Last night Micah Bowens Bishop Gorman Gaels got thumped by Saint Louis School of Honolulu. Micah went 12-21-0-2TDs. The main story of the game was the dominance of STL in the trenches. Bowens had to rely on his Ability to scramble and make people miss. He could fake out defenders in a London Phone Booth. He is super quick and has pocket (collapsing most of the time) awareness. When he tucked ball and took off, the excitement began. He had 45 yards rushing on eight attempts but the numbers are misleading because he was sacked many times. He was very good at extending plays. He has a very strong arm and throws a tight spiral. He also displayed nice touch on several throws. The STL QB looked much better because he had more time to throw. But Micah was by far the best offensive player on the field. His skills fit the offense utilized by PSU to a T. He also did a good job of throwing the ball away and not making any big mistakes.
BG was throughly out coached by Cal Lee and his staff. An interesting point, some of the coaches for BG played for Cal in high school and college.
Remember this name: M Botelho middle line backer for STL. He committed to ND. He was the overall best player on the field. Totally disrupted BG’s offense. There was so much talent on the field that I thought I was watching a D2 college football game. I would estimate that 20 to 25 young men that participated last night will get football scholarships.
Last note: Micah was always leading, always coaching his players up. I never saw his head go down.
BG was throughly out coached by Cal Lee and his staff. An interesting point, some of the coaches for BG played for Cal in high school and college.
Remember this name: M Botelho middle line backer for STL. He committed to ND. He was the overall best player on the field. Totally disrupted BG’s offense. There was so much talent on the field that I thought I was watching a D2 college football game. I would estimate that 20 to 25 young men that participated last night will get football scholarships.
Last note: Micah was always leading, always coaching his players up. I never saw his head go down.