Monday, December 15, 2025
35.0°F

Blue Devils bedevil bruise Bucs, 34-14

John Heglie Special to Leader [email protected] | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 11 years, 2 months AGO
by John Heglie Special to Leader [email protected]
| September 18, 2014 9:32 AM

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis09.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis08.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis07.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis06.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis05.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis04.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis03.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis02.jpg

photo

0918_S_FB_Polson_Corvallis01.jpg

POLSON – A long-standing streak was broken Sept. 12  when the visiting Corvallis Blue Devils emerged with a rare victory over the Pirates since the turn of the millennium.

 A pair of TDs in each of the first two quarters less a missed extra point accounted for the first-half scoring on the way to a 34-14 Devils victory.

After trailing 27-0 at the half, the Pirates got on the board after following a big completion from junior quarterback Wyatt Ducharme to sophomore tight end Tim Russell placed the host team within striking distance. Senior runningback  Joe Gallatin punched it in for the score while junior kicker Jacob Harrod converted the PAT to carve into the Corvallis lead.

 In an effort to climb back into the game more quickly, the Pirates recovered the ball after the ensuing onside kick and looked like they might tack on another score as they knocked on the Corvallis door once again, but the pass to an allegedly open receiver in the end zone was picked off to snuff the threat.

 Corvallis picked up an insurance TD early into the fourth quarter to account for all of their scoring.

 After the Pirates carved their way midway into Corvallis territory yet again, a third down pass attempt to an open Harrod just outside the right pylon of the end zone came up short and the drive stalled on the incompletion.

 Harrod came in to attempt a field goal in an effort to salvage some points from the drive, but the kick was just a few yards shy of clearing the uprights.

 The Pirates caught a break not too long thereafter when Walter Wood recovered a Blue Devil fumble with 2:47 remaining.

 A minute and change later, Gallatin punched his way through traffic for his second score of the evening to counter the third quarter tally of the visitors, which accounted for all the numbers posted on the scoreboard for both sides.

Despite the apparent chasm the score on the scoreboard, the game could just as well have swung the other way if varying factors had taken a different turn.

Foremost among those would have to be turnovers, which contributed to Corvallis scoring drives in each of the first two quarters.

Erase those fractured foibles coupled with the Pirates capitalizing on one of two bonifide opportunities of their own to rack up some points, and the game would have hinged on the missed PAT, tilting the outcome of the game in the direction of Polson.

 Another contribution factor would have to be a backfield and elsewhere depleted by injuries coupled with lack of familiarity among new personell who are still in the process of being integrated to fill in for absences.

 A third factor behind the dark omen of an eventual loss to Blue Devils that has been brewing in the Bitterroot can be attributed to former Ronan Chief assistant football coach and former Ronan Maiden girls basketball coach Clayton Curley taking over the helm of the program last season.

 In this observer’s estimation, the visitors looked crisper and more confident than in seasons past and that, at least in part, is to be attributed to the resources Curley brings to their table.

 Such a triad would be enough to turn any tide and unfortunately for the Pirates, these three things converged like an alignment of planets with a rippling effect that would inevitably create several waves in multiple ways, shapes or forms.

 For the Pirates, “galloping” Gallatin shined bright in the backfield, rumbling for 78 yards on 14 carries and would have easily surpassed the century mark had he factored into the offense another quarter and then some.

  On a side note, Stevensville transfer, 2013 State A basketball tourney MVP and recent Oregon State football recruit Jesse Sims did not factor into the outcome of this contest as he was sidelined to allow a hand injury time to mend.

  Polson (1-2) hosts Browning for Homecoming this coming Friday.

Corvallis   14  13  0   7   -   34

Polson        0    0   7   7   -   14

    3rd Qtr  P – Joe Gallatin 3 run (Jacob Harrod kick)

    4th Qtr P – Gallatin 4 run (Harrod kick)

RUSH (40-187) - Gallatin 11-78, Bridger Rowley 11-73, Jacob Wall-Wilbert 2-16, Wyatt Ducharme 8-10, Jacob Clairmont 2-4, Danny DiGiallonardo 2-3, Wood 1-3.

PASS - Ducharme 4-9-1-43.

   REC (4-43) - Harrod 1-21, Russell 1-14, Gallatin 1-7, DiGiallonardo 1-1.

    PNT - Harrod 6-168.

KO RET (3-58) - DiGiallonardo 2-46, Harrod 1-12.

 DEF TKL/ASST - Wood 7t2a, Gallatin 6t4a, Andrew Curley 5t2a, Mike Corrigan 5t1a, Jonah Burke 3t5a, Clairmont 3t1a, Harrod 3t, Trevor Corley 2t5a, Isaiah Williams 2t3a, Justin Young 2t1a, Remington Janeway 2t1a, Rowley 1t3a, Cadis Chowning 1t3a, Russell 1t, Kabe Forman-Webster 1t, Wit Sampson 1a.

 FMBL RECOV - Williams, Wood, Sampson.

 CAUSE FMBL - Gallatin.

ARTICLES BY JOHN HEGLIE SPECIAL TO LEADER [email protected]

November 20, 2014 8:15 a.m.

Musings on famed 'Brawl of the Wild' Rivalry

MISSOULA – Washington-Grizzly Stadium will kick off the 144th annual gridiron skirmish between the visiting Montana State Bobcats and the host University of Montana Grizzlies Nov. 22. The rivalry began over a century ago in Bozeman back on November 26, 1897 and is reputed to be the 31st oldest among still active rivalries within NCAA Division I ranks and the 11th oldest west of the Mississippi River. Among active Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) rivalries it is considered to be the oldest west of the Mississippi River and 4th oldest overall.

November 28, 2014 1:09 p.m.

4 area alums playing college FB

Two Mission Valley grads helped the Carroll College Fighting Saints (Helena) win the Frontier Conference championship with their ninth straight victory and earn the No. 1 ranking in the NAIA Football Coaches Top 25 poll.

Pirates chase, contain, capture Canadian Comets
September 4, 2014 11:31 a.m.

Pirates chase, contain, capture Canadian Comets

POLSON – The Polson Pirates opened their fall football campaign a little bit differently than in seasons past by engaging in  some international relations by tangling tackles as well as testing their talent against the visiting Raymond Comets from Alberta, Canada.  For those unfamiliar with Albertan geography, Raymond is situated about halfway along an imaginary perpendicular line between Lethbridge and the US border with a slight jaunt to the east. After a few uneventful series by the offenses from both teams, it would be the Pirates chasing the Comets when the visitors unleased a 64 yard rumble into the end zone to tally the first score on the scoreboard.  But Polson would respond right back with a scoring drive of their own when Matt Rensvold reeled in a Tanner Wilson pass to take the lead 7-6, followed by  a quarterback keeper to make it 14-6 entering the second period.  Wilson would hit receiver Hudson Smith for another score with Jake Harrod kicking his third extra point to extend the lead further to 21-6 in favor of the Pirates.  Just when the host team was beginning to feel in control of their own destiny, the Comets dipped into their playbook for a bit of razzle dazzle when their quarterback threw what initially appeared to be an ordinary pass to their wide receiver, who then threw it back to the quarterback, who then rethrew the pass to  the same receiver now very open heading down the sideline to cap off the second Raymond scoring drive to trim the margin to 21-13 after the extra point.  The play bore all the earmarks of a design play, but conversation with one of the coaching staff after the game revealed that the play by design initially had another target in mind, but Polson defensive coverage forced their quarterback to improvise, finding an open Rhett Ellingson running down the sideline for his second TD.