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FOOTBALL: Team effort sparks big win for DHS

</element><element id="paragraph-1" type="body"><![CDATA[The Indians debuted their new artificial surface at Van Metre Field in grand fashion this past Friday night, claiming a tough 25-15 battle with Herrin that left both teams sitting at 2-1 on the season.

"I&#39;m very proud of our club, they performed well tonight, but they&#39;ve been focused every day in practice too," said Indians&#39; head coach Al Martin. "They focused all week, they had a good week of practice, and that&#39;s what it takes, the preparation is the big key and they prepared hard all week. I&#39;m really happy."

The win is the third in a row for the Indians over the Tigers, following three straight losses to Herrin and DHS alum Jason Karnes from 2006-2008.

"Overall I thought we played well at times, but in the fourth quarter the effort wasn&#39;t there," said Karnes, head coach of Herrin&#39;s varsity squad. "We didn&#39;t execute very well offensively tonight, our quarterback was running for his life at times. It hurts when you&#39;ve got a captain and a running back go out in the first series."

Brock McGee, one of the Tigers&#39; top running backs, left the game early in the first quarter with an injury.

After both teams went three-and-out on offense to start the game, Du Quoin ran off five-plus minutes of clock with a 72-yard drive that ended on Cayle Diggins&#39; 4-yard touchdown run with 1:58 to go in the opening quarter.

The Tigers answered right back, going 52 yards in 1:37 and scoring on Toby Coffey&#39;s 23-yard run that gave Herrin a 7-6 lead after the extra point.

Brandon Williams&#39; pounded up the middle for a 1-yard touchdown in the second quarter to put Du Quoin up 12-7 at the half, then on the Tigers&#39; first possession of the third quarter, the Indians&#39; defense came up with a stop in a first-and-goal from the five situation for Herrin.

The Tigers had a chance for good field position near the end of the quarter, but ran into punter for a 15-yard penalty to keep an Indians&#39; drive alive. Later in that same series, Sam Gossett connected with Daulton Donoghue for a 19-yard touchdown reception and an 18-7 advantage.

"I&#39;ve said all week, &#39;guys, I&#39;ve played in the system, played for coach Martin, if you make a mistake he&#39;s going to cash in," Karnes said.

Coffey would score a second time with 6:30 left in the game, but Diggins added a 28-yard TD with 1:20 to go for the dagger.

"We executed some things by a lot of different people," Martin said. "There were some key third downs and long yardage, maybe third-and-four or third-and-five, we were able to pick up some big plays there."

Williams (19 carries, 74 yards) and Diggins (12-70) led the Indians&#39; rushing attack that totaled 204 yards in the ball game. Gossett was 6-for-7 passing with Diggins (3-41), Donoghue (1-19), Jonathan Boss (1-9) and Matthew Galik (1-6) hauling in catches.

The Indians out-gained Herrin 279 yards to 209 and achieved 22 first downs to the Tigers&#39; 13.

"You want to come back, that was a tough loss (last week at Harrisburg), we wanted to rebound from that," Martin said. "We did, its a big win for us to beat a quality club like Herrin."

Du Quoin (2-1) hosts Anna-Jonesboro (3-0) in week four as conference play begins in the Southern Illinois River-to-River Mississippi Division.

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