Bulldogs earn state soccer title
The Whitefish soccer machine was at
full throttle Saturday. Nothing was going to stop these Bulldogs
from reaching their aspirations of a state title — not even the
pesky Pirates that have long been a thorn in their side.
A season’s worth of sweat, drills, and
tough lessons learned culminated when the 2011 Whitefish boys
soccer team hoisted above their heads the Class A state
championship trophy. In front of a crowd at Smith Fields edging
over 800, Whitefish shut out Polson 3-0 to earn the school’s fourth
state title. The Bulldogs now own the most Class A boys soccer
championships of any school in the state.
By all accounts, Whitefish earned their
hardware. After a 1-2 record to start the season the boys markedly
improved from game to game by utilizing what Whitefish coach
O’Brien Byrd calls the “highest level formation every employed by a
Whitefish soccer team.”
Showing their soccer smarts, they
mastered the complex 4-4-2 formation and each player knew their
role in the system. They rattled off 12 consecutive wins dating
back to Sept. 3, including a perfect record in the Northern A
conference.
Whitefish was led from the back by
senior captains Mark Stormes, Matty McCrone and Joe Perry, while a
fleet of sharp shooters up front poured in the goals. Junior Sam
Donaldson finished the season with 25 scores — the most in the
state by a long stretch — and Curran Edland was tops in
assists.
This team was a machine to be reckoned
with by season’s end and only Polson stood in the way. In their
final match, they played “perfect.”
“It was their best game of the year,”
Byrd said. “We controlled everything.”
Whitefish’s bench exploded after the
final whistle Saturday, while players on the pitch tore off their
jerseys and a raucous student crowd flooded around the newly
crowned state champions and hosed them with silly string.
“The thing that makes me smile the most
is that these kids worked their tails off to get to that moment and
lift that trophy,” Byrd said. “I’m so proud of them. I knew they
could do it from the first day of the season. They did it, and they
did it with class.”