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| Main / Fire / Fire - Supercup Season 62 Search Forum | |
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| posted: 2025-11-13 23:29:49 (ID: 100195213) Report Abuse | |
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Post your predictions, results, write-ups here. Anything Supercup related with this season.
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| posted: 2025-11-13 23:31:37 (ID: 100195214) Report Abuse | |
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Source: https://imgur.com/lxdzBTK RZA Supercup Playoffs Write-Up Texas Reapers 51 – Chicago Cubs 45 (OT) “Death by Deep Ball: The Reapers Walk Into Chicago and Walk Out With a Miracle” Playoff football has a way of exposing pretenders… and occasionally humiliating the experts. On paper, this was supposed to be the moment the Chicago Cubs flexed their veteran muscle — higher ELO, more experienced manager, stronger tactical profile across the board. Instead, they ran directly into a Texas-sized buzzsaw wearing a black hood and carrying a football. The Texas Reapers, a team many pundits had politely placed in the “nice season, but good luck in the playoffs” category, marched into Chicago and delivered a wild 51–45 overtime upset that will be talked about for seasons. And they did it with swagger, grit, and the kind of offensive fireworks that make defensive coordinators reconsider their career choices. But the final dagger? A 78-yard overtime walk-off bomb that ripped the soul straight out of the Cubs’ secondary. This wasn’t just a win. This was a statement. 1st Quarter – The Opening Shockwave The Reapers didn’t just start fast — they detonated. Buster Cambell came out throwing haymakers, hitting Bruno Pinto for 40, then dropping a 52-yard TD to Oscar Rivelles before most fans found their seats. Chicago responded with… well… nothing. A whole lot of nothing. Texas up 21–0 after one. Chicago’s defense looked like they were still in warmups. This is the part where veteran teams usually settle in. Except… 2nd Quarter – The Cubs Wake Up Chicago finally remembered they were the favorites. Kurtis Escobar nailed a pair of field goals, and Gjurevski found Manolo Ortega on a short TD to drag the Cubs back into the fight. Texas, for the first time all day, looked human. Halftime: Texas 24 – Chicago 17 The Cubs crowd went from quiet to cautiously murderous. 3rd Quarter – Chaos, Momentum Swings, and an 80-Yard Truck Stick The third quarter was pure lunacy. Texas struck first with Gene Mclaurin hitting Oscar Rivelles again, this time for a 57-yard TD. Chicago answered instantly with an 80-yard explosion from Guillaume Holinka, who apparently turned into prime Adrian Peterson for one carry. Texas punched back. Chicago answered. Texas blocked Chicago’s answer with a TD of their own. Then Chicago answered the answer. This quarter had more punches than a UFC co-main. End of 3rd: Reapers 38 – Cubs 31 4th Quarter – The Heavyweight Brawl The fourth was playoff football at its purest: Fatigue setting in. Playmakers stepping up. Defenses begging for mercy. Chicago tied it at 38–38 on a 19-yard pass. Texas responded immediately — Buster Cambell hit Manolo Ortega for 44 yards and the Reapers went up 45–38. But Chicago refused to die. Gjurevski marched the Cubs downfield and tossed a 45-yard TD to force the tie. 45–45. Overtime. The stadium was shaking. Fans were swallowing their own tongues. The Cubs were the better-rated team. The more experienced team. The home team. But the Reapers? They were the team of destiny. Overtime – The Moment Texas Became a Problem for the Entire Supercup The Reapers got the ball. Herb Bush snapped it. Buster Cambell dropped back. Sataheep Low turned on the jets. The Cubs’ safety took one wrong step — just one — and Low was GONE like someone pressed the turbo button in Madden. Cambell uncorked it… 78 yards… touchdown… ballgame. No flags. No review. Just silence from Chicago and the sound of Texas players sprinting into the end zone like they’d robbed a bank. Final: Texas Reapers 51 – Chicago Cubs 45 (OT) A masterpiece. A playoff classic. And a defining moment for a rising team. Reapers MVPs ⭐ Buster Cambell – QB Badass of the Day 27/38 378 yards 4 TD The 78-yard OT kill shot that will live forever. ⭐ Oscar Rivelles – “We Don’t Cover That Guy Apparently” 8 catches 168 yards 2 TD 122 YAC, melting defenders like wax. ⭐ Sataheep Low – The Man Who Ended Chicago’s Season Only 2 catches Only 85 yards But one of them was the greatest Reapers play of the season. Defensive Notes Texas didn’t stop Chicago — let’s be honest. But they made just enough key plays: John Beattie with a pick Uhatashi and Krauss with clutch tackles Tanner Guidry & Tupac Pryce controlling the line when it mattered And the secondary… well… they tried their best. We’ll leave it there. Against a manager with more experience and better tactical rankings, the Reapers fought, clawed, and made plays at the exact right moments. That’s how upsets happen. That’s how playoff legends are born. Final Thoughts This wasn’t luck. This wasn’t a fluke. This was a team with lower ratings, lower experience, and lower expectations walking into Chicago and delivering the biggest punch of the Supercup Playoffs so far. The Reapers are no longer a fun underdog story. They are a threat. And after this game? Nobody — absolutely nobody — wants to see Texas in the next round. |
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