Eagles come away with 3-0 win through sloppy field conditions
Olivet’s Tyler Latunski planted his feet into the soft, muddy field on a cold and rainy night in Williamston and drilled a 22-yard field goal in overtime to give the Eagles a 3-0 win over the Hornets in the MHSAA Division 5 first round playoff game on Oct. 29.
The field goal was the first make of the year for Latunski as Olivet players and coaches poured onto the field in celebration once the ball went through the uprights.
“To hit a walk off kick, there’s nothing like it,” Olivet head coach Brock Peters said about the dramatic win. “There’s an emotion that’s involved in sports that I haven’t found in anything else—there’s more important things (in life), but that euphoria of doing something in a huge game like this, to be able to get a walk off is really special.”
The field goal came after Olivet’s defense came up with a stop on the first possession of overtime as Williamston missed a 27-yard field goal on fourth down, opening the door for the Eagles to win the game on any score after the miss.
In regulation, it was 48 minutes of some missed opportunities combined with strong defensive performances from both teams—similar to the team’s Week 8 matchup at Olivet, which the Eagles won 20-19 without the poor weather conditions.
Williamston’s best offensive series of the night came on its opening possession as the Hornets moved the ball all the way to the Eagles’ 1-yard line looking to take the early advantage. But the Eagles’ defense stood tall and forced Williamston into a missed field goal, which turned out to be a critical defensive stand for Olivet.
“Looking back, that’s the difference in the game,” Peters said. “At the time you don’t know it, any time you can hold a team first-and-goal from the one and keep (them) from scoring, that’s just a gigantic win. It gives you some confidence on defense, but not knowing it was going to be 0-0, you don’t realize how huge that was.”
The defense had to step up time and time again for Olivet while its offense was trying to figure out a way to move the ball against a stout Hornets defense and against the weather conditions. Late in the second quarter, the Hornets drove the ball near the Olivet red zone, but Olivet’s Mason Molek jumped a pass thrown from quarterback Alex Petersburg to keep the score deadlocked at 0-0 heading into halftime.
The Eagles got the ball first in the second half and pulled out a trick play to try to loosen up the Hornets’ stingy defense and executed a throwback pass back to quarterback Clay Flower for a first down into Williamston territory. But on the same drive, Flower had a pass intercepted by Zach Painter at the Williamston 38-yard line.
The Hornets would move the ball to the Olivet 30-yard line after the forced turnover, but Olivet’s defense stood strong again while getting a fourth down stop toward the end of the third.
On Olivet’s first drive in the fourth quarter, the Eagles were finally able to connect on a big play in the passing game when Flower found Dalton Tobias on a 39-yard pass play down the sideline. Shortly after, Flower connected with Bo Lincoln on a post pattern that Lincoln came down with at the 2-yard line, but a holding penalty on the Eagles negated the play and eventually forced the drive to stall out with 8:44 to remaining.
With 4:30 left in the game, the Eagles got the ball back but were forced to punt in their own territory when Ramsey Bousseau slightly bobbled the snap on fourth down. The bobble was enough time for the Williamston rush to force him to run the ball as he was stopped short of the first down marker.
The Hornets were suddenly in good field position after that stop, but they gave it right back to Olivet’s offense with a fumble on the first play of their next series that was recovered by Bo Lincoln, only for Olivet to fumble it back to Williamston on its next play in the wild sequence of events.
Williamston would get the ball to Olivet’s 19-yard line looking for the game’s first score and potential game winning touchdown, but a Petersburg pass was intercepted by Flower in the end zone, with Flower finding multiple blocks on the return and running the ball back to midfield before getting tackled with 55 seconds left.
Olivet could not take advantage of the field position and the game went into overtime to eventually set up the game winning field goal from Latunski.
Peters said he is proud of the way his defense has improved throughout the season while pointing out the competitive matchup between Painter and Olivet defensive end Blake Lincoln.
“Our two inside linebackers had never played inside linebacker before, so it’s pretty unusual to have a really good football team and have inexperience at linebacker,” said Peters. “They’re great football players and they’ve really learned how to play the position (Caleb Molek and Dalton Tobias), they’ve just gotten better and better all year. And as they’ve gotten better our defense has gotten better. Tonight, Blake Lincoln is one of our defensive ends, and they have number 11 (Painter) on their side is just an absolute monster, he’s a stud. We’ve played him now four times in three years, and he (Lincoln) really had to man up in the second half to take him on—he got manhandled by him in the first half but he stood up and played completely out of his mind in the second half.”
Tobias led the Eagles’ defense with seven tackles, with Caleb Molek coming up with six tackles on the night. Bousseau added six tackles, while Flower had five to go along with his interception.
Offensively, Flower completed 3-of-13 pass attempts for 53 yards and ran it 16 times for 39 yards.
Olivet will play at Portland High School on Nov. 5 to take on the Raiders (8-2) to decide the district champion in the MHSAA Division 5 playoffs.