Blaine Gabbert

The Longhorns' much-heralded quarterback, Nebraska-bound Blaine Gabbert, was just five of 16 passing for 64 yards and a pair of interceptions before he was benched in favor of his younger brother, Tyler, for the final 8:57 of the game. Tyler Gabbert threw for the Longhorns' lone score of the game, with less than a minute remaining.

http://prepsports.stltoday.com/ssi/prep/st...85?OpenDocument

Old newz...and obvious trolling... <_<

 
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http://prepsports.stltoday.com/ssi/prep/st...76?OpenDocument

Gabbert, Tobik help Parkway West prevail in a marathon showdownBy Brian Sumers

POST-DISPATCH

09/20/2007

BALLWIN — High school football games do not often last three hours, but with two of the area's best quarterbacks facing each other, Thursday's matchup between Parkway West and Webster Groves lasted longer than usual.

By throwing for four touchdowns, the Longhorns' Blaine Gabbert won this lengthy battle, leading Parkway West to a 35-28 come-from-behind victory in 3 hours, 2 minutes. It was the second consecutive victory for the Longhorns (3-1).

While Gabbert was the winner, the Statesmen's Mike Whittier was the hot passer — at least before the fourth quarter began.

With 7:26 left in the third, Whittier threw a 33-yard touchdown pass to Alex Bennett, putting Webster Groves up 20-14. Despite this success, Webster Groves (1-3) would not score again until eight seconds remained and the game was out of reach.

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Parkway West, meanwhile, scored three consecutive touchdowns after Bennett's catch. The first came with 49 seconds remaining in the third when Gabbert tossed a 55-yard swing pass, and the second came early in the fourth quarter, when Gabbert threw a 24-yard pass to Drew O'Connell.

Still, the real turning point came courtesy of the Parkway West defense. With 10 minutes remaining and the Longhorns winning by just eight, the Statesmen were driving deep into Longhorns territory. That's when Dan Tobik stripped the ball from Whittier and ran 72 yards for a touchdown.

"One of our linebackers poked it out a little," he said. "I just grabbed it out of his arms, and I ran for it. It got the team pumped."

From there, Whittier tried to lead his team back, but he did not have much success. The senior did put up stellar statistics, completing 19 of 33 passes for 272 yards and three touchdowns. His major problem, though, was his three interceptions, including two in the second half.

Another unusual feature Thursday was the game's length, which was drawn out because each team threw so many incomplete passes that stopped the clock. Because high school football games are not televised, they rarely last longer than 2 hours, 45 minutes.

"I definitely noticed it tonight," Gabbert said. "It took forever."
Stats so far:

PASSING

# NAME Comp Att PCT Yds TDs Ints Rating

Blaine Gabbert 39 87 44.83 566 5 4 77.225

Tyler Gabbert 3 8 37.50 15 1 0 73.409 (His little brother)

RUSHING

# NAME Att Yds TDs Avg

Keenen Maddox 51 280 3 5.5

Blaine Gabbert 32 209 1 6.5

Jerry Pankey 10 50 0 5.0

Ben Eskelsen 6 30 0 5.0

Chris Willis 1 3 0 3.0

Marc Verrilli 1 0 0 0.0

Tyler Gabbert 1 -9 0 -9.0

 
Last edited by a moderator:
More recent

http://prepsports.stltoday.com/ssi/prep/st...76?OpenDocument

Gabbert, Tobik help Parkway West prevail in a marathon showdownBy Brian Sumers

POST-DISPATCH

09/20/2007

BALLWIN — High school football games do not often last three hours, but with two of the area's best quarterbacks facing each other, Thursday's matchup between Parkway West and Webster Groves lasted longer than usual.

By throwing for four touchdowns, the Longhorns' Blaine Gabbert won this lengthy battle, leading Parkway West to a 35-28 come-from-behind victory in 3 hours, 2 minutes. It was the second consecutive victory for the Longhorns (3-1).

While Gabbert was the winner, the Statesmen's Mike Whittier was the hot passer — at least before the fourth quarter began.

With 7:26 left in the third, Whittier threw a 33-yard touchdown pass to Alex Bennett, putting Webster Groves up 20-14. Despite this success, Webster Groves (1-3) would not score again until eight seconds remained and the game was out of reach.

Advertisement

Parkway West, meanwhile, scored three consecutive touchdowns after Bennett's catch. The first came with 49 seconds remaining in the third when Gabbert tossed a 55-yard swing pass, and the second came early in the fourth quarter, when Gabbert threw a 24-yard pass to Drew O'Connell.

Still, the real turning point came courtesy of the Parkway West defense. With 10 minutes remaining and the Longhorns winning by just eight, the Statesmen were driving deep into Longhorns territory. That's when Dan Tobik stripped the ball from Whittier and ran 72 yards for a touchdown.

"One of our linebackers poked it out a little," he said. "I just grabbed it out of his arms, and I ran for it. It got the team pumped."

From there, Whittier tried to lead his team back, but he did not have much success. The senior did put up stellar statistics, completing 19 of 33 passes for 272 yards and three touchdowns. His major problem, though, was his three interceptions, including two in the second half.

Another unusual feature Thursday was the game's length, which was drawn out because each team threw so many incomplete passes that stopped the clock. Because high school football games are not televised, they rarely last longer than 2 hours, 45 minutes.

"I definitely noticed it tonight," Gabbert said. "It took forever."
Stats so far:

PASSING

# NAME Comp Att PCT Yds TDs Ints Rating

Blaine Gabbert 39 87 44.83 566 5 4 77.225

Tyler Gabbert 3 8 37.50 15 1 0 73.409 (His little brother)

RUSHING

# NAME Att Yds TDs Avg

Keenen Maddox 51 280 3 5.5

Blaine Gabbert 32 209 1 6.5

Jerry Pankey 10 50 0 5.0

Ben Eskelsen 6 30 0 5.0

Chris Willis 1 3 0 3.0

Marc Verrilli 1 0 0 0.0

Tyler Gabbert 1 -9 0 -9.0
good game gabbert :clap

 
Easy now. Gabbert is fighting an injury and playing through it.

He will break Mizzous heart MANY times.

BTW I dont think that is trolling.

 
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