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Possums take down Dogwood championship
April 7, 1997
The trophy stayed home.
Knoxville edged Greenville, S.C., 17-16 in the final of the Dogwood Tournament, held April 5 and 6, 1997.
Six teams competed in the two-pool tourney. In Bracket One, Knoxville stomped Johnson City 34-7 before the Possums shut out Findlay, Ohio, 22-0. In the second pool, Greenville romped Chattanooga 47-0 and beat Toledo 20-13.
Final
Ten minutes into the championship, with the pitch softened by a morning rain, Knoxville center Todd Little scored a try and lock Brian Niekerk converted for a 7-0 Knoxville lead.
Greenville flyhalf Rich Cobb booted two penalties to one by Niekerk to bring the halftime score to 10-6 in Knoxville’s favor.
The second half started with Knoxville prop Tyler Huskey bursting up the middle for a 25-meter try that Niekerk converted to put the Possums in front 17-6.
Cobb was knocked out of the game and wing Greg Blinston moved to flyhalf. He promptly slotted a penalty to bring the Griffins within eight points at 17-9.
A try by Greenville wing Lynn Moore, converted by Blinston, tightened the scoreline to 17-16. The Griffins pressured late on a scamper by scrumhalf Tom Liddle, but a Knoxville player alertly kicked the ball away when no support arrived for Liddle.
Knoxville Greenville
Huskey (C) 1 Little
Miller 2 Courtney
McArthur 3 J. Roberts
Cerne 4 Haywood
Niekerk 5 Speaks
Daugherty 6 Van Evera
Cunningham 7 Lecroix
Powell 8 D. Roberts (C)
Hopson 9 Liddle
Broyles 10 Cobb*
Bennett 11 Moore
Little 12 Howland
Koroa 13 Clardy
Dorwin 14 Blinston
Braswell 15 Quirk
*replaced by Jackson
Ref: Craig Kartiganer
Final-play ‘Header’ gives Greenville win over Knoxville
April 15, 1996
A “Rooster” got kicked in the head - and the Possums ended up dead.
Greenville, S.C., defended its Dogwood Tournament title in bizarre fashion, scoring on the last play of the game when a kicked ball bounced off the face of a Knoxville player into the try zone where Griffin No. 8 Dan Roberts fell on it for the easy game-winning try.
The tourney was held at Forks of the River Park April 13 and 14, 1996.
Prelims
In opening round play, Toledo, Ohio, struck first against Knoxville when former U.S. Eagle Rich Schurfeld slashed in from his fullback position to score a converted try.
The Possums rallied with tries by Frank Bennett and Jack Geibig, coupled with two penalty kicks and a conversion from fullback Kevin Blalock to pull away for an 18-7 win.
In its second match, Knoxville broke away from a 6-6 tie with Columbia, S.C., to run out to a 30-6 win. Doug Powell tallied a pair of tries and Blalock finished with half of the Possums’ points on a try, two penalties and a couple of conversions.
Greenville punished Chattanooga and then handled Findlay, Ohio, in a rematch of the 1995 Dogwood Tourney final to reach Sunday’s championship contest.
Final
Knoxville pressured early and were rewarded when flyhalf Marty Bradley nailed a penalty kick to put the Possums up 3-0. Greenville scrumhalf Butch Setzer followed with a penalty of his own to knot the scores at 3-3.
The Possums had a terrific opportunity to score a try when wing Pat Dorwin tossed a lineout to himself, dummied with trailing flanker Oscar Doster to slow the defense, then passed long to mid-field but a knock-on stymied the sure score.
Bradley then added a penalty but off the restart Geibig was whistled for shepherding and Setzer’s penalty made it 6-6 at the half.
Both teams threatened in the second stanza, but numerous Knoxville penalties nullified territorial gains.
Bradley and Setzer, whose angled conversion gave Greenville a 15-14 win over Findlay in the 1995 Dogwood Tourney, traded penalty kicks as it was 9-9 with just a minute left in the match.
A poor Greenville cross-kick went to Knoxville wing Mike Weldon, who set up a maul. The ball was spun to Bradley, whose clearing kick bounced backward off the face of retreating hooker Ryan “Rooster” Miller.
Roberts, Greenville’s captain, was behind the play but alertly knew there was no offside law to be broken and beat the cover to touch down the carom for the winning try. Setzer added the conversion and the Griffins repeated as Dogwood champions.
Greenville Knoxville
J. Roberts 1 Huskey (C)
Beamann 2 Miller
Speaks 3 Sandman
Atkinson 4 Cerne
Sullivan 5 Booth
Van Evera 6 Daugherty
Phillips 7 Doster
D. Roberts (C) 8 Powell
Setzer 9 Broyles
Gerezol 10 Bradley
Bratys 11 Weldon
Howland 12 Niekerk
Clardy 13 Bennett
Moore 14 Dorwin
Cobb 15 Blalock
Ref: Rich Boone, C-2, Mid-South
Greenville edges Findlay in Dogwood Tournament
April 10, 1995
Most Valuable Player Dusty Wilson had a dream first-half for Findlay, Ohio, in the championship of the Dogwood Tournament, scoring all his team’s points for a 14-3 lead.
Mother Nature then undid all of Wilson’s strong play as Greenville, S.C., completed a wind-aided comeback, helped by its defense tossing a 40-minute shutout, for a stirring one-point win.
Wing Lynn Moore’s second try and an angled conversion by scrumhalf Butch Setzer gave the Griffins a 15-14 win at Forks of the River Park.
Greenville advanced to Sunday’s final with Group A victories over Johnson City (16-7) and Chattanooga (19-10). Chattanooga stopped Johnson City 22-12 to earn a berth in the third-place match.
Saturday matches featured 30-minute halves and round-robin play.
In Group B, Knoxville and Huntsville played a full match with the loser dropping down to Division III that fall in the Mid-South RFU schedule. The Possums got a pair of tries from 1994 Dogwood MVP Kevin Blalock to shut down Huntsville 22-0.
The Possums then dropped a one-point decision to Findlay, 23-22, before the Ohioans lost to Huntsville 31-24 with Findlay advancing to the final based on total points scored.
That’s 45 points for Findlay to 44 for Knoxville if you’re scoring at home.
Findlay had a steady cross-breeze behind it in the first half of the championship. Just five minutes in, Greenville was caught offside and Findlay outside center Dusty Wilson hit the penalty from 25-meters, 3-0.
Minutes later, Greenville dived over a ruck and Wilson drilled a 40-meter penalty to up Findlay’s lead to 6-0. Findlay was then offside on a short Greenville lineout and Setzer’s boot from about 25 meters out made it 6-3.
A long 22-meter drop-out was fielded by Findlay wing Scott Switzer and he kicked back, hustling downfield to make the tackle. Findlay won the ruck and spun the ball down the line for Wilson to drop a 20-meter goal for a 9-3 lead.
A Greenville forward scooped up a loose ball near his own 22 and tried to find touch but his kick was blown cross-field to Wilson. He broke a couple of tackles and then chipped ahead, beating Greenville’s cover to touch down.
Wilson’s conversion was off, but he had all of Findlay’s points for a 14-3 halftime scoreline.
Findlay tried to clear early in the second half, but couldn’t find touch and the Griffins pressured. Setzer chipped ahead and Moore snuck past two Findlay defenders to score, pulling Greenville to within a converted try for a win at 14-8.
The Griffins then used long kicks to return to Findlay’s half of the field. Inside center Mike Beaqoume gained possession for Greenville and was just a dozen meters from the tryline when he chipped deep into the 20-meter try zone.
Moore again beat the cover to the ball and referee Keith Burnett was right on the play to rule that downward pressure was applied and he awarded the try to pull the Griffins within a point. Setzer’s clutch conversion gave Greenville a 15-14 lead and the Dogwood championship.
Greenville Findlay
Madden 1 Noonan*
R. Cobb 2 Sneary**
Roberts 3 Fennell
Bryant 4 Roller
Speaks 5 Vandermark
Herron 6 R. Switzer
Kimball 7 Durenberger
Van Eevers 8 J. Switzer
Setzer 9 Dk. Wilson
Gerisol 10 Rodgers
Moore 11 S. Switzer
Beaqoume 12 Swisher
Carlyle 13 Du. Wilson
Lemmons 14 Darliat***
M.Cobb 15 Wagner
Ref: Keith Burnett, C-3, Mid-South
*replaced by Machuka
**replaced by K. Switzer
***replaced by Hernandez
Third Place
Knoxville toppled Chattanooga 20-12 for third place while Johnson City beat Huntsville in the consolation final.
All-Tournament Team and MVPs
The following players were selected for the Dogwood All-Tournament Team. Dusty Wilson was chosen as Most Valuable Back while Rich Cobb was the Most Valuable Forward. They received plaques from Matt Godek.
1 Charles Madden Greenville
2 Rich Cobb Greenville
3 Tyler Huskey Knoxville
4 Jamie Roller Findlay
5 Jeff Bryant Findlay
6 Jeff Hall Chattanooga
7 Sheldon Brennan Greenville
8 Billy Eberle Chattanooga
9 Mike Curtis Huntsville
10 Marty Bradley Knoxville
11Lynn Moore Greenville
12 Don Clardy Knoxville
13 Dusty Wilson Findlay
14 Troy Flanagan Chattanooga
15 Tom Wilson Knoxville
Women’s Division
The University of Tennessee won all three of its round-robin games with #8 Jennifer Duke chosen as MVP.
Knoxville also said good-bye to its coach, John Holliday, who would return home to Australia in July. As a schoolboy, he won the Australian equivilant to the Heisman Trophy and helped our club tremendously.
Knoxville downs UT in Dogwood championship
April 18, 1994
The Possums beat up some future teammates as Knoxville handled the University of Tennessee 26-8 in the championship of the fifth annual Dogwood Tournament.
The event was held April 16 and 17, 1994 at John Tarleton Park.
In pool play, the Possums stopped Greenville, S.C., 12-5 and Johnson City 31-10. UT was upset in overtime 10-7 by Chattanooga before rebounding to defeat Findlay, Ohio, 25-0 to advance to the championship on Sunday.
Final
Seven minutes into the match, Knoxville center Tom Wilon slotted a 35-meter penalty to give the Possums a 3-0 lead. UT hooker Jason Kallivakos answered with a 30-meter shot to make it 3-3.
With 17 minutes gone, Wilson hit a second penalty (6-3), and shortly thereafter was instrumental in the game’s opening try.
As Knoxville pressured the Tennessee tryline, Wilson drew two defenders and opened up a spot that flyhalf Pat Dorwin dived through, the try giving Knoxville an 11-3 halftime lead.
The Possums contined the pressure in the second stanza and it paid off when No. 8 Brian Niekerk scooped up a loose ball and fed center Steve Cunningham on the burst for the try, 16-3.
Moments later, the 6-foot-3, 240-pound Niekerk collected a poor clearing kick and rambled in for the try. Wilson’s conversion made it 23-3.
The next 20 minutes were a scoreless stalemate until UT wing Chris Dulin called for a weakside feed off a scrum and went in for a try. With eight minutes remaining, Wilson closed out the scoring with a penalty and the match ended 26-8 in Knoxville’s favor.
Knoxvillle UT
Sandman (C) 1 Pledger
Miller 2 Kallivakos
Salansky 3 Huskey (C)
Christopher 4 French
Roads 5 Lawson
Klaehn 6 Jones
Powell 7 Dixon
Niekerk 8 Brown
Muniz 9 Brant
Dorwin 10 Gower
Bennett 11 Sweeten
Cunningham 12 Olson
Wilson 13 Carter
Altoonian 14 Dulin
Blalock 15 Clardy
Ref: Tim Wright
Notes
The versatile Niekerk would lineup at eightman, inside center and lock during his career at Dogwood tournaments. Steve Cunningham was also comfortable at a number of positions - hooker, flanker, scrumhalf, center and wing.
Blalock was named 1994 Dogwood MVP - thanks to his strong defense at flyhalf when he and Dorwin would switch positions when the Possums defended. Dorwin was primarily a wing and fullback, but also saw Dogwood time at scrumhalf and flyhalf.
UT fullback Don Clardy would later play for Knoxville and Greenville in Dogwood tournaments.
Years later, John Tarleton Park became home to the currrent high school league, spearheaded by longtime Knoxville flyhalf Marty Bradley, who was out of town for the 1994 Dogwood tourney.




