High school football: Papoccia says Wilmington compares favorably with Morrison

High praise indeed

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Newman's Jake Snow fights for yards on a kickoff return during the Comets' 21-6 victory over Erie-Prophetstown during the first round of the Class 3A playoffs Oct. 27 at Roscoe Eades Stadium in Sterling. Newman must hit the road for the first time in the postseason Saturday to face a Wilmington team coach Mike Papoccia likens to Morrison.
Newman's Jake Snow fights for yards on a kickoff return during the Comets' 21-6 victory over Erie-Prophetstown during the first round of the Class 3A playoffs Oct. 27 at Roscoe Eades Stadium in Sterling. Newman must hit the road for the first time in the postseason Saturday to face a Wilmington team coach Mike Papoccia likens to Morrison. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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When assessing his team’s
next playoff opponent, Newman football coach Mike Papoccia
gave Wilmington the highest
compliment he could.

In a span of five sentences, Papoccia mentioned his team’s chief rival, Morrison, three times.

“We have a chance to go farther than we ever have in 3A, but we’ve got a pretty formidable team in front of us,” Papoccia said. “They remind me a lot of Morrison. They run a lot of Wing-T-type stuff, although I think they run outside a little more than Morrison does.

“Their defense is every bit as tough as Morrison’s, and they’ve always given us trouble. We’ll have our hands full.”

Wilmington (9-2) ran the table in the Interstate Eight (Small) Conference, and its losses were by a combined five points to a pair of Class 4A playoff teams, Coal City and Plano.

Leading the way for the Wildcats is halfback Mike Wolfe, who has 138 carries for 1,091 yards and 11 touchdowns. Fullback Chris Tworek has added 992 yards
on 150 attempts, with 14
touchdowns.

Wilmington has also been effective through the air. Quarterback Sean Liaromatis has completed 59 of 113 passes for 1,021 yards, with 13 TDs and just two interceptions. Wolfe and wide receiver Dan O’Leary each have 14 receptions for a combined 474 yards and eight TDs.

The Wildcats have averaged 34.1 points per game, while allowing just 8.4. Newman, meanwhile, has scored 30.3 points per game while also allowing 8.4 per game.

A week ago, Newman (11-0) for the most part bottled up a prolific Monmouth-Roseville attack led by shifty halfback Martell Hunter, who had just 72 yards after entering the game with more than 1,600.

“We’ve played great defense all year,” Papoccia said, “and I think in the playoffs, we’ve even been getting better at it. The kids have been up to the challenge. We’ve been playing physical, we’ve been tackling very well and we’ve got a lot of kids to the ball. That’s the key to playing good defense.”

When the Comets have the ball, they’ll try to forge ahead against a team as stingy as they come, led by a 6-foot-3, 281-pound force in the middle in defensive tackle Derrick Romano. The Wildcats have given up just 22 playoff points against two Class 3A powers, Byron and St. Joseph-Ogden.

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