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Sep. 6—BOX SCORE
At W.F. West HS
VIKINGS 23, BEARCATS 15
North Kitsap6 7 10 0 — 23
W.F. West7 0 0 8 — 15
Scoring Summary
NK (Q1) — Andrew Knott 44 FG, 8:25
WFW (Q1) — Connor Coleman 15 pass from Wyatt Hoffman (Joel Mendez kick), 4:14
NK (Q1) — Knott 28 FG, 2:59
NK (Q2) — Cooper Anderson 35 pass from Teague Weible (Knott kick), 0:12
NK (Q3) — Knott 30 FG, 9:46
NK (Q3) — Tyler Prouse 66 pass from Weible (Knott kick), 5:49
WF (Q4) — Coleman 39 pass from Hoffman (Hoffman run), 0:26
Team StatsNK WFW
First Downs 9, 18
Rushing Yards 58, 121
Passing Yards 137, 210
Total Yards 195, 331
Comp-Att-Int 6-15-0, 15-30-2
Fumbles/Lost 6/3, 1/1
Individual Stats
Rushing: NK — Teague Weible 10-32, Townsyn Walsh 7-14, Kyree McGinity 11-8; WFW — Wyatt Hoffman 14-57, Miles Martin 13-49, Graysen Serl 2-10, Hiroto Smaciarz 3-5
Passing: NK — Weible 6-15/137 2 TD; WFW — Hoffman 15-29/210 2 TD, 2 INT
Receiving: NK — Tyler Prouse 1-66 TD, Cooper Anderson 2-40 TD, Kyree McGinity 1-23; WFW — Connor Coleman 5-109 2 TD, Holden Kunz 6-76, Miles Martin 2-11, Hiroto Smaciarz 1-11, Graysen Serl 1-3
Three drives that started in North Kitsap territory. Two turnovers on downs. One fumble lost. Zero points.
It wasn't just a countdown of the bounty of chances that went against the W.F. West High School football team. It ended up counting down to a Week 1 loss on Friday night.
Those trifecta of drives coming up empty combined with five turnovers and allowing two monster passing plays kept the Bearcats from celebrating their home opener, falling to the Vikings 23-15 in Chehalis.
"We have to keep coaching," W.F. West head coach Dan Hill said. "We've had games where we shot ourselves in the foot, but we always battle back. We outplayed them. It is a bummer, but that's football."
A little rivalry has started against North Kitsap with this latest meeting being the third time in four years the two schools in opposite directions of the state have clashed on the gridiron. Three years ago, they met in the Class 2A state semifinals.
Then last fall, they met in Week 1 only for W.F. West to spoil the Vikings' home opener.
They happily returned the favor.
"Our teams had some similarities," senior wide receiver Connor Coleman said. "They're a great team."
Rust was clearly shaking off for both sides. North Kitsap and W.F. West at least two players each exited with cramps and 11 total penalties were called. And even though the Bearcats outgained the Vikings on the ground by 63 and in the air by 73, it wasn't enough.
Primarily by what happened in the second quarter.
W.F. West's trio of drives started on the North Kitsap 13, 43 and 49-yard lines, respectively. On the first drive, after Peyton Santiago recovered a fumble, Graysen Serl coughed the ball up one play later.
On drive No. 2, sophomore quarterback Wyatt Hoffman hit Coleman for a 39-yard pass, but two straight penalties — the second wiped out a touchdown — killed the drive. Drive three ended with back-to-back minus-one yard runs.
"Frustrating," Hill said. "It is all a part of that process."
"The good thing about this group is they're quick learners," Coleman added.
North Kitsap (1-0) took advantage in the waning moments, recovering a muffed punt and four plays later, Cooper Anderson streaking behind the secondary and hauling in a 35-yard touchdown that put it up for good.
The Vikings' kicker Andrew Knott made all three field goals.
Hoffman overcame two fourth quarter interceptions and connected with Coleman for a 39-yard touchdown with 26 seconds left in regulation. W.F. West's ensuing onside kick attempt was scooped up by North Kitsap to seal the win.
After missing all of last year with an injury, Coleman's return to the football field ended with 109 yards on five catches. Hoffman threw for over 200 yards on 15 completions.
"Our effort level was there the whole time; we're figuring things out," Coleman said. "I worked my butt off to get back to where I am. It was hard."
Hill is hopeful Week 1 serves as a learning lesson before Week 2 at home versus Capital.
"We had opportunities to score 42 (points) tonight," Hill said. "We'll get better."
Continue reading...
At W.F. West HS
VIKINGS 23, BEARCATS 15
North Kitsap6 7 10 0 — 23
W.F. West7 0 0 8 — 15
Scoring Summary
NK (Q1) — Andrew Knott 44 FG, 8:25
WFW (Q1) — Connor Coleman 15 pass from Wyatt Hoffman (Joel Mendez kick), 4:14
NK (Q1) — Knott 28 FG, 2:59
NK (Q2) — Cooper Anderson 35 pass from Teague Weible (Knott kick), 0:12
NK (Q3) — Knott 30 FG, 9:46
NK (Q3) — Tyler Prouse 66 pass from Weible (Knott kick), 5:49
WF (Q4) — Coleman 39 pass from Hoffman (Hoffman run), 0:26
Team StatsNK WFW
First Downs 9, 18
Rushing Yards 58, 121
Passing Yards 137, 210
Total Yards 195, 331
Comp-Att-Int 6-15-0, 15-30-2
Fumbles/Lost 6/3, 1/1
Individual Stats
Rushing: NK — Teague Weible 10-32, Townsyn Walsh 7-14, Kyree McGinity 11-8; WFW — Wyatt Hoffman 14-57, Miles Martin 13-49, Graysen Serl 2-10, Hiroto Smaciarz 3-5
Passing: NK — Weible 6-15/137 2 TD; WFW — Hoffman 15-29/210 2 TD, 2 INT
Receiving: NK — Tyler Prouse 1-66 TD, Cooper Anderson 2-40 TD, Kyree McGinity 1-23; WFW — Connor Coleman 5-109 2 TD, Holden Kunz 6-76, Miles Martin 2-11, Hiroto Smaciarz 1-11, Graysen Serl 1-3
Three drives that started in North Kitsap territory. Two turnovers on downs. One fumble lost. Zero points.
It wasn't just a countdown of the bounty of chances that went against the W.F. West High School football team. It ended up counting down to a Week 1 loss on Friday night.
Those trifecta of drives coming up empty combined with five turnovers and allowing two monster passing plays kept the Bearcats from celebrating their home opener, falling to the Vikings 23-15 in Chehalis.
"We have to keep coaching," W.F. West head coach Dan Hill said. "We've had games where we shot ourselves in the foot, but we always battle back. We outplayed them. It is a bummer, but that's football."
A little rivalry has started against North Kitsap with this latest meeting being the third time in four years the two schools in opposite directions of the state have clashed on the gridiron. Three years ago, they met in the Class 2A state semifinals.
Then last fall, they met in Week 1 only for W.F. West to spoil the Vikings' home opener.
They happily returned the favor.
"Our teams had some similarities," senior wide receiver Connor Coleman said. "They're a great team."
Rust was clearly shaking off for both sides. North Kitsap and W.F. West at least two players each exited with cramps and 11 total penalties were called. And even though the Bearcats outgained the Vikings on the ground by 63 and in the air by 73, it wasn't enough.
Primarily by what happened in the second quarter.
W.F. West's trio of drives started on the North Kitsap 13, 43 and 49-yard lines, respectively. On the first drive, after Peyton Santiago recovered a fumble, Graysen Serl coughed the ball up one play later.
On drive No. 2, sophomore quarterback Wyatt Hoffman hit Coleman for a 39-yard pass, but two straight penalties — the second wiped out a touchdown — killed the drive. Drive three ended with back-to-back minus-one yard runs.
"Frustrating," Hill said. "It is all a part of that process."
"The good thing about this group is they're quick learners," Coleman added.
North Kitsap (1-0) took advantage in the waning moments, recovering a muffed punt and four plays later, Cooper Anderson streaking behind the secondary and hauling in a 35-yard touchdown that put it up for good.
The Vikings' kicker Andrew Knott made all three field goals.
Hoffman overcame two fourth quarter interceptions and connected with Coleman for a 39-yard touchdown with 26 seconds left in regulation. W.F. West's ensuing onside kick attempt was scooped up by North Kitsap to seal the win.
After missing all of last year with an injury, Coleman's return to the football field ended with 109 yards on five catches. Hoffman threw for over 200 yards on 15 completions.
"Our effort level was there the whole time; we're figuring things out," Coleman said. "I worked my butt off to get back to where I am. It was hard."
Hill is hopeful Week 1 serves as a learning lesson before Week 2 at home versus Capital.
"We had opportunities to score 42 (points) tonight," Hill said. "We'll get better."
Continue reading...