Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Run game stymied, Wolves turn to air

- BRANDON SMITH

6A-WEST

LAKE HAMILTON 41, SILOAM SPRINGS 7

PEARCY — Lake Hamilton showed it could have just as much success in the air as it does on the ground as the Wolves knocked off Siloam Springs 41-7 on Friday night to remain undefeated.

The Wolves (5-0, 3-0 6A-West) made the switch early to a pass game led by junior quarterbac­k Easton Hurley, and he helped lead the offense to a 41-0 halftime advantage. The Panthers (0-5, 0-3 6A-West) came out looking to face a run game with several stops down the stretch. It was not long, however, until Hurley began to connect with both his backs and receivers to ultimately rout the Panthers.

“I think we can switch to the pass game with Easton,” Lake Hamilton Coach Tommy Gilleran said. “So as long as we got him, I think we always have an opportunit­y to do those type of things. So I was proud of him and what he did, so we need that to carry over through the season so we have a chance to be more successful in all parts of our game.”

After the Wolves’ defense held the Panthers to a threeand-out to start the game, Hurley went long to senior running back and receiver Justin Crutchmer from 39 yards out for the touchdown for a 6-0 lead following the botched extra-point attempt.

Hurley next found sophomore David Felan on the left sideline for a 44-yard touchdown before he went back to Crutchmer, on fourth-and-15, from 27 yards out for a 20-0 lead at the end of the first quarter.

On another fourth-down play starting off the second, Hurley threw a screen pass to senior Kendrick Martin, who ran 21 yards for the score.

Hurley’s last two touchdown passes came with less than three minutes to go in the first half. Breaking tackles along the way, Crutchmer sprinted 82 yards off a short pass before taking the final touchdown in at 58 seconds.

The Panthers’ lone score came following a Lake Hamilton fumble less than one minute into the third quarter when sophomore defensive back Mikey McKinley picked up the loose ball and went in from 20 yards out.

Siloam Springs Coach Brandon Craig said he was pleased to hold the Lake Hamilton offense to less than 100 yards rushing, even though the secondary gave up several yards.

“That’s really good against this run-based offense,” he said. “They’re 72% run, so we knew we were going to have our hands full, but got beat on some man-on-man coverage. No. 5’s [Crutchmer] a great player and he beat us. He beat us in the one-on-one stuff. We knew we had to either go sell out to stopping him or try to stop the run.

“We sold out to stopping the run. And, you know, they’re a good football team and they could take advantage of that. He does a great job every year.”

Craig also said he thought his team played physical on both sides of the ball and that is something they have to continue to do.

“I mean, we knew they were a big physical team and I felt like we matched that intensity up front,” he said. “Again, we just didn’t balance up the skill level. We got our quarterbac­k hurt in, I think, the second series, so we lost him. Our backup quarterbac­k sprained his ankle on defense. So we were hurting. We were down to our third quarterbac­k.”

Siloam Springs’s sophomore starting quarterbac­k Jackson Still was replaced early on by sophomore Dane Marlatt before senior Nick Driscoll finished.

While pleased with the team’s defensive play, Gilleran said the Panthers did a good job at taking away some of their run plays.

“You know, the pass game was wide open on some stuff and so we felt like we could take advantage of that, and that’s what we did,” he said. “So we worked on some of that stuff and then some of that stuff we didn’t. We just made some adjustment­s through the game and then kids made plays.”

Hurley went 8-for-9 passing for 230 yards while Crutchmer racked up 200 yards off five catches. Martin tacked on 27 yards om eight carries as well as 31 yards on one reception.

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