A8 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAy, SEpTEMbER 18, 2019 HeraldSports Follow sports on Twitter @HHeraldSports Richland holds off Hermiston for MCC win By ANNIE FOWLER STAFF WRITER H ermiston stopped Richland three times on fourth down Fri- day — twice in the red zone. There also was a recovered onside kick and a fumble recovery, but it just wasn’t enough. Richland scored two quick touchdowns in the first quarter and held on for a 28-14 Mid-Columbia Con- ference win Friday over the Bulldogs at Kennison Field. “We make mistakes, that’s part of life,” Hermis- ton coach David Faaeteete said. “I am so proud of you guys for fighting to the end.” The Bulldogs (0-2 MCC) had the ball the last 3 1/2 minutes of the game. They drove down into Richland territory, where a pass interference call by the Bombers put the ball on the 3-yard line. Two plays later, Trevor Wagner ran the ball in from 2 yards out with 13.8 seconds remaining to pull Hermiston within 28-14. On the ensuing kickoff, Wagner chipped the ball, then recovered it himself at the Hermiston 49. The Bulldogs made it to the Richland 26, but ran out of time. “They are a good team,” Richland coach Mike Nei- dhold said of the Bulldogs. “They run a good program — there is no quit in those kids. We needed to play a good team to get back on track, and we did.” Richland led 21-0 at the half, then came out and scored less than 2 minutes into the third quarter, but that would be it. Hermiston’s first touch- down came with 3:03 left in the third as Sam Schwirse connected with Wagner for a 7-yard score and a 28-7 game. “I was happy with how I did on offense, but I need to work on defense,” Wag- ner said. “We did do some good things. We are a bet- ter team than we were last week. Eventually, it will all come together.” The Bulldogs had a new look Friday with Schwirse under center, and senior guard Dustyn Coughlin moving to center. “I think coach Faaeteete put me there to take con- trol of the offensive line,” Coughlin said. “The guards know I trust them to do their jobs. I was a little nervous, I’m not going to lie. I’ve only been doing it for three days.” Coughlin also stepped in on defense. “He’s a good defensive player and made some good plays,” Faaeteete said. Ryan Arnold led the Bull- dogs defensively with 11 solo tackles and five assisted Staff photo by ben Lonergan Richland quarterback Harrison Westover (16) hurdles a member of the Hermiston defense. The Richland Bombers defeated the Hermiston Bulldogs 28-14 at Kennison Field in Hermiston, Ore. Friday night. Staff photos by ben Lonergan BOTTOM LEFT: Hermiston quarterback Sam Schwirse (15) attempts to get ahold of a loose snap late in the first half. The Richland Bombers defeated the Hermiston Bulldogs 28-14 at Kennison Field in Hermiston, Ore. Friday night. BOTTOM RIGHT: Hermiston wide receiver Garrett Walchli (5) breaks free of the Richland defense. The Richland Bombers defeated the Hermiston Bulldogs 28-14 at Kennison Field in Hermiston, Ore. Friday night. tackles. The first half was all Richland. The Bombers drove 87 yards on their first posses- sion of the game in five plays, finishing with a 66-yard pass play from Har- rison Westover to Ben Fewel for a 7-0 lead just 2:04 into the contest. Fewel caught 11 passes for 233 yards on the night. After the Bulldogs were forced to punt, Richland once again started deep in its own half. A holding call against the Bombers put them back at their own 21, but Westover launched the ball to Dawson Palm, who reeled it in for a 79 yard touchdown and a 14-0 game that would stand at the end of the first. Hermiston drove into Bomber territory early in the second, and had first-and-10 at the 48, but a high snap sailed over Schwirse’s head and pinned the Bulldogs back at their own 38. Hermiston twice stopped Richland on fourth down in the second quarter, but with 1:18 remaining, Westover hit Kayden Roxburgh with a 10-yard TD pass for a 21-0 lead after Joseph Weissen- fels kicked the PAT. An on-side kick by Rich- land was recovered by the Bombers at the Hermiston 36 with 13 seconds to play. Garrett Walchli picked off Westover and returned the ball 65 yards before he ran out of real estate and time. “We shot ourselves in the foot a little bit,” Faaeteete said. “I challenged the kids at half to keep fighting, and they did.” Richland 14 7 7 0 — 28 Hermiston 0 0 7 7 — 14 Scoring plays R — ben Fewel 66 pass from Harrison Westover (Joseph Weissenfels kick) R — Dawson palm 79 pass from Westo- ver (Weissenfels kick) R — Kayden Roxburgh 10 pass from Westover (Weissenfels kick) R — Fewel 11 pass from Westover (Weissenfels kick) H — Trevor Wagner 7 pass from Sam Schwirse (Wagner kick) H — Wagner 2 run (Wagner kick) Individual Statistics passing: H, Sam Schwirse 20-27-0-139; R, Harrison Westover 25-32-1-379. Rushing: H, Daniel Faaeteete 15-71, Garrett Walchli 3-15, Sam Schwirse 6-(minus-32), Trevor Wagner 1-3, Nathan Wheeler 2-1; R, Marshawn Davis Copeland 11-34, Kainoa Steward 8-53, Kade brons 3-16, ben Fewel 1-(minus-5), Harrison Westover 1-(minus-8). Receiving: H, Trevor Wagner 9-42, broc Remmer 4-45, Trent pitney 2-31, Gar- rett Walchli 3-26, Daniel Faeeteete 2-(minus-5); R, ben Fewel 11-233, Marshawn Davis Copeland 5-22, Dawson palm 2-90, Matt Robinson 2-12, Kayden Roxburgh 1-10, ben Kostorowski 1-6, Grady Kriskovich 1-(minus 4). Dawgs look to upend Lions on Friday night Hermiston will play Kennewick at Lampson Field By ANNIE FOWLER STAFF WRITER W ith just two 3A playoff spots to share between four teams in the Mid-Columbia Conference, every game is must win for Hermiston when it plays Kennewick, Kami- akin and Southridge. The Bulldogs missed out on a playoff spot last year, dropping games to Kennewick (26-25) and Kamiakin (34-27). Friday night, Hermiston (0-2 MCC) will start again, playing Kennewick at 7 p.m. at Lampson Stadium. “We have some work to do,” Bulldogs coach David Faaeteete said. “We need to execute and get better. That was a big game here last year (against Kennewick), and HH file photo Hermiston’s Wyatt Noland gets wrapped up by Kennewick’s Brady Benton in 2018’s 26-25 loss to the Lions in Hermiston. part of the reason we didn’t go to the playoffs. We have to stop the run and defend the pass.” The Lions (1-1) are coming off a 37-0 loss to Chiawana last week. The Riverhawks shut down the Lions’ big running back Myles Mayovsky, limiting the 6-foot-2, 195-pound sophomore to just 18 yards on 14 carries. Mayovsky is just one concern for the Bulldogs. Their size and their athletic ability are others. “Like most Tri-City schools, they are bigger than us,” Faae- teete said. “They are a tough foot- ball team with a tough mentality. They run two tight ends and they punned the ball. We matchup well with them in certain spots.” The Bulldogs, who lost start- ing quarterback Chase Elliott to a broken leg in the first game of the season against Pasco, turned to junior Sam Schwirse last week, and moved big guard Dustyn Coughlin to center. “His stat line (20-27 for 139 yards) shows he was able to man- age the game,” Faaeteete said of his quarterback. “He wants to get out there and gain confidence.” Hermiston also saw senior run- ning back Guiomar Garay go down with an ankle injury against Pasco. He missed last week’s game against Richland, and is listed day to day this week. Daniel Faaeteete came in last week and rolled up 71 yards on 15 carries, but coach Faaeteete could like to have both backs available. “We would like to have another option,” coach Faaeteete said. “I expect Daniel to play better. There are big expectations from the older brother.” While the Bulldogs were the new kid on the block last year in the MCC, Kennewick coach Randy Affholter is in his first year with the Lions after coaching at Ellensburg for 22 years. He replaced Bill Tem- pleton, who stepped down after last season. “I have heard a lot of good things about him,” Faaeteete said of Affholter. “Coming in and taking control of a storied program like the Lions, he has done a good job.”