JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================t" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?Kr6qXv*f\:#4\89x?J{ eq9 5Grзw}+$> 6";I#j8Qd=f, CI@y}ŌZR[i&Fʹ}/\ukY.mmK"g K1-- C=mT1.79S&-ƥ<!Pcr"\M%r,zS_,0zbLndmq!_O_z* olyPxz&Y2!Gv=d,ĥy}]L'E2h' zQm[o X.N;ԶC]&=M{xȽ}O5-ۗt|#6X$FK 7AehlH6 1Vy_:BNHe)C"(>i)kr$،JV<z?6'e)ӁPӼ;kqHs坹}S۽I(T$+RI]b]߮HbFk==u6Xsꮂao}k%Ds8\=թUW; p)T\֍qiٗ,cVK$zg vj"͜ 'Ҽ2HR(x^guA+i4=?S1Z@e鍣_r2!R.q0kּۤevg/T>N8⮬#ka-u9(@`!A>dxqgA;$M*Z^Jڤ[ل €zzg\IB x'ẉnH2#usg|<{kocR8bZMլgĞF z,rw ca0~cV]& n= 5*x+Ehl#޼$zm$"fs"*@f9d77+Ac̹br00k9H nFμ֯TRyt.O$oNBp:hRq}:\Kr\ec5nO\O"obj[n ކiٝ˔E}oQj¼EY( pZ:^,"9d?&\\=Ųobk:դCiɧZ>Ԁczoy %I^S$I&Jojq*kC %zoeI4T >/ "ԧ!쾧eur6Dd_uYh9SN}kJxިTxmündǵ_SAj𼘽*-U5OQ"G(bHul縮֌졷asԊ/m䲟c) wO $Ōz/J$$1ɾ2r5o.J7.꺋jG)TBmQQTbÒxlkrXqֳn>n̬W#di.cy2đLnέ`3Qd^{wxu8ntYa- .>=ҢX )[EiU*c5kQ[ 6QqSkB &b gU _OoiH ^9CҲ4B}K;sr?iocJ>wۂ+F'ara<~lVjuc% ęQEX䞦aΚ7dV%m-g(G#(aM9?6Ojx<:2O$ _j*nU_2@yS_@$mGj9|?$Nrb'k @<ny2rQ!Bslm5-5hu}x| rV'ʝ9?Þ83]$e.n ףjimc|caЎݵ3$dLN(R ps]o<9{G .nc)I4s8JcA52_V#pA2zkR_qޕqN*QN{dB&H,Ϝݟhdq ɫ>Fz$HIjLBWz\]̏pۏjJ19 5Ok:,{L?Z$ϱGLw8KeRxAwWr)ݲމtiRE.,YhvR {-s;t6n|y$Ē}i5}#V̵qxvS}+<uX^\A#P1=ϴ/R1>@UUpaV&Oھiw5 Cr>Rkv М ";""85a \l' _gZ_RkR?VN?vc`6،+/-u$*@ǯHӬ< ǰס̪JkZ8J0z}TA 6ry{+G*=Bul 𝱛^yq]ÁZqeE:QI }L-p,}z(5ʹ`Kcp-u( ] vr=| dYnk@Vf] c7oW=N{Whq<^Ӣ9'?J^-E;\GS^ In|Yg|:?sxSLtr ]*I%rO>O$5+E5cX6XcHA"M^c5r 0~߫)F!ч*܃T#þe9Wgډ&CM#8CWchz],OucoLZ6 Z-h MEՠm <xwK{e|Ɗjo)#jqkj.pC4Q\-jR mr?x#Indeed the Panther's offense was on fire this last season, but the defense was also a key part in their success. In their opening game of the season against the Livonia Churchill Chargers, the mighty Panther's defense held the Chargers to just 91 yards of total offense. A big play that helped fire up the Panthers was when defensive tackle, Rob Alderton, capitalized on a Charger's fumble in their own end zone. Alderton experienced every lineman's dream in scoring a touchdown for his team. From that moment, the Panthers kept gaining momentum as the season progressed.<br>When the time ticked down for the Panthers to battle the Ypsilanti Braves, a team who crushed them the previous year, the Panthers had their game faces on and were ready to take care of business the old-fashioned way. Mike Macek gave a superb effort as he went on the warpath racking up 223 yards rushing and scoring four touchdowns! The Panthers defense stood as an iron curtain and held the Braves to only 61 yards in total offense and came home satisfied avengers with a 41-6 final score, a complete turn around from last year.  That was the game we waited for all year. We knew that we owed them something for what they did to us last year, a satisfied Mike Macek commented.<br>However, things didn't continue to go as smoothly as the Panthers had planned. Quarterback, Matt Rigley sustained a shoulder injury that kept him out a game. What would the undefeated Panthers do without their starting quarterback? Were their team goals going to fall apart all because of one player's injury? The Panthers rallied together as a unified family, they simply accepted the conditions that they had been dealt, made the proper adjustments, and adapted. They had come a long way and were not about to begin losing now. Coach Scala exhorted,  You have to overcome injuries and you have to capitalize on other people's mistakes. That is exactly what the Panthers did. Coaches put running back, Mike Macek in to fill Rigley's quarterback spot. With such a big change, the Panthers played their hearts out against Dearborn Heights and came shining through once again. Macek threw some beautiful touchdown passes to D.J. Brown and Clint Stoble. Despite the adjustments the Panthers were f