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Watson Chapel classes, ballgames resuming after power outage

Watson Chapel classes, ballgames resuming after power outage
Wildcat Stadium is pictured Sept. 5 during Watson Chapel's home opener against Crossett. (Pine Bluff Commercial/I.C. Murrell)

Power has been fully restored at Watson Chapel High School and classes will resume on campus Friday morning, the district announced Thursday afternoon.

The campus had been closed since Tuesday afternoon when a fuse on a light pole blew out that morning, according to Superintendent Keith McGee.

Entergy crews had been working since then to restore power.

Watson Chapel High will operate on a normal schedule Friday, the district announced through its alert system.

All other campuses have remained open during the high school outage.

“We appreciate your patience and understanding during this unexpected outage and thank Entergy crews for their diligent work in restoring service,” the district stated.

“Thank you for your continued support of Watson Chapel Schools.”

The recent outage had little effect on the district’s football practices and games.

The junior high Wildcats hosted Little Rock Christian Academy on Thursday and the high school Wildcats are scheduled to take on Joe T. Robinson at 7 p.m. Friday in the 5A-Central Conference opener for both teams.

The teams practiced during normal school hours during the outage.

In high school action, Watson Chapel (0-3), which hasn’t won since last year’s season finale, is in need of a spark after losing all of its nonconference games to Conference 4A-8 teams Helena-West Helena Central, Crossett and Warren.

The Wildcats have been outscored 134-36 so far this season, including a 42-0 loss at Warren two weeks ago.

“The message is to stay together. The message is work harder. The message is do the right things,” second-year Wildcats coach Steven Heard said after the Warren game.

Heard said all positions “are open” after the loss, but every player would get his turn under intensified practices.

“It’s gut-check time,” he said.

And one can expect Robinson (3-0) to bring the heat.

With first-year coach Tyler Uptergrove at the helm, the defending conference champion Senators recently avenged its 2024 state quarterfinal loss to Hot Springs Lakeside and is averaging nearly 41 points per game on the young season.

Junior quarterback Reece Simpson has thrown 7 touchdown passes, each one to a different player.

Senior Kevin “Deuce” Williams nearly averages 100 yards per game rushing.

He has scored 8 touchdowns on the young season.

Senior linebacker Isiah Reese (14 tackles per game) and defensive end Caleb Smith (2.5 sacks total), along with Williams (2 interceptions) in the backfield, carry the Senators’ defense.

The Wildcats will have to bring their own heat on both sides of the ball to avoid a slow start.

“It’s that we sit back and wait too late until somebody comes and punches us in the mouth first instead of taking the fight to them, especially on defense,” Heard said.