Spring ball starts Monday:
7th – 10th 2:30 – 5:30 (No Spring Ball on Friday the 11th)
14th – 18th 2:30 – 5:30
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2012 Spring Potluck - WFHS FOOTBALL 2012 SPRING POTLUCK LET’S GET TOGETHER AND HAVE A... [ read more ]
Warm up! It’s Time for Spring Ball - Spring ball starts Monday: 7th – 10th 2:30 – 5:30 (No Spring... [ read more ]
Spring Camp - Thanks to everyone who came out and participated in Spring... [ read more ]
TOPS Physicals Coming Soon! - To schedule an appointment contact Kathy Morken at 480-279-8017 or email... [ read more ]
Meet the 2012 Booster Club Board - The votes are in. Here’s the Williams Field High School 2012 Booster... [ read more ]
2012 Varsity Football Camp - Parents please note a change in our Varsity Football Camp. The boys get 1... [ read more ]
Spring ball starts Monday:
7th – 10th 2:30 – 5:30 (No Spring Ball on Friday the 11th)
14th – 18th 2:30 – 5:30
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Be sure to print out a 2012-2013 Doctor Sheets for Sports Physicals.
Don’t forget — You must have a physical on file in order to participate in sports, and this physical is good through all of next school year. And it’s FREE!
Along with the Physical Packet, players need to complete the rest of the athletic release forms before they can be cleared to play. You can pick-up the rest of the packet in the front office from our Athletic Secretary Kathy Morken.
Print this flyer. Click here
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Parents please note a change in our Varsity Football Camp. The boys get 1 ½ weeks off BEFORE camp this summer in July, instead of after.
The schedule is as follows:
No practice for Varsity: July/16 – July/24
Varsity Camp, July/25 – July/28
Monday 7/30 is the first official day of practice
Here’s a TENTATIVE summer schedule for your convenience. This schedule is subject to change.
Please plan your summer accordingly. Thank you!
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www.thecastleatashleymanor.com
The Castle at Ashley Manor
1300 South Price Road Chandler, AZ 85286-6601
Monday December 5, 2011
Dinner served at 6:00 pm
Menu: Italian Chicken Breast,Meatballs, Garlic Mashed Potatoes
Green Beans, Salad, Dinner Roll, Dessert, Lemonade
*Dress Shirt and Tie appropriate
Event lasts approximately 3 hours
Please purchase tickets through the team shop
The Castle would like a guest count no later than
November 23rd. There is a guest minimum so please order
your tickets as soon as possible.
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The Williams Field Black Hawks met the Thunderbird Chiefs in the Division III playoff’s opening round on Friday, a rematch of last year’s 4AII state championship. Looking to settle the score, the seniors had much motivation to answer the challenge and hand Thunderbird an early exit from the 2011 playoffs. However, unlike last year’s playoff run, this year’s Black Hawks have had more than their share of injuries.
The Chiefs set the tone on a windy, dusty evening by scoring on their first offensive play, a 65 yard outside run for a touchdown. By halftime, Thunderbird led 21-0 and the dust turned to rain.
Williams Field got on the board at 8:26 of the third quarter with a Garrett Forsgren touchdown pass to Jordan Johnson, closing the deficit to 7-21, but fourteen seconds later the score was 7-27.
Alex Howard managed to gain another 131 hard earned yards on 28 carries, but with fellow running back, Sean Schweicher out of the game, the Chiefs continually keyed on him and kept him bottled up and out of the end zone.
Williams Field improved their ball security, and did not commit a turn-over, while the defense forced two Thunderbird fumbles for turn-overs. However, the depleted offense was unable to convert.
Black Hawk families and fans would like to thank the players and coaching staff for another successful, exciting season. We wish our seniors much success as they finish their academic career at Williams Field, and look forward to next season, as the torch is passed to the next class of Black Hawks Football student athletes.
Photos by Laurel Adamcik
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Posted: Saturday, October 29, 2011 12:27 am
Queen Creek forces four turnovers to beat Williams Field By Anthony Martinez, Tribune East Valley Tribune
A stout defense against a powerful offense, big plays, momentum shifts, packed stands, a prize up for grabs and a wild finish.
It sure felt like playoff football came a week early in the season finale showdown against No. 7 Queen Creek and No. 3 Williams Field.
With home field advantage through the first two rounds on the line, the Bulldogs (9-1, 4-0) came up with one more big play than the Black Hawks (8-2, 6-1) to come up with a 22-20 victory on the road Friday.
Luis Moreno picked off Williams Field quarterback Garrett Forsgren with less than 14 seconds remaining to seal the win.
Moreno’s clinching play kept the Bulldogs at a No. 4 seed in the Division III state tournament, where it will play No. 13 Douglas in the first round.
“We really don’t pay much attention to that stuff,” Queen Creek coach Joe Germaine said. “We just want our team to get better and hopefully we’re taking steps toward that.”
The interception summed up Williams Field’s game pretty well. The Black Hawks turned the ball over four times; three times via fumbles.
The Black Hawks’ inability to hold onto the ball at key moments of the game cost them a shot to win the game.
Williams Field looked to be driving for the go-ahead score late in the fourth quarter when Ced Gloria coughed up and lost the ball on the Queen Creek 20-yard line.
The Bulldogs turned two of the recovered fumbles into 10 points.
Despite the costly turnovers, Williams Field coach Steve Campbell said he’d do little to bring it up in the week leading up to the first round of the playoffs.
“You start overanalyzing stuff like that and next thing you know it’s in the mind,” Williams Field coach Steve Campbell said. “If you start going crazy with it after you’ve had some, it just puts it on the mind in a negative manner.”
Williams Field running back Alex Howard did his best to give his team a chance to win, but he also cost the team some major momentum.
Howard rushed for 164 yards and a touchdown and ran back a kickoff return 90 yards for a touchdown, but he also fumbled three times. The Bulldogs recovered two of Howard’s fumbles.
“Our defense just played an awesome game,” Germaine said. “Our focus was seeing if there was a chance to limit the big plays. They got a couple of those with Howard…but for the most part we held them a little bit.”
On the other side of the ball, Queen Creek’s Matt Guida may not have had any long touchdown runs like Howard, but he protected the ball and ate up a lot of clock in the second half with runs of 3 and 4 yards.
“Matt Guida is a great ballplayer,” Germaine said. “Not every plays is going to be a big one. You love those, but those four-yard gains are critical. It keeps the drives alive and if we can have those it’d be huge.”
Guida finished with 135 yards and a touchdown on 26 carries. He also had a 33-yard touchdown catch.
Williams Field will host a first-round playoff game against No. 9 Phoenix Thunderbird in a rematch of last year’s 4A-II title game, which Thunderbird won.
“With the new alignment there’s not an easy game in there,” said Campbell, before he knew who he was playing. “There should be relatively close games from top to bottom.”
Photos by Laurel Adamcik
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Posted: Friday, October 21, 2011 11:52 pm | Updated: 9:09 am, Sat Oct 22, 2011.
There was only one problem with Tony Hatfield’s impersonation of Alex Howard Friday night.
Howard himself did it better.
Howard of Williams Field and Hatfield of Poston Butte traded a pair of touchdowns during an explosive first quarter Friday night in San Tan Valley, but it was Howard and the visiting Black Hawks that proved to be too much through the full four quarters, pulling away for a 35-20 victory over the host Broncos.
After Poston Butte (6-3) went three-and-out on the game’s opening drive, Howard barreled down the sidelines for a 69-yard touchdown run on just the second offensive snap for Williams Field.
On the ensuing kickoff, it was Hatfield’s turn. He initially dropped the kick, but regrouped and raced 89 yards to quickly tie it back up. Two Williams Field offensive plays later, it was Howard once again, scoring from 50 yards out.
Four offensive snaps; 21 points; 42 seconds.
“Our kids were real excited about playing this week. They knew that Poston Butte was a really good team … they were excited to play someone of their caliber,” Williams Field head coach Steve Campbell said. “I think that we were just a little bit amped up in the beginning. We hit it, hit it, hit it. But we burned a lot of energy.
Added Poston Butte coach Mike De La Torre: “There’s certainly an emotional tide there that we could ride a little bit. It helped us there in that first half. … Tony’s been doing that for us, he’s got that flash a little bit. He can go and make things happen. That’s why he’s a returner back there.”
Hatfield would score again late in the first to tie the game at 14 – this time on the ground from seven yards – before Williams Field (8-1) pulled away to lead 28-14 at the half en route to the victory. Howard had all four first half touchdowns for Williams Field.
While Desert Ridge running back Joey Counts was making his push for the state’s big-school rushing record over in East Mesa on this night, Williams Field’s Howard was forging his own assault at the mark in the Valley’s southeastern most point. He ultimately finished with 305 yards and those four scores on 26 carries, although he did have another 80-yard run for a touchdown that was called back in the third quarter.
“It’s hard to practice during the week when you have to try and match that kind of stuff,” De La Torre said of game planning for Howard.
Campbell noted that this was the first time all season that Howard had to be the go-to-guy the entire game. Part of that is the big leads the Black Hawks often ring up; part of that is having all-purpose contributor Sean Schweichler there to help spell Howard on most nights.
Schweichler was in street clothes on the sideline for this one, sitting with a knee sprain, Campbell said, adding that he hoped the junior would be back next week.
“Tonight (Howard) had to go the distance, you know, which he hadn’t had to do – I don’t know if he’s done it all year,” Campbell said.
Joked Howard after the game: “Too much.”
“I’ll get a good sleep tonight and I’ll be ready to go next week,” Howard said. “It was a good win, but I thought we could have done better.”
While Howard’s impact was felt both in the end zone and on the stat sheet, numbers don’t do justice in describing Hatfield’s effectiveness for the Broncos.
He only had a handful of carries out of the backfield, but in addition to the long kick return score, also had three other occasions where he returned kicks across the field and into Williams Field territory.
Considering the Black Hawks outgained Poston Butte 505-195 in total offense, that kind of push was invaluable, De La Torre said.
For the Broncos, quarterback Dean Martino completed 11 of 21 passes for 81 yards, including a 10-yard third-quarter touchdown to Cameron Owen. Martino also ran for 36 yards.
Williams Field shuttled two quarterbacks through, going primarily with senior Garrett Forsgren before platooning Jeddediah Fagg. The pair combined to complete 8 of 17 passes for 106 yards and an interception, while Forsgren also rushed for 50 yards.
While Williams Field has a tough road next week facing fellow 8-1 Queen Creek in the regular season finale, Poston Butte – playing in only its first full varsity season – hosts Apache Junction.
It’s been an interesting three week stretch for the Broncos. They started the season 6-0, but then dropped three straight, to 7-2 Perry, 8-1 Queen Creek and now 8-1 Williams Field. De La Torre is confident that the difficult parts of this stretch will only make his young team stronger in the end.
“We use (those opponents) as measurements,” he said. “As a new program coming in, we look and see where we’re at competitively against those types of teams. Can we be competitive? We’ve shown that we can be in ballgames and can have a chance to win those kind of ballgames.”
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October 14, 2011 – 11:36PM
Williams Field ran 11 plays in less than eight minutes of the third quarter Friday against visiting Casa Grande Vista Grande.
It was all the Black Hawks needed.
The hosts scored 28 points on those plays and rolled to a 63-13 thumping of Vista Grande as its big-play offense found one player after another able to get into the end zone.
“Watching film on them, I thought they were a really good team,” said Black Hawks running back Alex Howard. “I guess we just got our offense going on all cylinders tonight.”
Howard led the way for Williams Field (7-1) with 184 yards rushing on five carries and scored twice. His first carry of the game went for 52 yards and set up his own four-yard touchdown run. His final carry went for 94 yards and a score and sealed the outcome as it made the score 42-13 with 6:53 left in the third quarter.
“We are fortunate enough to have some big-play guys on our offense,” Williams Field coach Steve Campbell said. “We have plenty of things to clean up, but overall we did what we set out to do.”
For the game, eight different Black Hawks scored a touchdown. Quarterback Garrett Forsgren threw four scores to as many different receivers, and back-up quarterback Jeddediah Fagg ran for a 40-yard touchdown.
Williams Field finished with more than 600 yards of offense, led by its running game which accounted for nearly 500. Defensively, the Black Hawks allowed 235 yards and forced three turnovers.
“We thought we would have to pass the ball and move it that way,” Vista Grande coach Carlo Hernandez said. “We wanted to keep the ball away from their offense. Obviously that didn’t happen.”
The hosts opened a quick 14-0 first quarter lead and looked to have the game well in hand. But the Spartans rallied and got to within 21-13 in the second quarter.
Levi Durnil threw a pair of second quarter touchdowns, including a 22-yarder to Daniel Robbins that made it 21-13 with 4:42 left before halftime.
Williams Field responded with a 7-play, 65-yard scoring drive capped by a Forsgren 31-yard pass to Ced Gloria to make it 28-13 at halftime.
And then the second half was all Black Hawks.They scored on five consecutive possessions, starting with Fagg’s 40-yard run to begin the third quarter. After the Spartans drove the ball to the Williams Field 11-yard-line, Durnil fumbled and the Black Hawks recovered on their own 6. Two plays later Howard sprinted around the left side for his game-clinching 94-yard touchdown run.
“You could feel the wind leave our side after that run,” Hernandez said. “After that the wheels just fell off.”
Durnil finished the game 10-for-16 for 191 yards and the two scores. His first scoring pass was a 30-yard connection to Aaron Soto that put the Spartans (3-5) on the scoreboard and made it 14-7.
Forsgren threw for 148 yards, with 115 coming in the first half. Three of his four first-half completions were for scores, including a 28-yarder to his brother Cole and a 29-yarder to Jordan Johnson that made it 21-7 midway through the second quarter.
“We have some things to fix, like our penalties, but I feel like we are playing pretty well right now,” Howard said.
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Coming off an emotional victory over Higley last week, and with fall break beginning Friday, the Black Hawks, could have easily overlooked the sophomore laden Prospectors, to their detriment.
The cool evening was perfect football weather, and the Black Hawks drew first blood on the first of four Alex Howard TDs to start the scoring, at 8:34 of the first quarter. QB Garrett Forsgren found Jordan Johnson a few minutes later, putting the Black Hawks up 14-0 at 3:41. AJ answered 34 seconds later, cutting the lead to 14-7, and we had a ball game. By halftime the Black Hawks built a 14 point cushion, leading 28-14, but the Prospectors were still in the game.
The Black Hawks scored on another Howard TD on the opening drive of the third quarter, the defense forced a safety, and Sean Schweichler returned the subsequent kick off 75 yards into the end zone, blowing open the game. Schweichler scored another TD as the third quarter come to a close, and QB Shandon Coffman shed several tackles before crossing the goal line for the final score in the closing minutes of the game, as the Black Hawks cruised a 58-14 victory.
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by Craig Morgan – Sept. 30, 2011 11:31 PM
Special for The Republic
The schools are only separated by about two miles, but with each passing year, Gilbert Williams Field keeps widening the gap on district rival Gilbert Higley.
In three meetings between the schools – Williams Field is just four years old – Higley has come out on the losing end while being outscored by 72 points.
Running back Alex Howard had 10 carries for 112 yards and four touchdowns in the first half and Williams Field was never challenged in a 49-22, Division III, Section I whipping Friday at Higley.
Williams Field (5-1) scored touchdowns on every first-half possession and its first seven of the game to build a 49-0 lead. It only started one of those drives on its side of midfield, thanks to the guys on the flip side of the ball.
“The defense came out and played fast, and that’s what we were looking for,” Williams Field coach Steve Campbell said.
Howard scored on runs of 1, 20 and 51 yards to help stake Williams Field to a 28-0 lead after one quarter. By the second half, Williams Field had the requisite 42-point lead to institute a running clock, and Campbell started substituting freely.
“We really have learned to look at ourselves, and that’s really it,” Campbell said. “Our kids just came out and executed the game plan.”
Higley (4-2) never mustered any offense, but any hopes it had crumbled when quarterback Eric Kump left the game late in the first quarter with a knee injury. Coach Eddy Zubey said the early prognosis is a torn anterior cruciate ligament, which would end Kump’s season and put Higley’s in jeopardy.
With Kump out, Williams Field put the finishing touches on a first half of domination by blocking a 45-yard Higley field goal at the buzzer.
Following the game, Campbell turned his thoughts to far more important matters. Campbell’s mother underwent emergency brain surgery to remove a malignant tumor on Monday at St. Joseph’s Hospital. She will now begin a difficult regimen of chemotherapy.
“It’s not good,” Campbell said. “It really doesn’t look good. But we’ll keep pushing ahead. We’ll do what we can and hope.”
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