CARSON, Calif. – Their quarterback is the son of former NFL signal-caller Steve Bono.
Their defensive coordinator is a distance nephew of legendary coach George Halas.
Their campus is located directly across the street from Stanford University.
But as much greatness as the Vikings of
Palo Alto High School is surrounded and related to, nobody fathomed their stunning 15-13 upset of
Centennial (Corona), the nation's fifth-ranked team, in Friday's CIF Division I Bowl Championship game.
Nobody except the unranked Vikings themselves.
Expect Palo Alto (14-0) to climb into all national Top 25 rankings after this one.
"We've been the underdog all season," Palo Alto receiver
Maurice Williams, who had the key touchdown of the game, an 80-yard reception with 1:21 left in the first half. He also partially blocked kicker
Ezequiel Rivera's 42-yard field goal with 30.4 seconds to play to seal it. "And we were never a bigger underdog than tonight. This was a great way to end the season. It was perfect."
Palo Alto coach Earl Hansen gets doused following team's stunning victory.
Photo by Todd Shurtleff
Before a sparse crowd of less than 4,000 fans at the Home Depot Center on a rare wet and soupy night in Southern California, the Vikings executed Halas' defensive scheme to perfection, got spectacular touchdown catches by
Davante Adams and Williams and took advantage of Centennial's first sloppy and subpar game this season to record their first undefeated season since 1950.
Christoph Bono (13-of-23, 215 yards) completed first-half touchdown passes of 11 and 80 yards to Adams and Williams, respectively, en route to a 15-0 lead and then held off a spirited second-half rally led by 6-foot-5, 225-pound quarterback
Michael Eubank.
The Vikings' defense bent all night against what many considered the nation's top offense – Centennial finished with 460 yards, down from its average of 535 – but toughened up in the red zone, twice holding on downs inside the 10 on clutch tackles by linebacker
Michael Cullen on Eubank, who had accounted for 3,885 yards and 40 touchdowns coming in.
Strong safety
T.J. Braff and Cullen, who led the team with 10 tackles each along with Stanford-bound defensive end
Kevin Anderson, also combined to bring down Eubank on a 2-point conversion try with 4:14 left after the 6-foot-5, 225-pound quarterback scored on a 33-yard run to close to 15-13.
"I was suppose to take the pitch, but I saw he was going to take it so I went after him," said Braff, who also forced a fumble and recovered two fumbles. "(Cullen) was awesome all night. Our entire defense was. We all just came in playing loose like we had nothing to lose."
Said Palo Alto head coach Earl Hansen said about his defense: "Discipline, discipline, discipline. Those guys just played their butts off and came through when it counted most."
Defensive coordinator Jake Halas, a Southern California native whose wife is from Northern California and handpicked the Vikings after watching them lose in a 2006 Bowl game to Orange Lutheran, said he slept little trying to prepare against a team that averaged 53 points and 536 yards per game coming in.
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Centennial managed three 100-yard rushers, including Eubank (164 yards on 16 carries), but the Huskies (14-1) mustered only two second-half touchdowns. The Huskies played the second half without highly-touted running back
Barrinton Collins, who sustained a concussion late in the second period after rushing 17 times for 101 yards.
Collins entered with 2,325 yards and 42 touchdowns.
"We had two weeks to prepare for these guys and watched more film than you can imagine," Halas said. "We have smart kids who can make adjustments, but make no mistake, we have kids who are tough as nails."
They had to be to knock off three consecutive favored private-school West Catholic Athletic League opponents in the Central Coast Section playoffs heading into Friday's game.
And they had to in order to keep Centennial's no huddle, spread, and Oregon lookalike offense out of the end zone seven of nine possessions.
"That was a great team we just beat," Williams said. "If we would have played them five quarters instead of four, they might have got us. But like we've done all season, we proved people wrong. "
Michael Eubank led Centennial's
second-half charge.
Photo by Todd Shurtleff
Centennial, which felt slighted that it wasn't picked into the state's ultimate game, the Open Division contest, was presumably going to make a statement and take it out on Palo Alto.
Instead, the Huskies struggled, right down to the game's first and ultimately deciding points.
A shotgun snap – Centennial attacks via the shotgun every play – sailed over the head of long quarterback Eubank, who landed on it in the end zone, giving Palo Alto a 2-0 lead with 8:41 left in the first quarter.
"That set the tone," Centennial coach Matt Logan said. "It just wasn't our night. Every time we got something going, we'd have some sort of breakdown. I give (Palo Alto) all the credit. They were more ready to play than we were."
Centennial had 11 penalties for 112 yards including holding calls that wiped out a touchdown run and a 40-yard pass play. The Huskies also had three unsportsmanlike penalties.
Palo Alto had six penalties for 30 yards and didn't commit one turnover.
"We didn't tackle well," Logan said. "We turned the ball over. We had horrible penalties at the worst time. Those are simply our mistakes that we had control on. Unfortunately it came the wrong week to do it."
After the safety, the Vikings made it 9-0 on a beautiful 15-yard TD pass to Adams in the back of the end zone midway through the second quarter. Bono rolled right and fired a strike to a leaping Adams, who came down hard and injured his ankle but later returned.
"Christoph made a perfect throw," Adams said. "It was a painful injury, but it was definitely worth it. There was no way I was dropping that thing."
The two connected on a 22-yard completion the play before when Bono escaped a strong rush, rolled left and found Adams, who made another leaping catch.
"We have great receivers and we have guys who believe in one another," Bono said.
Christoph Bono threw for
215 yards, two TDs.
Photo by Todd Shurtleff
Those two catches paled to Palo Alto's next score an 80-yard bomb to the team's other dynamic wideout Williams.
Bono threw the ball as far as could, Williams came back to the pass and wrestled it away from a defender, then sprinted from the right sideline to the left pylon, making it 15-0 (the Vikings missed a 2-point conversion) with 1:21 left in the half.
The score came two plays after Palo Alto held on downs at the Vikings 5, making it a virtual 13-point swing.
"I just out-worked the dude for the ball," Williams said. "I wasn't going to be denied. We weren't going to be denied. Nobody believed it but us. It's a great feeling."
Palo Alto 15, Centennial 13Palo Alto 2 13 0 0 - 15
Centennial 0 0 7 6 - 13
First quarterPA – Safety, Eubank falls on bad snap in end zone, 8:41
Second quarter PA – Adams 11 pass from Bono (Bono kick), 6:43
PA – Williams 80 pass from Bono (run failed) 1:21
Third quarterC – Goodman 4 run (Rivera kick), 8:16
Fourth quarterC – Eubank 33 run (run failed), 4:14
Team statisticsFirst downs: PA 13, C 19
Rushing attempts/yards: PA 35-74, C 49-349
Passing: PA 13-23-0-215, C 10-20-0-111
Total yards: PA 289, C 460
Fumbles/lost: PA 0/0, C 4/2
Penalties: PA 6-30, C 11-112
Time of possession: PA 29:18, C 18:42
Individual statisticsRushingPA: Boyd 12-44, Hill 14-29, Gates-Mouton 1-7, team 1-(-1), Bono 7-(-5). Centennial: Eubank 16-164, Goodman 15-102, Collins 17-101, team 1-(-18).
PassingPA: Bono 13-23-0-215. Centennial: Eubank 10-20-0-111.
ReceivingPA: Williams 3-99, Adams 4-53, Braff 3-43, Cullen 1-9, Hill 1-7, Boyd 1-4. Centennial: Finney 3-50, Scott 3-31, Olijade 4-30.
TacklesPA: Braff 10, Cullen 10, Anderson 10, Pratti 8. Centennial: Bass 11, Jack 9, Tuihalamaka 7.
Records: Palo Alto 14-0, Centennial 14-1.