The Putnam County Midgets are taking a road trip to face off against the Gallatin Bulldogs at 7:00 p.m. on Friday. Putnam County will come into the matchup with an undefeated record on the line.
Putnam County is headed in fresh off scoring the most points they have all season. They never let Scotland County get on the board and left with a 55-0 win on Friday. The final result isn't all that surprising considering the Midgets' considerable advantage in MaxPreps' Missouri football rankings (they are ranked 86th, while the Tigers are ranked 255th).

Corbin Campbell-Johnson
| 10/10/25 vs Scotland County | 152 |
| 10/03/25 @ Polo | 111 |
| 09/26/25 vs Brookfield | 128 |
| 09/19/25 @ Maysville | 80 |
| 09/12/25 vs Trenton | 116 |
| + 7 more games |
Corbin Campbell-Johnson was his usual excellent self, rushing for 152 yards and three scores on only nine carries. That's the most rushing yards he has posted since back in October of 2024. Brayten Spring was another key back, rushing for 56 yards and one touchdown.
They were just one part of a punishing run game: Putnam County was unstoppable on the ground and finished the game with 349 rushing yards. That strong performance was nothing new for the team: they've now rushed for at least 172 rushing yards in eight consecutive contests dating back to last season.
Putnam County didn't go easy on the quarterback and picked off two passes before the game was over. The picks came courtesy of Bryce McCree and Rayden Chapman.
Meanwhile, after only six points in their last game, Gallatin made sure to put some points up on the board against Polo back in September. The Bulldogs blew past the Panthers 41-14. Give some credit to the fans of both teams: the last five times they've met, the home team has come away the winner.
Putnam County's victory bumped their record up to 7-0. As for Gallatin, they now have a winning record of 2-1.
Putnam County was dealt a bruising 48-16 loss at the hands of Gallatin when the teams last played back in October of 2021. Can the Midgets avenge their defeat or is history doomed to repeat itself? We'll find out soon enough.
Article generated by infoSentience based on data entered on MaxPreps