Reprinted
From November 7, 2009 Salem News
Defense does the deed for
Danvers
By Matt Jenkins
staff writer
WINTHROP — The
Danvers football team was in danger of letting a win slip away
last night at Miller Field. But, just like it had done all night, the Falcon defense came
up with the play to keep Winthrop an arm's length away.
Senior linebacker Dan Skinner stepped in front of Viking Frank
Ambrosino for an interception that killed Winthrop's only scoring
chance of the second half, and Danvers added a late touchdown to
pull away for a 16-3 victory.
Pinned at its own 1-yard line, Winthrop punter Will Milano voluntarily
stepped out of the back of the end zone, taking the safety that
gave Danvers a 9-3 lead. Milano's free kick from the 20-yard line
was then misplayed by Danvers, setting the Vikings up at the Falcon
33.
Three plays later, Skinner made the play that saved the day.
"Taking the safety was the best thing to do because we needed
a touchdown anyway," Winthrop coach Sean Driscoll said. "The
punt worked out when we got the turnover, but you just can't turn
the ball over on crucial plays during crucial parts of the game."
Winthrop, which played without tailback Nick McCarthy who may
be done for the year with a broken hand, leaned heavily on Milano,
its signal caller.
Milano, who needs only four more touchdown passes to become Winthrop's
all-time leader, was completely shut down by the Danvers defense
in the second half. After completing 5-of-12 passes for 74 yards
before intermission, Milano was limited to one completion on 11
attempts and three interceptions after the break.
"He can really play; he tore us apart last year," Danvers
coach John Sullivan said of Milano. "Our defense really played
tough. We held them to three points and a goal-line stand in the
first half. We had talked about it at halftime, if we had to come
out of here 7-3 we were going to."
Danvers took a 7-0 lead in the second quarter on a Clinton Lutz
29-yard run and a Greg Ladd extra point with a shade over three
minutes left in the half.
Winthrop (3-6) came through with its best drive of the night late
in the half, marching 67 yards to the Danvers 5-yard line. A Viking
penalty and an incompletion forced Robert Deeb to kick a 27-yard
field goal at the end of the half.
Danvers got two interceptions from Steve Hennessey and Skinner's
pick led to John McInnis' 15-yard touchdown run that put the game
out of reach late in the fourth quarter.
Danvers, which improved to 5-4, got a solid day from Lutz, who
has taken over as the workhorse back since Eric Burgos was knocked
out for the year due to injury. Lutz pounded through Winthrop's
defense for 140 yards on 22 carries.
"Clinton is working well for us, and he's developed throughout
the year," Sullivan said. "Now it's his time. He really
carried the freight for us." |