Kansas
City Command quarterback, Brian Jones and wide receiver Bret Smith
connected for five touchdowns Saturday night (tying a franchise record),
but Spokane lite up the scoreboard and KC dropped their second game in a
row, losing (70-46) in front of 8,628 fans at Spokane Veterans Memorial
Arena. Shock QB Kyle Rowley spread the ball around to five different
receivers, passing for 272 yards and eight touchdowns.
“It’s
the same old same old,” said Command Coach Danton Barto. “Our starting
quarterback is out and we don’t know if Zack’s ready to play. Brian is
giving us everything he can but we’re just out of sync at times. We’ll
go back to the drawing board and see what we can do.”
Jones
got his second start for KC stepping in for the injured Matt Gutierrez,
but never found a consistent rhythm. The Command defense, led by JC
Neal’s eight tackles, helped keep the Shock in check during the first
half; that allowed Jones to find his favorite target of the night, Bret
Smith who had three touchdowns by the halfway point. KC and Spokane
traded scores and went into halftime tied at 28 points apiece.
On
connecting with Jones for eight touchdowns in just two games, Command
wide receiver Bret Smith said, “I wish we could put together some wins
with it, but Brian and I have that chemistry dating back to our Arkansas
days (they played together at Arkansas in 2010 under Coach Barto).
“We’ve just gotta keep working hard and hopefully it will turn into
wins. We’re not pointing any fingers; we’ve just got to improve as a
team.”
Spokane
came out firing on all cylinders in the third quarter, quickly going up
35-28 with a six yard touchdown catch by Steven Black at the 12:28 mark
and never relinquished their lead. The Shock receiving core of Black,
Rod Harper, Jefferey Soloman, and Adron Tennell kept KC’s defense on
their heels all night and five different Shock receivers combined for 26
catches and 272 yards. Spokane’s defense gave KC a taste of their own
medicine compiling four sacks, two interceptions, and three fumble
recoveries; scoring 21 points off turnovers alone.
“We
keep turning the ball over, and we keep losing,” said Barto. “It’s not
some secret formula and we do it at crucial points and it hurts us, and
we’re just not good enough to recover right now.”
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