Thursday, December 3, 2009

Who are these guys?
Lummi will field a vastly different team in the title game than that which lost to Tri-Cities Prep early in the season

Lummi manager Shaun Diggs, 11, bundles up against the cold during Wednesday night's practice at Civic Field in Bellingham.

Last spring Travis Pederson, a starting tackle for Blaine High School's football team, came home from practice and told his father Dean that a kid from Lummi was playing for the Borderites. Dean, an assistant coach for the Lummi Blackhawks, asked Travis the boy's name. Travis wouldn't tell him. "He was afraid we would recruit him," Dean said, laughing. As it turned out, the player transferred to Lummi Nation High School in the fall. His name is Eric Robinson, and he's now one of the standouts on the Blackhawks squad that will play Friday afternoon for the 1B state title. Lummi meets Tri-Cities Prep at 4 p.m. in the Tacoma Dome.

Eric Robinson's athleticism has been a factor in Lummi's turnaround this season. He returned a kick for a score and caught a pass for another in last week's semifinal win over Neah Bay.

Robinson sat out the first five games of the season because he was a transfer. That meant he missed the Blackhawks' 82-32 loss to Tri-Cities Prep in the second game of the season. Also missing from the Lummi lineup that day were starting quarterback Ty Jameson, who had transferred from Arlington, and senior running back/linebacker Kyle Finkbonner, who was forced to miss the first five games after receiving a hardship waiver to play this year.

Dean Pederson said the Blackhawks have improved steadily as the season has progressed — evidenced by their win last week over Neah Bay, which beat Lummi twice during the regular season. But he emphasized that the Blackhawks must avoid turnovers if they are to win their first state championship.

Lummi head coach Jim Sandusky discusses a defensive scheme with his players during Wednesday night's practice.

Lummi is playing in the state title game for the second time in its history; the Blackhawks lost in 2006. Last season's squad featured a bevy of senior standouts, including Dustin Tom, the state's offensive player of the year. That team seemed to have a good shot at the state title but lost in the quarterfinals. This year's team started slowly, losing two of its first four games, but has since won eight of its past nine. It's a credit to coach Jim Sandusky and his staff that they have taken such an inexperienced team to the brink of the state championship.

Of course they first must beat a team that earlier in the season pounded them by 50 points. So it's unlikely they will bring home Lummi's first state title, right? Well, it also was unlikely the Blackhawks would beat Neah Bay in the semis. And that they would even be here in the first place. As the old sports cliche goes, that's why they play the games.

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