New Jersey power uses powerful run game and superb secondary play to dominate Southern California juggernaut.        
        
		
            
Bosco's defense harassed Alex Bridgford all night with six sacks and four interceptions. 
Photo by Daniel Coppola
 coaches and players settled on their 
sideline Saturday night, minutes before the opening kickoff against 
perennial California power 
Mission Viejo,  when assistant coach William 
Lopez turned to the chain gang and gave them fair warning.
“Stick with us,” he advised.
Although
 the Ironmen went three-and-out on their first two drives, the no-huddle
 ground attack they instituted left Mission Viejo looking battle weary 
late in the first quarter. From there, the No. 1 team in the Xcellent 25
 sprinted to a decisive, if somewhat uneven, 35-7 victory before 8,000 
fans at Grantatell Stadium.
All five of Don Bosco Prep's scores 
came on the ground game, including two apiece from first-time senior 
starter John Wilkins and sophomore standout Jabrill Peppers, while the 
defense picked off four passes and sacked Mission Viejo senior 
quarterback Alex Bridgford six times. Senior Kyle Sakowski came up with 
two interceptions, while junior Razohn Gross and senior linebacker 
Michael Strizak, a Boston College commit, accounted for two sacks 
apiece.
“If they're not up to the task, we can beat them just on 
pace alone,” senior two-way star Elijah Shumate said. “You've got to be a
 really in-shape team to keep up with our pace.”
On the Garden 
State's high school gridiron scene, the Ironmen's workouts are legendary
 for their intensity, which have been instrumental in establishing them 
as the state's standardbearer while winning five consecutive Non-Public 
Group 4 championships. They looked mostly fresh on a muggy night in 
North Jersey while the entire Don Bosco Prep sideline noticed the 
Diablos hunched over, their hands on their hips late in the first 
quarter.

John Wilkins led Bosco's ground game
with 23 carries for 114 yards and
two scores. 
Photo by Daniel Coppola
After an interception by senior 
Yuri Wright, Don Bosco 
ran 10 times on an 11-play, 64-yard directive Wilkins (23 carries, 124 
yards) capped when he plunged in from one yard out to make it 7-0 just 
45.3 seconds before the first quarter ended. After the senior ripped off
 a 28-yard run the second play of the drive, senior quarterback Tyler 
Yankovich kept getting the Ironmen to the line quickly – sometimes 
before Mission Viejo even settled into its defensive alignment.
“We
 knew that was going to happen. That was a given,” said Peppers, who 
scored on runs of 6 and 7 yards before finishing with 65 yards on eight 
carries.
“They looked pretty tired out there,” Don Bosco head coach Greg Toal said. “I thought the pace was good for us.”
Following
 a defensive stop, the Ironmen struck again quickly, with Peppers 
carrying three straight times before concluding a five-play, 44-yard drive that 
elapsed just 93 seconds with a 6-yard sprint across the goal line 6:50 
before halftime.
By this point, Mission Viejo had already burned 
through all three of its timeouts. Having lost three starters to injury,
 the Diablos were weary, but found enough of a second wind to cobble 
together a 13-play, 57-yard drive that brought them to the Don Bosco 25 
before missing a 42-yard field goal try.
From there, Mission Viejo
 never penetrated any deeper than the Ironmen until the fourth quarter, 
when Bridgford (17 for 31, 216 yards) clicked with junior Max Redfield on a 5-yard scoring strike that ended an 80-yard drive, but still left 
the visitors from the left coast trailing 28-7 with 9:59 left.
“The bottom line is when they got the momentum, they outplayed us,” Mission Viejo head coach Bob Johnson said.

Jabrill Peppers also rushed for two
touchdowns, of 6 and 7 yards. 
Photo by Daniel Coppola
Defensively,
 Don Bosco limited Mission Viejo's USC-bound senior workhorse 
Jahleel Pinner to 47 rushes on 18 carries, with his first seven carries yielding
 no yards thanks to senior defensive tackle 
Darius Hamilton and junior 
defensive end 
Alquadin Muhammad.Although Toal only rated the 
opening-night effort “a B-minus” and Peppers conceded “We can play a lot
 better than this,” the Ironmen nonetheless served notice that the rest of 
the nation will have a difficult time keeping pace with them.
“We've
 got a lot to work on, but we're looking to get that national 
championship this year,” said Shumate, a standout safety who added an 
11-yard scoring run late in the fourth quarter. "We're hungry.”
Added Sakowski: “We're here to play.”