Topsy-turvy fourth quarter sees Clippers’ ship sink

Choppy waters

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Amboy senior Cooper Nelson follows his blockers Saturday afternoon against Mercer County. Nelson rushed for 63 yards and a score, but the Clippers lost 33-21. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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AMBOY – There were enough momentum swings in the final quarter Saturday afternoon at The Harbor to make even the toughest football fan seasick.

The end result, for Amboy, was gut-wrenching.

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Three minutes after the Clippers tipped the momentum needle in their favor, the Mercer County Golden Eagles swung it back the other way and won 33-21 to reach the Class 2A semifinals.

Three minutes after the Amboy Clippers tipped the momentum needle in their favor, the Mercer County Golden Eagles swung it back the other way and won 33-21 to advance to the Class 2A semifinals.

The tail end of the 18-play, 10-minute drive that gave Amboy a 21-20 lead with 7:28 to play was enough to give the Clipper faithful ulcers.

Tyson Powers sneaked over center to pick up a yard and a first down at the Mercer County 1-yard line. The senior quarterback pumped his fist when a measurement confirmed the third-down conversion, the Clippers’ fourth of the drive that began at their own 33.

Fullback Jackson Sorrells was bottled up for a 1-yard loss. A false start took the ball back to the 7. Powers’ cut back on an option left to get 2 hard-fought yards. On third and 5, he extended the play rolling left before fitting the ball into a tiny window for Jordan Ernst, who slid along the back of the end zone to make the catch despite wet-shirt coverage by linebacker Devin Morford.

“We saw that they were bringing the blitz, so we just wanted to try to sneak a tight end,” Powers said.

The sneakiness continued. Instead of Canaan Ross lining up to kick the extra point, it was Powers, who kicked PATs until Ross took over during the postseason.

“We were thinking, ‘Are they gonna notice this?’ “ Powers said. “They didn’t, so we got lucky there. We’ll take it.”

Garrett Liebing snapped the ball directly to Powers. He lofted a pass to a wide-open Damon Quest, who released off the left edge.

But then Morford got even, and the vaunted Mercer County passing attack finally went yard after being held mostly to singles and doubles up until that point.

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