Juan Diego running back Cody Berg has been Mr. Reliable for the Soaring Eagle in 2010. There's drama ahead in 3A.
Stuart Johnson, Deseret News
Heading into the final week of the 2010 regular season, sizing up Class 3A was fairly easy.
There were top-ranked Hurricane, two-time defending champ Juan Diego and a whole bunch of other secondary contenders.
But it's hardly as easy to figure out 3A now.
Not after what the Cedar Redmen did to Hurricane last Thursday.
In a highly anticipated matchup to decide the No. 1 seed from Region 9, Cedar simply blew the doors down against Hurricane, a team that had been ranked No. 1 for almost the entire season.
The Redmen stunningly jumped out to a 38-7 lead early in the fourth quarter, then held on from there to ultimately win 44-30 in a game that sent reverberations throughout the state.
It was an absolute shocker — shocking because of the way that Cedar obliterated Hurricane — and it's made everyone rethink what they thought they knew heading into the opening round of the 3A tournament this weekend.
"Definitely," said Juan Diego coach John Colosimo when asked whether Cedar's big win changed his thinking. "I knew that Cedar was a good team, and I wouldn't have been surprised if they beat those guys, but they seemed to do it easily. It does change it."
Atop the list of changed considerations, Colosimo believes Cedar, with star running back Matt Grover leading the way, should now be considered one of 3A's leading contenders.
Rest assured that Hurricane coach Chris Homer, whose team was badly humbled last week, believes that Cedar is one of 3A's best teams, if not its best.
"I believe that," said Homer. "First of all, they have really great coaching and they buy into what they do. It just seems like they're so deep in a lot of positions where maybe in the past they haven't been quite so deep. Their best player, Grover, got hurt very early in our game and didn't play a whole lot in the first half, and they just plugged in another fullback and kept chugging away."
Continuing to chug away is the much-harder-than-it-sounds challenge for Cedar coach Todd Peacock, who hopes his players can find a way to somehow sustain their high level of play over the next several weeks.
Peacock, for his part, believes that any number of teams could ultimately win the 3A state championship, a sentiment shared by Homer, Colosimo and a bunch of other folks.
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