It wasn't the way that either Ogden or Judge Memorial thought it would go, but the change in script delighted the Tigers, who rolled to a 47-21 victory Friday and improved to 2-0 on the season.
Judge (1-1) expected to compete for a victory, but Ogden jumped out to a 14-0 lead in the first quarter and extended its advantage to 33-14 on the first drive of the second half to put the game out of reach.
"We came out throwing the ball more than I would have liked," Ogden coach Ian Eyre said. "But you can't really complain when you're scoring points."
The Tiger attack was led by senior quarterback Nik Allred, who threw for 201 yards, eclipsed 100 yards rushing and accounted for five touchdowns.
After Allred ran in the opening score, Judge fumbled the ball back to the Tigers on its first play from scrimmage. Five plays and 35 yards later, Jacob Buck put Ogden up 14-0 with a 22-yard scamper.
When Judge closed the gap to 14-7 with a 1-yard touchdown plunge by quarterback Daniel Shiramizu, Ogden answered with a five-play, 88-yard touchdown drive, with Allred finding Eric Porter for the first of his three touchdown passes. It was the type of answer Ogden gave every time Judge gained momentum.
"In previous years, we've gotten worked by Judge," Allred said. "We felt like we had something to prove tonight."
Judge received a boost from running back Paul Clark, who caught two touchdown passes. Clark also took the opening kickoff of the second half 52 yards to set up the Bulldogs in Ogden's territory. But a three-and-out possession quelled the scoring threat.
Clark gave his team terrific field position again on his next touch, a 54-yard kickoff return. But the second snap from scrimmage was fumbled away. After only getting four offensive touches in the first half, Clark didn't receive his first second-half offensive touch until 4:30 remained in the fourth quarter. His next touch was a 54-yard touchdown reception that lessened the gap of the lopsided game.

