GEORGETOWN ? Lynnfield opened its Cape Ann League/Small season Friday with a victory that would have made Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer proud.The Pioneers (2-0) scored touchdowns on offense, defense, and special teams – a strategy known as “Beamer Ball,” a style named after the longtime college coach – en route to a convincing 32-6 victory over Georgetown (0-1) at Georgetown High School.The Pioneers led, 32-0, before the Royals scored late in the fourth quarter.”It was nice to see we got a special teams touchdown and a defensive touchdown, and we did enough offensively, which was good,” Lynnfield coach Neal Weidman said. “We need to keep improving in all those areas, but we ran the ball well today.”Lynnfield’s success was in large part due to the tremendous field position with which it routinely started drives.After a short punt by Georgetown, the Pioneers took over late in the opening period at the Royals’ 26-yard line. Six rushes later, Gino Cohee scampered into the end zone for a 6-0 lead.The teams exchanged punts before Lynnfield struck again in the second quarter.The Royals fumbled the ball deep in their own territory, and Lynnfield’s Eric Inglese returned the ball 25 yards for the touchdown and a 12-0 advantage.Lynnfield’s next possession was its strongest drive of the game. Switching from Cohee to the team’s other quarterback, Chris Grassi, the Pioneers marched down the field, eventually scoring on Grassi’s 13-yard rush. Steve Ullian’s kick made it 19-0, Pioneers.”We have two good football players, so it’s a nice problem to have,” Weidman said of Grassi and Cohee. “It’s a nice little change-up for us. They’re both very capable of running the offense, so it’s nice to have them both come in and succeed like that.Lynnfield scored once more before halftime when Cohee connected with Tyler Surette on a 26-yard strike, giving the Pioneers a 25-0 lead at the break.Lynnfield added a 33-yard punt return touchdown by Grassi in the third quarter before the Royals finally got something going offensively. Georgetown’s 16-play drive lasted almost 11 minutes and ended with a 1-yard rushing touchdown by Chris Esposito late in the final period.”In the second half we came out and played much better, but it’s certainly not where it needs to be,” Georgetown coach Matt Bouchard said. “We only have six returning players from last year’s team. We’ve got to work, and the guys need to learn, but we’ll get there.”Coupled with its 34-7 win over Matignon last Saturday, Lynnfield looks to be on a roll early in the season.”I wasn’t expecting this,” Weidman said of the lopsided victory. “I thought it would be a little bit closer, but we played well today ? They came out and they wanted it, which was nice to see.”