Overlooked, undefeated Rolling Meadows beats Prospect

Running back Chris Divito paced the Mustangs with 22 carries for 155 yards and three touchdowns.

SHARE Overlooked, undefeated Rolling Meadows beats Prospect
Rolling Meadows’ Sean Nolan (24) reacts after a fumble recovery against Prospect.

Rolling Meadows’ Sean Nolan (24) reacts after a fumble recovery against Prospect.

Kirsten Stickney/For the Sun-Times

Rolling Meadows senior Chris Divito hasn’t been getting many carries on offense lately. The Mustangs’ coaching staff has had him focusing more on defense. He also plays linebacker.

That changed on Friday. Divito was unleashed on Prospect. The 5-10, 185-pound running back’s first run was for 12 yards, his third for 12 yards and his fourth went for 51.

That first drive set the tone for Rolling Meadows’ 26-14 win against the Knights in the second round of the Class 7A state playoffs.

Divito finished with 22 carries for 155 yards and two touchdowns. He also caught two passes, including a 24-yard touchdown grab.

“My linemen made a lot of good holes,” Divito said. “I kept pounding the ball and they let me keep going.”

Divito’s three-yard touchdown run with 6:40 to play but the Mustangs (11-0) ahead 20-14.

No. 23 Rolling Meadows hasn’t received much attention across the area despite its undefeated record.

“We are 11-0 but we are still underdogs,” defensive end Nate Pedraza said. “Nobody is gonna really look at us to make a huge run. We’re already in the quarterfinals. I think people have to open their eyes. We are going to make a big run.”

Junior Charlie Schmidt was the other major weapon on offense for the Mustangs. He had 15 carries for 85 yards.

“We beat them just a month ago so it was important to set the tempo and get a lead early,” Schmidt said. I trust in our defense that if we give them a lead they can keep it. Defense is our strong suit.”

Rolling Meadows’ defense dominated most of the game, but allowed two big plays.

Prospect (8-3) cut the Mustangs’ lead to 14-7 on an 80-yard touchdown pass from Gary Moeller to Noah Marx late in the first quarter.

Then they struck again late in the third quarter. Moeller threw to Brian Doherty near the sideline and he found Marx streaking downfield for a 61-yard touchdown pass that tied the game at 14.

“Those big plays, in the middle of them you are thinking ‘aww crap’ but then it is like, ‘bring it,’” Pedraza said. “It is all about the next play. The offense was kinda on the struggle bus at that point but the defense was able to pick it up.”

Moeller was 14-for-25 passing for 132 yards and one touchdown but the Knights managed just 10 yards rushing.

“We had to make sure it was our best week of practice,” Pedraza said. “We knew they were going to bring it. “

The Mustangs will face the winner of Downers Grove North vs. Wheaton-Warrenville South in the quarterfinals next weekend.

“We play hard, we work hard and it has been showing on the field,” Schmidt said. “We shouldn’t be overlooked anymore.”

The Latest
About 20 elected officials and community organizers discussed ways the city can combat antisemitism, though attendees said it was just the start of the conversation. Ald. Debra Silverstein (50th) said the gesture was ‘hollow.’
In a draft class that has been marked as the one that will change the trajectory of the league, there is arguably only one franchise that drafted more star power than the Sky, and they had the No. 1 overall pick.
The veteran defenseman isn’t sure why, but his play and production improved significantly after Jan. 13 the last two seasons.
Nastrini pitches five innings of two-run ball in loss to KC
We all love sports teams, but regular people don’t own the buildings or the land they frolic upon. We just pay homage to the teams — and to the power-laden who own them.