4 min read

JOSH BURKE from Freeport intercepts a pass by Poland’s Brady Downing as Andrew Demers tries to make a tackle during Saturday afternoon’s game against Poland. The Falcons won, 22-8.
JOSH BURKE from Freeport intercepts a pass by Poland’s Brady Downing as Andrew Demers tries to make a tackle during Saturday afternoon’s game against Poland. The Falcons won, 22-8.
FREEPORT

Josh Burke’s been waiting for this one.

The Freeport High School quarterback was a freshman the last time his football team won — it was a wild, double-overtime homecoming game in 2014 against Mountain Valley. And he was a running back.

FREEPORT’S TJ Morrill runs with the ball as Poland’s Zach Cote gives chase during the Saturday afternoon game in Freeport.
FREEPORT’S TJ Morrill runs with the ball as Poland’s Zach Cote gives chase during the Saturday afternoon game in Freeport.
In his first game behind center on Saturday against Poland, Burke went back to his ground-game roots to deliver a much-needed victory to the program. One comeback, one pass and a lot of time in the trenches led to a 22-8 Class C South win for the Falcons.

“This is one of our biggest wins for the program,” Burke said. “We just came off an 0-8 season, not many people thought we could do it, but we have the heart. We just know we can do it, and we showed them today that we can.”

Advertisement

“There’s so many emotions right now,” Freeport coach Paul St. Pierre said after earning his first coaching win. “Last year was a very difficult year. I’m just so proud of this entire town — the entire team, all these players, all these coaches. This was a win by everybody. There was no one man or one coach that did this. It feels really good.”

It didn’t take Burke long to get on the field in his debut. On the very first play of the game, Poland’s (0-1) Austin Bouchard took a hand-off and darted 65 yards down the sideline and into the end zone. After a 2-point conversion, the Freeport ( 1- 0) offense was in just about the earliest hole possible and it was stuck in it for a while.

Burke’s first 15 plays went nowhere, and the Falcons were on the verge of blowing great field position (botched Poland punt) when a crucial block-in-the-back penalty gave the Falcons life.

Then, from inside the 10- yard-line, two rushes from Burke were capped with a 3- yard score from TJ Morrill. A 2-point conversion tied the game.

“It was a real slugfest out there,” St. Pierre said. “We had a strategy coming in and after a couple plays, we had to throw it out. Josh (Burke), I think he did great holding his composure. We just had to go out there and make some adjustments.”

Burke managed 43 yards rushing on 14 carries. Of his 10 pass attempts, just two were caught, but one was huge.

Advertisement

Late in the fourth quarter, after coughing up the ball on the 11-yard-line and then quickly forcing a Poland punt, Burke and the Falcons started a drive at midfield. Stuffed for a 7-yard loss on the first rush, St. Pierre dialed up a needed pass play that sent Morrill sprinting down the right sideline. Burke lofted it up and Morrill laid out to complete a 33- yard play that put Freeport in the red zone. Another Poland penalty led to a first-and-goal, which Burke quickly turned into a touchdown on a 2-yard scamper.

“We work that play a ton during 7-on-7 passing,” St. Pierre said of the big gain. “We knew we were going to be mostly a running team this year, but we knew we had to throw the ball once in a while. We need to have that connection.”

Stopped cold

Poland’s ensuing possession, down 15-8 with 4:28 left to play, was a quick one. It began with another penalty and ended with a game-sealing pick-six. On third-and-long, Knights’ quarterback Brady Downing was swarmed with pressure and tried to release the ball, but Connor Dostie corralled a deflection and ran it 53 yards down the field. Another extra point from Morrill made the score 22-8 and it was all over — both the game and the losing skid.

“You know, they made more plays than us. That’s the bottom line,” Poland coach and former Brunswick athletic director Gene Keene said. “It was knock-down, drag-out. Both teams made some plays and they made more than us.”

Bouchard, who carried the ball a game-high 19 times, was stuffed three times in the second half, running for just five yards on his longest play. Of his 114 total yards, 105 came in the first half. It took Freeport a few drives to settle in, but when the Falcons did, Bouchard was silenced.

Advertisement

“It was probably that first-play jitter,” Burke said. “They only got one big play on us, really. Then we just all got together and our defense is just strong.”

Downing was 5-of-12 for 42 yards through the air with two interceptions. The Knights didn’t run more than five plays on any drive in the second half and turned the ball over on downs twice in the game.

Keene’s only explanation was to “go back to the drawing board.”

Freeport used a stable of running backs in the game, with Cody Vachon matching Morrill’s 38 total yards. The two sides combined for 15 penalties.

Cleaning up those penalties is one of the many things St. Pierre and the Falcons will be working on in practice this week, but Saturday was for congratulations.

After Dostie’s pick-six, St. Pierre turned to the Freeport crowd and yelled, “This is our first win in two years, let’s go!”

Advertisement

It was an experience he said the coaches, fans, and most importantly the players, needed.

“It’s going to be tough every week,” said St. Pierre, whose Falcons visit Wells this upcoming Friday at 7 p.m. “But the great thing is now, we have confidence going. The experience is everything. Many of these guys just got their first varsity win, so that experience is everything. We’re going to keep building on it.”


Comments are not available on this story. Read more about why we allow commenting on some stories and not on others.