Behind Platt’s monster night, Kim, Seneca Valley fend off Linganore

LINGANORE- Staving off slight tears of wonderment that were trickling down his face, Seneca Valley head coach Fred Kim took a moment to gaze off into the Friday night cool sky. Just moments removed from the wildest series of events in the recent years of Maryland’s high school football playoffs, Kim was flashing back to the rugged and misfortune filled path that has guided him to present time.
Along the way, there were stumbles and there were falls. It took him three years to get back to November postseason form, but all the painful memories faded rather quickly on Friday night as Seneca Valley fended off a hard-charging Linganore, 30-27, to advance to next week’s 3A West regional final against Damascus.
“Bend don’t break, always a philosophy we teach at Seneca,” said an emotional Kim, winning his first playoff game since 2012.

A large part of that “bend don’t break” philosophy is the 5-foot-6 violent roadrunner of Adrian Feliz-Platt who led an urgent Seneca Valley offensive attack out of the gates, finding the end zone three times in the game’s first eight minutes on runs of 11, 30 and four yards. Two of Platt’s three early scores came off of Linganore turnovers deep into their own territory.
“Linganore certainly helped us,” Kim said. “Looking back earlier in the game, those two turnovers were big. We had just enough.”
Seneca Valley took a 24-6 lead into the half and appeared the game would balloon out of control until Linganore’s Tyler Fleagle forced a fumble on the Eagles quarterback, Gaskins, that Daniel Ross took 23-yards to the end zone to chip away at the SV lead, 24-14 with 9:49 remaining in the third quarter.
Then a few minutes later and momentum swaying towards the Linganore sideline ever so slightly, Platt received a truck-wide seam up the middle courtesy of his offensive line and ripped off a 75-yard touchdown to energize the Seneca Valley faithful once more. The lead was pushed to 30-14 with 5:16 left in the third.
“My line stepped up huge tonight,” a wide smiled Platt said who finished the game with 224 total yards and four touchdowns on 28 touches. “That Lancer D-line is really good. I’m happy that they stepped up when they needed to step up. The holes were really big.”
In two games against ranked opponents during the regular season (Damascus and Northwest), Seneca Valley has only managed 10 total offensive points. So coming into the game, Kim and his staff knew they needed to put up points offensively and utilize weapons like the versatile Platt. It’s safe to say that game plan was exercised to almost perfection.
“I’ve never coached a kid with such incredible awareness,” Kim said. “You know the old PS3, Madden football, whatever it is where you got awareness? His would be 100, just off the charts and his hit sticks are incredible.”
As each quarter went on and as the clock counted down, the “Seneca Valley way” kept bending and bending.
Linganore pulled to within 10 when Musselman darted a pass to Jack Staub that he took 25 yards to the end zone. And then three plays later, Josh Faulconer scooped up a mishandled Seneca Valley lateral pass and hauled 63 yards down the field for a touchdown.
Just like that, a 24 point lead was a nail-biting three point game with under 11 minutes to go the final quarter.
“We warned our kids about (Linganore),” Kim said. “Their ability to regain momentum just like that. We squeezed our guys very hard in practice for moments like this.”
They bent some more, but seemingly did not break. With 23 seconds left, facing a 3rd-and-1, Seneca Valley needed one more first down to the close out the ball game. That’s when quarterback Petey Gaskins lunged forward and appeared to lose control of the football. Faulconer picked up the loose ball and took off for what seemed to be a walk-off 69 yard touchdown, triggering an electric atmosphere.
After a heavy discussion amongst the officiated crew, Gaskins picked up the necessary two yards needed for the game clinching first down and the play was whistled dead before the ball came loose.

Amid the controversy, Kim thought it was the correct call.
“It was absolutely the correct call,” he said firmly. “The whistle was blown and he had forward progress. It was the correct call.”
Linganore, meanwhile, losses their first home game since Week 9 to Middletown in 2012. The first half offensive hiccups that nearly costed the Lancers numerous of games this season nabbed their heels Friday night as they were down 24-0 with mere minutes left in the second quarter. They outscored Seneca Valley since then, 27-6, but it was not enough to keep the 2015 campaign alive for another week.
“We told our kids to keep playing hard,” Linganore head coach Rick Conner said. “The final play is what it is. All the 26 seniors this year are special. They made my fall.”
Many will be talking about this game for quite some time, speculating on the decision that was made on the last play while others will carry on, saying it’s the correct call.

Seneca Valley will travel to Damascus next week in the 3A West region championship.
“We had to fight through adversity tonight,” Platt said. “We’ll be ready for Damascus next week.”
You can follow me on Twitter @k_fadd and Maryland Sports Access @MDSports Access.

 

See the individual statistics below for other notable contributors throughout the game.

 

Box score

1st 2nd 3rd 4th Final
SV 21 3 6 0 30
LIN 0 6 21 0 27

 

Scoring summary

SV LIN
1st 10:33 SV Adrian Feliz-Platt 5-yard run (Genovez kick) 7 0
7:51 SV Adrian Feliz-Platt 30-yard run (Genovez kick) 14 0
3:18 SV Adrian Feliz-Platt 4-yard run (Genovez kick) 21 0
2nd 2:18 SV Rey Genovez 29-yard field goal 24 0
0:33 LIN Wade Stieren 32-yard pass from Nathaniel Musselman (Kick failed) 24 6
3rd 9:49 LIN Daniel Ross 23-yard fumble return (Musselman pass to Ross) 24 14
5:07 SV Adrian Feliz-Platt 75-yard run (Kick failed) 30 14
1:14 LIN Jack Staub 25-yard pass from Nathaniel Musselman (2-pt conv failed) 30 20
4th 10:42 LIN Josh Faulconer 63-yard fumble return (Sparacino kick) 30 27

 

Linganore individual statistics

Passing Comp Att Yards Comp % TD INT QBR
#7 Nathaniel Musselman 15 28 202 53.60% 2 0 100.6
#3 Wade Stieren 0 1 0 0.00% 0 1 0.0

 

Rushing Att Yards Avg TD Long Fumbles
#7 Nathaniel Musselman 20 97 4.9 0 14 0
#2 Davon Butler 6 21 3.5 0 12 1
Total 26 118 4.5 0 14 1

 

Receiving Rec Yards Avg TD Long
#5 Jack Staub 6 61 10.2 1 25
#3 Wade Stieren 5 82 16.4 1 32
#2 Davon Butler 2 8 4.0 0 5
#41 Alec Matthews 1 36 36.0 0 36
#18 Michael Rajnik 1 4 4.0 0 4
Total 15 202 13.5 2 36

 

Seneca Valley individual stats

Passing Comp Att Yards Comp % TD INT QBR
#11 Petey Gaskins 10 13 164 76.90% 0 0 118.3

 

Rushing Att Yards Avg TD Long Fumbles
#7 Adrian Feliz-Platt 25 181 7.2 4 75 2
#32 Darius Golston 14 68 4.9 0 22 0
#3 Antonio Fox 1 20 20.0 0 20 0
#11 Petey Gaskins 5 5 1.0 0 3 1
Total 45 274 6.1 4 75 3

 

Receiving Rec Yards Avg TD Long
#8 Cortez Ervin 4 114 28.5 0 54
#7 Adrian Feliz-Platt 3 43 14.3 0 18
#3 Antonio Fox 2 2 1.0 0 5
#32 Darius Golston 1 5 5.0 0 5
Total 10 164 16.4 0 54

 

 

 

 

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About Kyle McFadden 143 Articles
Kyle McFadden is a graduate from Linganore High's Class of 2014 and is a sports enthusiast. He got his start as a sports writer in January 2014 for LHS's student newspaper The Lance where he wrote 13 articles. McFadden then launched his own blog in October 2014 called The Beltway Dispatch covering collegiate, local high school, and professional sports. Formally known as The Beltway Dispatch, McFadden and Evan Engelhard merged each other's respective platforms in June 2015 to make what is now Maryland Sports Access. He brings plenty of sports knowledge to the helm of MSA as he has baseball, basketball and golf experience. McFadden covers a wide variety of sports in football, baseball, basketball, golf, hockey, lacrosse, soccer and specializes in the collegiate and high school level's. McFadden is volunteers his time at Damascus Road Community Church -- serving as a mentor to the youth, basketball coach at the varsity and junior varsity levels, and leads a small group of high school sophomores every Wednesday night. Although he has only been around journalism since January 2014, his work has appeared in Maryland newspapers such as The Daily Times (Delmarva Now), The Hometown Observer, Germantown Pulse, and regularly in the The Frederick News-Post. He's also won two Frederick News-Post Mike Powell Excellence in Journalism awards and has appeared on The Best of SNO, which showcases top student work of high school and college journalists. McFadden also holds positions at The Frederick News-Post as a freelance sports journalist, DMVelite as a high school basketball writer and analyst, MocoFootball.com as a Maryland high school football analyst, and as a staff writer for Maryland's Yahoo! Rivals. McFadden currently studies at Frederick Community College and plans to transfer to the University of Maryland in the fall of 2017 to work on a bachelor's degree in business and journalism as he has aspirations to be a columnist for ESPN.
Contact: Twitter

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