The State Port Pilot SPORTS George Cox Sports editor State champs! West Brunswick captures 2A crown, 14-6 Trojans first team to wear two crowns West Brunswick is the first county high school since consolidation in 1972 to capture two state championships in the major sports. The 1975 Trojan basketballers won the state 3A title under the guidance of the late Gary Taylor after finishing runners-up the season before. So this year’s West Brunswick footballers with their first-ever state 2A title, after finishing runners-up last December, have earned the school a noteworthy distinction. North Brunswick was the first consolidated county high school to win a state championship in 1979 when coach William Hargrove’s girls softball team beat Bandys twice in one afternoon to capture the state 1A-2A title en route to an unbeaten season. Belinda Jacobs hurled the Scorpions to both wins that day. And coach Paul Faulk’s South Brunswick baseball team duplicated the North Brunswick girls’ unbeaten season with one of its own in 1988 on the way to an unbelievable 29-0 campaign in the tough Waccamaw 2A Con ference. The Cougar state 2A titleholders were ranked fifth nationally and had the most dominant team ever of any Brunswick County major sports contingent. Faulk’s club accomplished that feat without the help of a "stopper" moundsman. "It was the best-hitting club I’ve ever seen," remarked R. J. Powell, a 40-year veteran sports writer who covered many of New Hanover’s teams for years. The Cougars batted around at least once and sometimes more during many of their 29 games. Brunswick media journey to Chapel Hill Three of my compatriots in the media business accompanied yours truly to Chapel HilLFriday night in preparation lowest Brunswick’s football - championship performance on Saturday. Johnny Craig and his capable wife, Kerri, along with Brunswick Beacon sports editor Doug Rutter, talked sports for hours Friday night. It was one of those special times when sports stories were exchanged by the minute. Everyone was confident that coach Jim Brett’s Trojans were going to be "focused and ready" to meet another unbeaten team - the Maiden Blue Devils - in Kenan Stadium on the University of North Carolina campus. The consensus was that this year’s Trojan edition was not as strong as last season’s club, but with coach Jim Brett’s experience and brilliant foot ball mind, gaps were closed and this edition had the intangibles that last year’s club lacked. West Brunswick’s players, particularly fullback Aaron Butler and run ningback Steve Holmes, emphasized just how "focused" the Trojans were on winning the game instead of just "being there". Butler was named the Trojans’ best defensive player while Holmes, who scored two touchdowns and gained a team-high 76 yards rushing, collected team offensive honors. No doubt, being in the state championship game a year ago was also a distinct advantage for the players who had hungered and thirsted for anoth er chance to win the state championship after falling short for the second year in a row of winning the regular season Waccamaw 2A Conference championship. The ability to have a team peak in the playoffs is the trademark of great coaches at any level. Brett’s team at Tarboro made the playoffs practically every season. Look at Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs’ December record in the pros as well (32-10). Cougars, Wolfpack couldn t cut mustard Neither East Bladen’s Cougars nor Whiteville’s Wolfpack, Waccamaw 2A Conference regular season winners for the past two seasons, could cut the mustard in the post-season playoffs, which means that starting slow and finishing fast is the primary objective -- if the team can qualify for post season play. West Brunswick (11-3) started 5-3 only to come on strong at the end of the regular season and throughout post-season play. It took first-year coach Brett, a veteran of North Carolina sideline wars at Tarboro, over half a sea son to get his unit clicking and they indeed peaked at playoff time on both sides of the ball. Most observers felt the Trojans were the best club in the Waccamaw by the time eastern semifinals action came around. Whiteville beat Brett’s team, 16-6, at Shallotte earlier in the year when the Trojans fumbled their See Cox column, page 4C Road to the title Opponent Win-Lose Score | Conway, S. C. L 19-14 | South Brunswick W 35-0 | Georgetown, S. C. W 22-0 I WhitevUle L 6-16 | Fairmont W 28-8 | South Robeson W 33-8 | West Columbus W 33-0 1 East Bladen L 8-14 I South Brunswick W 22-0 | South Columbus* W 47-0 | Clinton* W 14-6 1 Farmville Central* W 41-14 1 St Pauls* W 39-14 I Maiden* W 14-6 | Antoine Ikard, Maiden’s powerful running back who had gained 1,952 yards this season, gained only 107 more against West Brunswick in Chapel Hill on Photo by Jim Harper Saturday - not enough, as the Trojans prevailed 14* 6. ‘Defense’ is last word in Trojans’ title chase By George Cox Sports Editor The first question this writer ever asked West Brunswick football coach Jim Brett in a post-game in terview brought the following response: "Defense wins championships." Those prophetic words echoed in Kenan Stadium on the University of North Carolina campus Saturday afternoon as Brett’s Trojans effec tively shut down Maiden running back Antoine Heard, North Caro lina’s all-time leading rusher, en route to a 14-6 state 2A championship victory. Heard, who rushed for 2,208 yards this season and-