Homecoming Court Nominations Available On-Line

Homecoming Court Nominations Available On-Line

The nominations for the 2017 Homecoming court are going digital!  All nominations for this year’s court will be accepted online.  There are two ways to nominate your classmates.

1) Join the Homecoming Nomination Class in Google Classroom (code r0bz5m) and complete the Google Form.

OR

2) Go to https://goo.gl/forms/t9DxFgpkNuBRWqrx1 and complete the Google form.

You must be logged into your Woodlawn High Google account to vote.   All voting will close on September 25 at 2:40pm.

Students must have a 2.5 gpa and no serious discipline issues to be considered for the court.

Defense Stands Tall in 14-7 Overtime Victory

Defense Stands Tall in 14-7 Overtime Victory

The Woodlawn Panther football team notched their first win of the season behind an outstanding defensive effort and two touchdowns by Louisiana Tech commitment Xavier Lodge.

Lodge took the first snap of the overtime period from the ten yard line, broke a tackle at the line of scrimmage, then carried multiple Hammond defenders into the end zone to give the Panthers their first lead of the game.

Senior linebacker Kerrington Hill tackles a Hammond ball carrier for a loss.

Woodlawn’s defense had to take the field for one final possession in order to preserve that lead. On second and goal from the two-yard line, Hammond’s quarterback fumbled the snap, and junior defensive lineman Kenneth Augustus pounced on the loose ball to send the visitors’ sidelines into celebration.

The Panthers used a ball control offense, often featuring Lodge or senior running back Chris Middleton at quarterback in wildcat packages, to dominate both the time of possession and the total number of plays. Woodlawn used 42 rushing attempts to gain 139 yards and keep Hammond’s offense off of the field. The Tornados finished the game with only 36 total plays, compared to the Panthers’ 61 plays.

As is often the case, special teams also played a huge role in Friday night’s contest. Each team fumbled a punt return and lost it to their opponent, and Hammond’s only points of the night came via a punt return with 4:30 to play in the first quarter.

Junior punter Jacob Barnes’ punt was picked up by a Hammond returner, who was quickly met by junior long snapper Evan Larson. A host of Panthers converged on the ball carrier, led by senior linebacker Kerrington Hill, who poked the ball from the grasp of the Hammond player.

However, luck leaned in the Tornadoes favor, as a Hammond player picked up the loose ball and raced 75 yards down the visitors’ sideline for Hammond’s first and only points of the night.

Two series later, Woodlawn took over on their own 36 yard line following a ten yard return by senior defensive back Braylyn Jones. On second down, senior quarterback Brian Byrd found junior receiver Bryson Reaser for a 14 yard gain. The Panthers were aided by a 15 yard penalty for a late hit on Reaser after he was knocked out of bounds. The Panthers controlled the ball for eleven more plays, with Lodge finally reaching the end zone on a four yard carry, knotting the score at seven.

Neither offense was able to cross the goal line again in regulation.

The Panthers (1-1) held the Tornadoes (0-2) to 21 total yards. Eleven of those yards came on the ground on 29 carries, while Hammond completed 4 of 7 passes for ten yards. Much of that yardage came on the final drive of regulation, when the Panther defense sat in a prevent defense to keep the game tied.

“The defense continues to keep us in games. We must do a better job in the other two phases of the game to be successful going forward,” Woodlawn coach Daniel Luquet said.

Senior receive Joshua London takes the hand-off from senior quarterback Brian Byrd.

Byrd, in only his second start since returning from a knee injury which ended his junior season, improved from the season opener. The quarterback completed 6 of 19 passes for 67 yards, but also threw two interceptions. He added 24 yards on 6 carries.

Each interception came in Hammond territory, with the second occurring after the Panther offense took over at the Tornado 29-yard line.

“You can’t lose the turnover battle and win many games,” Luquet said. “And when you’re given a short field by your defense, you have to capitalize. We will continue to work on the little things that will help with the overall process.”

Reaser led Panther receivers with 4 catches for 44 yards. Sophomore Tyrell Smith added one reception for seven yards.

Lodge and Middleton paced the running game with 16 carries a piece. Lodge tallied 65 yards and two touchdowns. Middleton had 45 yards on the ground, and added one reception for 16 yards.

The Panthers defense placed constant pressure on Hammond’s quarterbacks throughout the night. Hill led Woodlawn with three sacks, keeping the Tornado passing game from gaining any traction.

Woodlawn will be on the road again in week three, as the Panthers travel to Broadmoor to take on the Buccaneers. Game time is set for 7 pm on Friday, September 15.

Panthers Fall to Eagles in Season Opener

Panthers Fall to Eagles in Season Opener

Jerit Roser, originally written for Livingston Parish News

Photos by Hunter Kirkland of HK Photo

A few big plays by Live Oak and miscues by Woodlawn proved the difference Friday in former Panthers coach Brett Beard’s return to his previous school.

The visiting Eagles (1-0) used those opportunities to climb to a 21-0 victory in an otherwise back-and-forth defensive battle on a muddy field in the season opener.

Xavier Lodge brings down a Live Oak ball carrier Friday night.

“It’s hard,” Woodlawn coach Daniel Luquet said. “Because when you know your opponent as well as we knew Live Oak and you put six months of preparation into it, and you come out and you put a 0, and the defense sees that, it’s frustrating. But we have a very big senior class with a bunch of guys who are leaders, and a bunch of guys who are gonna play at the next level, who have to understand that emotions are gonna take over. This is an emotional sport.

“But we have to be able to check our emotions when the game’s over, come back tomorrow morning and watch film and just continue to get better. Last year was hard, but last year we lost a lot of guys. This year, we stayed healthy for the most part, and I just think that if they continue to take care of the little things, then the bigger process will take care of itself.”

Both defenses lived up to strong billing in a first half that saw just a combined 96 yards and seven first downs — much of which came in its final few minutes.

But a dropped snap and pair of penalties forced Woodlawn (0-1) to punt out of its own end zone midway through the second quarter to give Live Oak starting field position just 35 yards from the end zone.

And the Eagles needed just four plays for Hagen Long to put his team on the scoreboard, 7-0, with the Nathan Holliday extra point.

“I know there was 13 punts in the first half combined,” Luquet said. “But even then, they may have done six plays instead of three. And three plays against an offense like that is gonna hurt your defense because you’re gonna leave ‘em on the field a lot longer than they need to be. We’ve gotta get better at not always just scoring, but being able to move the sticks, flip the field and keep our defense off the field sometimes.”

Cameron Dickerson busted back-to-back runs of 19 and 40 yards in the third quarter to stretch the lead to 13-0.
And Live Oak added a third score, a 1-yard Kee Hawkins run, in the fourth quarter on another short field after a blocked punt provided Beard and company possession at the 34-yard line.

“I love this place,” Beard said. “I wanted to come back to this place … Ideally we’d love to play on the turf, because we’re spoiled with it. But I love this place. I love these kids. I love the atmosphere here. I wanted to come back and be on the other side of it and look at it and see my friends that have done great things and become great coaches across from me.

“I’m excited to be able to go against those guys. They do a phenomenal job, and they’ve got a great team. I tell you what: If people are sleeping on Woodlawn, those cats right there, once they get in game shape and play a little bit, they’ve got a chance to be really good.”

Senior running back Chris Middleton Jr. led the Panthers with 41 yards rushing and a 16-yard reception.

Brian Byrd looks to scramble versus Live Oak.

Senior standout Xavier Lodge added 17 yards on two carries, while also leading the defense with 10 tackles, and senior quarterback Brian Byrd and junior wide receiver Bryson Reaser added 9 and 4 yards on the ground, respectively.

Senior wide receiver Joshua London led Woodlawn with 26 of the team’s 42 receiving yards on a tough night for the passing game.

“You’ve gotta be balanced,” Luquet said. “You’ve gotta be balanced. We’ve got to get better at that. Look, (Byrd) was gonna be our guy last year and tore his ACL, so now this is really his first look, first game playing a team that’s had six months to prepare for him. But you’ve gotta make the easy throws. They have to be catchable balls. They can’t be hard to catch. Because with the field and those defenders doing what they do, he has to make them easier catches. And it’s gonna come.

“Look, it’s Week 1. I think our run game is gonna be solid. I think our pass protection got a little bit better in the second half, but we have to be able to throw the football, or teams are gonna load the box, and for our two running backs, it’s gonna be a long year. But we’ll keep working on it, keep doing it — repetition, repetition — and the farther along he gets, the more experience, by the time we get to district, which is when it matters, hopefully we’ll be cruising.”

View Roser’s original story by clicking here.

Woodlawn Scores Jamboree Victory Using Stingy Defense, Timely Offense

Woodlawn Scores Jamboree Victory Using Stingy Defense, Timely Offense

The Woodlawn Panther offense used an eleven play drive, capped by the victory formation, to seal the victory Friday night over East Ascension in the 2017 jamboree. Clinging to a one-point lead and facing a 3rd and 15, Louisiana Tech commit Xavier Lodge picked up 22 yards to force East Ascension to use their final timeouts.

Senior captains prepare for the coin toss before the 2017 jamboree.

The Panthers only score of the night came early in the first half. After Junior Jacob Barnes’ kickoff pinned the Spartans on their own 13 yard line, the defense forced a three and out. Senior defensive back Jonathan Scott had the big play of the drive, tackling an East Ascension ball carrier for a six yard loss. The Spartans were forced to punt from their nine yard line, and when the punter mishandled the snap, senior linebacker Shaun McCray tackled the punter at the one yard line.

Three plays later, senior quarterback Brian Byrd found junior receiver Bryson Reaser alone in the back of the end zone for the touchdown. Barnes’ extra point put the Panthers up 7-0.

The Spartans were able to quickly answer, scoring on a ten play drive on their next possession. However, senior linebacker Daron Mosely was able to break through the line on the extra point attempt and block the kick, retaining the Panther lead by the score of 7-6.

The Panther defense held East Ascension’s offense to 72 total yards on the game. Woodlawn was especially stingy against the run, allowing only 11 yards on 14 carries.

The night began with the underclassmen getting a chance to play in front of a packed stadium on a Friday night. Woodlawn’s freshman team fell 14-0 to East Ascension’s freshmen. The Panthers shut the Spartans out in the second half.

Woodlawn’s JV team also fell to East Ascension’s JV by the score of 3-0.

Woodlawn will be back in action Friday, September 1 at home. The Panthers will host Live Oak in the opening game of the 2017 season. Two of Woodlawn’s service clubs, National Honor Society and Beta Club, will be hosting a tailgate beginning at 4 pm. The game is set to kick off at 7 pm. Students are encourage to wear white to the game.

Woodlawn Begins 2017-2018 School Year

Woodlawn Begins 2017-2018 School Year

Senior Josh London

As the bell rang at 7:02 AM on Wednesday, August 9th, 2017, the 2017-2018 school year was officially underway. And with that bell, hundreds of new and returning Panthers found their way to their new classes.

Joshua London, a senior beginning his fourth year at Woodlawn, said that his senior year got off to a wonderful start.

“My classes seem interesting, and I liked my teachers. It seems like my senior year is going to go great. I’m looking forward to it,” said Joshua.

Other Panthers had many of the same sentiments. Chase Gauthier is a third year student, and is also very much looking forward to his junior year.

Freshman Julyana Espinal

“The first day was really good. My teachers were great, really relaxed, and made us feel welcomed,” explained Chase. “It makes me very excited about this year.”

Julyana Espinal, a very outgoing and energetic incoming freshman, said that she was a little nervous for her first day.

“You really don’t know your way around the school. It is a new environment with new people. You really aren’t ready for it. You can’t prepare for it,” Julyana said.

However, she did say that everyone she encountered was extremely welcoming and helpful.

Sophomore Arielle Williams

“I didn’t really have trouble finding my way around. My sister is an upperclassman, and I had a few friends that already came here that helped me in the hallways. And if I couldn’t find them, I would just ask a teacher, and they were all very helpful.”

With the first day in the books, students are already starting to look forward to an exciting school year. Many of that excitement revolves around athletics, clubs, and extracurricular activities.

“I am looking forward to joining some clubs. I plan on joining Panthrobotics. My brother (Hernan Espinal) joined it when he was here, and I plan on joining too,” said Julyana. “I am also looking forward to soccer and softball. And homecoming spirit week!”

Sophomore Arielle Williams said she is also looking forward to athletics and spirit week.

Junior Chase Gauthier

“I am excited about our special events, our dances, games, and everything having to do with school spirit,” said Arielle.

Upperclassmen also looked back at their high school careers and had a little advice for the new freshmen.

“My freshman year, I was lost. I took high school as a joke sometimes. You need to understand that your freshman year will stay with you all four years, so you need to take it serious,” advised Joshua.

Chase simplified the school year quite nicely.

“Don’t act up. Do your stuff. You’ll pass.”

Pretty simple advice that all Panthers can follow! Here’s to a great school year!