How to watch THE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
What: UIL 5A Division 1 football championship
Teams: Ryan (Denton) (14-0) vs. Cedar Park (14-0)
Date: Friday, Jan. 15 | Time: 7 p.m. CT
Location: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
TV: FOX Sports Southwest FSSW Plus2 (in state only) | Live Stream: FoxSportsGo (in state only) | Audio: Texanlive.com
Another audio link
https://www.texassportsproductions.com/
UIL Championship football coverage on FSSW will be available on FOX Sports GO app. FOX Sports GO is an extension of your pay-TV service that allows fans to watch their favorite teams on the go, live from anywhere via the app or FOX SportsGo.com. FOX Sports GO is currently available on mobile and tablet devices, including iOS and Android as well as FOXSportsGO.com. FOX Sports GO is also available on connected devices including Amazon Fire TV, Android TV, Apple TV, Google Chromecast, Roku Players and Roku TV, and Xbox One. Fans can download the app for free from the iTunes App Store, Google Play, Amazon App Store, Roku App Store, Xbox One App Store and Windows App Store.
High school football fans can visit GetMyHomeTeams.com for options on getting FOX Sports Southwest in their area. Fans will find exclusive content, videos and analysis on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and FOXSportsSouthwest.com and are encouraged to join the conversation on social media by using the #UILONFSSW hashtag.
If college recruiters were to pick the winner in the Texas 5A Division 1 high school football championship game between the Ryan (Denton) Raiders and Cedar Park Timberwolves, it might be pretty one-sided.
The Raiders are loaded, with eight top 247Sports recruits splashed between three classes. They include two of the top seven seniors in Texas, both listed as athletes in five-star Texas signee Ja'Tavion Sanders (6-foot-4, 220 pounds) and Oklahoma signee Billy Bowman (5-11, 175).
Meanwhile, the Timberwolves don't boast a single player on the 247Sports recruiting list. Yet, like Ryan, Cedar Park is 14-0 and by all indications well equipped to take Ryan down to the wire.
The Timberwolves certainly offer the offensive firepower to win, having averaged 53 points in five playoff games. They averaged a whopping 462 yards per game in their first 13 games, led by quarterback Ryder Hernandez, who threw for 4,240 yards and 58 touchdowns in that span.
He has great weapons in 1,000-yard-plus receivers Josh Cameron, Gunnar Abseck and Jack Hestera, who've combined for 207 receptions, 3,160 yards and 44 touchdowns, almost evenly divided. It's no wonder why Cedar Park averages 50 points per game.
Scoring against Ryan won't be easy. The Raiders allowed less than 10 points in three of their five playoff wins, though they gave up five touchdowns in a 49-35 semifinal win over Mansfield. They held three high-scoring offenses to just 22 points combined thanks largely to the play of defensive end Michael Gee (6-1, 191), linebacker DJ Arkansas, a Rice signee, and two of the state's top juniors, cornerback Austin Jordan and defensive tackle Bear Alexander (6-3, 325).
Clearly, it's the massive all-around skills of Sanders and Bowman, who have combined for 139 catches, 2,223 receiving yards and 29 touchdowns that can not be matched by Cedar Hill.