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H-town crushes Wolverines on both sides of the ball to win regional crown; await River Hill

Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2009


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Staff photos by DARWIN WEIGEL
Huntingtown head coach Jerry Franks gets the requisite dunking after his Hurricanes pounded Westlake 46-0 in the 3A South title game.


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Huntingtown's Jason Meyer prepares to plant the team flag after its regional final win.


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The Huntingtown football team celebrates its 3A South regional title.


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Huntingtown's Andrew Bose, left, and Wayne Smith team up for a first quarter sack of Westlake pivot Chris Istvan.

The first time Huntingtown and Westlake squared off this season the Hurricanes eked out a four-point win. So it was only natural to assume that Friday when they faced off again that the game would be as close as that one. Right? Not so much.   

Running back Greg Goodwin scored four touchdowns as the host Hurricanes throttled Westlake both offensively and defensively to the tune of 46-0 in the 3A South regional title game.

"I can't believe we just won," said Huntingtown senior linebacker Andrew Bose as his teammates whooped it up around him.

"I'm just real happy right now, to be honest," said Huntingtown senior quarterback Justin Bittner, who was 4 of 11 for 122 yards and touchdown. "The first time we ever played in a regional championship and we came out and played and beat them pretty good. It feels pretty good.

When asked if he expected the game to be so one-sided, Huntingtown head coach Jerry Franks shook his head: "No, no, not at all, not like that. I don't think anybody could have expected that. It was a game we jumped out on top and never let up and we took advantage and it snowballed."

Senior wide receiver Chaz'Ze Hall, who was celebrating his birthday, added: "Man, it's unbelievable. It's a real good feeling to be on this side instead of on the opposite side and to lose. We didn't want to lose our season. We didn't want to be that team that turns its equipment in. That's the mindset we go into practice with."

Huntingtown (12-0) will host River Hill, which defeated Atholton in the other semifinal, Friday night to determine one of the participants in the state championship game. The Hawks won the last two 2A state titles before moving up to 3A this season.

The stunning loss brought an abrupt halt to any thoughts of Westlake (9-3) repeating as state champions.

"I'm really disappointed because I don't feel we played to our potential; I really figured it would be a close game," said Westlake head coach Dominic Zaccarelli following a lengthy post-game meeting with his stunned players. "My hat's off to Huntingtown. I hope they go on and win the state championship and keep it in the SMAC."

The Wolverines can at least take solace in the fact that the lone state representative from the conference will give its all and has arguably the best running back in the area.

As he has been for most of the season, Goodwin (22 carries, 122 yards) was again a dominant force on this night.

The 5-foot-8, 175-pound senior scored on runs of 1, 25, 10 and 1 yards with two touchdowns in each of the second and fourth quarters. 

"Westlake was focused on stopping me but we just proved we're a solid team," Goodwin said. "You put nine in the box, we'll just throw it. We have enough athletes on this team. We've proven we can throw the ball or do whatever we want."

"I think our defensive line played pretty good," Zaccarelli said, "but we hadn't seen anyone do that to us in two years." 

While Goodwin was leading the offense, the defense did more than its share to tilt the game in the Hurricanes' favor.

Huntingtown allowed just three first downs and held Westlake ballcarriers to two or fewer yards on 18 of 31 carries. The Hurricanes also forced three turnovers — interceptions by Bose and Quante Brown and a fumble recovery by Conor Stueckler — which led to 15 Huntingtown points. Just three of 12 Westlake drives lasted longer than four plays.

"We knew from the start that they were a fast team and they were going to come after us," Bose said. "As a defensive team we just had to come out and show everybody Huntingtown defense."

"Westlake's a fast team; they're ... fast," Goodwin said, "[but] we've got the best defense in ... Maryland. I'll put our linebackers against anyone, our d-backs, anyone."

It appeared the Hurricanes would be in for a long night when Goodwin gained one yard on two carries and an incomplete pass brought an end to its first offensive series.

Westlake took over but was unable to fare any better.

Bose and Wayne Smith teamed up for a sack, the Wolverines' were flagged for five yards and were later forced to punt on 4th and 13.

Westlake punted and the ball rolled slowly downfield as the Wolverines followed, ready to down the ball.

But Hall swooped in, collected the ball, and raced 65 yards down the right side for the touchdown to send the Hurricane faithful into a frenzy.

"I was never thinking about [letting it roll to a stop]," Hall admitted. "[Westlake] thought I was going to do that because of their coverage but I never had it in my mind to fair catch it or nothing. My team is always crossing its fingers whenever I get back there because they never know what I'm going to do."

"It's either a touchdown or a fumble," Goodwin shouted, referring to the results of Hall's punt returns.

Hall smiled and added: "They're really crossing their fingers but when I make the play they're happy. It's rare that I don't make the play."

Franks added: "He took a chance with it and people like that make good plays. That was a bit of a gamble but it was something he's done before and been productive with it. That's one [play] you look at and say, ‘No, no, no .... [run] thataway.'"

After the two teams traded fumbles, Westlake had a good chance to get on the board but Chris Istvan's pass to Steven Koudossou in the left corner of the end zone slipped through the receiver's fingers.

"Maybe the one thing that could have, not changed the outcome but maybe changed the momentum and made it more of a fight, was we had that touchdown pass we dropped," Zaccarelli said. "That was a tough one . I don't think we ever really recovered from that"

The Hurricanes added to their lead the second quarter when Mark Smith booted a 27-yard field goal.

Two offensive series later, Huntingtown took over at the Westlake 31 with 1 minute 47 seconds left in the half and Bittner promptly threw a fade down the right sideline to Hall, who made a diving catch of a ball that seemed to come loose, according to the Wolvs' sideline.

"Oh yeah, I made it," Hall said, demonstrating how he collected the ball. "It bounced off my shoulder pads and it was up in the air like this and when I was coming to the ground I just cradled it, under. It was a catch."

"I was pretty nervous," Bittner said. "I was backing up and looking but he came down with it and that's all that really matters."

Goodwin bulled his way in from a yard out on the next play and the Hurricanes led 16-0.

Bose then stepped in front of Istvan's pass on the Wolverines' next offensive play and, after a late hit penalty, the Hurricane offense went back to work on the Westlake 20.  

"I was looking at the quarterback the whole time and I just saw him throw it," Bose said. "I looked up and I caught it and my mind just went blank but then I started going upfield."

Three plays later Goodwin broke four tackles on his way to a 25-yard scoring run.

The Hurricanes scored on three of their five second half possessions to complete the rout. The first touchdown was a 48-yard slant from Bittner to Andre Carter and on Goodwin's fourth TD of the night, he seemed to pull all of Westlake's defenders with him into the end zone.

"I just wanted to play hard until the end," he said. "I just ran them over and carried the rest of the team, on my back. We were just trying to keep up the intensity."

     

mreid@somdnews.com

Results

Huntingtown 46, Westlake 0

Westlake     0    0  0   0 

Huntingtown    6  18  8  14 

First quarter

H - Hall 65 punt return (kick failed), 3:53

Second quarter

H - Smith 27 FG, 2:05

H - Goodwin 1 run (Smith kick), 10:47

H - Goodwin 25 run (Bittner pass to Stanley), 11:25

Third quarter

H - Carter 48 pass from Bittner (Bittner pass to Ricchiuto), 4:37 

Fourth quarter

H - Goodwin 10 run (Smith kick), :50

H - Goodwin 1 run (Smith kick), 9:23

Team stats

W (3 first downs, 31-97 rushing, 35 passing, 1-1 fumbles, 8-67 penalties)

H (9 first downs, 30-151 rushing, 108 passing, 1-1 fumbles, 4-20 penalties)

Top individual performers

Rushing – W: Blair 3-35, Rutledge 3-30, Reese 12-22; H: Goodwin 22-122, Fletcher 4-35, Ricchiuto 2-3    

Passing – W: Istvan 2-5-1 22, Hale 1-3-1 13; H: Bittner 4-11-0 108, Riddle 0-1-1 0 

Receiving – W: Owens 1-20, Ford 1-13, Williams 1-2; H: Carter 3-78, Hall 1-30

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