DePaul defeats Pope John, 33-21, in state championship

SPARTA. Lions finish season with 5-8 record, including three playoff victories.

Sparta /
| 29 Nov 2024 | 01:31

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DePaul wins its 11th state championship, defeating Pope John, 33-21. It is the Wayne school’s seventh state title since 2013.

DePaul’s De’zie Jones makes a second interception with 1:01 minutes left.

Pope John takes possession of ball with 1:31 minutes left in the game.

DePaul’s De’zie Jones intercepts the ball on the Pope John 1-yard line with 5:24 minutes left in the game. DePaul leads, 33-21.

Nolan James Jr. scores his second touchdown for DePaul, bringing its lead to 33-21 with the extra point.

Fourth quarter under way.

A 67-yard touchdown run by Tylik Hill brings score to DePaul 26-Pope John 21. Kick by Omar Daniel fails.

DePaul pushed lead to 26-15 with a touchdown on a pass to Elijah Burress.

Third quarter scoreless with less than 5 minutes left.

Pope John has the ball as second half begins.

Halftime.

DePaul, ranked No. 3 in the state, regains 19-15 lead with a third touchdown but two-point conversion fails.

Pope John takes 15-13 lead with a second touchdown by Tylik Hill followed by a two-point conversion by Joseph Rozynski at the beginning of the second quarter.

DePaul regains 13-7 lead with a second touchdown after an 88-yard kickoff return in the first quarter.

Pope John ties score at 7-7 with a touchdown by Tylik Hill in the first quarter of the Non-Public, Group B tournament championship game Friday, Nov. 29 at MetLife Stadium.

Earlier news:

The Pope John XXIII Regional High School football team is headed to the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA) Non-Public, Group B tournament final after a convincing victory against St. John Vianney, 48-14, on Saturday, Nov. 23 in Sparta.

After a 2-7 regular season, the Lions have flipped a switch in the playoffs, winning their three games by a combined 73 points.

They have done so on the back of running back Tylik Hill, and Saturday’s game was no different.

Hill scored twice in the first quarter as the Lions took an early 13-0 lead.

He rushed for 234 yards and three touchdowns, eclipsing the 2,000-yard mark for his career.

“My offensive line helped me prove my point that I’m the best running back in the state,” he said after the game.

After the early Lions lead, the St. John Vianney team responded, scoring its first points of the day and cutting the Pope John lead to six points heading into quarter two.

It didn’t take long for the Lions to come back as senior Joseph Rozynski got loose off a screen pass from quarterback Luke Irwin for a 54-yard touchdown.

The Pope John defense faltered again in the second quarter, surrendering another touchdown, but that was the last time that St. John Vianney saw the end zone.

Senior linebacker and Wake Forest commit Tyler Houser intercepted the ball and ran it all the way back to the end zone, putting an exclamation point on a dominant half for the Lions.

The second half was much of the same. A 55-yard touchdown run by Hill to start the half all but ended the game as St. John Vianney continued to have no answer for Hill and the Lions offense.

The Pope John defense stiffened up as well, not allowing a point in the second half.

“We got a lot of tough guys in the middle of the field, and Houser is special,” said Pope John head coach Dom Gastone.

The Lions tacked on another seven points from a 64-yard throw and catch between Irwin and senior Wes Johnston.

“We got a resilient group of kids. They fought all season and honestly we haven’t been healthy and now we’re healthy at the right time,” said Gastone. “Everything’s coming together at the right time for the boys.”

The regular season record may not have been what the Lions were hoping for, but the experience of playing some of the state’s best teams certainly helped them during the playoff run.

Pope John will travel to MetLife Stadium to take on DePaul in the tournament final at 11 a.m. Friday, Nov. 29. The team hopes to avenge its week-one loss against a 10-1 DePaul team.

“Trying to cement a legacy here and keep it going,” Houser said. “We haven’t been to MetLife in 11 years, and it felt great to get there from our home field.”