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FB---Providence Day Gets 1st Win

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Providence Day believes that rings are still possible

By Langston Wertz Jr.

September 13, 2018 11:59 PM

Coming off a state championship loss to regional power Charlotte Christian last season, Providence Day football coach Adam Hastings was returning a lot of talent, including two high school All-Americans, and he was looking for ways to close the gap between his team and the Knights, who have won four of the past six Division I state titles.

A big part of Hastings’ plan was an ambitious early-season schedule that included dates with Columbia Ridge View, a S.C. 4A team, Fayetteville Trinity Christian, a powerhouse N.C. private school team and North Stanly, a 1A power returning lots of talent from a 10-2 team.

The one thing Hastings wasn’t counting on? An 0-3 start.

“But my feelings about them never changed,” Hastings said about his team. “With everything we’ve been through, I never lost faith that our players were 100 percent bought in to where we had to be.”

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And it wasn’t like Hastings’ team - which features top 100 2019 recruits Porter Rooks and Jacolbe Cowan - was playing the Holy Sisters of the Poor.


Providence Day lost 41-20 to Trinity Christian (4-0), which is ranked No. 18 among all N.C. teams, regardless of class, by MaxPreps. That was followed by a 33-7 loss to Ridge View (2-1), a school four times the size of Providence Day, and then a 29-14 loss last week to a 1A North Stanly (2-2) team that has two close losses to bigger 3A teams. In that game, Providence Day had six turnovers, three on North Stanly’s side of the field.

“We felt like we could be 3-0,” Hastings said, “and we ended up 0-3.”

On Thursday, the Chargers whipped the Hickory Hawks 51-0, dominating a home school team in an easy win. The Chargers scored 30 points in the first quarter.

“A win’s a win,” Hastings said, knowing his team needed one. “The biggest thing for us is we played three quality opponents, and we just needed to gain some momentum.”

The Chargers only have 40 players on varsity and a good number are freshmen. Hastings said his team can’t do too many contact drills for fear of injury. So being able to hit on Friday nights only means his team might take a little while to get comfortable.

But by playing a tough schedule, Hastings says he was able to identify the areas the Chargers need to improve. And other than a non-conference game at home against Arden’s Christ School Oct. 19, the Chargers should be favored every week until the regular-season rematch with Charlotte Christian Oct. 26. That game could be for the Big South 4A conference championship.

And despite the start, the Chargers’ goals were always to be playing for the conference and state titles. If they get there, Hastings is positive the opening schedule and the hardships his team has fought through will mean it is more ready to take the next step.

“We’re confident with how we can play,” he said. “The reality is, because we played such quality opponents, we learned a lot about us. If we had not scheduled tough, we would not know how and where to get better.

“All we preach in the off-season is to put yourself in uncomfortable positions and that’s how you become a tougher, better person. And I think our goals are still attainable. When we do things the way we need to, we’re as good as we need to be.”
 
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