Unity and Byron delivered a championship matchup for the ages, breaking 10 records in a 56-50 Byron win. The Rockets’ passing attack and the Tigers’ rushing game rewrote IHSA history.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks
Unity's Dane Eisenmenger avoids a sack attempt from Byron's Zion Gautier during first quarter action in the Class 3A championship game at Hancock Stadium. The All-State quarterback passed for 541 yards against the Tigers.
NORMAL - Records didn’t just fall during Friday’s Class 3A state championship — they shattered in waves. Ten IHSA marks were rewritten in a game that roared from start to finish, delivering an offensive spectacle unlike anything the title stage had seen, before coming down to a single fourth-and-goal throw with 16 seconds left. Byron held its ground in the final moments, denying Unity at the goal line to close out a 56-50 thriller that instantly joins the list of all-time great championship finishes. The teams combined for 106 points, breaking the previous title-game scoring record of 89 set in 2006 when St. Joseph-Ogden and Plano traded blows in another classic shootout. Their 1,211 total yards also set a new 3A championship standard, with Unity responsible for 652 of them — a new team record. Individually, the numbers were just as staggering. Byron running back Cade Considine ran for 371 yards, a new championship record, and finished with 430 all-purpose yards. Unity quarterback Dane Eisenmenger broke five marks of his own: 541 passing yards, seven touchdowns, 42 completions and 65 attempts. Tyler Henry set the new receptions record with 16 and added three scores. Despite entering the week labeled the underdog, Unity kept swinging. The Rockets led 29-28 at halftime and went toe-to-toe with a Byron team making its third straight title-game appearance. The Tigers, who have reached the championship every other year since 2021, completed another perfect 14-0 season and extended their streak of title wins to three — 2021, 2023 and now 2025.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks
Virtually unstoppable, Byron's Caden Considine runs the ball for a Tiger first down.
Considine’s performance carried Byron throughout the night. “I think he saved his best for last,” head coach Jeff Boyer said. “He has been a great player here at Byron. Maybe one of the best who has ever played here. He’s a kid that wasn’t going to let us lose.” While leaning on their dependable ground attack, Byron junior Andrew Talbert provided timely support through the air, completing four of five passes for 98 yards, though he did throw one interception. Eisenmenger’s record-breaking night was fueled by his trio of reliable targets, each showing exceptional hands and speed. Tyler Henry led the Unity receiving corps with 16 catches for 160 yards and three touchdowns. Tre Hoggard added two scores and a game-high 189 yards on 12 receptions, while Mason O’Neill joined the 100-yard group with six catches for 130 yards and two touchdowns. Unity was held scoreless in the third quarter but made a furious charge late. Down 56-43 with 6:01 left, Eisenmenger tossed a six-yard touchdown that cut the deficit to six with 2:00 remaining. The Rockets then executed a perfect onside kick and recovered at the Byron 45, pushing the stadium into full suspense. Eisenmenger guided Unity to a first-and-goal, and two plays later the Rockets stood on the 13-yard line after a costly penalty.
Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks
Unity kick off team celebrates the recovery of an onside kick on the 49-yard line in the fourth quarter. With two minutes left to play, the Rockets had a minute and 46 seconds to at least tie the score or win the game outright, and came up short after 13 plays.
With the season down to one snap, Eisenmenger rolled right and fired toward the end zone. Considine, playing linebacker, read the play and broke up the pass, sealing the Tigers’ victory and leaving Unity inches short — just as St. Joseph-Ogden had been in its memorable 2006 duel. “I never had a doubt that we would be with them right there to the end,” first-year Unity head coach Tony Reetz said. “These kids have given us no reason to believe that we were ever out of the game. These guys have battled all year long. They’ve been on the ropes before. We came out on top, obviously. There was just one game we came up one play short.” Unity finishes its season 12-2, earning the school’s seventh runner-up trophy — and its first in the Reetz era following six under longtime coach Scott Hamilton. It was a game that pushed boundaries, rewrote history, and ended with the Rockets leaving everything they had on the field.
