Raiders respond to early adversity, excel late
DIV. 3 LEVEL 2: MEDFORD 16, RIVER FALLS 14
BY MATT FREY
SPORTS EDITOR
It took 11 games, but the Medford Raiders got their first full 48-minute test of the 2019 football season Friday and, after some shaky moments early, came out with a passing grade in a thrilling 16-14 win over River Falls in their WIAA Division 3 Level 2 battle at Raider Field.
In playoff football, the grades are pass or fail, and the Raiders got the desired result by scoring 14 points off two gamechanging Wildcat turnovers, including a big touchdown just before halftime, running for 228 yards against a stout River Falls defense while erasing an early 6-0 deficit and playing much-improved second-half defense, particularly on two fourth-quarter stands.
The first of those stands ended in a high snap that Wildcat punter Joe Stoffel kicked out of the end zone for the tiebreaking safety with 8:59 left in the game that ultimately won it for the 11-0 Raiders.
âWeâve talked about that for quite a bit of the year, that at some point in time weâre going to face some adversity,â Medford head coach Ted Wilson said. âThe way you respond to that adversity is going to decide how the outcome of that particular game is. I thought the kids did well. Itâs a statement to their positive attitude to stick with it and not get negative and to keep trusting the system and the process. I thought the kids responded well to facing down maybe the first significant adversity that weâve had all year.â
âIâm sure at the start, yeah I was feeling a little down but I realized we had to pick it up,â said Doug Way, who got Medford on the board with a 26-yard touchdown reception in the final minute of the first half and sealed the win by pushing River Falls quarterback Peter Noreen out of bounds on fourth-and-nine with 1:12 to go. âWe still had three and a half quarters to go. That canât stop us from going for our goal.â
Both teams moved the ball well in a back-and-forth first half, but mistakes by each team in enemy territory kept it just a 7-6 game at halftime.
Medfordâs initial drive stalled at River Fallsâ 41 after two first downs and Logan Baumgartnerâs punt got into the end zone for a touchback. The Wildcats went 80 yards on just six plays with the big one being a 53-yard scamper by running back Michael Krueger. Kruegerâs 1-yard score made it 6-0, but the Wildcats botched the hold on the extra point, keeping it a sixpoint game with 5:39 left in the opening quarter.
Medford again drove into Wildcat territory, keyed by Ean Wilsonâs second run of more than 25 yards in the opening quarter, but a holding penalty set the drive back. On fourth down from the 21, Emett Grunwald was open at the goal line but slipped. Peyton Kuhnâs pass bounced off Grunwaldâs chest and was intercepted by Arsenio Black, who returned it to the 18.
The Wildcats drove into the red zone, with Noreen running 37 yards on the big play of the drive, but a holding penalty got them into a third-and-long situation and Justin Sullivan was in the right place at the right time, intercepting a pass that was tipped by Wildcat receiver Payton Flood at the 19-yard line.
âWe werenât doing a great job with some of their motion,â Ted Wilson said of Medfordâs defensive first half. âNot that we hadnât game-planned for that, but we were allowing our eyes to go to different spots instead of trusting the keys and trusting the game plan as to who leads us to the ball. It took our kids a little while to settle down and come back to what weâd planned to do in the first place. Then they played much better.â
âWe didnât play very well at all,â Ean Wilson said. âWe werenât the defensive team we normally are. We found a way in the second half and picked it up.â
After Sullivanâs pick, Medford put together a typical Medford drive, going on a 14-play, 81-yard drive that chewed 6:16 off the clock. After 13 consecutive running plays, River Falls bit hard on Medfordâs backfield action and Way slipped out all alone on the left side for an easy touchdown catch with 56 seconds left. Austin Waldhartâs kick made it 7-6. The Raiders then survived a Hail Mary pass to the goal line on the halfâs last play.
âI saw them all coming towards me, the safety and the corner, and Iâm like, âyes, here we go,ââ Way said.
âYou watch them start creeping and you can definitely tell their eyes are not on the tight ends, theyâre on the backfi eld trying to figure out where number one is,â Ted Wilson said, referring to Ean Wilson. âIt was a good throw, good route run by Doug, great catch.â
The big play of the second-half was an interception by junior cornerback Carson Church, who didnât get fooled on some flea-flicker action in the backfi eld by the Wildcats. The Raiders got big pressure on Noreen when he got the ball pitched back to him and Church swiped his pass to the left flat and returned it 24 yards to the River Falls four. Ean Wilson scored on the next play for a 14-6 Medford lead with 3:29 left in the third quarter.
âI was in the right place at the right time,â Church said. âI kinda saw the back coming out of the backfield and it was just kinda there. I just saw it out of the corner of my eye and started drifting that way.â
âCarson Church did a nice job there,â Ted Wilson said. âWe were playing man coverage pretty much the entire game. His guy actually came down to block. He just came off that block and got some depth, read it and undercut it and made a nice play.â
River Falls swiped the momentum back five plays later when Noreen made a beautiful throw down the left seam to Stoffel, the Wildcatsâ standout tight end. His 60-yard catch and run along with a razzle-dazzle two-point conversion tied the game at 14-14 with 47 seconds left in the third.
Medford went three and out, giving River Falls its chance to regain the lead. But the Raiders allowed nothing defensively, leading to the high snap over Stoffelâs head that put Medford in the lead.
The Raiders wouldâve come close to running out the clock after the free kick, but a lost fourth-and-one chance led to their drive stalling at the Wildcatsâ 32 with 4:51 left. River Falls got one first down, but another misplayed snap resulted in an 11-yard loss and ultimately put the Wildcats in the fourth-and-nine situation that Way foiled, shoving Noreen out of bounds before he could get off a throw while rolling to his right.
âI was just doing what Iâm supposed to do,â Way said. âI chased the quarterback and got him out of bounds before he could do anything.â
âThe defense played really well in the fourth quarter,â Ted Wilson said. âWe hardly gave up any rushing yards and got them into those third-and-long situations, second-and-long situations which teams like River Falls and ourselves donât want to be in.â
River Falls (8-3) had a 301-259 advan-
See MEDFORD tage in total offense, but Medford had a 228-209 edge in rushing yards. Ean Wilson had 187 of those yards on 35 carries behind an offensive line that was missing junior Abe Miller and had junior Jarod Jochimsen playing through an ankle injury during the game.
âThose guys, our two seniors (Zac Breneman and Isaac Zepeda) on that offensive line, they stepped up a lot,â Ean Wilson said. âOur juniors (Brody Doberstein, Joe Gierl, Dalton Krug, Jochimsen and Miller) are just competitors. They get after it and they want to get after it.â
Next up for second-seeded Medford is a date with the regionâs top seed, the Menomonie Mustangs (10-1), who shared the Big Rivers Conference title with River Falls. Menomonie took care of fourth-seeded New Richmond Friday 3513. Medford and Menomonie have scrimmaged each other the past two Augusts but havenât met in the playoffs since 1996.
âTheyâre a good team,â Ean Wilson said. âItâll probably be the same as this one, a hard-fought battle that will come down to the last couple of plays.â