Jump to content

2019 HEMPHILL HORNETS


Recommended Posts

This is the hidden content, please

2019 FOOTBALL TEAM PREVIEWS

HEMPHILL HORNETS

2018 Record: 4-7 Overall, 2-3 District

4th Place in District 12-3A-II

 

In 2018, the Hemphill Hornets managed to find their way into the playoffs out of rugged district 12-3A-II. To repeat that feat in 2019, Head Coach Gary Vanya will rely on the contribution of seven returning offensive starters and nine returning defenders.

 

Head Coach: Gary Vanya

Offense:

Seven starters return to the Hemphill offense in 2019.  Junior Wesley Ross will lead the Hornet offense.  The Hemphill rushing attack will be lead by junior back Drey'Lyn Washington (1st team all-district) and sophomore JaMarrius Hall (2nd team all-district).  Look for senior back Kordale Oliphant and junior Clay Butler to also see time in the backfield.  Senior wide out Logan Wilkerson (2nd team all-district) and junior receivers Jeremy Clancy and Chance Wilkerson, as well as junior tight end Braylon Simmons, will pace the Hemphill receivers. Senior center Koltin Ross (2nd team all-district), senior tackle Seth Murray (2nd team all-district) and senior guards Malik Wilkerson and Jed Scott will protect things up front.  Look for juniors Lance Collins and Tevor Harley to also see time on the line.

Defense:

Nine starters return to the Hemphill defense in 2019. Senior defensive ends Christian Burns (1st team all-district) and Malik Wilerson (2nd team all-district) and Collins (2nd team all-district at defensive tackle) will pace the line along with Simmons and Harley.  Oliphant (2nd team all-district) will lead the Hornet linebacker corp along with Hall.  Butler (2nd team all-district at safety), Logan Wilkerson (2nd team all-district at cornerback) will anchor the Hemphill secondary along with Wood (2nd team all-district at linebacker in 2018), Clancy and Wesley Ross.

Special Teams:

Special teams positions are to be determined.

Schedule:

Aug. 30 - Timpson, 7:30 pm

Sept. 6 - at Buna, 7:30 pm

Sept. 13 - OPEN

Sept. 20 - at Beckville, 7:30 pm

Sept. 27 - San Augustine, 7:30 pm

Oct. 4 - at West Sabine, 7:30 pm

Oct. 11 - Anderson-Shiro, 7:30 pm*

Oct. 18 - Newton, 7:30 pm*

Oct. 25 - Kountze, 7:30 pm*

Nov. 1 - New Waverly, 7:30 pm*

Nov. 8 - at Corrigan-Camden, 7:30 pm*

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Member Statistics

    45,977
    Total Members
    1,837
    Most Online
    cfbswami
    Newest Member
    cfbswami
    Joined


  • Posts

    • We'll see. I don't trust us. 
    • Starting pitching has been shaky the last few weeks due to some injuries outside of Hagen Smith.  He goes tomorrow, so y’all should be fine 
    • Manchin may get it but any mention of the radical left that wanted to get rid of the filibuster and end almost 220 years of history because the Democrats are mad?  The House and Senate are obviously different legislative bodies with entirely different election processes and rules for a reason. The House can vote on laws with a simple majority vote. The Senate put rules in place that it would make it much tougher to pass laws. Laws should be difficult to pass. The Senate is often the holdup of the right and left. It takes 60 votes to break the filibuster so any law will almost certainly require agreement at least in part, from opposing sides of an issue. Because they can’t get laws passed, the radical left is like a baby having a tantrum and wants to change over 200 years of history and make it potentially ridiculously easy to pass laws. I have seen current poll maps and it is possible for the Republicans to sweep into complete power in November but by the tiniest margin. That would possibly mean that a single vote margin in both houses could enact what you might call the radical right laws. There would be nothing that the Democrats could do to stop any legislation whatsoever if the left (they are all radical, minus Manchin) got their filibuster rule changed.  That is where the current filibuster comes into play as any new law would require several Democrats to agree with the majority Republicans and vice versa.  Do you want the potential for your radical right to have free rein as the radical left wants by killing the filibuster or is the radical left just as (if not more) dangerous? Let’s see if we have a history in this area? Oh yeah, the Democrats changed the rules in the Senate to allow federal judges to not have to overcome the filibuster. Obama was not getting his federal judge nominations passed and being angry, they changed the rules instead of nominating more moderate justices. They were warned that it would come back to bite them. They didn’t care and chose the nuclear option to change the rules. Oops! Any guess how Trump got all of his Supreme Court nominees passed against strong Democrat opposition? The Democrats got rid of the filibuster for federal judges after another tantrum   So when you are so worried about the radical right, are you equally concerned in what the radical left is always doing by changing rules and history which were put into place just for situations like we are in? So while Manchin gets it, what about his other 50 colleagues (49 + Harris)?  What concerns you more, Abbott and Paxton or the Democrats who want to make it to where if the Republicans do take over, they can go wild… at least in your mind? 
    • MODS please remove that ISD twitter link! I had no idea it would copy the whole posting. I only highlighted the portion about the venue change. Sorry about that!
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...