MORE HORSEPOWER

Mustangs pound A-C 64-26 in 8-Man Showdown

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Adair-Casey tight end Charlie Terry (33) is tripped up by Murray defensive back Austin Halls as George Barber (56) closes in on the play Friday in Murray. Halls had nine tackles and Barber had eight in the 64-26 victory. A-C was held to six points in the second half.
Adair-Casey tight end Charlie Terry (33) is tripped up by Murray defensive back Austin Halls as George Barber (56) closes in on the play Friday in Murray. Halls had nine tackles and Barber had eight in the 64-26 victory. A-C was held to six points in the second half. (CNA photo by LARRY PETERSON)

Halls finished 13-of-23 passing for 208 yards and two TDs, with the two rushing TDs as well. Although he didn't score, Murray receiver Cody Scroggie had seven catches for 77 yards.

The Mustangs had two weeks to prepare for the game, with a bye week the previous week. Extra film study and early-morning workouts had the Mustangs prepared for battle.

"We felt good coming into the game," Murray coach Keith Shields said. "We thought we matched up well speed-wise with them. The big question was, could we match up with them physically?"

The answer seems to be on the scoreboard. Halls, Rider and Scroggie all raved about the offensive line after the game, which includes 2011 returnee Eddie Otto and newcomers Cole Weir and George Barber. Rockhold is the tight end opposite Scroggie.

"Our line really stepped up this week," Scroggie said.

Both sides of the ball had a good performance up front.

"It took all eight guys out there doing their job," Shields said. "Plowman is a threat on any play, from anywhere. You can't tackle him high, and a lot of times you can't tackle him with one guy."

QB scrambles

On many of Murray's big pass plays, the elusive Halls bought extra time by juking and spinning away from A-C defenders. After avoiding pressure, he'd motion to Scroggie or other Mustang receivers before firing the pass.

"I don't know how he does it," Scroggie said. "He just kind of points and I just start running. We've played football with each other since we were in sixth grade, so we just kind of know. He's pretty accurate."

"They bring a lot of guys, so I just try to create some time for myself," Halls explained. "Cody is a smart receiver, so when I finger-point, he gets it. We have so many athletes out there with so much speed. If our defense plays like that, we're hard to stop."

The maturation of Rider, who played as a 125-pound freshman two years ago, brings another element to the Mustang offense. He showed explosive acceleration Friday, and isn't as easy to bring down at 160 pounds.

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