For the second straight year, Hays went into the Westlake game
undefeated and within reach of a district title. And for the second
straight year, Westlake turned it into a laugher. The Chaps scored
touchdowns on each of their first nine possessions and got another
outstanding game from their defense in a 65-7 route Friday night at Bob
Shelton Stadium in Buda, TX.
After spending the season’s first eight weeks rotating
quarterbacks, Westlake finally handed the keys to senior Kirkland
Michaux. The tall righty showed exactly why the coaches put their trust
in him by completing 15-of-23 passes for 287 yards with four touchdowns
and no interceptions. He also added a touchdown on the ground.
“There comes to be a point where you have to give one of them
more reps than the others,” Westlake coach Todd Dodge said of the
quarterbacks. “Kirkland has been in our quarterback room since he was a
freshman. A lot of people don’t remember, but he was the guy that was a
play away during his freshman season, so he’s been around a long time… I
thought he played really well against Lake Travis before his injury. He
led us on some big-time drives, ran the ball well, was very accurate
and he continued it tonight.”
Most of Michaux’s completions went to senior wide receiver Ryan
Lindley, a crafty slot-man who finished the night with nine receptions
for 111 yards and a touchdown. Arkansas commit Mason Mangum – also a
senior – had two touchdowns on his three catches for 62 yards. Freshman
Jaden Greenhouse (3 catches, 62 yards, TD) continues to flash talent
beyond his years and junior running back Zane Minors (10 carries, 87
yards, 3 TDs) gave the running game a punch that will come in handy as
Westlake chases down a state title.
“We’re becoming harder to defend by personnel. We’re spreading
the ball around to a lot of different people. Our running game is
starting to pick it up,” Dodge said. “We’re getting so many more people
involved, not only in the passing game but in the run game. Grey Nakfoor
and Zane Minors are really stepping up at the running back position.
It’s a nice little 1-2 punch. Our quarterbacks are running the ball
well. A lot of the night tonight, even though he made some big plays,
they chose to double Mason Mangum and we went in some different
directions and spread the ball around, so that’s where we are. We are
getting a lot of production from a lot of different people.”
Hays came into the game averaging almost 400 rushing yards a
game with its old-school slot-T offense. The scheme is so different from
what most kids are used to that it can cause major problems, even for
the most talented defenses. Westlake’s resistance, however, was ready
for what came at them. Hays mustered only 112 yards on the ground on 2.4
yards per rush. The Chaps also got a blocked punt from senior Jackson
Coker and an interception from senior defensive end Austin McClendon
deep in Hays territory to set up easy touchdowns.
“Absolutely great preparation. This is a tough team to prepare
for because of the slot-T. You only see it probably once a year, and I’m
so proud of our defense,” Dodge said. “It’s just about kids just being
gap sound, being unselfish. You really have to be unselfish when you
play a team like this. The defensive line, we tell them, if you don’t
make a tackle, you could play a great game just by holding up, not
getting trapped, staying in your gap, getting hats to the ball. In
today’s era of spread offenses, our kids are pretty physically. But,
boy, you have to really turn it up against a team like this and put your
big boys pants on in this kind of physical matchup.”