Belton shuts out Rudder, Waco next up
November 6, 2025
By Tony Adams
The Belton Journal
The Belton Tigers went into Friday night’s game with confidence that they had gotten past a late loss to University on Oct. 17.
They took the confidence, dominated Rudder in all three facets of the game, and posted a 35-0 shutout.
It was the first shutout since the Tigers blanked Austin Northeast College in the Class 5A-II Bi-District Playoff in 2022, 56-0, and the first regular-season shutout in nine years: a 56-0 rout of Shoemaker on Oct. 20, 2016.

“It was a complete game, and bounce back from last Friday,” Belton head coach Brett Sniffin said. “We controlled the line of scrimmage and our defense worked hard for the shutout.”
Belton’s rushing game towed most of the weight in a ball-control mode, having toted the rock 45 times for 258 yards, a 5.7 yards per carry average. Quarterback Will Shepard, and running backs Gino Zecca and Javid Nua Planz combined for 201 yards on 30 carries by themselves, with Planz scoring twice and Zecca once.
The Tigers’ offensive line pushed the Rangers’ defense around the field, making room for Belton’s prolific offense.
Shepard was 11-of-18 passing for 156 yards, a touchdown, and three interceptions, with all three being products of tipped attempts into and out of a brisk southerly wind that led both teams to keep the ball on the ground.
Gavin Ross became Belton’s all-time career receptions leader, hauling in 11 passes for 127 yards and a score. For the season, Ross has 68 catches for 938 yards and nine touchdowns. For his career, Ross has 123 receptions for 1,697 yards and ten touchdowns.
The Belton defense held Total yards on 40 plays (3.8 yards per play), as Rudder’s deepest penetration into Tiger territory was the 23-yard line where Santiago Lugo’s 40-yard field goal came up short. Lugo also missed a 49-yard attempt that ended the first half.
Anthony Anderson and Jahari James recorded interceptions for the Tigers. Corin Ramesar continued his consistency, going 5-of-5 on point-after attempts. He did have a 42-yard field goal attempt blocked with 1:16 remaining in the first quarter, but it did not factor into the scoring, as the Belton defense held the Rangers to a three-and-out on the ensuing drive.
With two District 10-5A-II games remaining, the Tigers have already clinched a playoff spot. In three district games, Belton has averaged 38 points per game while allowing 25 points per game.
Rudder’s offensive struggles have Waco High looking to find their rhythm. The Lions sit at 0-3 against the Rangers, averaging just 4.7 points per game while allowing 46.7 points per matchup. Waco averages 111.1 passing yards and 127.9 rushing yards per game. Dual-threat quarterback Bryant Whitaker (31-of-78, 577 passing yards, 483 rushing yards, four total touchdowns) has accounted for yardage on 127 of the Lions’ 352 plays. Primary receivers Zaydrian Johnson (22 receptions, 485 yards, five touchdowns) and Jahmarian Howard-Crawford (12 catches, 201 yards) have been key targets.
Belton’s defense has been dominant, recording nine fumble recoveries, eight interceptions, 27 tackles for loss, and seven sacks. Key contributors include Oakley Torres (53 tackles), Azian Wilkinson (38 tackles, four fumble recoveries), Jacob Lewis (33 tackles), Lyric McGinnis (29 tackles, two interceptions, 75-yard interception return), and Adam Gonzales (28 tackles).
Special teams have also excelled this season. Ramesar is 29-of-30 on extra points and 3-of-5 on field goals. Graham Chambley has blocked three kicks, and Shepard has punted nine times with a net average of 38.9 yards, placing three punts inside the opponents’ 20-yard line.
Offensively, the Tigers’ linemen have dominated at the line of scrimmage, enabling Belton’s ball-control offense to excel. The team averages 225.4 passing yards, 1,246 rushing yards, and 35 total touchdowns. Key offensive contributors include Shepard (1,327 passing yards, 403 rushing yards, 19 total touchdowns), Zecca (374 rushing yards, four TDs), Planz (290 rushing yards, four TDs), and Cason Morton (107 rushing yards, one TD). Receivers Ross, Morton (283 receiving yards), Zecca, Wilkinson, and Achilles Palomares (149 receiving yards, two TDs) have been instrumental this season.
The Lions’ defense has been battle-tested, recording 42 tackles for loss, 14.5 sacks, seven fumble recoveries, and five interceptions. Standout defenders include Chanse Rynes (111 tackles, eight TFL, five sacks), Jaylen Gude (107 tackles, 73 solo, 12 TFL), and Michael Leonard (97 tackles).
The one area the Tigers must avoid heading into the final two games and the playoffs is penalties. “I hate penalties,” Coach Sniffin said. “To be a great team, you must eliminate penalties. I hate penalties.”









