Windsor Jaguars win 2011 D-2 championship

 

 Perfect finish: Windsor wins NCS Div. 2 title

By PHIL BARBER

THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Darrian Roman had been waiting for this moment since he was 8 years old, a wide-eyed kid attending Windsor football games and dreaming of gridiron glory.

When his time came, Roman made the most of it. He scored three touchdowns, including the decisive score on a 62-yard breakaway, and played a key role in the Jaguars’ defensive effort as they outlasted Concord, 28-20, in a wild North Coast Section Division 2 championship game at Santa Rosa High.

Windsor’s first NCS title was the cherry on top of a 14-0 season, and it brought the student section streaming onto the field as the Jaguars dissolved in a frenzy of hugs and back slaps.

“I can’t explain to you how good I feel right now,” quarterback Christian McAlvain said. “What a night. What a night for our guys, what a night for our team.”

To make it happen, Windsor had to overcome a heroic performance by Concord running back Olito Thompson, who rushed 54 times — that is not a typo — for 285 yards in defeat.

In case you’re wondering, the California record for attempts in a game is 71, set by Saddleback’s Luis Soto in 2010.

The top-seeded Jaguars had scouted the No. 7 Minutemen and knew that Thompson would be difficult to contain, and he was every bit as good as advertised. But while he did get loose for a 35-yard touchdown scamper in the second quarter and a 30-yard run late in the game, most of the real estate was difficult to acquire. Only seven of Thompson’s 54 runs netted double-digit yardage.

“Their defense was great. We knew that coming in,” said Thompson, a junior. “Their defense is like ours. They were rated top in the north. We were top in the east. They deserved this win. I can’t say nothing bad about ‘em.”

Concord’s final threat ended when Thompson took a short pass on fourth-and-27 and was tackled after a 13-yard gain with 25 seconds left.

The Jaguars went into the fourth quarter trailing 20-14, but began the final period by stuffing Thompson on a fourth-and-goal play from the 1-yard line.

“The goal-line stand,” Concord coach Brian Hamilton said afterward. “We march down to the 1, they bow their necks and stop us. ... Hats off, man. Great team.”

Two possessions later, Windsor took over at the Minutemen’s 37 after a short, hurried punt, and Roman wound up pounding it in from the 1-yard line to give Windsor the lead.

Concord, trying to bounce back, drove to the Jaguars’ 26-yard line before Windsor forced three straight incompletions to take over on downs. Then, on a third-and-2 play from the Windsor 38, Roman broke the game open. He picked up the first down over the right side, then cut back and was off to the races for the score that made it 28-20.

Roman finished with 20 carries for 173 yards.

If the Jaguars had come up short in this game, they would forever have looked back to the final, disastrous six minutes of the second quarter.

Windsor had gone up 7-0 earlier in the quarter on the first of Roman’s three touchdowns. Then came this alarming sequence: Concord’s Wyatt Morrow hit Jacob Smith in traffic for a 28-yard touchdown pass on fourth-and-1; Thompson ran for the 2-point conversion and the Minutemen were up 8-7; Concord attempted an onside kick (Hamilton’s team frequently does), and was successful when Tyler Colby recovered; Thompson spun, ducked a shoulder and scored from 35 yards out (though his 2-point try failed); Concord went back to the onside kick and got it again, this time with Quinton Casey recovering.

Windsor appeared to end the deluge when linebacker Vince Valdes recovered Thompson’s fumble at the Jaguars 6-yard line. But after a couple first downs, McAlvain couldn’t field a snap cleanly on fourth-and-1, and the Minutemen’s Smith scooped up the loose ball and ran 39 yards for a touchdown 2:23 before halftime.

That put the Jaguars in a 20-7 hole, but they shut out Concord in the second half, denying the Minutemen consecutive NCS championships.

Windsor’s first football banner came in Rob Gatrell’s first season as coach.

 

High school football

NCS DIVISION 2 CHAMPIONSHIP

AT SANTA ROSA HIGH

Concord 0 20 0 0 — 20

Windsor 0 7 7 14 — 28

W: Darrian Roman 2 run (Christian McAlvain kick)

C: Jacob Smith 28 pass from Wyatt Morrow (Olito Thompson run)

C: Thompson 35 run (run failed)

C: Smith 39 fumble return (run failed)

W: Trey Tobon 30 pass from McAlvain (McAlvain kick)

W: Roman 1 run (McAlvain kick)

W: Roman 62 run (McAlvain kick)

Rushing: C—Thompson 54x285. W—Roman 20x173, Jarod Leon 10x40.

Passing: C—Morrow 12/18, 138 yds, 1 TD. W—McAlvain 10/17, 112 yds, 1 TD, 1 int.

Receiving: C—Smith 7x115. W—Tobon 4x87.

Records: C 10-4, W 14-0

 

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Concord High football team falls to Windsor 28-20 in NCS Division II title game...

By Ben Enos

Contra Costa Times

SANTA ROSA -- Concord High running back Olito Thompson finished his junior season with one of the gutsiest efforts of his life.

Unfortunately for the Minutemen, it came in a loss.

No. 1 seed Windsor stormed back after trailing by 13 at halftime, running off 21 unanswered points Friday to claim the North Coast Section Division II title with a 28-20 win at Santa Rosa High.

Thompson carried an astounding 54 times for 285 yards, setting a Northern California record for rushing yards in a season with 3,488. That broke the mark of 3,224 set in 13 games by Salesian''''s Jahvid Best in 2006. Concord played 14 games this season.

Thompson also set a Northern California record for carries in a game, breaking the previous record of 52 by Live Oak''''s Paul Nevarez.

"At the end of the day, they can''''t say we didn''''t give them a challenge. They can''''t say we didn''''t fight back," Thompson said. "I''''m just proud to have the team that I did, to have the heart that it did. It taught me a lot."

Thompson''''s records proved little consolation, as the Minutemen saw the game slip from their grasp thanks to a spirited effort by the Jaguars.

Windsor (14-0) started its comeback in the third quarter, when Christian McAlvain found Trey Tobon for a 30-yard touchdown pass.

The Jaguars kicked it into high gear in the fourth, when Darrian Roman ran for a 1-yard score to tie the game with 6:02 remaining. McAlvain added the extra point to put Windsor in front.

Windsor added on to the lead with 2:13 left, when Roman busted loose for a 63-yard touchdown run. Roman finished with 176 yards on 20 carries.

Concord (10-4) had its shot to take command, getting inside the Windsor 5 with just over 11 minutes left to play. The Jaguars made the stop they needed though, stopping Thompson at the 1-yard line on fourth down.

The last shot for the Minutemen came with 2:06 left. They took the ball from their own 16 to the Windsor 28 with under a minute remaining, but two sacks and an incompletion stalled the drive, and a pass from Wyatt Morrow to Thompson fell well short of the first-down marker.

"Their pass rush was just so good," Concord coach Brian Hamilton said. "We were limited, and it caught up to us."

Concord built its halftime lead thanks to some opportunistic plays in the second quarter. The Minutemen recovered two onside kicks, Morrow found Jacob Smith for a 28-yard touchdown pass and Thompson rushed for a 35-yard touchdown.

Concord also scored defensively, as Smith picked up a fumble and returned it 39 yards for a score.

 

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Windsor gets title; Olito Thompson gets two Northern California records...

BY HAROLD ABEND

The house was packed at Santa Rosa High and Concord’s Olito Thompson didn’t disappoint with two Northern California rushing records.

But it was Windsor (14-0) and its running back Darrian Roman and his two fourth quarter touchdowns that brought the Jaguars back from a 20-7 halftime deficit to win their first North Coast Section title with a 28-20 Division II victory on Friday night.

Thompson set the records, but Roman, Windsor’s two-way star had the more explosive runs, played excellent defense, and gets a section title.

“They quoted in the paper that he (Thompson) had more yards than me in three games than I had all year, and that got under my skin,” Roman said. “I had to prove myself as a runner and I wanted to stop him on defense.”

The 5-foot-10, 200-pound senior rushed for 176-yards and three touchdowns. He also had nine tackles with two for loss.

When Roman scored on a 1-yard plunge with 6:02 remaining, Windsor had the lead at 21-20.

Concord (10-4) got the ball at its own 29-yard line after the kickoff and went to work using Thompson on six of seven running plays, however the drive stalled at the Jaguars’ 30-yard line and the Minutemen turned it over on downs.

Three plays later and at the 2:13 mark, Roman took it 63 yards to the house and the game was all but over.

Thompson’s carry at 6:08 of the first quarter pushed him past Jahvid Best (Salesian-Richmond, Cal, Detroit Lions) as the all-time leading rusher in the Metro Bay Area.

The senior running back ran rushed 54 times for 285 yards and one touchdown. The 54 carries is a Northern California record according to the Cal-Hi Sports State Record Book.

Thompson finishes the season with 3,488 yards and 35 touchdowns. The yardage will also get him into the top 10 on that list in the record book

Jacob Smith caught a 28-yard TD pass from sophomore quarterback Wyatt Morrow and scored on a 36-yard fumble return to help Concord take a 20-7 halftime lead.

Windsor is now State Bowl eligible.

The state’s 10 commissioners will announce the 10 teams, five from the North and South, on Sunday and Windsor will be the only undefeated Division II North team on the board. Sac-Joaquin Section powers Del Oro and Vacaville are currently ranked higher in both human and computer rankings.

 

The State Bowl Championships are Dec. 16-17 at the Home Depot Center in Carson.

BOX SCORE 1 2 3 4 F

D-2 (7) CONCORD (DVAL) 10-3 0 20 0 0 20

D-2 (1)WINDSOR (SCL) 14-0 0 7 7 14 28

Date: December 9, 2011 Time: 7:00pm Venue: Santa Rosa

Brad Stibi steps up as new Jags football coach

 

August 13, 2018
  • Jul 3, 2018

Former defensive coordinator takes over for Ballatore

READY TO ROLL — Longtime assistant coach Brad Stibi will succeed Kevin Ballatore as the new head football coach of the Windsor Jaguars.

READY TO ROLL — Longtime assistant coach Brad Stibi will succeed Kevin Ballatore as the new head football coach of the Windsor Jaguars.

The Windsor High School administration didn’t have to look far to fill their vacant head varsity football coaching position, tapping former defensive coordinator and longtime assistant coach Brad Stibi to lead the program.

Stibi succeeds Kevin Ballatore, who stepped down this spring after one season at the helm.

A former standout player in high school before going on to play at Sacramento State College, Stibi has been a fixture in the local football coaching ranks for nearly two decades.

After spending 10 years coaching at various levels in the Windsor Knights youth program, he spent several seasons with the WHS JV team before joining the varsity as an assistant, serving as the defensive coordinator under both Tom Kirkpatrick and Ballatore.

Football family

The Stibi name has been synonymous with Windsor football for more than a decade, with sons and WHS graduates Blake, Brady and Brett all coming through the ranks to star for the Jaguars.

Since taking the reins, coach Stibi’s first order of business was to convey a desire for continuity and commitment for a program that has had four head coaches in the past five seasons.

“I’d like to establish some stability in the program and create a good environment for the kids,” he said. “I want our players to work hard and have fun.”

The new head coach hit the ground running this summer, combining regular team weight training sessions with participation in the seven-on-seven league at Santa Rosa Junior College and the El Molino passing league.

Stibi has already assembled most of his coaching staff, naming veteran youth coach Rich Evans as his offensive coordinator.

“Rich and I coached together for years in youth football and he’ll establish his own style of offense,” Stibi noted, hinting that more emphasis may be placed on running the ball this season.

“I believe the most successful coaches adapt their style of play to the players they have, putting kids in a position to be successful.”

With league realignment taking effect this fall, Windsor has been placed in the competitive Oak Division, along with Cardinal Newman, Rancho Cotate, Maria Carrillo, Ukiah and Analy. The preseason will be equally tough, with the first three games coming against Casa Grande, Freedom and Del Oro.

“It’s going to be a challenge but I’m looking forward to it,” Stibi said.

El Cerrito holds off huge rally

beats Windsor for NCS D-III crown 

BENICIA – Last season it was El Cerrito that staged a furious second-half comeback in the semifinals of the North Coast Section Division III playoffs, rallying from a 27-point deficit before losing to Windsor by a point.

Windsor returned the favor Friday night, coming back from a 28-point third-quarter hole before losing to El Cerrito 34-27 in the NCS D-III final at Benicia High. Kamani Jackson’s second interception of the game, this one with 1:08 left to play, gave the undefeated Gauchos their first NCS title since 2013.

Next up for El Cerrito (13-0) is the CIF NorCal Regionals. Pairings will be announced Sunday. Gauchos coach Jacob Rincon said he’s heard Grant-Sacramento is a possibility. The Pacers (10-2) beat Christian Brothers 20-12 Friday night for the Sac-Joaquin Section D-III title.

“I just want a home game,” said Rincon, which doesn’t seem too much to ask given the Gauchos’ record.

El Cerrito and Windsor appeared to be headed for a running clock (one team leads by at least 35 points) when Tony McAdoo scored on a 54-yard run five plays into the second half. McAdoo’s run boosted the Gauchos’ lead to 34-6. It was the third successive drive that resulted in a touchdown for the Tri-County Athletic League Rock Division champs.

It was also the third touchdown of the game for McAdoo, a lightning-quick 5-foot-8, 165-pound senior, pushing him over 200 rushing yards for the game. He finished with 267 yards on 21 carries, many of them on sweeps

Windsor (10-2) responded with a 12-play, 68-yard march that consumed 5:19 of the third period and closed the gap to 34-13. The Jaguars then scored on a 31-yard pass play from quarterback Judson Anderson to younger brother Harley Anderson, making it 34-20.

Game on.

The Jaguars stopped El Cerrito on its next three drives, then scored on a 13-yard pass from Anderson to Max McFerren. The point after was good and only seven points separated the teams.

“Windsor did a great job of making adjustments at the half and holding us to only one score in the second half,” Rincon said.

Of course, wiping out a four-touchdown deficit is no easy task, especially against a defense as good as El Cerrito’s. The Gauchos had only yielded 62 points in their first 12 games. None of their prior opponents had scored more than 13 points.

After the Windsor touchdown that cut El Cerrito’s lead to seven, the Jaguars tried a successful onside kick, recovering the ball at the Gauchos’ 49-yard line. Windsor’s first two plays lost eight yards, then the Jaguars threw their third interception of the game. They had four turnovers in all.

“We kind of slowed down in the second half,” said Gauchos’ cornerback Warren Smith, a top Bay Area recruit who is committed to Washington State. “But this team (Windsor) fights for all four quarters. We knew that and had to put our foot down.”

Said senior safety Jermaine Hargraves, “We did a lot of things good, we did a lot of things bad. We’ve got to fix what we did bad and get ready for next week.”

Windsor had 411 total yards to 382 for El Cerrito. The Jaguars passed for 191 yards and two touchdowns. But those four turnovers, compared to one for El Cerrito, obviously had an impact.

Now the Gauchos go for win number 14. They have never had a 14-win season in the MaxPreps era, which began in 2004. They were 13-1 in 2012, losing in the NCS finals to Marin Catholic.

Rincon said this season is helping make up for last year. El Cerrito was 9-3, its season coming to an end in that wild 33-32 semifinal against Windsor. But the coach was mostly talking about an off-field issue that led him to being suspended while an investigation was conducted.

Dramatic Windsor comeback falls short in NCS title game

Windsor nearly put together a comeback for the ages in Friday’s North Coast Section Division 3 title game against top-seeded El Cerrito.|

 

 

GUS MORRIS

Windsor nearly put together a comeback for the ages in Friday’s North Coast Section Division 3 title game against top-seeded El Cerrito, turning a 28-point second half deficit into a one-score game in the closing minutes and having a chance to tie or take the lead late in the fourth.

Ultimately, the Gauchos held on for a dramatic 34-27 win thanks to a game-sealing interception with a minute left on the clock at Benicia High School.

Windsor, which ends the season at 10-3 overall, trailed 34-6 early in the third quarter but rattled off 21 straight points from the middle of the third until late in the fourth.

Judson Anderson’s 13-yard touchdown pass to Max McFerren made it 34-27 with two minutes left. Then, the Jaguars recovered the ensuing onside kick at midfield and looked for one final scoring drive.

But the Gauchos (13-0), who had allowed just 62 points all season entering Friday and boast a defense fill with future Division I college players, picked off Anderson for the third time in the game on a deep ball with a minute left to bring an end to the dramatic rally.

“I don’t think there was a person on our sideline that didn’t think we were going to come back and win the game,” Windsor head coach DJ Sexton said. “… We were going to go for 2 if we scored; we weren’t playing for overtime, that’s for sure. To outscore a team like that 21-7 in the second half, that says a whole lot about our football team.”

The Gauchos built their big lead with an avalanche of huge plays just before halftime. They led 14-6 after a 53-yard touchdown run for running back Tony McAdoo early in the second quarter, then turned their first interception of the game into another score to make it 20-6 two possessions later.

Their second interception of the game ended Windsor’s following drive and ultimately made it 27-6 after a 45-yard catch-and-run score for Aaron Woodward.

Out of the half, McAdoo broke off a 54-yard touchdown run to make it 34-6 early in the third and suddenly made the prospect of a running clock seem very real. McAdoo finished with 282 rushing yards on 21 carries with three scores.

But Windsor responded with a 12-play, 67-yard scoring drive, capped by a three-yard touchdown run for Hayden Anderson, who barely played in the first half due to illness.

The Jaguars followed that score with a stop and then further cut into the deficit with a 31-yard connection between the Anderson brothers to open the fourth.

Looking to respond and put the game on ice, El Cerrito drove deep into Windsor territory on the ensuing drive, but Windsor’s Gunnar Erickson came up with a goal-line interception with about seven minutes left in the game.

The Jaguars quickly worked their way downfield but turned the ball over on a fumble at El Cerrito’s 30.

Still, Windsor’s inspired play continued as the Jaguars came up with another stop, getting the ball back at their own 43 with 3:40 left on the clock. Six plays later, they scored again as Judson Anderson hit McFerren for the 13-yard score.

Then, a perfectly executed onside kick gave Windsor one last chance at midfield. But with the game on the line, El Cerrito’s defense made one final impact play as Kamani Jackson hauled in the game-winning interception with a minute left.

“Our guys battled a team that’s probably one of the best teams I’ve ever seen, and I don’t think anyone in our area could have done what we did tonight,” Sexton said. “I’m proud as heck to be coaching our kids and to be the head football coach at Windsor High School right now. Walking off this field, I feel like we won this game because of how hard our kids played and how hard they battled.”

Judson Anderson passed for 258 yards with three scores and ran for another but was picked off three times. Hayden Anderson had 82 receiving yards and two touchdowns, a majority of which came in the second half.

The 27 points scored by Windsor is double the previous season high the Gauchos had allowed in a game all season.

Windsor players and coaches watched through tears as the Gauchos celebrated at midfield but appear poised to compete for another section title next season, with more than 30 of their varsity players set to return next season.

“We’re just getting started with our program right here,” Sexton said.

This is a compilation of Windsor high school football coa hstory.

Start End Years Coach Name Record
2004 2009 6 Jason Fayter 34-28
2012 2014 3 Vic Amick 18-16
2015 2016 2 Tom Kirkpatrick 16-9
2011 2011 1 Rob Gatrell 16-0
2018 2020 3 Brad Stibi 12-14
2017 2017 1 Kevin Ballatore 5-6

 

 

Windsor Football Coach History

This is a compilation of Windsor high school football coach history.

Coach Name   Record.

        2023-23 Dean Sexton

        2022-23 Dean Sexton

        2021-22 Paul Cronin

        2020-21 Brad Stibi 

        2019-20 Brad Stibi 7-4

2018-19 Brad Stibi 3-7

2017-18 K. Ballatore 5-6

2016-17 T. Kirkpatrick 9-4

2015-16 T. Kirkpatrick 7-5

2014-15 V. Amick 8-4

2013-14 V. Amick 6-6

2012-13 V. Amick 4-6

2011-12 R. Gatrell 16-0  2011 D-2 North Coast Section Champions 

2010-11   7-4

2009-10 J. Fayter 6-5

2008-9 J. Fayter 4-6

2007-8 J. Fayter 5-5

2006-7 J. Fayter 9-2

2005-6 J. Fayter 6-4

2004-5 J. Fayter 4-6