The times. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1972-current, December 09, 2018, Image 9
SPORTS Bill Murphy Sports Editor | 770-718-3415 | sports@gainesvilletimes.com Unties gainesvilletimes.com Sunday, December 9, 2018 ATLANTA UNITED | MLS Cup Final Five Stripes win MLS Cup BY PAUL NEWBERRY Associated Press ATLANTA — Finally, Atlanta has another team it can call champions. Josef Martinez and Franco Escobar scored goals, Brad Guzan came up with a couple of clutch saves and Atlanta United gave the city its first title since 1995 with a 2-0 vic tory over the Portland Tim bers in the MLS Cup final Saturday night. Cheered on by the largest crowd in franchise history, United captured the crown in just its second season to set off a huge celebration in a city that has known so much sporting heartbreak. Owner Arthur Blank got to lift the trophy, just under three years after his other team, the NFL’s Falcons, squandered a 25-point lead in an epic Super Bowl collapse. Martinez, capping the greatest goal-scor ing season in MLS history, put United ahead in 39th minute. Escobar added an insurance goal in the 54th, turning the final minutes into a raucous, flag-waving celebration and sending coach Tata Martino out with a title in his final game as coach. He’s report edly headed to Mexico to take over as that country’s national coach. Atlanta reveled in its first title since the Braves won the 1995 World Series — a gap of 8,442 days, for those counting. After a surprising run in the playoffs, the Timbers were denied their second MLS champion ship after winning the cup in 2015. Since major league sports came to Atlanta in 1966, the only other team to win a championship in one of the five major sports also came on the soccer pitch. The Atlanta Chiefs claimed the title in the North American Soccer League’s inaugural season in 1968. While that team laid the groundwork, Atlanta United carried the sport to unprec edented levels in North America. The team shattered the MLS attendance record a ■ Please see UNITED, 2B TODD KIRKLAND I Associated Press Atlanta United forward Josef Martinez (7) beats Portland Timbers goalkeeper Jeff Attinella (1) to score a goal during the MLS Cup championship soccer game, Saturday in Atlanta. COLLEGE FOOTBALL CRAIG RUTTLE I Associated Press Heisman Trophy finalists, from left, Dwayne Haskins, from Ohio State; Kyler Murray, from Oklahoma; and Tua Tagovailoa, from Alabama, pose with the tophy during a media event Saturday, Dec. 8, in New York. Murray beats out Tagovailoa for Heisman BY RALPH D. RUSSO Associated Press NEW YORK — Kyler Murray replaced a Heis man Trophy winner by becoming a Heisman Trophy winner. The Oklahoma quar terback won college football’s most presti gious individual award Saturday night, edging Alabama’s Tua Tago vailoa and setting up a College Football Playoff matchup of Heisman win ner versus runner-up. The fourth-ranked Sooners play the top- ranked Crimson Tide in the Orange Bowl semi final Dec. 29 in the sev enth bowl matchup of Heisman winner and runner-up, and first since second-place finisher Vince Young and Texas beat Reggie Bush and Southern California in the 2006 Rose Bowl. This season, Murray stepped into the starting job at Oklahoma held by last year’s Heisman winner and first overall NFL draft pick, Baker Mayfield. Oklahoma is the first school with have Heisman-winning quarterbacks in consecu tive seasons and the fifth overall with winners in back-to-back years. “This is crazy,” Mur ray said in his accep tance speech. “This is an honor, something that I’ll never forget. Something that I’ll always cherish for the rest of my life.” Unlike most seasons, the winner was far from a foregone conclusion, but Murray (517 first- place votes and 2,167 points) ended up with a fairly comfortable mar gin of 296 points over Tagovailoa. Ohio State quarterback Dwayne Haskins, the other final ists, was a distant third with 783 points. Three more quarterbacks fol lowed: Will Grier of West Virginia, Gardner Min- shew II of Washington State and McKenzie Mil- ton of Central Florida. Murray was named on 92 percent of the Heis man ballots, third most all time. Tagovailoa’s 1,871 points received was the most for a runner-up in the 84-year history of the Heisman. Tagovailoa was the Heisman front-runner for most of the season, but Murray surged late as the Sooners turned to him and its offense to bailout a leaky defense down the stretch. Mean while, Tagovailoa picked a bad time to have his worst game of the season, throwing two intercep tions in the Southeastern Conference champion ship against Georgia and leaving early with a sprained ankle. Murray’s first season as a starting quarterback in college is set up to also be his last. The junior has already signed a $4.66 million contract with the Oakland Athletic after he was selected in the first round of the Major League Baseball draft in June. Listed at 5-foot-10 and 195 pounds, Mur ray is small for an NFL quarterback but talented enough to be an intrigu ing prospect if he ever decided to give it a try. Oklahoma’s late-sea- son Heisman campaign for Murray harkened back Bo Jackson, the 1985 Heisman winner who went on to star in both the NFL and MLB, and his Bo Knows Nike ads. “I’d like to do both (baseball and football) if possible,” Murray said Friday. “But I don’t know how possible that is. ” Draft analyst Dane Brugler of The Athletic called Murray a potential top-50 NFL draft pick. “The NFL hasn’t had a 5-10 or shorter quarter back have sustained suc cess in a long time, but Murray has a rare skill- set with his arm talent, mobility and instincts,” Brugler said. El IG El SCHOOL WRESTLING I Hall County Championship Troj ans take county title Photos by AUSTIN STEELE I The Times North Hall’s Hayden Cook pins East Hall’s Drew Highfield during the final day of the Hall County wrestling championship at Gainesville High School on Saturday, Dec. 8. North Hall wrestlers combined to go 104-8; good enough for first place at Saturday’s Hall County Championship meet North Hall’s Cody Smith pins East Hall’s Dylan Lee during the final day of the Hall County wrestling championship at Gainesville High School on Saturday, Dec. 8. BY NATHAN BERG nberg@gainesvilletimes.com Coming off a Class 3A state cham pionship, North Hall’s wrestling team has started off this season with a bang, keeping its hot streak alive with a first-place finish in the Hall County Championship on Saturday. The Tro jans won all but three weight classes, sweeping every classification from 152 pounds to heavyweight. The team also produced Outstand ing Wrestler for Hall County winners in Matthew Glenn for 106 pounds to 145 pounds and Dalton Battle for 152 pounds to heavyweight. And while North Hall’s regular lead ers continued their stellar seasons at the meet, the less experienced Trojan athletes stepping up is what pushed the team over the top of earning it the county title. “We’re very fortunate this year that our guys competed very well,” North Hall coach David Nichols said. “We had a couple kids that were kind of unexpected in the lineup who were able to get in there that hadn’t been wrestling in our varsity lineup that competed very well for us, so we were very pleased with that.” Nichols pointed specifically to Christian Contreras and Ali Rogers as less experienced members of the squad who filled in to help get the win. Contreras — wrestling at the 120 pound weight class — went 5-3 on the day after not wrestling in a varsity match all season previously to Satur day. Rogers, a freshman, also went 5-3 at 113 pounds. “Being a female wrestler is tough in a varsity lineup in a mostly boys sport,” Nichols said of Rogers’ perfor mance. “... I was really proud of her.” Outside of Rogers and Contreras, nearly every other North Hall par ticipant went a perfect 8-0 to win indi vidual state titles. Dawson Thompson went undefeated with eight pins at 106 pounds, while Jacob Pedraza did the same at 126 pounds. “He’s been great for us all year,” Nichols said of Pedraza. “We expect him to really compete for a state title. ” Damon Cambell was 8-0 with seven pins at 132 pounds, while Glenn kept his season-long undefeated streak alive, going 8-0 with eight pins and winning an individual county title as well as Outstanding Wrestler for Hall County for 106 to 145 pound weight classes. Hayden Cook was 7-1 on the day, losing only to the eventual state cham pion at 145 pounds. “He wrestled a great tournament,” Nichols said. “Just came up a little short.” North Hall won county titles at every other weight classification — from 152 to heavyweight — with nearly every wrestler from that threshold onward going undefeated at the event. Cody Smith went 8-0 with seven pins at 152 pounds, while Hunter Adams was 8-0 with six pins at 160 pounds. Dalton Battle won all eight of his bouts, including a county title clinch ing match against East Hall’s two-time state placer. The performance was good enough to earn Battle Outstanding Wrestler for Hall County for 152 pounds to heavyweight classifications. Logan West went 8-0 with six pins at 182 pounds, while Logan Hawthorne was 8-0 with eight pins at 195 pounds. Seth Carlton also won all eight of his matches with pins at 220 pounds. Bowie Eisenberg was 7-1 with six pins in the heavyweight classification, but because his one loss came against an opponent with fewer total wins at the weight class, Eisenberg won the indi vidual county title. Nichols said that while winning the yearly tournament is certainly an honor, merely competing in it is enough to make the Hall County Championship one of the team’s favor ite events of the season. “We always look forward to com peting in this tournament because the camaraderie among the athletes,” he said. “A lot of them train together in various training facilities in the off season, so there’s friendships there. The guys look forward to all being in the same gym together, and I look for ward to seeing all the other coaches. We all respect each other and value the direction that each coach is going with the program. We just look for ward to coming together and compet ing in this tournament.” Behind North Hall, East Hall was the runner up at the event. Chestatee finished right behind the Vikings to take third place.