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<p>You don't need a film room to see who changed these games. Round 1 of the 5A playoffs had some good stories, but the headliners were the kids who took over drives, flipped field position, and slammed the door in the fourth.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Campo Verde 24, Verrado 14 — [player_tooltip player_id='401164' first='Jake' last='Jones'] Set the Tone</h2>
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<p>Campo Verde beat Verrado by playing grown‑man defense, plain and simple. [player_tooltip player_id='401164' first='Jake' last='Jones'] was a nightmare off the edge all night — he just kept showing up in the backfield. Three sacks, seven tackles, constant heat, and it felt like he was either making the play or forcing someone else to. That kind of pressure doesn't just show up on the stat sheet; it messes with everything the offense wants to do. Verrado started calling more screens, chips, and quick throws just to survive. Campo Verde didn't ask a ton of their offense, just be effecient — which [player_tooltip player_id='884014' first='Jonah' last='Lubno'] was (a calm 11-for-16 with three total scores) — their defense controlled the game, kept Verrado behind the chains, and let the clock bleed out.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Cactus Shadows 56, Tucson 35 — [player_tooltip player_id='401159' first='Donivan' last='Dixon'] Went Full Dual‑Threat</h2>
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<p>This wasn't empty‑calorie yardage — it was a full meal of big‑time quarterbacking. [player_tooltip player_id='401159' first='Donivan' last='Dixon'] was in total command from kickoff, dropping dimes all over the yard and keeping Tucson on skates. He finished with 346 yards and 5 TD through the air and tacked on 159 and 2 more on the ground, but what really stood out was how smooth it looked. He never forced anything, just took what was there until the Falcons pulled away. He'd rip a seam shot one play, then pull it down and outrun linebackers the next. You could tell the game's starting to slow down for him.</p>
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<p>[player_tooltip player_id='1603188' first='Alex' last='Dafnis'] was his go‑to guy — reliable as ever. He turned short throws into chunk gains, finishing with six grabs for 113 and a touchdown on the ground, constantly finding soft spots in coverage. [player_tooltip player_id='1326047' first='Brock' last='Cashin'] did the dirty work near the goal line, punching in two scores and setting the tone with physical runs after the catch that wore down the defense.</p>
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<p>Together, they looked like a group that's not just winning games, but figuring out who they are offensively — balanced, confident, and dangerous.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Mountain View - Marana 27, Buena 8 — Drake Davis Broke It Open</h2>
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<p>Mountain View's first playoff win since 2012 came with a simple formula: give Drake Davis the rock and let him roll. Literally. They attempted just five passes for less than 15 yards, and still won the game by three scores. The sophomore back racked up 184 yards and 2 TD on 19 carries and owned the tempo of the game. Every time Buena looked like it might settle in, Davis ripped off another chunk play to remind everyone who was in charge. You could feel the confidence growing with every run. He's got that rare mix of patience and burst — waits just long enough for a lane to open, then hits it like a track sprinter. Credit the offensive line for carving space, but Davis turned creases into fireworks, breaking tackles and putting defenders in chase mode all night. This was his breakout moment, and he made sure it felt like one.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Yuma Catholic 35, Millennium 28 — Second‑Half Poise, Starring Ott and Polk</h2>
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<p>This one was a legit back‑and‑forth battle. Millennium came ready, throwing haymakers and forcing Yuma Catholic to answer every score. But in the end, the underdog showed some real poise — especially impressive for a team fresh off moving up from 4A to 5A this season.</p>
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<p>[player_tooltip player_id='1177554' first='Nash' last='Ott'] was steady all night (15‑for‑22 for 227 yards and a score), keeping the offense on schedule and making good decisions when things got hectic. [player_tooltip player_id='739458' first='Jose' last='Polk'] was the hammer, putting up a ridiculous 242 all‑purpose yards and four total TDs — three on the ground and one through the air — and doing it with a mix of patience and power.</p>
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<p>On the other side, Millennium's [player_tooltip player_id='1650526' first='D'Mari' last='Bryant'] (147 rushing yards) and Rayden Reibel (220 and 3 TD through the air) made sure this stayed tight till the end. It was one of those games where you couldn't look away for long, but when it mattered most, YC stayed composed and made the plays that closed it out.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Notre Dame Prep 49, Maricopa 20 — A Backfield Bludgeon</h2>
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<p>If you like gap schemes and downhill football, this was your game — and then some. Nate Jones ripped off 247 yards and 3 TD on just 17 carries, [player_tooltip player_id='1190653' first='Gunnar' last='Perry'] followed with 129 and 3, and Decker Haskins‑Smith added 131 and a score while bulldozing through tacklers like it was nothing. That's three different backs crossing the century mark, which is wild enough, but when you realize Notre Dame Prep piled up 521 rushing yards as a team — that's absolutely absurd. It felt like they could've called the same play ten times in a row and still moved the chains. The line mauled up front, the backs ran angry, and by the third quarter, Maricopa's defense looked like it wanted no part of that smoke. NDP didn't just run the ball effectively — they steamrolled their way into Round 2.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Desert Mountain 54, Gilbert 8 — [player_tooltip player_id='1258544' first='Easton' last='Conner'], A One Man Show</h2>
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<p>The score tells you Desert Mountain handled business; [player_tooltip player_id='1258544' first='Easton' last='Conner'] tells you how. Just a sophomore, he looked calm and confident all night, running like he's been here before. He ripped three rushing TDs and even popped a 54‑yard catch to flip the field early. Every time DM needed a spark, Conner was the guy delivering it — slipping through tackles, keeping his feet moving, and showing that blend of patience and burst coaches love. They controlled every aspect of this game, but Conner's balance and vision were what made every drive feel like it was heading to the end zone.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Cienega 49, Sunnyslope 35 — A QB Clinic With A Side of Havoc</h2>
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<p>This turned into a true shootout, and [player_tooltip player_id='286018' first='Julian' last='Hainley'] came out on top. He didn't just win it with numbers — though 424 yards and 4 passing TDs, plus 3 rushing scores for seven total, is outrageous — he won it with poise. Every time Sunnyslope made a push, Hainley answered. He escaped pressure, kept his eyes downfield, and found ways to extend plays that had no business gaining positive yards. For a high school kid, that level of command is rare.</p>
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<p>Jaden Rodgers gave him a go-to option all night, working corners with sharp routes and finishing with 189 yards and 2 TD. You could tell Hainley and Rodgers were just in sync — that QB‑WR rhythm every offense hopes for in November.</p>
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<p>Sunnyslope's [player_tooltip player_id='1603406' first='Royce' last='Vanacore'] did everything he could to keep it tight, finishing with 277 yards and 2 TD of his own. Every time Cienega pulled ahead, Vanacore hit back with another big play.</p>
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<p>But when the Bobcats needed a closer, Andrei Davis‑Lopez showed why he's one of the best defensive players in the state. Four tackles for loss, three sacks, and a constant presence in the backfield. He brought the energy that finally broke Sunnyslope's rhythm and sealed a wild one for Cienega.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Mountain Pointe 47, Flowing Wells 26 — Takin' Care of Business</h2>
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<p>Mountain Pointe did what a favorite should do at home in Round 1: score early, keep pressure on, and never let it slip. But the real story was sophomore running back Jamier McKinney, who looked like a star in the making. He only needed nine carries to make his mark, exploding for 121 yards and 3 touchdowns at a ridiculous 13.4 yards per carry. Every time he touched it, the energy in the stadium changed — quick feet, great vision, and that gear that defenders just couldn't match.</p>
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<p>Flowing Wells had a few nice flashes — a big run here, a third‑down conversion there — but every time they started to get something going, McKinney or the Pride defense answered right back. Mountain Pointe stayed aggressive, played fast, and looked every bit like a team built to make a run.</p>
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You don't need a film room to see who changed these games. Round 1 of the 5A playoffs had some good stories, but the headliners were the kids who took over drives, flipped field position, and slammed the door in the fourth.
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