By Damon D. Anderson Senior High School Football Analyst
The stage was set for Montgomery County’s marquee Week 1 matchup, but only one team looked ready for the spotlight. Quince Orchard, fresh off its sixth Maryland Class 4A state championship, walked into Burtonsville with something to prove. Three hours later, the Cougars had done more than prove a point, they had issued a resounding reminder that the road to a title still runs through Gaithersburg. Final score: Quince Orchard 35, Paint Branch 0.
This was billed as a heavyweight showdown, a chance for Paint Branch to measure itself against the county’s gold standard. Instead, it became a showcase of Quince Orchard’s ability to reload, reset, and dominate all over again.
If there were any nerves for senior quarterback Will Drakeford, a Westlake transfer making his Cougar debut, they didn’t show. The newest general of the “Red Army” delivered a four-touchdown performance, accounting for three scores through the air and one on the ground.
Drakeford spread the ball with confidence, hitting Rafferty Bankert, Diego Rodriguez, and Isaiah Simms for touchdowns before sneaking one in himself. His presence gave John Kelley’s offense instant rhythm, something often missing in Week 1 games.
As efficient as the offense looked, the defense reminded everyone why Quince Orchard hoisted the trophy last December. Even without All-Met stalwarts Iverson Howard (Maryland) and Aydan West (Michigan State), the unit looked as nasty as ever.
Up front, Jaheim Bond and Kacey Gilliam (James Madison commit) were unblockable, collapsing the pocket and blowing up runs before they could start. Bond set the tone early, stonewalling a Paint Branch fourth-down attempt inside their own territory, which led to an immediate Cougar touchdown. The back end did its part as well, with Amari Wilson picking off a second-half pass to kill any chance of a Panther rally.
Quince Orchard’s demolition of Paint Branch doesn’t secure anything beyond a 1-0 record, but it does send a message to the rest of Maryland. With national-level Stone Bridge (Va.) on deck, the annual grudge match with Northwest, and county power Sherwood lurking, the Cougars know the tests will only get tougher.
But for one Friday night in early September, the Cougars erased any doubts about their identity post-Howard and West. This was still Quince Orchard football: fast, physical, and unforgiving.