Blue Raiders' Kellye Cawood is area Waffle House player of week

Cleveland quarterback Kellye Cawood (12) tries to get around three Bradley defenders.  The Cleveland Blue Raiders visited the Bradley Central Bears in TSSAA football action of September 15, 2017.
Cleveland quarterback Kellye Cawood (12) tries to get around three Bradley defenders. The Cleveland Blue Raiders visited the Bradley Central Bears in TSSAA football action of September 15, 2017.

Honorable mention

Keegan Jones, Cleveland: He ran for 253 yards and two touchdowns on 15 carries in the Blue Raiders’ win over Maryville Heritage.Deangelo Hardy, McCallie: He completed 16 of 25 passes for 320 yards and a TD as the Blue Tornado routed outmanned Pope John Paul II 49-14.Dylan Standifer, Bradley Central: He hit 78 percent of his passes (14 of 18) for five TDs and 273 yards in the Bears’ 49-14 victory at McMinn County.

With players like Keegan Jones and Micaleous Elder, some quarterbacks might be expected to fill a lesser role.

"A lot of times with guys like those you might tell your quarterback, 'Don't screw things up; just get them the ball,'" Cleveland coach Scott Cummings said Monday after he'd reviewed the Blue Raiders' 47-34 victory over Maryville Heritage.

Jones ran for 253 yards and Elder had 156 receiving yards, but there still is room in the Blue Raiders' offense for stardom from junior quarterback Kellye Cawood. He earned the Times Free Press area honor of Waffle House All-Star player of the week by passing for 248 yards and three touchdowns and running for 66 yards and another score.

"He's really strong-armed," Cummings said. "If he went out and ran a 40-yard dash he isn't going to impress people, but when he gets on the field he doesn't mind putting his foot down and going."

photo Kellye Cawood (12) calls signals for Cleveland. The Cleveland Blue Raiders visited the Bradley Central Bears in TSSAA football action of September 15, 2017.

The 5-foot-10, 170-pound Cawood is the trigger for the Raiders' triple-option offense and the cannon behind their passing game.

"He's not a real big guy, but he throws like a kid that's 6-foot-4 - gets a lot of rotation on the ball," Cummings said. "But we run so much option that he's more than just a distributor. He's a crucial piece to the whole puzzle."

The 66 rushing yardage was net, which includes the yards lost due to sacks.

"Part of that is him holding the ball a little too long looking downfield, and sometimes he likes to fit things in where he shouldn't. He likes to flash that arm strength, and sometimes he pulls it off, and I guess if I had a receiver like Micaleous I might hold it a little longer, too," Cummings added.

As much as Cawood has targeted Elder, obviously a big-play receiver, he completed passes to seven receivers last Friday.

"He's a good student academically, which in some cases doesn't translate to football, but fortunately for us it does," Cummings said. "He's done a good job running the triple-option - a lot of pitching and a lot of keeping - and when defensive backs begin edging up in run support he's done a good job getting the ball downfield."

Contact Ward Gossett at wgossett@timesfreepress.com or 423-886-4765. Follow him on Twitter @wardgossett.

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