San Francisco, CA
How South San Francisco went from not having a varsity team to winning the CCS Division V championship
Two years removed from having no varsity football team, South San Francisco completed a remarkable ascent Saturday with a 13-7 win over Santa Teresa for the Central Coast Section Division V championship at newly-opened MacDonald High School.
“A great win,” SSF coach Kolone Pua said. “These guys hung in there. I told them all year we can make history.”
The Warriors did it Saturday the way they’ve done it all season, with a physical style both offensively and defensively.
South City ran 67 plays from scrimmage, 55 on the ground using a throwback full-house T-formation with two tight ends for a significant portion of the game, compared to 38 total plays for Santa Teresa.
“That was the hardest hitting game I’ve ever been around,” Pua said.
The way the team’s defense has played has been the biggest factor in its success. South San Francisco (12-1) has allowed 80 points in 13 games this season, 6.2 per contest.
Six points total were allowed in the last five games of the regular season. In three playoff games the opposition has scored a combined 16 points, with the seven allowed in the championship game coming about from a blocked punt recovered in the end zone.
Santa Teresa (6-7), the defending CCS Division IV champion, also blocked a crucial extra point late in its semifinal win over Woodside. They broke through to block a South City punt at the start of the second quarter and fell on it in the end zone to take a 7-0 lead.
The Warriors responded with a 77-yard drive that concluded with a 3-yard run for a touchdown by fullback Marcus Mercurio. The snap on the conversion attempt was fumbled, leaving Santa Teresa with a 7-6 lead at halftime.
South City took the second-half kickoff and drove 74 yards in 15 plays, with Mercurio scoring on another 3-yard run.
After Santa Teresa went three-and-out, South City chewed another chunk of time off the clock, and that’s kind of the way it went the rest of the way.
The Saints finished with 130 yards of total offense split evenly, 65 rushing and 65 passing. Their defense kept it close. Jaikob Wright and Tevita Pekipaki had sacks. Santa Teresa did a good job of keying on star running back Elijah Fields, who took a number of hard hits and had to work hard for 79 yards on 21 carries.
But Mercurio had his best game of his career, rushing 23 times for 105 yards and both touchdowns as South City amassed 208 yards rushing and 251 yards of total offense..
“No fear,” Mercurio said. “I knew my teammates had my back. We changed history and created a family.”
There was a long tradition of football excellence at South San Francisco, something the community with its working class identity took pride in. “South San Francisco The Industrial City,” the big letters on San Bruno Mountain read, is visible for miles to drivers heading north on 101.
That’s what made it so tough for so many people when the football program plummeted, going a combined 0-24 in the three seasons prior to 2021, when the school was only able to field a junior varsity team.
Former coach Frank Moro came back last year and guided the Warriors to a 6-4 record in a return to the varsity ranks, playing in the Peninsula Athletic League’s Lake Division, a bottom-tier “C” division.
This season Moro turned over the head coaching duties to Pua, a former South City player and assistant coach. And Pua made it a family affair with his two sons serving as coordinators, Kolson Pua with the defense and Kolone Isaac Pua with the offense.
The CCS title was the third in school history, following CCS Division II-North championships in 1981 and 1989. The 12 wins is a school record, eclipsing the victory total of the 11-0 team in 1989.
Next season SSF will move up to the PAL El Camino Division. But first the team will await Sunday’s CIF seeding meeting and learn who it will play in a NorCal regional game
San Francisco, CA
Dolphins keep playoff hopes alive with 29-17 win over 49ers, who were eliminated Sunday afternoon
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — – Tua Tagovailoa threw for 215 yards and a touchdown, Jason Sanders nailed five field goals, and the Miami Dolphins kept their playoff chances alive by beating the San Francisco 49ers 29-17 on Sunday.
The 49ers were eliminated from the playoffs before the game because of wins by the Los Angeles Rams and Washington Commanders earlier Sunday. The loss ensured that last year’s NFC champions will have a losing season for the first time since 2020.
The Dolphins (7-8) helped their chances of making the playoffs for a third straight season, but will need to win their final two games and get help from losses by the Broncos, Chargers and Colts for that to happen.
Trailing by nine early in the fourth, San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy found tight end Eric Saubert for a 2-yard score that cut the lead to 19-17, but the Niners couldn’t get past self-inflicted wounds.
After punting the ball back to Miami with 6:45 left, San Francisco was hit with consecutive penalties for illegal substitution, unnecessary roughness and offsides to give Miami 25 yards, helping set up Sanders’ 48-yard field goal that stretched the Dolphins’ lead to five.
The 49ers were penalized 11 times for 90 yards.
Cornerback Kader Kohou then intercepted Purdy on the next drive, after the quarterback was pressured by defensive tackle Calais Campbell. Dolphins running back De’Von Achane sealed it with a 50-yard touchdown run.
Tagovailoa finished 22 of 34. Purdy was 26 of 40 for 313 yards and two touchdowns.
Tyreek Hill’s inconsistent season continued. He caught just 3 of 7 targets for 29 yards and a touchdown, with drops on the first two drives of the game and another on a potential touchdown in the third.
Jonnu Smith caught six passes for 62 yards to set the Dolphins’ single-season franchise record for receptions (76) and receiving yards (802) by a tight end.
Sanders was 5 of 5, including a 54-yarder, which made him 11 of 13 on field goals of 50-plus yards this year. San Francisco’s Jake Moody missed a 41-yarder in the third.
Deebo Samuel caught his first touchdown since Week 6 on a 16-yard score in which he muscled through several defenders on his way into the end zone.
Miami moved into 49ers territory three times in the first half but settled for field goals before Hill’s 3-yard touchdown catch from Tagovailoa that put the Dolphins ahead with 3:20 left in the second.
Purdy then drove San Francisco 67 yards down the field to set up Moody’s 21-yard field goal to cut Miami’s lead to 13-10 at halftime.
Injuries
49ers: LB Dre Greenlaw (right calf), LG Aaron banks (knee) and LT Jaylon Moore (quad) left with injuries. … DE Leonard Floyd played through a shoulder injury suffered in the first quarter.
Dolphins: WR Jaylen Waddle did not play because of a knee injury suffered last week. … CB Kendall Fuller (knee) and LB Jordyn Brookes (quad/knee) left in the second half.
Up next
49ers: Host Detroit on Monday Dec. 30.
Dolphins: At Cleveland next Sunday.
——
AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nflbr/]
Copyright © 2024 ESPN Internet Ventures. All rights reserved.
San Francisco, CA
SF is the only city where it's cheaper to buy a home now than in 2019
San Francisco is the only major U.S. city where it’s cheaper to buy a home now than it was five years ago, according to data from real estate listing site Zillow.
Of the 100 largest U.S. cities by population, San Francisco is the single example that saw home values fall between November 2019 and November 2024, based on what the company calls the “Zillow price index.”
The city saw the typical home price decline by 3.7% during that period. All other cities saw prices increase. Across the Bay, Oakland had the smallest increase, with the average home value rising 2.1%. Among other major U.S. cities, prices rose 37.58% in Los Angeles; 38.34% in Austin, and 69.26% in Miami.
Cheaper is one thing. But cheap? That’s a different story.
According to Zillow, the typical home value in San Francisco in November 2024 was $1.26 million, versus $1.31 million five years ago. In 2019, San Francisco had by far the highest typical home price across all major cities, coming in more than 30% over second-place San Jose.
In 2024, San Francisco was one of four cities, all in California, with typical home prices over $1 million.
Kara Ng, a senior economist at Zillow, said San Francisco was an outlier in the first place.
“Five years ago, San Francisco was far and away the most expensive city to buy a home in the U.S.,” Ng said, adding that the pandemic fueled the ability for a highly paid but price-constrained workforce to flock to more affordable areas.
San Francisco, CA
Drive-thru turkey drive in San Francisco collects holiday meals families in need
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — Holiday help was there for a community in need.
A drive-thru turkey donation drive was held in San Francisco on Saturday, benefitting the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank. It brought a big donation response from the community, coming at a time when the need for food has never been greater.
Holiday turkeys and hams were arriving by the minute at a donation site near St. Emydius Church in San Francisco.
“Makes you feel good. That’s what you’re supposed to do,” said Ron Isola from Daly City.
The rainy weather didn’t stop anyone from showing up and helping out, especially Linda Peppars.
MORE: North Bay food bank issues holiday SOS for donations
“I live in the neighborhood and I just like helping people. God has blessed me. Why not bless other people? That’s the whole thing about life, especially today,” Peppars said.
It’s the 13th year for this turkey drive, started by volunteer Pierre Smit.
“I’m here from a different country. I came with nothing. If I had some some money, I would bring a few turkeys to St. Anthony’s,” Smit said.
It’s now a community-wide effort, benefitting the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank.
Hundreds of turkeys were donated, including lots of hams.
MORE: How Salvation Army’s Red Kettle campaign helps others achieve ‘2nd chance at a 1st-class life’
“We’re currently serving 50,000 households every week. These turkeys and hams will go to some of our agency partners who are putting on Christmas lunches and dinners,” Abbott said.
It comes at a critical time for most Bay Area food banks that responding to food insecurity.
One in six people in Santa Clara and San Mateo are getting help from Second Harvest of Silicon Valley.
That agency is feeding a half million people every month.
In Napa, demand for food assistance has tripled compared to this time last year, and the North Bay’s Redwood Empire Food Bank is serving thousands more families, just in the past five months.
MORE: Toys for Tots aiming to reach 70,000 gift goal in Alameda Co.
“Our number one concern is inflation. We purchase some of the food we distribute. It’s costing us two times what it did pre-pandemic,” Abbott said.
It’s why this food drive is so important.
“It’s hard. Everybody doesn’t have what you have and visa versa,” Peppers said.
As a show of thanks, everyone who donated got a round of applause from volunteers.
Copyright © 2024 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.
-
Politics1 week ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology1 week ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics1 week ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Business1 week ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta’s Instagram boss: who posted something matters more in the AI age
-
News1 week ago
East’s wintry mix could make travel dicey. And yes, that was a tornado in Calif.
-
Technology2 days ago
Google’s counteroffer to the government trying to break it up is unbundling Android apps