Tempe, AZ — This is how it goes again: DeCarlos Brooks slices through Gilbert Perry's defense and Chandler celebrates another 6A football championship. With Brooks running for 149 yards and three touchdowns in the first half, then delivering a 58-yard scoring dagger in the third quarter, Chandler rolled to its third consecutive state title with a 65-28 rout Saturday night at Sun Devil Stadium. "I stayed locked in, focused all week," Brooks said. "I saw it in my teammates. They were locked in on the offensive and defensive side." This has been the same script played out for three years, as Brooks became Chandler's third 2,000-yard rusher in three years. Two years ago, T.J. Green ran for more than 2,000 yards. Last year, Drake Anderson ran for more than 2,000 yards. Brooks went over the 2K mark in the first half on Saturday, then shifted momentum quickly back to Chandler in the third quarter after Perry opened the half with Jaden Burns running 33 yards for a score that cut Chandler's lead to 27-14. Brooks found a huge seam between the tackles and ran untouched 58 yards to make it 34-14. Game over. In the regular-season meeting, won by Chandler 45-34, Brooks carried 43 times for 246 yards and two TDs. That was late September, and just a sampling of what was to come. Coach Shaun Aguano was telling everybody that another state championship was going be carried by the durable Brooks, who has committed to California. Brooks had 287 yards and five TDs rushing on 25 carries through three quarters on Saturday. Two plays into the final quarter, Brooks had his sixth rushing TD on a 1-yard run and Chandler had a 58-21 lead. He finished with 334 yards rushing on 33 carries. "We were confident with our offensive and defensive fronts, that we could dominate," said coach Shaun Aguano, who won his fourth state championship since 2014. "We let DeCarlos do his thing. I don't know what he rushed for. But they just decimated that line." Senior Jacob Conover made state history by becoming the first quarterback to lead his team to three state titles at the biggest level. And he only had to throw one touchdown pass. He was smart, cool and accurate throughout. He used his legs and instincts to score a touchdown on fourth and 2 from 14 yards out in the first half when he discovered Perry left the right side of the field open. There was never a doubt this time. After Gilbert Highland took Chandler into overtime two weeks ago in a semifinal for the ages, the Wolves woke up. In a big way. Chandler built a 27-7 halftime lead, scoring on all but its last drive of the half. On the opening series, Chandler (13-1) needed just seven plays to go 75 yards with Brooks taking it in from a yard out for a 7-0 lead. It looked like a statement that no way Perry was going to break through with its first win ever against Chandler, but to show that any talk about who is the best football program in Arizona runs through Chandler, even as overpowering Peoria Centennial was in its 60-7 rout of Scottsdale Notre Dame in the 5A final the game before. Chandler is 6-0 against Perry in the last three seasons, beating the Pumas (11-3) in the playoffs each year. "There was nothing they were going to do with our offensive line," said Conover, who was 13 of 18 for 198 yards and a TD. "It was a matter of who was going to be more physical." Two years ago it was a 62-20 semifinal drubbing by Chandler against Perry. Last year, Chandler was challenged but prevailed 49-42 against Perry and quarterback Brock Purdy in the state final. But this time, Chandler had an answer for the younger Purdy, Chubba, who never got going with his legs, as he did in the first three playoff games, until he ran 81 yards down the sideline to give Perry a glimmer of hope. That led to a TD pass to Colby Dickie. But on three consecutive possessions, Purdy was intercepted three times. Purdy was continually bottled up and sacked four times in the first half. He ran 13 times for 22 yards but the sacks took him to net zero yards in the half. He was 9-of-11 passing but his longest completion was 15 yards to Dickie. Chandler held Purdy to just 85 yards passing in the half. Conover, who will finish his academic high school requirements this month, will go on two-year church mission before starting his BYU football career. He threw 16 TD passes and only one interception in the six games combined in his career against Perry. "To lose Conover and DeCarlos and all that group (next year), it's bittersweet, but it's an incredible feeling," Aguano said. Can Chandler keep the dynasty rolling? The freshman team was devastating this season. "I have assistant coaches who do a great job from the lower levels all the way up," Aguano said. "Hopefully, we can keep this going."