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October 31, 2006

Last-Minute Answers Solve Nassau Playoff Equation

So by now you know whether your team made the Nassau football playoffs or not.You can read my playoff advance here. But there were some lingering questions Monday night.

Conference I
Hempstead protested its 24-18 loss to rival Uniondale in three overtimes on Saturday. Lloyd Martin broke free for a 7-yard touchdown run to lift Uniondale after two scoreless OTs.

What Hempstead protested was the final play of regulation, a 19-yard field goal that allowed Uniondale to forge a tie at 18. According to Hempstead coach Antoine Moore, the Uniondale center threw the ball off the field once the team arrived at the line of scrimmage on fourth down, an apparent attempt to get a clean ball.

Hempstead contended that it counted as a play and the game was over. Uniondale said that’s not how it happened, and with no video evidence to back its claim, Hempstead’s protest was denied.

So at 3-4, Hempstead finishes ninth in Conference I and misses the playoffs for the first time in four seasons. Had Hempstead won, No. 8 Oceanside might well have been eliminated. Check out the final football standings here.

Conference II
This issue was officially called a clarification. Lawrence and Garden City finished with identical 6-1 records and identical 125.91 power ratings atop Conference II. The sides met on Monday to figure out who gets the top seed and a seemingly easy path to the conference title game and who is No. 2 and likely gets Carey in the semifinals.

Of three possible scenarios, Garden City held the edge in two. The most obvious one was to declare the two tied and then resort to tie breakers. The first is head-to-head play. Garden City beat Lawrence, 16-8, in Week 2. Advantage Trojans.

The next two involved the actual permutation of the power points. If you calculate out each team’s power rating to the thousandth point, according to Garden City historian Jack White, then Garden City finishes with a slight edge over Lawrence.

For some technical reason unknown to this reporter, power points guru Andy Morris opted to calculate some schools to the thousandth and simply added a zero to others. The result gave Lawrence a 125.912 rating to Garden City’s 125.910. The official explanation is Morris simply used the “values expressed in the football guide.’’

So that’s the backroom story of how Lawrence earned the top seed and Garden City ended up second. As a side note, White was told the football committee would consider amending its power points system during the off-season.

Conference III
The coaches and players at Clarke and Sewanhaka were forced to scoreboard watch on Monday – not to find out if they made the playoffs, but to see what seed they’d land at.

What game determined their fate? Great Neck North (1-5) vs. Jericho (1-5). Go figure. The game was moved to Monday because of Saturday’s blustery weather. Despite 24 points from Jericho in the fourth quarter, Great Neck North held on to win, 27-24.

That moved Sewanhaka (3-4) into the No. 6 seed and Clarke (5-2) to No. 7. Had Jericho won, the teams would have swapped seeds. It may not sound like a big deal, but that’s the difference between playing red-hot No. 2 Floral Park (6-1) and a solid but beatable No. 3 Lynbrook (6-1) in the quarterfinals.

October 10, 2006

Nassau Conference I Mid-Season Awards

With the Nassau football playoffs starting Week 8 with quarterfinals, it’s fair to say the midpoint of the season is here. Over the next four days, I’ll break down the year to date in each conference -- the highlights and lowlights. Here are my mid-season observations for Conference I.

Coach of the Year: Hicksville coach Craig Stueber has the Comets, a preseason No. 13 seed, off to a 3-1 start. They’ve already bettered last season’s 2-6 record. And they’ve done it with shutout wins over Plainview JFK, Long Beach and Valley Stream Central. A win over 3-1 Oceanside this week all but locks up a playoff spot.

MVP: Where would Oceanside be without QB Chris Logan? He’s thrown for 10 TDs and run for three more to help the Sailors, a No. 11 seed, to a 3-1 start.

Unsung Hero: East Meadow OT John Elliott has the Jets off to a perfect start. Got syrup? This guy has been serving up pancakes all season.

Biggest Surprise: Freeport (4-0), one year removed from a 4-4 season, has come out of the gate on fire. The No. 5 seed has played like a team on a mission. The defense, led by MLB Chris Edmond, is fast. The offense, energized by QB Shannon Robinson, is dynamic.

Biggest Disappointment: Sure, Baldwin (1-3) didn’t return a single starter and the Bruins’ first-half schedule was brutal. But even coach Steve Carroll must have expected more. After all, Baldwin is coming off a 10-1 conference-championship season.

First Half Game of the Year: Massapequa salvaged its season with a 34-31 triple overtime win over Baldwin on Oct. 7. Baldwin rallied twice to tie it. But Chiefs running back Jon Pesce scored three times, including on a 6-yard run for the winner.

Second Half Game of the Year: Freeport at East Meadow, Oct. 28, 2 p.m. is a clash of titans. Simply put, the two best teams in Nassau. There may even be scalpers at this one, so get there early or bring extra cash.