Arroyo player gets a burrito after tipping off his coaches of Schurr tendencies

Good scoop here from Aram Tolegian
His name won’t appear in the box score. In fact, he didn’t even play in the game. But Arroyo High School football player Noah Caraballo had as much to do with the Knights’ win over Schurr as anybody else on the roster.
Caraballo, a reserve defensive end, spotted a tendency when Schurr was on offense that helped tipped off whether the Spartans were going to run or pass. He promptly told a teammate, who told his position, who told head coach Jim Singiser.
Sure enough, Arroyo out-scored Schurr 35-7 in the second half of a 42-28 win.
“It was one of those things that you couldn’t see on film, but he saw it at field level and it helped,” Singiser said of Caraballo. “We’ve been doing this a long time and that’s never happened. At least not during a game. That’s like next-level thinking. He easily could have been sipping Gatorade and checking out the cheerleaders. To pay a attention to minute details like that? They’re high school kids, I’m lucky they make it to practice.
“So yeah, he got a breakfast burrito the next morning. That’s the reward you get.”

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