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Xtreme
Outrage Orlando
By
David Curtis - Xtreme Team Reporter
Los
Angeles - (19 March 2001) -- Sunday
afternoons game between the Los Angeles Xtreme and the
Orlando Rage figured to be a seesaw affair. Orlando came in
as the league leader in rushing and points, while LA boasted
the leading passer and receivers with the best individual marks
for catches and touchdowns. So it was an especially good sign
that the Xtreme scored first. And second. And third. And fourth.
And fifth. And sixth.
The
floodgates opened as quickly as the lanes for return man Damon
Gibson, who brought back a punt 50 yards to the Rage 20 with
just 2:51 gone in the first quarter. The Xtreme went three-and-out
and settled for a 29-yard Jose Cortez field goal. But no matter.
On Orlandos third punt, Gibson worked his way to the sideline
and raced for 34 yards (plus a five-yard penalty) to the Rage
14. This time LA went three-and-in to the end zone. Tommy
Maddox lunged over the line of scrimmage from a "yard"
out to give his team a 9-0 lead.
The
point-after try failed. But no matter. Cortez added another
three from 31, and Gibson set up another six on a slot screen
by cutting wide, accelerating, and then weaving back inside
again for a gain of 32. Darnell McDonald capped the latter drive
with a short slant for the score.
Finding
themselves down 18-0 at the halfs two-minute warning,
the Rage began moving the ball effectively against a prevent
defense. Quarterback Brian Kuklick soon grew impatient, though,
allowing safety Leomont Evans to break on a deep shot and return
the resulting pick 57 yards. Kuklick was subbing for Jeff Brohm,
injured earlier during a blitz by middle linebacker Juan Long.
Brohm, it should be noted, hadnt thrown an interception
in four weeks.
The
Xtreme went right back to McDonald on the slant. Coverage was
much better than it had been on the previous strike, but he
still managed to haul in the pass with a defender on his back.
Jeremaine Copeland scored the extra point on a quick out. Twenty-five
to nada.
Orlando
made another push late in the third, most of it coming on a
perfectly executed 38-yard screen to running back Derrick Clark.
But no matter. Corner Dell McGee, once the weak link in LAs
secondary, shielded the much larger Dialleo Burks from a would-be
touchdown, came up with the ball, and eluded the befuddled Burks
to mount a lengthy return of his own. His yardage was largely
nullified by an illegal block, but the offense proceeded to
drive 90 yards in 11 plays for a final romp over the goal line.
Saladin McCullough did the honors, dragging a Rage linebacker
for a considerable ride.
Game
over. No; in fact, Orlando got six points of consolation. Well.
Same difference.
TEDDY
ROOSEVELT WOULD BE PROUD
Shutting
out an offensive powderkeg until late in the fourth seemingly
should involve unmistakable dominance. Yet LAs defense
seemed rather innocuous on camera. The Rage averaged a healthy
5.6 yards per play, committed only one turnover when the game
was in doubt, and didnt yield a single second-half sack
despite their frantic efforts to come back. The Xtreme simply
mastered the fundamentals, racing to positions that forced holding
penalties in the run game, refusing to allow many yards after
the catch, etc. McGee was a prime example of this understated
approach. With fellow starter Terry Billups out because of a
hamstring pull, he was the only true corner on the field in
base packages. The onus was on him as never before. And he responded
by beating Orlando at its own physical game. In addition to
his pick, he outmuscled Burks twice more to force incompletions
and made a solo stop on the 235-pound Clark. Just a few signs
of the attitude and discipline that prevailed.
STILL
THE ONE
McCullough
managed less than three-and-a-half yards per carry, but continued
to show why hes become the feature back. He flattened
a safety on an 11-yard catch and run and left a linebacker clutching
at air in the backfield on a 10-yard draw play. And that touchdown
thing was nice, too
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