The team was psyched. It was the Allan Hancock College football teamās first season in a new, tougher conference, and here they were in the playoffs. All across the practice field, there were looks of determination, easy confidence, and blue Mohawks. It was the eve of the Bulldogsā playoff game against third-ranked Mt. San Antonio College.
The Bulldogs have played a great season and taken some spectacular wins. Quarterback Eric Anderwkavich, cornerback Lamar Allen, and defensive back Tim Ochoa spoke on the practice field about Hancockās recent triple overtime win against Glendale.
The story goes like this: With 5 minutes left in the game, the Bulldogs were down by 14 points, when one of the Hancock tailbacks broke a long touchdown. They then managed to get the ball back with a minute and a half left, and drove 90 yards for the touchdown and tied the game with 16 seconds left.

Glendale scored first in overtime and the Bulldogs stopped their two-point attempt (turns out you can only kick for a point for two of the overtime periods, then the rules force each team to go for the two-point conversion), and then scored a touchdown and made their two-point conversion. That was the game.
According to these guys, that the team rushed the field is an understatement.
So what have they done differently this year to account for Hancockās impressive season?
Coach Kris Dutra explained that, with his assistant coaches, heās got a lot of experience on his staff, as well as a team full of players who really stepped upādefense in particularāto account for the improvement.
Ā āYou know, thereās a defense we run thatās real aggressive. … You call certain stunts, and youāre going after the quarterback a lot. Itās kind of a high pressure deal, where guys are moving around a lot,ā Dutra said. āWe have kids this year that can handle that a little bit better.ā
In going up against a team like Mt. SACāone of the biggest community colleges in the state and ranked 9-1 this seasonāwere the Bulldogs intimidated?
Not at all, Dutra said.
āThese guys donāt get intimidated,ā he explained. āWhen we played Pasadena, you should have seen that teamās line: offensive tackles that were 6ā 7, 6ā 8, even one of their defensive backs was 6ā 4, 212 pounds. Then you look at us, weāre just not a big team, physically.ā
And how did that game turn out?
āWe beat āem, 45-42.ā
Sadly though, in the end, it just wasnāt meant to be. Facing a team with the No. 1 ranked passer in the nation and a roster that was almost double the size of theirs, the Bulldogs lost 52-14 on Nov. 22.
To be sure, there were moments of greatness for the Bulldogs: Tailback Diondre Bryant rushed for a total of 113 yards. And Quarterback Anderwkavich rushed for an impressive 97 yards.
āHe was almost like another running back,ā Dutra said.

With a score of 28-7 and 6:30 left in the first half, the Bulldogs had a chance to narrow the gap with the ball on Mt. SACās 5-yard line. Instead, the pass was picked off and run back 98 yards for a touchdown.
The loss came from a combination of factors that Saturday, not the least of which was Mt. SACās kickoff guy, who, according to Dutra, ācould kick the ball on kickoff through the end zone.ā
āOur [kickoff] guy got it to the 10 and they were returning it to midfield. We were returning it to the 20,ā Dutra said. āYou take those special teams and factor it in there, thatās a hard game for you to win.ā
Still, the coach knows that his team will come away from this season with a fresh determination for the next one.
āThe best thing is, the kids have been there now and understand the kind of teams weāre going to play next time,ā he said. āWhen we play teams like College of the Canyons, weāre playing against the top teams in the countryāyouād better be ready. Theyāll be able to spread that message to the freshmen that come in next year.ā
Just the fact that the Bulldogs made it as far as they did in this tougher division is testament to Coach Dutra, his staff, and the Bulldogsā hard work and determination this season. All across campus, the mood has been less about the Bulldogsā loss on Saturday and more about how much theyāve accomplished.
As coach Dutra put it: āThey fought hard.ā
Intern Nicholas Walter always fights hard. Push him back at intern@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Nov 26 – Dec 3, 2008.

