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LANGHORNE - Half of Central Bucks
West’s defense had slammed Jamar Brittingham to the
sod once, and then again, and so the Bucks figured
Neshaminy's meal ticket would be handed the football
one more time, on fourth-and-goal from the 6-yard
line and time ticking away Friday night.
But Brittingham, the senior running
back and Division 1 prospect whom West had committed
eight, sometimes nine defensive players to stopping,
did not get the bail He was a decoy, used perfectly
to break the Bucks' hearts.

Instead of handing off to
Brittingham, Neshaminy senior quarterback Jason
Wiater pulled off a play-action fake, found tight
end Scott Mullen for a 6-yard touchdown with no
time, remaining in the fourth quarter, nullified a
stirring West comeback and gave the Redskins a 21-19
win at Harry E Franks Stadium.
The play, which Wiater called at the
line of scrimmage with 11 seconds left, capped a
tingling sequence that saw all of the following:
West rallied from a 15-0 halftime
deficit to take a 19-15 lead with 1 minute, 57
seconds to go.
On its ensuing possession, Neshaminy
drove from its 30 to the Bucks' 3 in less than 70
seconds.
The Bucks almost held off the
Redskins by stuffing Brittingham twice from inside
the 5 with Neshaminy out of timeouts.
In the end, however, the Bucks (3-2
overall, 2-2 SOL), single mindedly trying to stop
Brittingham (116 rushing yards, 88 receiving yards),
bit on Wiater's moment of deception, and they now
teeter on the edge of a district-playoff berth. This
is their first season with two losses since 1995,
and one more defeat likely would keep them out of
the PIAA District One Class AAAA playoffs for the
first time since 1992, the year District One
instituted a postseason tournament
"This team stands out the most of the
three years I've been playing for being close.
There's no cliques," said West senior offensive
lineman Justin Outten, who returned to the lineup
Friday after sitting out one game with an ankle
injury.
"We're going to bounce back from
this. There's still a chance for the playoffs. We're
going to work hard."
They did exactly that in scoring
three second-half touchdowns, the first two by
junior fullback Doug Kniese. And when senior Clay
Lepley charged into the end zone from the 1 with
1:57 to go, the Bucks had positioned themselves to
hand Neshaminy (5-0, 4-0 SOL) its first loss of the
season and again become the team to beat in the
Suburban One League National Conference.
But while West slowed the 6-foot-1,
194-pound Brittingham, who had averaged 233 rushing
yards in his first three games, Wiater picked its
defense apart, throwing for 208 yards, completing
all five of his passes on the Redskins' game-winning
drive, and making that crucial call on fourth down.
"We got to the point where we were in
that spot and we were stuck with the same personnel
in the same defense," West coach Randy Cuthbert
said. "We were selling out to stop the run.”
We were in a straight man-to-man and
were blitzing. We felt we had to sell out to stop
Brittingham. You give something up when you do
that."
That something was Mullin, who
released from the line and flashed into the left
corner of the end zone. Wiater faked, sprinted left
and made the easy throw as the clock hit: 00.
It was Mullin's only catch of the
game.
"On that call, I knew I was going
out," Mullin said. "I didn't know I was going to be
wide open."
Neither did the Bucks.
"All that preparation and being
together, it pays off when you win," Outten said.
"But when you lose, it's like a shot in the face."
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