THE GREATEST GAME EVER PLAYED – told by someone without a clue!
By Mike Dywan – Sports Director
Article 2/4: The Buildup
The game in question took place on November 5 of that year, 2004 – now twenty years ago from when this very piece was released. However, this story begins a few years before that fateful night at the Boneyard.
Then again, another question should arise that I thought to myself before watching the game and adding my own two cents on the game for the first time: What makes a game great?
Yes, you could have next-level starpower, two talented teams, a neck-and-neck game script, fantastic coaches, memorable plays, a game played with high stakes, etc. And do not get me wrong – this 2004 Sectional Championship did check all of those boxes. However, there is one key difference that separates the good games from the great ones.
Pure hatred.
It was bad blood that had built up from years before the game we are recollecting – as the Panthers and the Niners were some of the Region’s best, but would often face multiple times a season given they both resided in the Lake Athletic Conference Black Division.
In the midst of that, the Panthers moved down into the 3A class in 2003 – more importantly joining a sectional grouping that featured the Niners.
“By this time they are on each other’s schedule every year, and they are going to meet in the tournament, and both teams have the same goal, ” said Ramirez. “Everybody had the same goal.”
The “hatred” commences in week three of the 2002 season, in what would be a 26-23 overtime win for Andrean that got to the extra frame after a sequence of last second heroics from the Panthers, followed by a controversial missed extra point (depends on who you ask) that would have won Griffith the game.
In that overtime period, the Panthers struck first with a field goal – but a budding Andrean superstar caught his second receiving touchdown to win it for the Niners. After that, chaos ensued.
“Brett put it right where only I could catch it,” said Tommy Finn, a sophomore wide receiver at the time. “Next thing I know, my 170 pound body is underneath the pile. Not only that, but Rich Lehmann was guarding me and got trampled underneath me.”
During the celebratory dogpile, Lehmann, who was then a sophomore defensive back for Griffith was reported to be knocked unconscious and would sustain numerous injuries in the game’s concluding moments for Andrean.
“There were some feelings about that, but I don’t think any of that was intentional,” Finn said. “I can recall being under and just yelling, ‘Get off!’ But that for sure ignited the start of the rivalry.”
Whether it was deemed intentional or not, Griffith would not forget what was known as the “trample game.”
“That lit the town of Griffith up,” Chris Ramirez said. “They took it personal, which fueled the fire.”
It would be the last the two programs would meet in the 2002 season. Both teams continued to dominate in their respective classes.
Andrean played its way to the Dome for a second straight season, this time falling short to powerhouse Bishop Chatard. Griffith, although ever hungry for similar postseason success, would go on to win its second consecutive sectional title at the 4A level.
As mentioned before, heading into the fall of 2003, Griffith would jump down to the Class 3A – calling for the opportunity for both sides to meet twice a year if possible.
Spoiler alert, they will.
While there was a new face in the mix at the 3A level, there also was a new face manning the Andrean sideline – as first-year head coach Brett St. Germain was brought on board that offseason after former frontman Wally McCormack took the head coaching job at Hobart.
“I knew I had stepped into a very good program,” St. Germain said. “I knew what I was walking into. But because I was walking into such a successful program, I better be pretty good at what I am doing. Early on when I met with the coaches, they kept throwing this kid’s name out – Tommy Finn.”
After a promising sophomore campaign, Finn would soon be in line to start under center – the same position his two brothers, Billy and Bobby, each did for the Niners years ago. To add some more fuel to the fire, Tommy’s two brothers each did quite well under center for the Niners.
“There was some pressure,” Tommy said. “Coming through, my coaches and my brothers always helped out with that. A lot of pressure can be taken off by your work ethic, and that is where your confidence starts.”
The junior would ride that confidence into a 7-0 start in his first season as the signal caller – setting up another highly anticipated bout with Griffith in week eight. Again, four quarters was not enough, but the Niners once again squeaked by the Panthers, 28-27.
Of course, a rematch was set up for the Sectional Championship of that season. If you do not see a trend already, these games were usually close… and this one was no different.
In a contest that was seemed to be Griffith’s to lose, Andrean broke the hearts of the Panther faithful for a third meeting in a row, this time in their first win-or-go-home situation. Special teams would continue to play a role in this rivalry, as Niners’ kicker Mark Edwards drilled a long field goal with under two minutes to go. (See Video Below)
It would be the difference, as Andrean prevailed again, this time 16-14, stripping the Sectional Championship out of Grifith’s hands.
If there was a thorn in Griffith’s side during that stretch, it was the Andrean 59ers. In the previous three meetings, dating back to the “trample,” there were two overtimes and an overall scoring differential of six points, 70 to 64 to be exact. All three games ended with the same result.
The Niners would lose a nail biter next week to Hamilton Heights, which allows us to move to 2004 – the final act of this Hollywood-esque story.
Heading into the year, the goal for both sides was simple: win some hardware. Griffith more so was still hoping to add a second State Championship next to its lone 1997 trophy, while Andrean, although arguably the more successful team as of late in the postseason, was still searching for that elusive first state title.
Finn was hoping to end his preps football career with a bang, while now-second year head coach St. Germain wanted his offense to rely more on the now-senior QB.
“When you give kids chances to make decisions, majority of the time they are correct,” said St. Germain. “You can’t throttle them down if they make a mistake. The more that Tommy was able to create, the better he was. As good as he was , he was better when he was creating it.”
Both teams once again started the season hot. The two 3A classmates would work their way into another marquee regular season matchup at the Boneyard – both with 6-1 records.
It was mentioned that whenever Andrean and Griffith played each other during this three-year window, a close and hard fought game was expected. However, on October 8 of the 2004 season, this game broke the mold.
Calling it a rout was a bit of an understatement.
This Griffith team, who came into this game scoring at least 21 points in all seven of its matchups, were now quarterbacked by Rich Lehmann. Does that name sound familiar? It is the same Rich Lehmann that was stuck under a pile of 59ers in 2002.
Accompanying him skill-wise were talents like Matt Nelleman and Drew Rogowski, rounding out a trio that ran the wishbone to perfection. All of this was led by an Indiana Football Hall of Fame head coach, Russ Radtke.
The built up heartbreak and disappointment from meetings previous came out from the talented Griffith sideline that evening – as the game got away from the Niners quickly.
“They got annihilated,” said Ramirez. “Griffith was playing nearly perfect football by week eight. Even before the fourth quarter, Andrean was getting buried.
What the fourth quarter did was lay the foundation for the greatest game ever played.”
At the end of three quarters, the scoreboard read 42-14 in favor of Russ Radtke’s Panthers. With the game arguably decided, a few choice plays added some insult to injury en route to a statement Griffith victory.
“There was a fake punt in the fourth quarter,” Ramirez recalled. “There were one or two other things. The game was decided. Was that payback for the trample? Maybe. It galvanized Griffith. Now the whole Region seemed to focus on what would happen a few weeks down the road. Everyone knew Andrean and Griffith would get to meet one more time.”
Although the late game decisions caused a stir in the media and outsiders – Andrean thought the beatdown was warranted.
“They can do whatever they want,” Finn said. “They wanted that for their kids and they had to do that to get over the hump. Nothing really boiled over after the game. We had to lick our wounds and go back to the drawing board.”
“Griffith’s whole focus at that point was beating Andrean – which it should’ve been,” said St. Germain” They destroyed us. This was a team that was on a mission. Two years of devastating losses. We got throttled.
Yes, they ran a fake punt to end the game. I remember being asked about it. My gut told me, ‘If I am going to worry about what they did, I am focused on the wrong things.’ We just got beat by five touchdowns. And we are going to play this team again.”
Coincidentally, the draw for sectionals came out that weekend.
Anyone want to take a guess on what the potential Class 3A Sectional Championship was?
“It was built-in material,” said Ramirez. “There was conflict – and you couldn’t escape it. I couldn’t tell you another game from that tournament.”
The Niners – fresh off of that loss to a hungry group of Panthers, were slotted to head back to the Boneyard if both teams did their part in the sectional. That would soon be the case, but this was a Andrean squad with some newfound confidence – as they outscored its first two sectional opponents 126-15.
St. Germain felt that these dominant performances in the early stages of the tournament were essential. After all, his team had to try and muster up any ounce of confidence to return back to a place where they lost by five scores.
“My only mindset at that time was that our kids need to feel so confident and who we are and what we are doing that when we get to that game, they are at their highest emotional peak,” St. Germain said. “We needed to feel like a machine going in there.”
Tempers certainly flared as soon as the Niners got off the bus, as Andrean brought a bone of its own which was torn off of a Halloween decoration, just to stir the pot even more.
Stereotypes were thrown around when discussing the two teams at that period. Griffith was often labeled as a team and community that as always playing a chip on its shoulder. The Panthers of that time, both the players and community, were not afraid to beat you to the ground and let you know about it – which made outsiders feel uneasy about the culture that built up over time. On the other hand, Andrean heard all of the stereotypes that may come with being a private catholic high school.
The Niners, who took more of a “let the play do the talking” approach in the first ‘04 meeting, wanted to do a different path for the second affair, one similar to its opposition.
“As seniors, we were more mature,” Finn recollected. “We were just like, to heck with it, let’s embrace it. Let’s go there and start yelling right back at them. We did it, even though one of our assistant coaches got word of and was strongly against it. We did it anyway. I think it was one of those things where we were going to embrace the underdog role. We had nothing to lose.”
“That’s sport,” said St. Germain. “You have to find whatever motivates you. I didn’t orchestrate anything, that was all the kids. I kind of felt like we’re not going to go over there and be quiet. If they are going to talk, talk back. Not trash talk, not inappropriate stuff, but we don’t have to be quiet. We took that approach and that didn’t work a month ago.”
Heading into the game, with all of the buildup coming together in what was the atmosphere of the Boneyard, you couldn’t ask for a better matchup.
Heck, we still had a game to play!