Tommies quarterback Amari Powell starting to find himself through the highs and lows

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St. Thomas redshirt freshman quarterback Amari Powell has an important appointment scheduled upon the team’s return to campus following Saturday’s Pioneer Football League game at San Diego.

Win or lose, Powell will find an appropriate time to head for O’Shaughnessy Stadium, where he will sit down on the field and take 30 minutes to reflect on the happenings of the just-concluded week.

The ritual has been in place since the third week of the season, following the Tommies’ 45-13 loss at Harvard, during which Powell threw a pair of interceptions and was replaced by true freshman Tak Tateoka.

Powell lost the starting job to Tateoka the following week due to his penchant for turnovers, only to return to the field following a season-ending injury to Tateoka on October 14 in a loss at Drake. Powell has performed well in his “second chance” to lead the Tommies’ offense, and said his postgame meditations at O’Shaughnessy have proven invaluable.

“Just submerse myself in my feelings and emotions,” Powell said. “It’s been super-enlightening for me, just making me think about what I want and what I want to do. It’s been a blessing to be able to do that. I think college is about figuring out yourself — who you are and your identity.

“As much as I thought it was just going to be a football thing, it has helped me so much off the field; how life is up and down, but you have people in your corner you can always rely on.”

Ordinarily, Powell’s time of reflection concludes with a long phone call to his mom and dad in Valencia, Calif., but his parents, grandparents, younger brother and one of his high school coaches will be attending the game. The idea of putting on a show for family and friends is not part of Powell’s makeup.

“I kind of found a groove these past two weeks,” Powell said, “so just making sure I’m doing things a little bit better week by week. Keep pushing the guys to be the best we can be. Winning would provide the best moment.”

Head coach Glenn Caruso said Powell’s inability to “take care of the football” led to the quarterback change after the Harvard game. Powell has done a better job of late of making good decisions and dealing with the physical aspects of the game.

“What they tell us here is to think of the football as your child,” Powell said, “and you wouldn’t want anybody else taking that away from you. So just thinking about that, and how the football I have (in his hands) is the program.

“So it’s been huge to think about taking care of the program when it is in my hands.”

Powell, who won the starting job in an open competition prior to the start of the season, admits that he went through a tough period when the change was made so early in the season.

“But I also knew for the betterment of the team I knew I had to make sure that Tak was OK,” he said. “And still being a leader, still being vocal. But also, for me reflecting on it, other people were there for me as well, talking to me, making sure my head was good.

“I really got into building my foundation on faith. That helped me get through it.”

While Powell said he will appreciate the warm breezes that await him in San Diego, no part of him regrets his decision to travel so far away from home to play football and attend college.

“I think I needed it, this isolation, just figuring myself out,” he said. “Figuring life out for myself instead of relying on my parents for everything. This is a big stepping stone in my life.”

Powell believes he is a better quarterback than he was at the start of the season.

“One, just building confidence,” he said. “Two, mentally has been a huge step for me. And I think my leadership; I think I’m starting to step into a role that I can see myself starting to get used to.”

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High school football: Saturday state quarterfinal predictions

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Here are a couple of Saturday’s top high school football playoff games involving East Metro teams:

CLASS 5A

St. Thomas Academy (8-2) vs. Owatonna (8-2), at Woodbury H.S., 12 p.m.

This is the same round that the Cadets lost to Mahtomedi in overtime a year ago. Oh, and it’s on the same field. So St. Thomas Academy should lack no motivation to come out and score a little vengeance, even if it’s against an unfamiliar foe. Both programs breezed through their respective sections. Owatonna has a strong passing game, which will give St. Thomas Academy’s defense a chance to show it is a better unit than it showed during the regular season. OUR PICK: St. Thomas Academy 30, Owatonna 28

Mahtomedi (6-4) vs. Chanhassen (10-0), at Apple Valley H.S., 1 p.m.

Chanhassen sports one of the state’s top players in do-it-all star Maxwell Woods, who has run for 1,300 yards and 14 touchdowns. The Storm cemented their current place as the top team in Class 5A with their thrilling victory over Mankato West in the section final. Of course, the top team all fall doesn’t always lift the trophy at season’s end. And the Class 5A state tournament is generally one of the toughest to navigate unscathed. Mahtomedi has been up and down this season, but it has played well of late and could be finding its stride. OUR PICK: Chanhassen 35, Mahtomedi 14

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Bronx Zoo welcomes pair of new Mangshan pit vipers, one of the world’s rarest species of snakes

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Larry McShane | New York Daily News

Two recently-arrived Mangshan pit vipers, one of the world’s rarest and most colorful species of snake, are just a subway ride away in the Bronx.

The new hatchlings were born this past Aug. 7 at the Bronx Zoo, with one of the pair now housed in the nursery at the facility’s World of Reptiles with a pair of adult Mangshan vipers, the facility said in a Friday news release. The venomous snakes were only discovered in 1990 and are believed to live solely inside a densely forested 115-square-mile stretch of mountains in Southeast China.

Zoo officials described the pit viper as an endangered and “exceptionally beautiful” creature, with its scales forming camouflage patchworks in various colors of green for protection in the forest and a light-colored tip to their tales. The zoo said there are currently just 500 Mangshan pit vipers believed to exist in the wild, and the creatures are listed as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List, with habitat loss and illegal abductions cited for their dwindling numbers.

The creature’s name comes from the pits between its eyes and nostrils, which act as heat sensors as they hunt prey. The species is also one of the few pit vipers that lay eggs.

The Bronx facility began a husbandry program for the snakes in 2011, with this year’s arrivals greeted as the firstborn from the effort. The pair of three-month-old snakes, currently about eight inches long, would typically grow to just over six feet as adults, the zoo said, and there are there were roughly 150 of the Mangshan vipers in zoos across Europe and in the United States.

The zoo’s breeding program for the snakes now includes 11 of the pit vipers, with the facility hoping to “increase the genetic diversity and support the sustainability of this endangered species,” the zoo said.

Wild get captain Jared Spurgeon for Friday’s game in Buffalo

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BUFFALO, N.Y. — The captain is back. The question is, can he right the ship?

Wild captain Jared Spurgeon was set to play against the Sabres on Friday at KeyCenter Arena, his first game since he suffered an upper body injury in an Oct. 5 preseason game in Chicago.

“Are we looking for him to come back and be a savior right away? Of course not,” head coach Dean Evason said before the 6 p.m. CST puck drop. “Everybody’s got to play the right way.”

Spurgeon has been skating for the better part of two weeks, and traveled with the team on this three-game trip through New York in anticipation of getting into at least one game. General manager Bill Guerin said Wednesday that was unlikely to happen, but player, trainers and coaches agreed the veteran defenseman could play on Friday.

He slotted back into a pair with Jake Middleton, who has struggled in his absence — although the team as a whole has struggled in Spurgeon’s absence. They entered the last game of this trip 5-6-2 overall after a 4-1 loss to the Rangers on Thursday in New York City.

Like most coaches, Evason won’t use injuries as an excuse. Twenty players suit up for a game and it’s their job to win games. But he acknowledged Friday that Spurgeon was a major loss as the Wild stumbled out of the gate.

“He’s just one of the best defensemen in the world, right?” the coach said. “So, to have him out of our lineup, sure, it’s hurt all areas of our game.”

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