Sports

2 Maine high school football storylines you need to know

By Adam Robinson, Bangor Daily New Staff

Foxcroft bounces back

In Foxcroft Academy’s 14-13 loss to Lisbon on Sept. 23, the Ponies lost their do-it-all star player Caden Crocker in the second quarter to an injury. 

Lisbon also held the ball for 38 minutes and forced Foxcroft into three turnovers. 

It was a low point for the Ponies, who are the defending Class D champions, and they hoped to bounce back against John Bapst this past Friday.

Crocker came back and scored three touchdowns, made an interception and had a big punt return early in the game to get the offense into good field position. 

“He was phenomenal Friday night,” Foxcroft coach Dan White said of Crocker. “He left the Lisbon game in the second quarter so we lost him. Having him back certainly helped. He was massive… He’s always going to be one of the best players on the field but he played with a little more Friday night.”

White said the team entered the John Bapst matchup with a “chip on their shoulder,” and after a good week of practice wanted to bounce back in a big way. 

This season Foxcroft returned four of its five offensive linemen from their title-winning team a year ago and the unit played well on Friday night, according to White.

Foxcroft now is preparing for Hampden Academy at home before two road games against Maine Central Institute and Freeport before finishing the regular season at home against Oak Hill. 

Dexter stays undefeated behind quarterback play

Dexter quarterback Bryce Connor is one of many returning players from last year’s eight-player, small-school championship-winning team, and his leadership helped the Tigers to a close win over Orono on Friday. 

The Tigers scored twice in the first quarter and then didn’t score again until the fourth, but the team never quit. 

“The leadership really makes a difference,” Dexter coach Andrew Levensalor said. “We went up two scores then didn’t score again until the fourth. The mindset they have when they’re down is special. We preach body language, good or bad, and move onto the next play. These kids, they never quit. The leadership from my quarterback is awesome.”
Connor threw for two scores on Friday and ran for one more. On the season he has 14 touchdowns. 

“We run the double tight end sometimes, and he’s happy to run that. He can run outside, and if we want to spread it out he can throw it, too,” Levensalor said. “There have been a couple games where he’s run over 200 yards and a couple where he’s gone over 300 throwing yards. He has 1,400 yards of offense just by himself.”

Levensalor said the team has replaced what it lost from the championship team last season, despite being a different team.

“I think we’re right there with them at least,” he said, comparing the two teams. “Of course having (Connor) back in makes a huge difference. I was talking with a coach that you can tell they’ve seen it all before. They don’t get frazzled.”

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