Delta QB Colin Christensen is sacked by Hurricane's McCrae Vaifanua in the 3A football semifinal in Salt Lake City, Thursday, Nov. 11, 2010.
Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
Between last season and this season, Hurricane lost seven of its defensive starters.
All of them were stars.
Two of the seven — middle linebacker Ian Gates and defensive lineman Jeff Staples — were first-team All-State selections a year ago, another — outside linebacker Jaden Seely — was a second-team All-State selection and the other four all played indispensible roles on Hurricane's state-finalist team in 2009.
So when it came time to try and build another phenomenal defense this fall without them, Hurricane coach Chris Homer and his staff all recognized it was an unenviable challenge, to be sure.
But it was a challenge that Hurricane's current crop of defensive players all embraced.
Unfazed by the fact that many of their star teammates had departed, Hurricane's defenders went out and became stars in their own right — both individually and collectively.
With one notable exception — a perplexing loss to Cedar at the end of the regular season — the Tigers have been quite simply stellar on the defensive side of the ball.
Five players — DL Eric Canfield, MLB Taylor Frost, OLB Josh Bulloch, CB Trey Smith and S Taylor Parker — have stepped up enormously, and the Tigers have simply gone from defensive strength to defensive strength.
"I don't know that I was worried about the defense, but there were tons of question marks, especially when you look at who we lost," said Hurricane coach Chris Homer. "There were tons of question marks coming in to the season, but I think from the beginning of the season to the end of the season — if you take out the Cedar game — we've been really stellar."
'Stellar' would certainly describe Canfield, Frost, Bulloch, Smith and Parker.
In their own ways, they've all been huge parts of Hurricane's defense this fall.
Canfield is tough and physical and helps give the defense its signature; Frost has emerged as a leader in the middle of the field; Bulloch plays incredibly sound and smart from his OLD position; Smith is a blanket corner that people often forget because of what he does on offense; and Parker, only a junior, has been the perfect safety in Hurricane's defense.
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