Triple OT win hikes SWC record to 5-0

by Phillip Brents

Some history was made last Saturday following Southwestern College’s 40-38 triple overtime football win at San Diego Mesa College.

Since Southwestern joined the National Southern Conference in the state’s community college football alignment, the Jaguars had never gotten out to a 5-0 start.

Now, they have. Five and Oh-My!

“Being 5-0 is great but it’s not our goal,” SWC head coach Oscar Rodriguez said. “We understand the work’s not done and we have a lot of things we need to clean up fundamentally before moving in the second half of the season.”

The second half of the season starts with an Oct. 9 matchup against the host Palomar Comets.

The Jaguars, ranked fifth in California and 16th in the nation, host Riverside on Oct. 18 and El Camino on Oct. 25, play at Saddleback on Nov 1 and close out regular season play Nov. 8 against visiting Chaffey.

A bowl game could be in the offing.

El Camino (4-1) and Saddleback (4-1) are both 2-0 in conference play.

Neither Southwestern nor Mesa (1-1, 2-3) had trouble scoring in the game, a key one not only in the conference standings but also for county bragging rights.

SWC quarterback Brayten Silbor opened scoring on a six-yard run followed by a seven-yard pass from Reggie Johnson (Madison) to Aleonte Logan (Morse) for Mesa and a 7-7 standoff. The Olympians took a 14-7 lead on a Jay Porter (Vista) one-yard run but the Jags evened the score at 14-all on a 69-yard pass from Silbor to Clint Thomas Jr.

SWC then went ahead 17-14 on a 25-yard field goal by Jacob Cuevas (San Diego Cavers) and extended the lead to 24-14 on a 10-yard pass from Silbor to Tyler Becker (Del Norte). The first half ended 24-17 on a 29-yard field goal by Mesa’s Joshua Hossmann (Helix).

Thomas caught a 28-yards scoring pass from Silbor to up the Jags’ lead to 31-17. But nothing was safe as Johnson scored on an eight-yard run to trim the lead to 31-24 and then added a five-yard scoring run to tie things up at 31-all.

Both teams scored a touchdown in the first overtime for a 38-38 deadlock. Blocker swept in from 25-yards out for the Jags.

SWC stopped the Olympians on an interception to start the second overtime but the Jags missed a field goal attempt in a bid to win.

The sudden-death third overtime tiebreaker relies on two-point conversions. Southwestern scored on its turn but the Jags stopped Mesa for the win.

Southwestern accumulated 561 yards in total offense in the marathon clash while the Olympian range up 292 yards for 853 yards total between the teams.

Silbor passed for 311 yards with three touchdowns and two interceptions while Johnson passed for 175 yards with one TD and one pick. Silbor also gained 63 yards on 11 rushing attempts.

Blocker was the Jags’ tank with 164 rushing yards on 19 carries and one touchdown while Thomas logged 194 receiving yards and two scores. Mater Dei Catholic alum Josiah Jefferson had five catches for 75 yards.

On defense, Southwestern’s Carson Curtis had two sacks and three tackles for losses while Jakob “Dawson” Washington had one interception. As a team, the Jags totaled five sacks (for 45 yards) and eight tackles for losses (for 51 yards).

Niko Ta’a (Lincoln) paced SWC overall with six tackles, including five unassisted stops.

SDSU place-kicker Gabriel PLascencia has made six field goals and eight extra-point conversions so far this season. Photo by Phillip Brents

It’s good! SDSU gets its kick when it matters most in last-second non-conference win at Northern Illinois

University of San Diego Toreros out-kick St. Thomas with :00 remaining

Last weekend’s spate of college and professional football games offered fans a wild and crazy look at the sport. Both San Diego State University and the University of San Diego claimed non-conference victories on walk-off field goals on Saturday.

Sunday’s nationally telecast NFL game between the Green Bay Packers and host Dallas Cowboys ended in similar whacky fashion with the Packers kicking a field goal with one second left on the clock (following an incompletion in the end zone) to salvage a 40-40 overtime tie after the Cowboys had taken a 40-37 lead on a field goal earlier in the OT period (after being stopped on the goal line).

Red and Black

San Diego State was playing its second road game of the season after recording a big 34-0 shutout win at home over Cal-Berkeley the week prior. The emphasis was on defense, not necessarily offense in Saturday’s game against the Huskies as Gabe Plascencia kicked a pair of field goals, the second as time expired to give the Aztecs a 6-3 victory.

“It was a great, gritty, tough team win going on the road, it’s hard, something good teams do,” Aztec head coach Sean Lewis said. “Obviously, tremendous effort by the defense. Stepped up time and time again in a really huge way. Because of the effort on that side of the ball, it really gave the whole organization a chance to win.

“Gabe did a tremendous job on all the kicks. I thought special teams did a good job in most areas if creating some momentum, flipping the field in a huge field position game like that, pinning them as far away from the goal line and scoring opportunities as possible.”

Plascencia, who entered the game with the second-longest streak in the country, is now 23-for-24 in career field goal tries.

SDSU’s 3-1 start is its best start since 7-0 in 2021.

SDSU is off to its best start in several seasons. Photos by Phillip Brents

Northern Illinois scored first on a 31-yard field goal by Andrew Glass in the first quarter. The Aztecs drew the equalizer with five seconds elapsed in the second quarter from 30 yards out.

From there, defense prevailed on both sides until the SoCa visitors managed to penetrate deep into Huskies territory in the dying seconds. Plascencia’s boot from 25 yards out proved to be the game-winner.

The final SDSU drive included seven plays for 49 yards consuming 1:44 off the clock.

The Aztecs managed 266 yards in total offense to Northern Illinois’ 179 total yards. SDSU’s Hunter Green punted six times for 282 yards while the Huskies’ Danny Vuckovic punted seven times for 298 yards. The Aztecs averaged 47.0 yards per punt while NIU averaged 42.6 yards per punt.

Jayden Denegal completed 13 of 20 passing attempts for 110 yards with two interceptions and one sack. The Huskies were limited to just 57 passing yards with one interception and two sacks.

Gabriel PLascencia looks up to see the ball go through the uprights. Photo by Phillip Brents
Jordan Napier makes a sideline grab in season opener against Stony Brook. Photo by Phillip Brents
Mikey Welsh bolts down field in season opener against Stony Brook. Photo by Phillip Brents

As a team, the Aztecs rushed for 151 net yards. Lucky Sutton (Cathedral Catholic) keyed SDSU with 88 yards on 17 carries. Helix grad Christian Washington had 12 carries for 22 net yards.

Jordan Napier (73 all-purpose yards) accounted for 52 receiving yards on six catches. Napier had one catch measure 19 yards to go with a 16-yard burst on turf.

Owen Chambliss (team-leading 11 tackles) and Ryan Henderson each recorded 10-yard sacks while Chris Johnson (seven tackles) returned a pick four yards. Trey White (Eastlake) ranked third on the team with six tackles while fellow South County product Tano Letuli (Cathedral Catholic) had four defensive stops.

NIU logged five tackles for losses.

The Aztecs kick off Mountain West play Friday against the Colorado State Rams (1-3 overall) at Snapdragon Stadium, 7:30 p.m. start. It’s a chance to make inroads into the conference standings.

Fresno State (4-1 overall) and Boise State (3-1 overall) are both 1-0 in conference play.

“We’re tough, man, we’re tough,” Lewis said when asked what he’s learned about his team in its opening four games of the season. “We’re resilient, and we continue to mature week in and week out.”

Mater Dei Catholic alum Dom Nankil passed for 265 yards and two touchdowns in the Toreros’ comeback win in Saturday’s Pioneer Football League game againas visiting St. Thomas. Phtoo coutesy University of San Diego athletics.

Torero pride

USD, in winning its Pioneer Football League opener, rallied from 17-3 halftime deficit by out-scoring the Tommies 27-10 in second half, piling up 20 unanswered points.

Junior Dom Nankil (Mater Dei Catholic) helped lead the Toreros to a 3-2 overall start by passing for 265 yards and two touchdowns. A 41-yard scoring pass from Nankil to graduate student Josh Heverly late in the third quarter narrowed the score to 17-10.

The Tommies went up 27-10, before the USD comeback began in earnest. Senior Adam Criter scored on a 12-yard run and Nankil passed 54 yards to senior Cole Monach to trim the deficit to 27-24 with seven seconds left in the third quarter. A 56-yard heave from Nankil to Heverly set up Criter’s TD run.

Emiliano Salazar closed out the game with a pair of field goals for the Toreros — a 34-yarder with 1:52 remaining in the fourth quarter to tie the game at 27-all and the game-winner as time expired. USD’s game-winning drive included four plays for five yards after Nate Higgins recovered a fumble in the final minute near the St. Thomas goal line.

Graduate student Malachi Copper was credited with the punch-out after rejecting a St. Thomas field goal attempt earlier in the third quarter.

“We’re a team that when the chips are down, we fight, and fight, until the end, and that’s what they did today,” USD head coach Brandon Moore said.

For the season, Nankil has passed for 776 yards and five touchdowns while rushing or 105 net yards and two scores.

USD continues league play at Marist (0-1, 2-2) on Saturday, Oct. 4, in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

USD quarterback Dom Nankil scopes out a downfield target in Saturday’s game. Photo courtesy University of San Diego athletics

SDSU LOCALS

Lucky Sutton (Cathedral Catholic): 337 rushing yards, three TD

Christian Washington (Helix): 122 rushing yards, one TD

Byron Cardwell (Morse): 32 rushing yards, 0 TD

Nathan Acevedo (Lincoln): 32 receiving yards, 0 TD

Tano Letuli (Cathedral Catholic): 24 tackles

Trey White (Eastlake): 19 tackles, 1 sack

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