It was a good
news/bad news Homecoming for Lake Stevens last Friday.
Good news: Lake won the game 30-6 to edge closer to earning a spot in the State
Playoffs.
Bad news: The game was played in a downpour which effectively ruined Lake’s
passing attack (four of 15 for 58 yards).
Good news: Brennan Frost ran wild for Lake, especially in the first half where he
carried nine times for 202 net yards and three touchdowns covering 27, 43 and
54 yards (he finished with 223 net in 14 carries).
Bad news: Lake lost yet another key player to injury, when Chameron Lackey went
down with a damaged knee in the third quarter; he’s reported to be out for the
season.
Good news: Injured Viking linemen Garek Stuart and Jesse Porter (neither of whom
played vs. Monroe) may be able to return to the lineup before the season ends.
Bad news: After Lake compiled a 23-0 lead less than two minutes into the
second quarter it only outscored Monroe 7-6 the rest of the way. This was partly due to Coach Tom Tri’s
liberal substitutions and partly due to sloppy play all around.
Good news: Lots of reserves saw action for the Vikings, and some of them, replacing injured starters, played well, including junior
linemen Gunnar Eckland and Taylor Metzger. Lake’s offensive line did a stellar job of helping free up Frost for his touchdown rampage. Nose tackle Josh Berg was a dominant
defensive force inside, notching three quarterback sacks among his 11
takedowns.
Bad news: Had the crowd only known how awful the second half was going to
be (Lake netted 23 yards and two first downs after intermission) it might have
opted to escape the
monsoon after enjoying the halftime Homecoming show which included the
traditional Running of the Great Chicken, Coronation of Royalty, lively Viking band, and fireworks.
Good news: See halftime Homecoming show, above.
The win set up Lake (3-1 in Wesco
North, 4-3 overall) with a clear-cut scenario: win at Oak Harbor this Friday or against Snohomish at Lake the following week and the
Vikings are in the Playoffs.
Monroe was hampered by the absence of
several key players (including its starting quarterback and its star running back) to injury and to academic suspension, and
Lake to its credit jumped all over the Bearcats in the early going.
After that, it was slop city for both
teams.
Lake’s 30 points included a Bryson
Daggett to Tyler Reside 13-yard touchdown pass in the third quarter and a
safety in the first quarter when the Bearcats snapped the ball out of the end
zone in a failed punt attempt.
Arvid Isaksen caught a 37-yard screen
pass and kicked all four extra points; he has been playing on a bad ankle for
much of the season.
Lake finished with 200 net yards rushing
to 37 for Monroe. The latter
completed nine of 27 passes for 88 yards, with Viking interceptions by Jaimie
Laurine and Christian Gasca. Laurine also
intercepted Monroe’s two-point PAT attempt.
Vasia Bogdanoff punted six times for Lake, for an outstanding
41.8 average.
In addition to Berg’s three QB sacks
Chase Crowley, Jordan Eckstrom and Korey Young had one sack apiece.
Leading Viking tacklers were Berg 11,
Eckstrom 11, Jason Mendel 10 (he also recovered a fumble), Metzger 9.