Sandites Throttle Tigers 41-7, Abbi Elder Named Homecoming Queen

Abbi Elder was named Homecoming Queen and Mason HArris was Kissing Captain. Photo: Charity Emigh.

Tahlequah tried to set the tone early in its Friday night road game at Sand Springs. On fourth-and-one near midfield, the Tigers handed the ball off to Darryn Spahr and the senior back ran into a wall named Owen Floyd.

Two plays later Ali McCoy took the ball 57 yards to the house. Tone set.

McCoy ran for over 200 yards in the first half as the No. 5 Charles Page High School football team (3-2, 1-1) steamrolled to a 41-7 win over No. 6 Tahlequah (1-4, 0-2) on Homecoming.

“It wouldn’t be possible without the five guys up front,” said McCoy, who ended the night with 10 carries for 213 yards and two touchdowns.

“I expected us to do good on the ground, but I didn’t expect that outcome. It feels good sharing this moment with our seniors. We’ve been working really hard.”

One of those seniors was Kenneth Page, who had 12 carries for 132 yards and three scores. Another was wildcat quarterback Jace Arnold who ran the ball six times for 43 yards and another score.

When the clock finally ran dry the Sandites had amassed 392 yards on the ground, averaging a first down with every snap.

“I really like how we came out after a disappointing performance last week,” said head coach Bobby Klinck, referencing a 51-13 loss to No. 1 Muskogee.

“(The offensive line) is the heart and soul of our football team and they’re getting better each week.”

Kenneth Page scored 3 touchdowns against Tahlequah on Homecoming. Photo: Charity Emigh.

As dominant as the offense was, the defense was equally in control, recording two takeaways, seven tackles for loss, and two turnovers on downs. The Sandites forced four punts on the night and only allowed 79 yards in the second half.

“It was really good to see our secondary as a whole just continue to get better,” said Klinck. “Our secondary hadn’t been our strong point defensively, so for them to kind of lead and do some big things, I’m very happy with them.”

That secondary stepped up time and time again with Landyn Barnes breaking up a pass to force a punt on the Tigers’ second possession before intercepting Cash McAlvain on their third possession.

The pick was crucial for keeping momentum on the Sandites’ side as Tahlequah’s Jacob Morrison had just intercepted Easton Webb on the previous drive.

Two plays later, McCoy had another mad dash for a 49-yard touchdown.

Spahr got the visitors on the board with a 14-yard run to open the second quarter, but Page responded with a 19-yard run, the Tigers went three-and-out, and Arnold scored his 10-yard run to make it 27-7 after a failed PAT.

Two Tiger penalties set the Sandites up for a kickoff from deep in Tahlequah territory and they used the opportunity to practice their onside kick.

Dawson Puckett’s first attempt only traveled eight yards before going out of bounds, but that kick was nullified as the Sandites had lined up offsides and got a re-do.

This time it was flawlessly executed and recovered by Cooper Guardado to set up a 33-yard touchdown run by Page.

Tahlequah successfully moved the ball 61 yards on its next drive before Mason Harris sacked McAlvain and forced a fumble that was snatched up by Keagan Gilman with 42 seconds in the half.

The Sandites nearly punched in another but ran out of time after driving 52 yards on five plays to enter the red zone.

The starters got one more drive to open up the second half and Page scored his third touchdown on a one-yard plunge for the final score of 41-7.

From there, both teams played mostly backups and took turns exchanging punts till the clock ran out.

Sand Springs will take to the road next week with a key district match-up at No.4 Stillwater (3-2, 2-0), who prevailed 48-13 over No. 8 Booker T. Washington in their Week 5 game.

The Pioneers have won their past two meetings with Sand Springs and lead the series 32-12 all-time.

CPHS 41 Tahlequah 7
1Q:
CPHS 14-0.
2Q: CPHS 20-7.
3Q: CPHS 7-0.
4Q: 0-0.
First Downs: CPHS 14, Tahlequah 15.
Fumbles-Lost: CPHS 1-0, Tahlequah 3-2.
Penalties: CPHS 9-85, Tahlequah 7-80.
Passing: CPHS 7-11-97-1, Tahlequah 16-25-128-1.
Rushing: CPHS 36-392, Tahlequah 32-114.
Offense: CPHS 47-489, Tahlequah 57-242.

Sandite Junior High Teams Shut Out Sapulpa in Season Finale

The Sand Springs junior high football teams ended successful seasons Thursday night at George F. Collins as both the eighth and ninth grade teams won lopsided shutouts against their rivals from Sapulpa.

For the second year in a row, Thomas Parks’s eighth grade unit finished the season atop the conference. The Sandites defeated Sapulpa 38-0 to end the year 7-1 and outscored their opponents 272 to 77.

Their only blemish was an 18-12 week-seven loss to Carver, who they previously defeated 16-6 in week three.

The Sandites had a rough opening drive, but Dawson Jamison forced a turnover on downs for the defense and Sutton Cook got the visitors on the board with a one-yard wildcat sneak.

They started the second quarter with a 65-yard scoring strike from Dom Forbes to Cook, and Forbes ran in the two-point conversion to make it 14-0.

Forbes was 7-of-7 passing for 191 yards and two touchdowns on the night and scored another on the ground.

“He’s an unbelievable leader,” said Parks. “He shows up every day, he works hard, he wants to get better. Nobody’s harder on him than himself, but he can really reel it in and lead this football team.”

Brody Wilson hauled in a 33-yard reception to set up a two-yard scoring plunge from Cook and the Sandites led 22-0 at the half.

Gabe Harris scored on a 20-yard reception to open the third quarter and Kendell Page added a two-point run.

Kaden Pope forced a fumble on the Chieftains’ next drive and Kasen McAffrey recovered it to set up Forbes’s one-yard touchdown dive. Jesse Jordan connected with Pope on the two-point toss for the final points of the night.

Cook finished with two catches for 98 yards and also carried the ball six times for 49 yards. Harris had two catches for 43 yards and rushed seven times for 60 yards.

The defense totalled nine tackles for loss, two sacks, two turnovers on downs, two fumble recoveries, and an interception.

Nikyllien Crisp was the top man on defense with six tackles for loss and two sacks. Page almost had a 98-yard pick six on the final play of the game but it was called back for a penalty.

“That whole group is really solid,” said Parks. “It’s team defense all the way around. They fly to the ball, they know how to create turnovers. It’s been a fun group to coach this year.”

The ninth grade ended the season at 5-4 after a 30-0 win against Sapulpa. The team struggled all season with how good it was, as it kept hemorrhaging players to the varsity unit.

Gage Kaiser’s freshmen won the Indian Nations Conference as seventh graders and went undefeated in eighth grade. With eight freshmen on the varsity roster, they were short-handed for the tougher games this season.

“Different dynamic with this group,” said Kaiser. “No matter what, these guys responded to adversity. They were tough.”

Easton Webb was the quarterback the past two years but earned the starting job on varsity this season. Alex Dudley took over from there, but even he was called up for varsity action.

Emory Smittick got to lead the freshmen for the first time against Sapulpa and he delivered with 16 carries for 262 yards and three touchdowns.

“Ninth grade’s kind of different,” said Kaiser. “We mix it up every week. You don’t know who you’re going to have all the time.”

“Emory Smittick had a huge game today. He’s played a little bit of running back for us before. We came out tonight in a kind of wildcat offense and he was great in it.”

Isaac Sensintaffar scored on a one-yard plunge on the opening drive and Smittick added a 41-yard touchdown soon after.

After falling behind 12-0 Sapulpa threatened with a fourth-and-goal from the five-yard line, but Sensintaffar preserved the shutout with a tackle for loss.

Cooper Guardado added another turnover on downs early in the second half and Ge’Vauri Hill scored with a nine-yard run on the next possession.

Smittick added a 17-yard touchdown run to open the fourth, Tatum Wells forced a turnover on downs, and Smittick scored the final points on an eight-yard scamper.

Sensintaffar had three tackles for loss and Guardado totaled five tackles as the defense surrendered only 82 yards.

“(Seinsintaffar and Guardado) are great kids, hard workers. Show up every day, want to get better, and love football,” said Kaiser.

The junior high success bodes well for the varsity program as it’s infused each year with players who know what winning feels like.

“It injects excitement into the program,” said Parks. “Everybody in town knows what’s coming up.”

“I told them from day one, the standard’s the standard. You’ve got to meet the standard that coach (Bobby) Klinck sets for our varsity program, and we’ve got to hold it down here. They did.”

“The Tulsa area has taken notice that Sand Springs is going to get rolling here and we’re going to be a force to be reckoned with.”

Sand Springs 8th Grade football team goes undefeated, beats Sapulpa 40-0

A version of this story was originally written for the Sand Springs Leader.

There’s no playoffs for eighth grade football, but if there were, all eyes would be on Sand Springs.

The Clyde Boyd Middle School eighth grade football team wrapped up a perfect 8-0 season Thursday night at Memorial Stadium with a 40-0 shutout of Sapulpa. 

It was the team’s sixth clean sheet of the season, and the Sandites outscored their foes 356 to 18.

“It’s just a great group of kids,” said head coach Thomas Parks. “They’re coachable, they want to learn, they want to get better. They bring it every single day.”

Quarterback Easton Webb was 5-of-6 passing for 58 yards and two touchdowns, while carrying the ball six times for 55 yards and two more scores. 

“The thing about Easton Webb is he shows up every single day,” said Parks. “He wants to get better. He doesn’t often make mistakes and when he does make a mistake he wants to learn from it. He never gets too high, never gets too low. He’s just the ultimate team leader.”

Hudson Sheppard scored the first touchdown of the night on a 67-yard run late in the first quarter, and Isaac Sensintaffar ran in the two-point conversion.

Sheppard ran for 70 yards on four carries, and Sensintaffar had 79 yards on two carries. Cooper Guardado had a 17-yard TD reception in the second quarter, and Brighton Davidson had a three-yard TD reception in the fourth. Jacob Marlow had a big impact at center with several big blocks. 

Sheppard also led the team defensively with five tackles. Ryley Kester had three tackles for loss and a fumble recovery. Alex Dudley had a fumble recovery and Sensintaffar made an interception, and Ethan Shea had a 19-yard  pick-six. 

The perfect season was a continuation of what this team did in the Indian Nations Football Conference last year, winning the league’s top division as seventh graders. 

“A big reason for this team’s success has been the youth football coaches,” said Parks. “Cody Sensintaffar, Joey Webb, Adam Dudley. When I got them in eighth grade they were well-prepared, they knew what was going on.”

Parks expects his team to make a big impact on varsity over the next four years. “They’re all a good group of kids, they’re not afraid to mix it up and get in there and get after it.”

Eight Grade Schedule

9.2.21 Sand Springs 60-12 Muskogee Green (H).
9.9.21 Sand Springs 58-0 Bartlesville Blue (A).
9.16.21 Sand Springs 44-0 Carver (H).
9.23.21 Sand Springs 42-0 Sapulpa Blue (A).
10.7.21 Sand Springs 36-0 Muskogee Green (A).
10.12.21 Sand Springs 54-6 Bartlesville Blue (H).
10.21.21 Sand Springs 22-0 Carver (A).
10.28.21 Sand Springs 40-0 Sapulpa Blue (H).

Ninth Grade

The Charles Page High School freshman football team also won big over Sapulpa, paying back a loss from earlier in the season to end the year 2-7.

“Nothing feels better than a 20-0 shutout,” said head coach Gage Kaiser. “That’s huge for our kids. Just to finish strong right here, keep them rolling into next year.”

Quarterback Ali McCoy was 5-of-8 passing for 59 yards and two touchdowns, and ran it 15 times for 90 yards, a touchdown, and a two-point conversion.

“Ali, he’s a baller,” said Kaiser. “He’s great in the run game, he got us some good passes, especially in the second half.”

Caleb Goodman had three receptions for 44 yards and two touchdowns, and Jaden Allen led the defense with five tackles. Christian Freltus recovered a fumble and Dameon Leathers had an interception in the shutout.