Alabama Christian Academy

ACA Cruises to an Easy Victory Over Notasulga

For the second time this week, the Lady Eagles won easily as they defeated Notasulga 69-15, Thursday night. Alabama Christian led 15-1 after a quarter and the outcome was never in doubt. Katelyn Sutton scored seven of the team’s first eleven points to give the Eagles an 11-0 lead with 3:15 left in the period. After a Blue Devil free throw, Jaide Newkirk and Rachel Rine scored to give ACA the fourteen-point lead after one. Newkirk and Sutton teamed up in the second quarter to score 19 of the team’s 24 points to help stretch the lead to 39-10 at the half.

The officials seemed determined to get ACA out of the press as they called three fouls in forty-seven seconds against the Eagles. Fortunately, it did not help Notasulga as they missed all four free throw attempts. The balled move well in the third as four of the seven made field goals were assisted. Maddie Traywick closed the period with back-to-back scores to build a 57-12 lead for the visitors. The fourth moved quickly with a running clock, but the team played hard all the way through. Izzy Warrick was all over the place as she dominated the boards and dove for any loose balls in her vicinity. She even carried one of the opponents as she was fouled when one of the Notasulga players jumped on her back. The sophomore finished the scoring with two free throws in the fifty-four-point lopsided triumph.

Katelyn Sutton led the Eagles and outscored the opponent with 24 points and contributed seven assists, six steals and five rebounds to the team. Jaide Newkirk and Izzy Warrick both had double-doubles as Newkirk finished with 19 points and 15 rebounds and Warrick had 11 points and 11 rebounds.

The Lady Eagles close the regular season Friday night against Pike Liberal.

Alabama Christian Snaps Long Losing Streak on Senior Night

ACA began the final week of the regular season with victories. Both teams celebrated Senior Night with dominating wins over Ellwood Christian from Selma.

Boys

Cole Barsukoff started Senior Night with a bang as he nailed a three on the team’s first possession. Mac Moorer scored the next seven ACA points to extend the lead to 10-4. Darius Gardner closed the scoring in the quarter as Alabama Christian led 12-5 after one. The home team heated up in the second and closed the half on a 14-2 run to stretch the lead to 34-10 at the break. Moorer’s long-distance shooting was featured in the period as he totaled 22 points in the first half.

The second half flew by as both teams took their time on offense in the lopsided game. Christian Snipes, Mac Moorer, and Jayden Jones scored all thirteen points in the third period to give ACA the lead by a score of 47-14. The offense was slowed down in the third, but in the fourth, it was put in neutral and left to idle as Alabama Christian decided to just run the clock. Over the final six minutes of the contest, ACA had two possessions and took one shot as they played keep away from Ellwood. The Eagles triumphed in the end, 51-16.

Mac Moorer outscored the opponent with 26 points on the night with seven steals and two assists. Christian Snipes had eight points, three rebounds and two steals while Jayden Jones had five points and two rebounds.

Girls

Rachel Rine, the team’s lone senior, led the team in scoring, rebounds, assists and steals to spark a blowout, 72-29. The guard finished with nineteen points, twelve rebounds, eight steals and seven assists.

It took the Lady Eagles almost two minutes to score their first points, but once they did the rout was on. Jaide Newkirk and Katelyn Sutton scored the team’s first eleven points for an 11-2 lead midway through the quarter. The period ended with a 20-6 advantage as Rachel Rine and Marcy Gregory scored for the Eagles. Rine scored the first four points of the second and ended the first half with 14 points as ACA built a 37-18 lead at the half.

The lead continued to grow in the third as Campbell Hammett got the hot hand with eight points in the quarter. The bench erupted with the biggest cheer of the night as Marcy Gregory hit a three from the corner for a 49-18 lead. ACA led by thirty-eight after three quarters. The running clock in the fourth made the game fly by, but the Lady Eagles did manage to extend the lead even further. Addison Smith scored the last bucket of the night in a 72-29 annihilation of Ellwood.

Three more Eagles scored in double figures as Katelyn Sutton finished with 13 points, four assists and two steals. Jaide Newkirk had 11 points and 10 rebounds while Campbell Hammett scored eleven with two rebounds. Marcy Gregory also had a career-high seven points.


Both teams travel to Notasulga on Thursday. 

Lady Eagles Sweep Season Series with MA

Girls

Alabama Christian defeated MA for the second time this season with a 39-31 triumph over the Area foe. Both offenses struggled to score, but ACA did enough on to take home the victory on their own floor. Jaide Newkirk scored on the first possession of the game, but the Eagles managed just one more score the rest of the period. MA built an 8-4 lead after one as the home Eagles did not score over the last five minutes of the quarter. Newkirk scored four quick points to open the second tying the score, 8-8. ACA scored the final six points of the half highlighted by a Rachel Rine bomb to take a 17-11 lead into the locker room.

ACA would never trail in the second half although MA did cut the lead to two points a couple of times. Izzy Warrick and Katelyn Sutton each scored to start the second half to build a 21-11 lead. The duo closed the quarter as Sutton found Warrick for a score to give the Lady Eagles their biggest lead of the night, 29-18. MA scored at the buzzer to cut the lead to nine heading to the fourth. Senior Rachel Rine was injured near the end of the third and the offense sputtered for a while in her absence. ACA failed to score over a five minute stretch that covered parts of the third and fourth quarters. The visitors cut the score to 29-27 before Jaide Newkirk scored to extend the lead to four points. Sutton took the reins from there and guided the team through the final minutes contributing to the team’s final eight points. The sophomore guard assisted on the next two baskets and drained a three herself after grabbing two offensive rebounds earlier in the possession. 

Jaide Newkirk led the squad in scoring with 14 points and added six rebounds and a block. Izzy Warrick scored 11 points, 10 in the second half, with five steals and four rebounds. Katelyn Sutton had nine points, eight in the second half, with eight rebounds, four assists, and three steals.

Boys

The boys capped the night with a hard fought effort against MA, but in the end fell 44-55. ACA trailed by just two points midway through the fourth, but were unable to score down the stretch. Neither offense was clicking in a methodical opening period as the teams shot a combined 6 for 25 from the floor. MA led 7-6 after one. Devin Moseley connected from deep to open the second to give ACA its first lead of the game. Conner Mark and Christian Snipes also dialed long distance with threes to help keep the game close. Alabama Christian led 21-19 at the half.

ACA led for most of the third as Jayden Jones and Darius Gardner combined for 12 of the team’s 14 points in the quarter. MA hit a three with 1:08 left in the period to take a lead they would not relinquish. The home team was able to tie the game at 43 apiece as Tyree Saadiq found Christian Snipes for a score, but mustered just a single point the rest of the game as MA finally pulled away for the eleven point victory.

A trio of players scored eleven points to lead the offense. Christian Snipes had eleven with seven rebounds and two assists. Jayden Jones had five rebounds to go along with his eleven points and Darius Gardner finished with eleven points, two blocks, and two assists.

Alabama Christian Halts Losing Streak to MA

Girls

ACA stopped a fifteen-game losing streak to MA with a 47-38 victory on the road. The officials had no intention of going home as they whistled 55 fouls in the game. The two opponents combined for seventy free throw attempts while five players fouled out. ACA made at least thirty free throws in a game for just the second time in program history and the forty-one attempts tied for third-most ever in a game. The team shot 73% from the stripe.

Rachel Rine and Jaide Newkirk scored the first five points of the night to give the visitors the early lead. MA cut the lead to one by the end of the quarter and took their only lead with a basket to start the second. Rine answered on the next possession with a three and Alabama Christian never trailed again. MA managed to keep the game close and trailed 25-22 at the break.

Both teams left the offense in the locker room in the third period. Neither team scored for almost three minutes until Jaide Newkirk broke the seal on the goal with a score in the lane. The teams combined for just six points in the third. MA got as close as five points with 57.9 seconds left in the game, but Rachel Rine clinched the win with six straight made free throws over the final 38.6 seconds.

Rachel Rine broke her own single-game record she shared with Carlie Ainsworth with fourteen made free throws in the contest. The senior led the team with 25 points and seven rebounds. Katelyn Sutton finished with nine points, six rebounds, four assists and two steals while Jaide Newkirk had eight points, four rebounds and two blocks.

Boys

ACA fell on the road 47-61 against MA Tuesday night. At the end of the first period, Devin Moseley and Jayden Jones hit back-to-back buckets to tie the score, 10-10, with less than a minute to go. The visitors gave up a three and then turned the ball over against the press and fouled the MA shooter. After hitting one free throw, the home-standing Eagles led 14-10 heading to the second. Christian Snipes scored the first points of the second quarter, but MA responded with an 8-0 run to take a ten-point lead. The teams played evenly for the remainder of the half as Mac Moorer hit a trey to close the gap to 23-30 at halftime. 

MA stretched the lead to as much as sixteen in the third quarter as they began to take control of the game. Darius Gardner and Christian Snipes combined to score on three consecutive possessions at the end of the quarter, but MA scored on a putback at the buzzer to lead 47-35. ACA fought in the fourth, but were never able to get the deficit to single digits in the fourteen point loss.

Christian Snipes scored ten points to lead ACA withfour rebounds. Mac Moorer had nine points and two steals while Jayden Jones scored eight points with four rebounds, two assists and two steals.


Both varsity squads travel to St James Friday night to continue Area play.

Lady Eagles Start New Year with a Blowout

Girls

Alabama Christian enjoyed an easy night on the court with a 59-13 demolition at Pike Liberal Friday night. The Eagles scored the games first twenty-two points in a contest that was never in doubt. The win evens the team’s record at 7-7.

Rachel Rine scored the night’s first points with an old fashioned three point play as she was fouled on the made bucket. All five starters scored in the period which was puncuated by Izzy Warrick’s three to close the quarter. Pike Liberal scored first in the second quarter, but ACA responded with fifteen consecutive points led by Katelyn Sutton, who scored eight points during the run. Alabama Christian led 40-5 at the break.

Jaide Newkirk highlighted the third quarter as she hit her first career 3-pointer as the Eagles expanded the lead to as much as forty-nine points. The fourth period had a running clock and all of the Eagle’s subs played the entire quarter. The final score was 59-13.

Katelyn Sutton led three Eagles in double figures with 14 points, two assists and two steals. Rachel Rine scored 13 points with seven rebounds, four assists, and two steals while Jaide Newkirk also scored 13 with six rebounds, three steals and three blocks.

The Lady Eagles open Area play in their next game as St James visits ACA on Tuesday, January 10th.

Boys

The boys game started like the girls game with ACA scoring the first five points of the game on a Mac Moorer three and a Darius Gardner two-pointer. Unfortunately, that would be the high point of the evening. The Eagles did not score a point over the next five minutes of the quarter as Pike Liberal scored ten points and never trailed again on the night. A basket at the first quarter buzzer and the first five points of the second gave the Patriots a 17-9 advantage. The teams played even the rest of the half as ACA trailed 17-25 at intermission.

Again in the second half, the Eagles scored the first five points and cut the Pike Liberal lead to three points. ACA would not score again in the period as the team managed just seven shots over the final five and a half minutes of the quarter. The Patriots led 36-22 after three as they scored the last eleven points. ACA fought in the fourth, but could get no closer than six points and fell 38-44.

Mac Moorer led the team with seven points and two assists. A trio of players scored six points. Jayden Jones had six with three rebounds, Christian Snipes had six with five rebounds, and Devin Mosely had six with three rebounds and three steals.

The Eagles next play PCA on Monday, January 9th, before opening Area play.

Lady Eagles Defeat Tallassee in a Close Game

Girls

In the first meeting, two weeks ago, ACA handled Tallassee easily with only six players. Tuesday night, the Eagles were short just one player and struggled to find an offensive rhythm all night. Senior Rachel Rine’s presence was definitely missed. 

Campbell Hammett scored the first points of the night and the two teams traded baskets throughout the opening period. The contest was tied 8-8 as neither team scored over the last two minutes of the quarter. Early in the second the visiting Tigers took their first lead of the game with an offensive rebound and score off a missed free throw. ACA tied the game on two different occasions, but could not regain the lead and trailed 19-20 at the intermission. Izzy Warrick and Jaide Newkirk each scored six points in the half to pace the offense.

The lead changed hands five times in the third period, but a pair of Katelyn Sutton free throws gave the home team the lead for good with 21.3 seconds left in the quarter. Izzy Warrick and Maddie Traywick scored the first two baskets of the final period to give ACA a 36-31 lead. Tallassee responded and tied the game 40-40 with just over a minute left in the game. Jaide Newkirk scored in the paint and Campbell Hammett made a steal and scored to make it 44-40. After Tallassee made one of two free throws, Hammett grabbed an offensive rebound on an Eagle missed freebie and scored to seal the game. The last four possessions of the game ended with both teams making one of two free throws and Alabama Christian hung on for the 48-43 victory.

Jaide Newkirk was the game’s leading scorer with 16 points as she dominated the inside with 18 rebounds and four blocks. Campbell Hammett added 11 points with four rebounds and three steals while Izzy Warrick had 10 points with four rebounds.

Boys

ACA came out on fire in the boy’s game as a bewildered Tallassee coach called his second timeout of the quarter with 3:11 left and his team trailing 13-2. Mac Moorer and Conner Mark combined for three made threes in the first five minutes of the game. The Tigers settled down and cut the lead to 15-8 by the end of the period. The end of the quarter saw the first of seven attempts to stall or hold for a last shot by the Tallassee coach. Although they would eventually win the game, the visitors only scored once when they tried to slow the pace. Tallassee scored the first ten points of the second period to take their first lead of the night, and would never trail again. ACA trailed 18-21 after two quarters.

The offenses for both teams disappeared in the third period as the two teams combined to make just seven shots from the floor as Tallassee outscored ACA 9-6 to extend the lead to six points. ACA continued to struggle as the Tigers pulled away in the fourth. Trailing by just three points, the Eagles gave up eleven straight points to trail 29-43. Both teams added a basket in the final two and a half minutes as Tallassee prevailed, 45-31.

Tyree Saadiq’s ten points led the offense with four rebounds and four assists. Conner Mark had seven points while Mac Moorer finished with six points. Mark, Moorer and Christian Snipes were all held scoreless in the second half. Darius Gardner led the team with five rebounds.

ACA Sweeps Thorsby with Road Victory

After winning their first game of the year against Thorsby a few weeks ago, the Eagles completed the season sweep with a 60-41 defeat of the Rebels. ACA started fast as they opened up an 11-3 lead midway through the first period as four different players scored. The home team responded and closed the gap to one point as they scored the first points of the second quarter. The two teams played evenly to start the second, but Alabama Christian pulled away late with an 11-0 run, punctuated by a Conner Mark steal and score, for a 33-18 lead. The team moved the ball well in the stretch with three assists on five made baskets. The Eagles led 33-21 at the break.

Conner Mark scores after a steal.

The two teams traded threes to start the second half as Mac Moorer and Conner Mark hit from deep and Thorsby made a three and converted an and-one opportunity. With ACA leading 39-27, the Eagles scored seven straight points to extend the lead to 46-27 with almost two minutes left. The third ended with the Eagles leading 50-35. Devin Moseley scored the first four points of the fourth to spark the offense. The defense allowed only six points in the final period as the Eagles won by nineteen points, 60-41.

Jayden Jones drives to the hoop.

Mac Moorer led all scorers with 20 points and added five rebounds and two assists. Christian Snipes had 14 points, four rebounds and two assists while Jayden Jones finished with eight points. Tyree Saadiq led the team with eight rebounds and five assists.   

ACA Boys and Girls Sweep Ellwood Christian

Both varsity teams won their fourth game of the season as they dominated at Ellwood Christian in Selma. Alabama Christian overpowered the home standing Eagles as the boys won 90-19 and the girls won by a score of 75-34. The boys point total was the most since 2008 and the seventy-one point margin of victory is the second biggest in program history. The Lady Eagles offensive output was the best since 2010.

Jayden Jones drives to the basket for two.

The boys led 33-9 after a quarter and extended the lead in every quarter for the rest of the game. All ten players played and scored on the night. Four players scored in double figures led by Jayden Jones with 23 points. Christian Snipes scored 18 followed by Mac Moorer with 15 and Cole Barsukoff with 11 points.

Katelyn Sutton hits a layup.

The Lady Eagles were also impressive in their game against Ellwood. Leading 42-22 at the half, the squad took away all doubt of the outcome by outscoring its opponent 25-4 in the third and cruised to a forty-one-point triumph. Five players reached double figures as Katelyn Sutton scored 18 points, connecting on four threes. Rachel Rine scored 15 points while Campbell Hammett and Jaide Newkirk both had 13 and Izzy Warrick had 11 points.

ACA Survives Road Test at LAMP

Boys

A young team, learning a new coach, a new system, and how to finish games, held off LAMP in a 52-50 thriller Friday night. The Eagles have won three of their last four games and are showing improvement every time out. 

Christian Snipes hit the first shot of the game, but LAMP controlled much of the opening period and led 11-6 with 2:26 left. Devin Moseley and Mac Moorer hit back-to-back threes to give ACA a 12-11 lead. The lead switched hands three more times in the final 96 seconds as LAMP held a 15-14 advantage at the end of the quarter. Neither team scored during the first two minutes of the second quarter. Snipes broke the scoreless drought and put the Eagles back up by one. The teams traded baskets as the lead changed four times over the next two minutes. The home-standing Tigers finally put together consecutive scores and once again built a five-point lead, 25-20. Snipes and Darius Gardner combined for seven straight Alabama Christian points to take a two-point lead, but LAMP hit a triple late to take a 28-27 advantage into the half. 

Darius Gardner guards the LAMP ballhandler.

LAMP scored the first five points of the second half to build their biggest lead of the game, 33-27. Once again it took ACA a while to get in a rhythm as they scored their first points more than two and a half minutes into the period. With 1:15 left in the third, Mac Moorer connected from downtown to give the Eagles the lead for good. Christian Snipes added two free throws one possession later and ACA took a 40-37 lead to the final quarter. The Eagles looked poised to run away with the contest as the lead extended to seven points early in the period on a Snipes basket. To LAMP’s credit, they fought back and tied the score 48-48 with 1:09 remaining. ACA turned the ball over, but the Tigers returned the favor with an errant throw on a fast break opportunity. On the next possession, Darius Gardner was fouled going to the hole and calmly sunk his free shots with 33.8 seconds left. The defense forced a LAMP turnover and Gardner hit two more freebies with 20.8 seconds to ice the contest. The home team scored at the buzzer for the final margin of 52-50.

Tyree Saadiq looks for an open teammate.

Christian Snipes scored a game-high 24 points with seven rebounds and three blocks. Darius Gardner scored eleven, hitting all six of his free throws, with nine rebounds while Mac Moorer had ten points. Tyree Saadiq had a team-high five assists as he directed the offense.

Girls

The Lady Eagles had their chances against LAMP Friday night but shot poorly from the floor and the line as the game got away from them in the fourth quarter. ACA shot just 27% from the floor and made one of twenty 3-point attempts.

Alabama Christian scored the first six points of the game and looked ready to blow LAMP out, but it never happened. The Lady Tigers methodically ran their offense and trailed by only one point at the end of the first, 7-8. In the second, the contest remained close as the lead changed hands a couple of times. Rachel Rine and Jaide Newkirk scored the last four points of the half to give the Eagles a 20-17 advantage.

The Eagles built the lead to five on three different occasions in the third, but LAMP responded every time. The Tigers held ACA scoreless for over three minutes in the middle of the period and hit a three in the final seconds for a 30-28 lead. In the fourth quarter, Alabama Christian wilted under the pressure LAMP produced. The home team outscored its opponent 11-2 to start the quarter and stretched the lead to double digits. Overall, the Eagles were outscored 8-19 in the period and lost 36-49.

Rachel Rine produced a double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds with three steals. Jaide Newkirk had eight points with twelve rebounds and two blocks while Katelyn Sutton had seven points, all in the first half, with four steals and three rebounds.

Short Handed Lady Eagles Run Over Tallassee

Girls

ACA dressed only six players Monday night due to other school activities and injury, but the team was unphased by the lack of players as they blitzed Tallassee 67-36 on the road. Alabama Christian more than doubled up the Tigers in the first quarter to lead 16-7 and did it again in the second for a 34-16 halftime advantage. The Lady Eagles continued to pull away in the second half for the decisive thirty-one-point triumph. 

Jaide Newkirk became just the fourth different player in program history to score at least 30 points in a game with a 31-point performance. The last player to score 31 in a game was Christina Hayes in 2008. Rachel Rine finished with 20 points followed by Katelyn Sutton with 10 points and Izzy Warrick with six points.

Boys

For the second game in a row Coach Jim Sanderson faced off against a former player as his Eagles played at Tallassee Monday night. The home team jumped out early and built a 24-12 lead after a quarter. ACA fought their way back into it as they cut the lead to single digits by halftime, 33-25. The Eagles managed just 13 points in the second half as they fell to the Tigers 50-38.

Christian Snipes led the offense with 13 points. Mac Moorer, who made all three of the team’s 3-pointers, scored 11 followed by Darius Gardner’s 10 points.

Both Alabama Christian teams play at LAMP Friday night in the third of six consecutive road games.

ACA Boys Week in Review - Eagles Win Two of Three

ACA took two of three on the week to win their first games of the year. Veteran coach Jim Sanderson led the squad to its first triumphs of the year. After losing to Notasulga the Eagles rebounded with wins over Thorsby and Thomasville.

11-29-22 Notasulga

Alabama Christian began the week on Tuesday and fell to Notasulga in a hotly contested affair, 47-48. Neither team led by more than seven points on the night. Darius Gardner and AC Walters were both available to play and added depth to the ACA rotation. Tyree Saadiq scored the games first points two minutes into the first period. The Blue Devils scored at the buzzer on a reverse layup to lead 12-9 after one. Notasulga outscored ACA 8-4 over the first four minutes of the second quarter to gain their biggest lead of the night, 20-13. The Eagles closed the half on a 10-3 run to tie the game at intermission, 23-23. Four different players scored the last ten points as Christian Snipes and Devin Mosely both had buckets and Darius Gardner and Mac Moorer both hit triples, the last of which tied the game with 36.3 seconds remaining.

Mac Moorer fires from deep.

Gardner scored the first four points of the second half for Alabama Christian. Devin Moseley closed the quarter with two free throws for a 33-32 lead with 1:38 left. The score remained the same for the rest of the period. The offense featured Christian Snipes in the final quarter as he scored ten of the team’s fourteen points. Trailing by two points, Snipes was fouled with 32.8 seconds left in the game. The freshman made the first but missed the second attempt. AC Walters grabbed the rebound and scored his only two points of the game to give the Eagles a 47-46 lead. The defense held and retained possession with 14.9 seconds left in the game. However, the inbound man did not hold his spot as he attempted to pass the ball in and was called for traveling and a crucial turnover. Notasulga scored quickly on the inbounds play and regained the lead, 48-47. After an Eagle timeout and two delays trying to figure out how much time should be on the clock, the home team inbounded with nine seconds remaining. Alabama Christian drew a foul and had a chance for the win with 1.7 seconds left, but missed both free throws. The Blue Devils collected the rebound and the game was over. Free throws were the key to the outcome as Notasulga hit all five of theirs in the fourth and ACA connected on just two of eight attempts.

Tyree Saadiq drives to the basket.

Christian Snipes led the team with 18 points and added eight rebounds and two blocks. Mac Moorer finished with eight points and two assists while Darius Gardner had seven points and three rebounds. Tyree Saadiq led the team with eleven rebounds and five assists.

12-1-22 Thorsby

ACA secured their first win of the season and gave Jim Sanderson his first as coach of the Eagles. Alabama Christian defeated Thorsby 61-52 in a contest filled with strange goings on. The Rebels raced to a 7-2 lead, but ACA answered and never trailed again as Darius Gardner hit two freebies for a 9-7 lead with 2:29 left in the first. The margin stretched to seven points by the end of the quarter as Mac Moorer and Sam Davidson hit treys on consecutive possessions for a 16-9 advantage. Thorsby scored the first five points of the second and the score stayed close through the rest of the half. Christian Snipes closed the half with a putback bucket to give the Eagles a 26-21 lead the break.

Coach Jim Sanderson gives instructions to his team.

Darius Gardner scored nine of the team’s first eleven points in the second half to give Alabama Christian their biggest lead of the night at 37-27. At this point in the period, the strange happenings began. As Thorsby hit three 3-pointers and ACA scored one bucket, the score should have been 39-38 in favor of the home team, but the scoreboard read 39-39. As the scorer’s table was trying to figure that out, the Eagles went to the foul line and made the first of two free throws. The only problem was the refs didn’t see it because of the discussion about the score and the made shot was disallowed. The referee running the clock struggled all night as he seemed to be confused by the technological wizardry of the scoreboard control. The period ended with ACA holding a slim one-point lead, 40-39. The Rebels tied the score one last time at 43-43 before the Eagles ran off nine straight points and forced a timeout from the visitors with 3:20 left. Four different players scored in the run, highlighted by a Cole Barsukoff three. Unlike the game against Notasulga, the Eagles hit their free throws down the stretch, connecting on seven of ten over the final seventy-two seconds. The second unusual item was the ejection of a Thorsby player with just 16.5 seconds left as he said something the lead official didn’t like. No technicals or free throws were assessed, just sent the player off the floor. When the final horn sounded, the home team enjoyed its first victory of the year.

Darius Gardner scores two of his team-high 25 points.

Darius Gardner led the offense with 25 points, scoring 21 in the second half and adding eight rebounds. Christian Snipes had 18 points and seven boards while Mac Moorer finished with 10 points and two assists. Tyree Saadiq led the team with four assists.  

12-3-22 at Thomasville

Like the Lady Eagles, the boy’s team handled the opening quarter on the road very well as they led 14-4 after eight minutes. Conner Mark and Darius Gardner both connected twice from long distance to spark the offense. Christian Snipes picked up his third foul with 3:28 left in the half with a 20-11 lead. The rest of the team held their own to close the period as Sam Davidson and Gardner both scored in the final minute for a 24-16 cushion at the break. 

Sam Davidson handles the defensive pressure.

Alabama Christian had a strong third quarter as they outscored the Tigers 13-8. Christian Snipes scored seven in the period to lead the team as Darius Gardner, Mac Moorer and Conner Mark each scored for the Eagles. Snipes scored the first points of the final quarter for a 39-24 lead, the biggest of the night. With 6:58 left in the game, Snipes fouled out with the lead still at fifteen points. Without the freshman center on the floor, the Thomasville offense caught fire. The Tigers outscored ACA 23-5 over the next five minutes to take a 47-44 lead. At one stretch, the opponent connected on 3-pointers on four consecutive possessions. Down three, AC Walters hit one of two freebies to cut the lead to 45-47. After a defensive stop, Tyree Saadiq found Conner Mark behind the arc and the sophomore drained it for a 48-47 lead with 48 seconds left. The defense allowed only one shot and stole the ball twice from the home team to hold on for a dramatic one-point victory.

Conner Mark eyes his man on defense.

Christian Snipes led the way with 15 points and nine rebounds. Darius Gardner had 14 and eight boards while Conner Mark finished with 11 points and three rebounds. Although Tyree Saadiq did not score he contributed mightily with eight assists and six rebounds.

ACA will visit Tallassee and LAMP next week and look to continue their win streak.

ACA Girls Week in Review - Two Milestone Victories for Eagles

The Lady Eagles experienced two milestone victories during the week as Spenser Cantrell coached her first win on Tuesday against Notasulga and the girl’s program notched its 500th win with a convincing performance over Thorsby. ACA won two of three during the week as they dropped a game at Thomasville on Saturday.

11-29-22 Notasulga

To see the final score of the contest against Notasulga, one would never guess ACA got off to a slow start. However, with 4:42 left in the first, the teams were tied, 4-4. Coach Cantrell called a timeout and whatever she said worked. The Eagles finished the quarter on a 15-0 run to stretch the lead to 19-4. The defense forced nine turnovers and allowed only four shots for the Lady Devils over the second half of the period. Izzy Warrick scored seven points followed by Rachel Rine and Jaide Newkirk with four points apiece as they pulled away from the visitors. Alabama Christian hit their first five free throws in the second period to help extend the lead. Warrick and Campbell Hammett each scored four points in the quarter to lead the team. ACA had a 30-7 cushion heading into the locker room.

Jaide Newkirk goes up for a rebound.

In the third quarter, the defensive pressure continued and the offense caught fire as they scored the first fifteen points of the period and outscored Notasulga 25-2 overall. Katelyn Sutton terrorized the Blue Devil offense with five of her team-high nine steals in the third. Notasulga managed just two made free throws for their only points in the period. Even in the half court, the Devils’ offense had trouble functioning as the Eagles called off any kind of pressure. ACA outscored the visitors 13-2 in the quarter for a final tally of 68-11.

Izzy Warrick heads up the floor.

Jaide Newkirk’s 20 points led the offense with nine rebounds followed by Rachel Rine with 18 points, five rebounds and three steals. Izzy Warrick produced a double-double with 13 points and 12 rebounds with five steals. Campbell Hammett tallied ten points, four assists, four steals and three rebounds. Katelyn Sutton tied Hammett with a team-high four assists and had nine steals.

12-1-22 Thorsby

A slow start was not a problem Thursday against Thorsby. The Lady Eagles scored the first nine points of the game as four different players made baskets. The Rebels’ only points came after two Eagle defenders collided with each other, trying for a steal. The mishap led to an easy layup for the visitors. Alabama Christian scored the last fifteen points of the period for a 24-2 cushion after the opening quarter. The stifling Eagle defense forced ten turnovers and allowed only eight shots for Thorsby. ACA scored three quick buckets to open the second for a 30-2 advantage and led 34-7 at the break.

Coach Cantrell gives directions to her players.

The defense did not allow a field goal in the third quarter as ACA outscored Thorsby 14-1 in the period for a 48-8 margin after three. Due to the thirty-plus point lead, the clock ran continuously in the final period. At one point, the ACA defense deflected four inbounds passes in a row that took more than a minute off the clock. The Rebels were finally able to score from the floor with less than five minutes left in the game, but the outcome had long been decided. Alabama Christian overpowered the visitors, 50-17.

Katelyn Sutton passes to an open teammate.

Jaide Newkirk scored 15 points to lead all scorers with eight rebounds and three blocks. Rachel Rine had 14 points, seven rebounds, four assists and three steals while Katelyn Sutton finished with 12 points, four rebounds, four assists and four steals.

12-3-22 at Thomasville

ACA did not let their first road game rattle their nerves as they visited Thomasville. After giving up the game’s first points, the Eagles controlled the remainder of the quarter. Jaide Newkirk and Katelyn Sutton combined to score nine points for a 9-3 lead midway through the first. Campbell Hammett stretched the advantage to 15-5 as she scored after an offensive rebound with 1:50 left. Neither team scored the rest of the way as the lead stayed at ten points headed to the second. Alabama Christian was whistled for six fouls in the quarter and would continue to be plagued by eager stripes the rest of the half. The saying “There is a foul on every play if you’re looking for it” was brought to life by the officials as they called ten fouls in a three-minute span on both teams which brought any flow to the game to a halt. Jaide Newkirk picked up her third with 6:20 left in the half with the team leading 16-9. With Newkirk on the bench, the lead disappeared and the Lady Eagles trailed by two, 21-23 at the half.

The game remained close in the third and ACA took the lead on a Katelyn Sutton three. After the score, Thomasville ended the quarter on a 10-1 lead for their biggest lead of the game, 37-29. The Eagles were still down by eight with six minutes left when they started to chip away at the deficit. Izzy Warrick nailed a three followed by a Rachel Rine bucket to cut the lead to three points. Sutton sank two free throws with 4:17 remaining to make the score 39-40. Warrick gave Alabama Christian the lead with an and-one opportunity at 3:36 in the fourth. Jaide Newkirk rebounded the missed free throw and drew a foul herself to extend the lead to three points, 45-42. The Tigers turned up the pressure as the contest neared its conclusion. With less than a minute left, Thomasville scored on an offensive rebound to cut the lead to two. After an ill-advised shot by ACA, the Tigers were fouled and tied the score. The Eagles turned the ball over and the home team took the lead with seven seconds left. After another turnover, ACA got the ball back one last time with 0.3 seconds left but was unable to score in the 49-51 defeat.

Jaide Newkirk led the team with 15 points and six rebounds. Katelyn Sutton had 10 points, three rebounds, three assists and three steals while Rachel Rine scored ten with six assists and three boards.  

Eagles Lose Both Games in Thanksgiving Tournament

The Eagles opened the season Monday night as they hosted Abbeville in the ACA Thanksgiving Tournament. The year’s first game was the latest start of a season since 2005. Coach Jim Sanderson coached his first game as the head man at Alabama Christian.

Mac Moorer gave ACA its only lead of the game with a first-quarter trey, but Abbeville responded quickly. Although the game was close most of the night, the visiting Panthers never trailed after they regained the lead midway through the opening period. The Eagles trailed 7-14 after one quarter. Devin Moseley sparked the offense with back-to-back threes to cut the lead to 17-22 in the second, but Abbeville scored the last two buckets of the quarter to take a 26-17 lead into the locker room. 

Christian Snipes tips the season off against Abbeville.

ACA leaned heavily on Christian Snipes in the second half as he scored 14 of the team’s 28 points over the final two quarters. Abbeville had an answer for everything ACA threw at them and extended the lead to thirteen points at the end of the third. The Panthers scored six points in the final 30 seconds to make the score look worse than it really was. Abbeville defeated the Eagles 62-45.

Tyree Saadiq drives to the bucket for two.

Christian Snipes led the team with 16 points and 10 rebounds. Mac Moorer had 11 points and two steals while Devin Moseley had 10 points, three rebounds and two steals. Tyree Saadiq had a team-high six assists and he and Sam Davidson both had three steals.

Tuesday, ACA faced Sipsey Valley in the second game of the tournament. Both teams struggled offensively throughout the contest. The Eagles scored the first five points of the game as Devin Moseley and Conner Mark both connected from the field. Neither team scored over the next two and a half minutes, but Sipsey Valley scored nine points over the final 3:45 of the period to take a 9-5 lead into the second quarter. The Bears held a 17-9 lead late in the half, but Moseley and Christian Snipes both scored to cut the lead to four at intermission.

Devin Moseley battles for the ball with a Sipsey Valley player.

The second half began with another two-and-a-half-minute scoring drought for both teams before Tyree Saadiq scored to cut the Bear’s lead to two points. Christian Snipes gave the lead back to ACA late in the third with an offensive rebound and a free throw after the bucket for a 23-21 lead. Both teams traded scores to finish the period as Alabama Christian led by two after three. In the fourth, the offense went cold and Sipsey Valley took advantage with a 15-2 run for their biggest lead of the night with 1:19 left. Sam Davidson and Snipes added late scores, but the visiting Bears won the game 40-31.

Sam Davidson watches the Sipsey Valley ball handler.

Christian Snipes led the team with 13 points and added six rebounds followed by Devin Moseley with eight points and a team-high ten boards. Conner Mark and Mac Moorer both scored three while Tyree Saadiq and Sam Davidson both scored two points. Saadiq led the squad with five assists and two steals.

ACA Drops Two in Thanksgiving Tournament

Alabama Christian began their season as tournament host over the Thanksgiving break for the second year in a row. Spenser Cantrell, who was an assistant last year, coached her first games as the leader of the girl’s program. The Lady Eagles dropped both games as they lost to Sipsey Valley, 38-52, and Smiths Station, 50-56.

The Lady Eagles opened with Sipsey Valley and the tone was set for the game as the first foul was called eight seconds into the contest. Campbell Hammett scored the first points of the season as she drained a three to tie the game early in the period. Rachel Rine closed the first quarter by hitting two of three free throws as she was fouled at the buzzer. ACA trailed 10-13 after the opening period. After Sipsey Valley scored to begin the second, the Eagles ran off nine straight points to take a 19-15 lead. Rine and Jaide Newkirk combined for eight of the nine points to spark the offense. With 4:37 left in the half, Rine joined Katelyn Sutton on the bench with her third foul and had to watch the rest of the half. The squad hung tough as they were minus their two ball handlers for the rest of the half. Newkirk managed three points to finish the quarter as ACA trailed 22-23 at the half. 

Jaide Newkirk moves to the basket for the shot.

Jaide Newkirk gave the home team the lead as she scored the first two points of the half. ACA kept the lead for the first three minutes of the quarter. As the Bears overcame the deficit and took the lead, the lack of depth showed against the Eagles towards the end of the period. Sipsey Valley led 37-30 at the end of three. Every time the Lady Eagles scored in the final quarter, the Bears immediately answered and stretched the lead to as much as sixteen points. Campbell Hammett scored the last bucket of the game for the final margin of 38-52.

Rachel Rine brings the ball up the court.

Jaide Newkirk led the offense with 17 points while totaling 12 rebounds and four steals. Senior Rachel Rine had 12 points and four assists while Campbell Hammett finished with seven points, six rebounds and four steals.

In the second game against Smiths Station, ACA fell behind in the third quarter before making a furious comeback only to come up just short in the six-point defeat. Rachel Rine and Jaide Newkirk combined for ten of the team’s twelve first-quarter points for a 12-11 lead after one. In the second, the Eagles outscored Smiths Station 7-2 over the first two minutes and stretched the lead to eight points as Campbell Hammett knocked down a three with 3:54 left in the half for a 25-17 advantage. Alabama Christian led 26-21 at the half.

In the third period, the Lady Panthers turned up the pressure picking up full court and negatively affecting the Eagle attack. Smiths Station outscored the home team 18-5 in the quarter and held ACA scoreless from the field for a 39-31 lead. Jaide Newkirk’s field goal two minutes into the fourth period broke a 14:13 drought from the field that spanned parts of three quarters. The visitors held a 48-38 edge with 2:34 left in the game when the Lady Eagles staged a serious comeback in just under two minutes. Rachel Rine hit three free throws after being fouled and then stole the inbounds pass and scored again to cut the lead to 43-48 with 2:06 remaining. Rine was fouled again while shooting a three and drained all her freebies to cut the lead to five points with 1:13 on the clock. Campbell Hammett scored back-to-back baskets in a fifteen-second span to cut the lead to 50-51 with just 43.6 seconds left in the contest. ACA would not score again as the Panthers scored five points to close it out for the 56-50 victory.

Rachel Rine led the offense with 22 points, including a remarkable 12 for 13 from the line, and added five steals and three rebounds. The twelve made free throws ties for the second most made in a game in program history. Jaide Newkirk finished with 12 points, five rebounds and three steals followed by Campbell Hammett with nine points and twelve rebounds and Katelyn Sutton with seven points, six rebounds and four assists.

ACA resumes play next week as they host Notasulga on Tuesday, November 29th. 

ACA Football - 2022 Season Recap

Although the season ended earlier than wanted, this team, this senior class, and, in particular, this offense left its collective marks on the ACA record books. The 2022 team became the eighth squad in program history to win at least eight games in a season and the four-year total of 31 victories for this senior class is the best ever. The Eagles reached the playoffs for a record seventh consecutive year and Coach Michael Summers’ 15 wins in his first two years is the second-best total in school history. The offense posted five of the ten top point totals this year, including a best-ever 64 against Lynn, and finished with an all-time high average of 41.4 points per game. The scoring average bested the next-best season by more than six points per game.

Here is a look at the records and milestones that were reached this season:

Game

Hayes Hunt tied his own record with five touchdown passes in a game which he did four times this year.

Avery Stuart tied the record for most catches in a game with his 10 catches against Randolph County.

Preston Hicks tied the record with three touchdown receptions in a game which he did twice.

Tyson Summers set the record for most extra points in a game with nine against Randolph County.

Season

Hayes Hunt’s 35 touchdown passes beat his own record from last year by twelve.

Otasowie Dion set the record averaging 10.6 yards per carry for the season.

Preston HIcks (14) and Avery Stuart (12) produced the best two touchdown receptions seasons ever.

Tyson Summers’ 60 extra points set a new school record.

Career

Hayes Hunt

  • Third in completions with 247

  • Fifth in attempts with 383

  • First in completion percentage with 64.5%

  • Third in passing yards with 3,501

  • First in touchdown passes with 63. The next closest total is 38 in Eagle history.

  • Ninth in receptions with 49.

  • Fourth in total offense with 4,374 yards.

Corey Landers

  • First in rushing attempts with 574.

  • First in rushing yards with 3,573.

  • Fourth in rushing touchdowns with 34.

  • Fifth in receptions with 57.

  • Second in all-purpose yards with 4,700.

  • Fifth in total offense with 4,291 yards.

  • Second in total touchdowns with 45.

Otasowie Dion

  • Seventh in rushing yards with 2,048.

  • Third in average yards per rush with 10.2 per

  • Eighth in rushing touchdowns with 22.

  • Seventh in all-purpose yards with 2,882.

  • Tenth in total offense with 2,299 yards.

  • Sixth in total touchdowns with 30.

  • Fourth in solo tackles with 115.

  • Tenth in total tackles with 178.

  • Third in sacks with 12.

Preston Hicks

  • First in receptions with 119.

  • First in receiving yards with 1,698.

  • First in touchdown receptions with 23.

  • Ninth in total touchdowns with 24.

Avery Stuart

  • Seventh in receptions with 53.

  • Fourth in receiving yards with 1,037.

  • Seventh in yards per catch with 19.6 per

  • Second in touchdown receptions with 17.

Tyson Summers

  • First in extra points with 85.


This season will be long remembered for the success on the field and the special group of seniors who all played their entire careers at Alabama Christian.







ACA Loses Heartbreaker to End Season

Alabama Christan’s season came to an abrupt halt Friday night as Pike County stunned the Eagles with a 41-39 comeback victory to advance to the next round of the playoffs. The Eagles owned a 25-0 lead at the end of the first period, but the visitors fought all the way back to take their first lead of the game late in the fourth quarter. ACA finished the year with an 8-4 record.

The game could not have started any better for the Eagles as they scored early and often against the lifeless Bulldogs. ACA drove 64 yards in six plays highlighted by a 31-yard Corey Landers run. Hayes Hunt hit Otasowie Dion on an eight-yard score for the first points of the night. Pike County could muster just one first down on their initial drive and were forced to punt the ball back to ACA. The Bulldog punter fumbled as he tried to punt and William Milner recovered for the Eagles at the Pike County 39-yard line. Two plays later, Landers took a direct snap and ran 39 yards for the touchdown to give the home team a 13-0 lead. The defense forced a second straight punt to give the ball back to a hot offense.

Otasowie Dion rumbled 61 yards on the first play of the possession to set up a 1st and goal at the Bulldog nine-yard line. After a Landers’ reception moved the ball to the one, Dion punched it in for a 20-0 advantage for the home team. Tyson Summers boomed the ensuing kickoff in the corner at the one-yard line and the returner was tackled inside the five to back up the Bulldogs. After three unsuccessful offensive plays, the ball was snapped over the punter’s head for a safety which extended the lead to 22-0. After the free kick, the offense drove 42 yards in seven plays and set up a 35-yard field goal by Summers to give the Eagles a 25-0 lead at the end of the first period.

The Pike County offense finally awoke in the second period and scored on their first drive in the quarter. The Bulldogs drove 60 yards in eight plays for the score and were aided by two face mask calls against the defense. As good as the first quarter was for ACA, they cooled off in the second. After a dropped pass an attempted throwaway was picked off by Pike County and returned 46 yards for a score and the lead was cut to 25-14 just like that. Both teams had the ball two more times in the half, but could not score. The Eagles were plagued by another dropped pass on the first of those two possessions.

The Bulldogs took the second-half kickoff and cut the margin to 25-21 on a seven-play 59-yard drive. ACA answered immediately as Otasowie Dion ran 63 yards on the first play of the next drive for a 1st and goal at the one-yard line. However, the scoring opportunity was not put to use as three straight running plays netted negative five yards, and a missed 23-yard field goal produced no points. A Brady Smith sack helped stop the next Pike County drive and the offense responded with points. On a 4th and 5 from the Bulldog 14-yard line, Avery Stuart hit Hayes Hunt on a quarterback throwback for a 32-21 late in the third period.

As the fourth quarter started the standout receiver from Pike County took over the game as he scored all three touchdowns for his team in the period. The first score was a 25-yard reception in the end zone on a 4th and 8 yards to cut the lead to 32-27. On the next ACA drive, the offense converted a third down and later faced a 4th and 2 at the opponent’s 49-yard line. Otasowie Dion took the direct snap and squeezed through a hole in the middle and beat the defense to the end zone to extend the lead to 39-27. The Bulldogs responded as they scored on a short pass that turned into a 40-yard score as the defense was unable to bring down the Pike County receiver. With a five-point lead, the offense had a chance to work the clock but was unable to pick up a first down as they lost four yards in three plays and were forced to punt the ball to the visitors. The Bulldogs converted two third downs, the second a spectacular 31-yard diving catch in the back corner of the end zone to give Pike County its first lead of the game, 41-39. To ACA’s credit, the offense drove the ball to the 11-yard line after a 31-yard pass to Preston Hicks and a six-yard Dion run. The unit disastrously lost twelve yards on second down from the eleven and turned a possible 28-yard winning field goal attempt into a 40-yard try. After an incomplete pass on third down, the Eagle’s final field goal attempt was blocked and Pike County held on for the win.

Otasowie Dion led the offense with 196 yards on just nine rushes with two touchdowns and caught two passes for 13 yards and a third touchdown in the game. Corey Landers finished with 80 yards on 18 carries and a touchdown. Hayes Hunt finished 10 for 18 for 79 yards with a touchdown. Preston Hicks and Landers led the receivers with three receptions each. On defense, William Milner led the way with 12 tackles and a fumble recovery. Josh Kreitz and Blake Shaw each had ten tackles while AC Walters had eight. Landers and Dion had five tackles each and Brady Smith had a sack.

ACA Dominates in First Round Playoff Victory

Alabama Christian looked like a team hitting its stride last week against Bayside Academy and Friday night the Eagles continued to impress as the high-flying offense overwhelmed Randolph County in a 63-30 shellacking. The unit amassed 534 yards of offense while the point total was the second most in program history and set a new mark for most points in a postseason game.

The Eagles produced over 500 yards of offense on the night.

Randolph County received the opening kickoff and gave the impression they did not want the Eagle offense on the field. The Tigers held the ball for over seven minutes as they marched 55 yards in 13 plays for the game’s first points. After having a flag thrown against them on a 4th and goal from the six yard-line, which negated a touchdown, the home team scored on the next play from the 11 yard-line for the 6-0 lead. ACA’s offense responded quickly with a three-play 62-yard lightning strike of a drive to take the lead for good, 7-6. After having a big gain called back from a holding call, Hayes Hunt connected with Preston Hicks two plays later on a 59-yard bomb for the team’s first touchdown. The long pass play pushed Hicks to the top of the list in career receiving yards in school history. The defense rose up and forced a Randolph County punt with the help of back-to-back sacks by Otasowie Dion and Hicks. The first period ended with ACA leading by one point over the Tigers.

Otasowie Dion sacks the Tiger quarterback.

The second quarter began with another quick ACA touchdown. Corey Landers raced to the end zone on a 39-yard score to extend the lead to 14-6. The run capped a four-play fifty-yard drive. The defense forced a second straight three and out to give the ball back to the offense. The possession started deep in Eagle territory on their own six-yard line. The unit covered 82 yards in five plays, highlighted by a 47-yard pass to Avery Stuart, and looked poised to score again. However, three incompletions in a row forced a field goal attempt, which was no good. It would be the only drive of the night that did not produce points for the Eagles, except for the victory formation to end the game. Randolph County responded to the missed opportunity and narrowed the lead to 14-12 with another extended drive. The Tigers marched 80 yards in 11 plays but failed on the two-point conversion to preserve the lead for ACA with 2:40 left in the half.

Hayes Hunt readies for the snap.

The home team must have been feeling good about their chances as halftime loomed, but little did they know ACA was on the verge of delivering the knockout punch before the half. After the kickoff, the Eagles started on the 50-yard line and completed three passes to Avery Stuart to move the ball to the Tiger 12-yard line. The Randolph County strategy of playing way off on Stuart left him open all night in the short-pass game. On 2nd and 10 from the twelve, Hayes Hunt found Preston Hicks for a touchdown with 1:17 left in the half for a 21-12 lead. It looked as if the home team was going to let the clock run out and head to the locker room down by nine points, but after picking up a first down, the Tigers dropped back to pass again and fumbled as the quarterback tried to avoid the rush. Hicks came up with the loose ball for the Eagles with just 5.3 seconds left on the Tiger 23-yard line. As Alabama Christian prepared for one shot at the end zone they were assessed a delay of game penalty which moved them back to the 28-yard line. Apparently, the extra five yards of real estate was just what the Hunt to Hicks combination needed as the two connected with no time on the clock for a 28-12 halftime lead. 

Preston Hicks and company go for the fumbled ball late in the first half.

ACA knew they could put the game away with a touchdown to start the second half and that is exactly what the offense did. They did it the hard way as the drive started on their own three-yard line. Two direct snap runs by Otasowie Dion moved the ball out to the 28-yard line. From there, Hayes Hunt and Avery Stuart connected on three pass plays that covered 62 yards. The last catch was a 25-yard touchdown toss to extend the lead to 35-12. In just five minutes and nineteen seconds of game time, Alabama Christian stretched the lead from 14-12 to 35-12 to take full control of the contest. Dion starred on defense on the first possession of the half for Randolph County as he batted down a pass and later dropped the Tigers back for a three-yard loss on a 3rd and 1 attempt. On fourth down, Josh Kreitz tackled the receiver just short of the first down to give ACA the ball on their own 35-yard line. Stuart caught three more balls on the next drive including a seven-yarder for a 42-12 advantage with 2:10 left in the third period. The touchdown catch was Stuart’s tenth reception of the night which tied the single-game record. The quarter ended with Randolph County driving and Alabama Christian working younger players into the game to gain playoff experience.

Avery Stuart on the move after one of his ten catches.

The home team finished the drive with a score, but once again failed on the two-point conversion. Corey Landers helped the offense respond with consecutive carries on a two-play 55-yard drive to run the score to 49-18. The scoring rush was 48 yards long for Landers. On the ensuing kickoff, the special teams forced a fumble that was scooped up by AC Walters and returned 28 yards for a score, and just like that, the score was 56-18. The Tigers scored on a long pass play to cut the lead to 56-24 with 9:22 left in the game. For the first time all night, ACA took the offense down a gear and worked the clock as they featured backup Jordan Frazier. Frazier carried the ball six times on a seven-play drive and gained 59 yards including a 13-yard touchdown with 5:15 left in the game for a 63-24 lead. Tyson Summers’ ninth PAT of the night was a new record for most extra points in a game. The last score of the night came with 1:45 remaining as Randolph County cut the margin to 63-30. The Eagles ran out the clock in every head coach’s favorite way, the victory formation to extend their season for at least one more week.

Jordan Frazier alludes the Randolph County defender.

The offense leaned more heavily on the passing game Friday night and senior quarterback Hayes Hunt delivered with a career-high 312 yards passing while completing 16 of 21 passes and five touchdowns. Hunt also added 20 yards on the ground on six attempts. Avery Stuart’s ten catches for 188 yards and two touchdowns led the receiving corps. The 188 receiving yards are the second most in a game in school history. Preston Hicks tied his own school record with three touchdown receptions and finished the night with five catches for 125 yards. Corey Landers led the backs with six carries for 98 yards and two scores while Jordan Frazier had six attempts for 59 yards and a touchdown followed by Otasowie Dion with seven rushes for 48 yards.

Josh Kreitz tackles the Tiger receiver for a fourth down stop.

Defensively, Taylor Thompson and Corey Landers led the unit with seven tackles each. William Milner added six tackles while Avery Stuart finished with five tackles. Otasowie Dion had five tackles, two pass deflections and a sack on the night. Five Eagles, Blake Shaw, Preston Hicks, Josh Kreitz, Brady Smith and AC Walters, all had four tackles. Hicks added a sack and the momentum-changing fumble recovery at the end of the first half.

Next week, Alabama Christian will host Pike County in the second round of the playoffs.

Eagles Demote Admirals in Playoff Tune-Up

Alabama Christian took advantage of a road trip to Bayside Academy to end the regular season and turned it into a dress rehearsal for the postseason which starts next Friday. The two-and-a-half-hour road trip, a new opponent, and a hostile atmosphere were used as a preview of the Eagle’s trip to Randolph County next week. With the solid performance turned in by the team, ACA should be confident moving forward. The Eagles trailed 10-7 early in the second quarter but outscored the home team the rest of the way 36-8 for the surprisingly easy 43-18 triumph.

Preston Hicks looks for room downfield after a catch.

ACA received the opening kickoff and set the tone for the contest with a 12-play, 79-yard march that ate up four minutes and forty-three seconds of the first quarter clock. Quarterback Hayes Hunt showed off his running ability as he ran three times for 30 yards on the drive including a 14-yard scramble around left end for the game’s first points. History was made on the drive as Corey Landers ran for 16 yards on his third carry of the night to become the leading rusher in program history. The senior back finished with 140 yards on the night and has gained 3,395 for his career. Bayside answered with a long drive of their own to tie the contest. The Admiral’s possession covered 69 yards, capped by a three-yard run with 2:35 remaining in the first. ACA punted on their last possession of the opening period as a holding penalty killed the drive. The quarter ended with Bayside looking at a 1st and 10 on the Eagle 25-yard line and the score tied, 7-7.

Corey Landers breaks the school career rushing record on this first quarter carry.

Over the next three plays, Bayside gained just two yards thanks to tackles by Blake Shaw, Josh Kreitz and William Milner. The Admirals did manage to get three points on the drive after making a 39-yard field goal. The home team led 10-7 with 10:27 left in the half. The Eagles did not trail for long as they covered 80 yards in four plays to retake the lead. Otasowie Dion covered over half of those yards with a 42-yard run down the right sideline and Avery Stuart finished the drive with a 24-yard touchdown reception from Hayes Hunt to take the lead for good, 14-10. The Admirals tried to respond to points posted by the visitors and picked up two first downs, but the drive stalled at the ACA 45-yard line. The rugby-style punter held on to the ball long enough for Dion to block the punt which went out of bounds at the Bayside 31-yard line. 

Coach Howard celebrates with Otasowie Dion after a second quarter blocked punt.

Before the punt, points before the half were uncertain, but with the short field, 3:56 was plenty of time. David Ortiz-Ramirez began the journey to the end zone with a 10-yard run and Hayes Hunt finished it with consecutive completions, the second a 13-yard pass to Preston Hicks with 2:26 left in the half for a 21-10 advantage. As Tyson Summers connected on his third extra point of the game, he set a new mark for most extra points in a season. The Admirals had to decide whether to try and score before the half or run the clock out and try to regroup at intermission. The home team decided to try and get points and three incomplete passes later, the decision backfired as they punted back to ACA with 1:45 left on the clock. Corey Landers’ 15-yard punt return set up Alabama Christian at the Bayside 42-yard line. Hunt started the drive with a 16-yard scramble and three plays later found Preston Hicks for a 21-yard touchdown pass with just 32.2 seconds left before halftime. 

Tyson Summers sets the season record for most extra ploints made.

The home team received the second-half kickoff and after picking up one first down punted back to the Eagles. AC Walters broke up passes on consecutive plays to help thwart the drive. ACA began the second half much like the first with a methodical, time-consuming drive. The offense kept the ball for five minutes over nine plays and covered 77 yards. Corey Landers (30 yards) and Otasowie Dion (16 yards) both had big runs to keep the offense moving. Facing a 3rd and goal from the 14-yard line, Hayes Hunt and Preston Hicks connected for the third time on the night to extend the lead to 36-10. Hicks tied the single-game record with his third touchdown catch of the contest. The Admirals held the ball for virtually the rest of the quarter as they scored their only points of the half with 43.1 seconds left to cut the score to 36-18. Although his team was still down by three scores, the Bayside quarterback felt the need to chirp at the Eagle defenders which earned him an unsportsmanlike penalty. 

AC Walters breaks up a pass in the third quarter.

As they have through the latter stages of the year, the offense leaned heavily on Corey Landers in the fourth period. The powerful runner toted the ball on six of seven plays to move the ball to the Bayside 10-yard line. Just when the defense was expecting another dose of Landers, Hayes Hunt passed the ball to Avery Stuart for the score and stretched the lead to 43-18 with 5:45 left in the contest. The touchdown throw was Hunt’s fifth for the game which tied the school record. The passer has thrown five touchdowns in a game four times in his career. The home team had one last shot for something positive to happen as they took the field trailing by 25 points. The offense drove down the field and looked poised to post the final points of the night with a 1st and goal at the ACA one-yard line with 1:42 on the clock. However, the Eagle defenders remembered the actions of the Admirals after their last score and wanted to make sure their hosts weren’t tempted to be unsportsmanlike again. On first down, Blake Shaw stopped the runner short of the goal line. On second down, the Bayside back lost his footing on his cut into the hole and fell forward to the line of scrimmage. On third down, a convocation of Eagles stopped the running back to set up a fourth down. Desperate for points, Bayside called a timeout to have time for their last offensive play. On fourth down, the Admiral back ran left and tried to jump over Shaw, who was in the hole, and William Milner finished him off in the air for a dramatic goal-line stand to punctuate the victory.

The defense celebrates the game-ending goal line stand.

William Milner led the defense with 17 tackles while AC Walters and Otasowie Dion both had six tackles followed by Blake Shaw with five. Three runners had at least fifty yards as Corey Landers led the team with 140 yards on 16 carries. Dion finished with six rushes for 74 yards and Hayes Hunt had 53 yards on five attempts and a touchdown. The senior QB had a hand in all six touchdowns against Bayside. Hunt finished with 123 passing yards on ten completions and five touchdowns. Preston Hicks led the receivers with five catches for 72 yards and a record-tying three touchdowns. Corey Landers had three catches for 17 yards and Avery Stuart caught two for touchdowns totaling 34 yards.

Hayes Hunt looks for an open receiver.

The playoffs start next week as Alabama Christian travels to Randolph County to hopefully begin a long run in the postseason.        

Eagles Clinch Third Seed in Region with Road Win

“What a game!! What a great game!!” Those words echo through the minds of the ACA faithful who were present for the game at Southside-Selma on Friday night. The PA announcer drilled it into the heads of the crowd constantly throughout the first half. As the Eagles pulled away in the third period, the phrase was heard less frequently and by the fourth, the phrase had been retired for the evening.

ACA took care of business and secured the number three seed in the Region with a 56-38 defeat of the home-standing Panthers. The team’s sixth win of the season ensures a winning record for the fourth consecutive year.

New daddy, Coach Dockins prepares for the game.

The Eagles got the ball first and scored the game’s first points, but the drive was far from smooth. Corey Landers converted a 4th and 5 with a six-yard run and bolted 40 yards on a 3rd and 15 to keep the drive going. On 3rd and goal from the six, Hayes Hunt directed Otasowie Dion to an open spot in the end zone and completed the pass for a 7-0 lead. The defense looked good on the first two plays of the Southside possession as the home team faced a 3rd and 15 from their own 41-yard line. The Panthers proved they were capable of the big play as a middle receiver screen went all the way for a score and an 8-7 lead. ACA had the ball for two more possessions in the first quarter but lost ten yards combined on the two drives. Sandwiched between those two drives, the defense forced a turnover as Preston Hicks recovered a fumble at the Eagle 46-yard line.

Hayes Hunt points Otasowie Dion open in the end zone.

Blake Shaw ended the Panther’s first drive of the second period with a third down sack to give the ball back to the offense. Alabama Christian found some rhythm and drove 74 yards in 11 plays in a little over four minutes to recapture the lead, 14-8. Otasowie Dion converted two third downs with his legs and the drive ended with a 29-yard pass from Hayes Hunt to Avery Stuart to grab the lead for good. The defense stiffened as AC Walters broke up a pass and Shaw and Brady Smith combined for a sack to force a punt with 3:29 left in the half. That was more than enough time for the offense as Hunt hit a wide-open Preston Hicks in the middle of the field for a 43-yard touchdown on the first play of the drive. ACA went into the half with a 21-8 advantage.

Brady Smith and Blake Shaw pressure the Southside quarterback.

Although the Eagles kicked off to start the second half, the defense put points on the board to extend the lead to 28-8. On the third play of the quarter, Preston Hicks worked the tip drill to perfection as he intercepted the carom and raced 46 yards down the right sideline for the touchdown. The defense kept up the pressure as Corey Landers and Otasowie Dion both broke up passes on Southside’s next drive. On fourth down, ACA got a piece of the punt and David Ortiz-Ramirez recovered the ball on the Panther 37-yard line. Hunt and Stuart hooked up again two plays later for a 25-yard score and a 35-8 cushion. The home team tried to stay in the game with a 50-yard run around the right end by the quarterback to cut the lead to 35-14 with 7:54 left in the third.

Preston Hicks races down the sideline for a touchdown after an interception.

Alabama Christian minimized any momentum from the home team as Hayes Hunt went 4 for 4 on the next drive including a 42-yard bomb to Preston Hicks to move the score to 42-14. The touchdown toss was Hunt’s fifth of the night, which tied his own record for most TD passes in a game and was his 28th of the season which broke his record from last year for most TD passes in a season. Southside found its offense in the second half and matched ACA score for score over the final twenty minutes of the game. The Panthers closed out the scoring in the third quarter with a two-yard run and made the score 42-22.

Hunt and Hicks celebrate a third quarter touchdown connection.

As the final period started, the offense made a concerted effort to feed Corey Landers the ball and the senior back ate up time and yards against Southside. On the first drive of the quarter, Landers carried six straight plays that covered 64 yards and culminated with a five-yard scoring run to stretch the lead to 49-22. The Panthers answered with a nine-play 51-yard drive scoring march that cut the score to 49-30. Once again the offense hitched its wagon to Landers who ran the ball on three consecutive plays for 54 yards to run the score to 56-30 after his 15-yard score with 1:47 left in the game. Southside answered one last time as their talented receiver took a swing pass and weaved his way through the entire defense on a 72-yard trek with 37 seconds left in the contest. The touchdown finished the scoring for the night and the Eagles prevailed 56-38.

Corey Landers runs around left end in the fourth quarter.

Hayes Hunt finished the night with 15 completions on 23 attempts for 206 yards and five touchdowns. Avery Stuart was Hunt’s favorite target with a team-high five receptions for 69 yards and two scores. Preston Hicks finished with three catches for 101 yards and two touchdowns while Otasowie Dion had three grabs for 22 yards and a score. Corey Landers dominated on the ground with 164 yards on 17 carries and two touchdowns. 

Blake Shaw and friends stop the Panther runner.

Defensively, William Milner and Blake Shaw led the team with ten tackles each. Otasowie Dion and Josh Kreitz each had four tackles. Shaw and Brady Smith each had a sack while Preston Hicks had a fumble recovery and an interception for a touchdown on the night.

The Eagles close out the regular season next week as they travel south to Bayside Academy.

Thornton Era Ends for ACA Volleyball

For the past seven years, if you came to an ACA volleyball match, Emily or Alyson Thornton was on the floor competing for the Eagles. Today, in a loss to St. Luke’s in the Super Regional, Alyson Thornton’s career came to a close at Alabama Christian. Other families like Ainsworth, Baker, Entrekin, Faulkner, Hatcher, and Traff have represented Alabama Christian in volleyball, but the Thornton’s will leave as the most decorated sibling duo in program history. Both Emily and Alyson rank in the Top 20 in school history in kills, aces, and assists. They join Carlie Ainsworth and Sarah Ford as the only players to be ranked on the career list in all three categories. This season, Alyson became just the second Lady Eagle to lead the team in kills and assists in the same season. The senior finished her career ranked second in aces, fifth in assists, and twelfth in kills all-time.