SPORTS: Neah Bay tries to get grounded and not let down for state semifinal game

NEAH BAY — Don’t let down.

That’s the message coach Tony McCaulley is giving his Neah Bay football team this week as the Red Devils prepare for the state semifinals, just one win away from the Class 1B state championship game.

Neah Bay (10-2) will meet Odessa-Harrington (8-3) on Lions Field in Moses Lake on Saturday starting at 3 p.m.

That’s eight days after the Red Devils had one of their best wins in the history of their program when they beat nemesis Lummi 58-40 in the quarterfinals in Bellingham.

The then-undefeated Blackhawks, defending state champions and No. 1-ranked team, had beaten the Red Devils six straight times, including twice this year and in the past two state semifinal games.

And on top of that, Lummi was ahead 20-0 and within the Red Devils’ 5-yard line, ready to go up by four touchdowns in the quarterfinal game.

“If they had scored that touchdown, we would not have beaten them,” McCaulley said.

It didn’t help that quarterback Jared Tom had handed the ball off to standout fullback Deion Hoskins, whose running has bedeviled Neah Bay this year, with less than 5 yards to go for paydirt and that four-touchdown lead.

Then came the season-saving play of the game for the Red Devils as Tyler McCaulley, the coach’s son, tackled Hoskins, forced him to fumble with Neah Bay recovering.

“That was a big hit,” Tony McCaulley said.

Two plays later Josiah Greene sprinted 78 yards for the score, the Red Devils scored on a two-point conversion and suddenly it was a 20-8 game that soon became a 20-16 score by halftime.

“That was huge,” McCaulley said about Greene’s touchdown run.

The momentum had changed.

The contest went back-and-forth after that with the Red Devils finally gaining control late in the fourth quarter.

High emotions

Thus, Tony McCaulley had to bring his team back down to earth at Monday’s practice.

“Yes, I am worried about a letdown,” McCaulley said in an interview just before practice started. “We need to stay focused this week.

“It was a huge roller-coaster of a game we were on last week. I’m really concerned.”

Another problem is the traveling time for the Red Devils. After driving to Bellingham and back last weekend, Neah Bay will travel all the way to Moses Lake for the semifinals.

But McCaulley isn’t worried about the road trip.

“That is not a distraction for us,” he said. “We’re used to traveling. It is what it is.”

McCaulley worked on the mileage issue the other day and figures the Red Devils will have traveled almost 1,900 miles when they get back home from Moses Lake just since the playoffs started two weeks ago.

“We will have traveled 1,890 miles,” he said.

The good news for the semifinals is that Neah Bay almost is 100 percent healthy with one offensive guard with a bad ankle and Tyler McCaulley with a shoulder stinger.

Tyler received the stinger in the second play against Lummi but played the whole game. He will be ready to play this week, Tony McCaulley said.

On Saturday, McCaulley is expecting to play a solid team in Odessa-Harrington.

“They are really fundamentally sound,” he said. “They tackle well and they don’t really get themselves out of position.”

They are from the South League, though, which isn’t as strong as the North, where Neah Bay and Lummi come from.

Odessa’s quarterfinal opponent, King’s Way Christian, isn’t in the same class as Lummi, McCaulley said.

“North is quite a bit tougher, but they did beat King’s Way by a good margin,” McCaulley said of the 76-36 score.

Odessa quarterback Jared King is the team leader.

“He is a real player,” McCaulley said. “He throws well and he runs hard.”

At 170 pounds, he isn’t easy to bring down.

The Titans don’t use the spread and use more conventional formations, according to McCaulley.

“They are more like we are,” he said. “That’s kind of nice.

“On the three tapes I saw on them, they are run-orientated and try to control the game tempo to keep guys honest.”

Just the kind of team to help the Red Devils get grounded for the semifinals.

More in Sports

Forks’ Radly Benett, left, rebounds in front of Neah Bay’s Daniel Cumming on Thursday night in Forks.
BOYS BASKETBALL: Neah Bay handles Forks’ challenge

Sequim, Port Angeles boys fall on the road

Lonnie Archibald (2)/for Peninsula Daily News
Referee Steve Singhose watches closely as Forks’ Avery Dilley (left) and Neah Bay’ Angel Halttunen hustle for a loose ball. Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News
GIRLS BASKETBALL: Spartans, Red Devils tune up for playoffs

Greene, Moss, Johnson score 20 points apiece for Neah Bay and Forks

Emily Matthiessen/for Peninsula Daily News 
Sequim’s Jordyn Julmist is closely defended while putting up a shot attempt against Bremerton as teammate Vaeh Owens, far left, looks on during the Wolves’ win over the Knights at Rick Kaps Gymnasium on Thursday.
GIRLS BASKETBALL: Sequim shakes off slow start for senior night triumph

Roughriders top Kingston in regular season finale

Photos by Jay Cline/Peninsula College Athletics 
Peninsula’s Sam Tekeste steps through a pair of Shoreline defenders on his way to the rim during the Pirates’ 75-63 win over the Dolphins on Wednesday.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Pirate men stay alive in playoff chase

The Peninsula Pirate men controlled their contest with the… Continue reading

Peninsula’s Malia Garcia dribbles through the lane during the Pirates’ 94-9 win over Shoreline at home Wednesday.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Pirate women dominate Dolphins

By limiting the minutes of its starters, Peninsula College… Continue reading

Port Angeles boys head coach Kevin Ruble, right, and volunteer assistant Bryant Hoch watch during pregame Tuesday in Port Angeles before the Roughriders took on defending state champion Bremerton. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
BOYS PREP ROUNDUP: Defending champs Bremerton cruises past PA

Sequim, Forks, East Jefferson all victorious

GIRLS BASKETBALL: Riders, Spartans seal league titles

4th straight league championship for Forks girls

GIRLS FLAG FOOTBALL: PA, Sequim both in state tournament this weekend

In their inaugural seasons of girls flag football, both Sequim and Port… Continue reading

Sammie Sullivan of Kingston (143) leads the pack, including Tanya Woodward of Forks (638)  at the starting line of the 2025 Elwha Bridge Run, which returns Saturday. (Run the Peninsula)
RUN THE PENINSULA (Updated): Elwha Bridge Run returns Saturday

The Run the Peninsula series returns this weekend with… Continue reading

Tom Garrick celebrated a hole-in-one at Cedars at Dungeness on Jan. 28. (Cedars at Dungeness)
AREA SPORTS BRIEFS: Hole-in-one at Cedars at Dungeness and OJBR sign-ups

The Cedars at Dungeness reported its first hole-in-one of the… Continue reading

The Klahhane Gymnastics Xcel gold team of, from left, Emily Bair, Abigail Odland, Lorelei Sanders and Zayleigh McCullem finished first at the Freedom Invitational Gymnastics Meet at the Kitsap Pavilion last week. (Klahhane Gymnastics)
KLAHHANE GYMNASTICS: Xcel gold first at Freedom Invite

Klahhane Gymnastics Xcel teams delivered an outstanding weekend of competition… Continue reading

Liam Sprague, Crescent basketball.
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK: Liam Sprague, Crescent basketball

Crescent basketball player Liam Sprague finished the season with a flourish, showing… Continue reading