LINFIELD FOOTBALL IS A FAMILY AFFAIR
Wildcats have amassed 127-25 record under Joseph Smith, and
two sons star on this year's playoff-bound team
By Kerry Eggers,
Portland Tribune, Tue, Nov 19, 2019
McMINNVILLE —
"Smith" is not just a name in Linfield football. It's a brand.
Joseph Smith, 48, is in his
14th season as head coach of the Wildcats. This week, he was named Northwest
Conference Coach of the Year.
Wyatt Smith, 21, is
Linfield's 6-foot, 205-pound junior quarterback who leads the NCAA Division III
ranks in passing yardage per game this season, having thrown for 3,121 yards
and 39 touchdowns. He set a school record with eight touchdown passes in a
77-22 win over Puget Sound on Oct. 12. Wyatt was named NWC Offensive Player of
the Year.
Colton Smith, 19, is
Linfield's 6-foot, 170-pound freshman who ranked sixth in the conference in
receiving yardage per game, having hauled in 47 passes for 711 yards and nine
TDs. He was named NWC Freshman of the Year.
The 20th-ranked Wildcats
(8-1 overall, 7-0 in NWC play) head into the first round of the national
playoffs at noon Saturday against 12th-ranked Chapman (9-0) in Orange,
California.
If there's a more
successful football family in all of college football, that's saying something.
Linfield's only setback was
a 27-19 nonconference loss to Redlands on Sept. 21, the second game of the
season. Chapman, champion of the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic
Conference, beat Redlands (8-2) 21-18 on its way to the league title.
"We're a much better
team than when we lost to Redlands," Joseph Smith said. "I like our
chances. But then, I like our chances every game we play."
As well he should. Linfield
has assembled a 127-25 win-loss record under Smith's direction, continuing the
winning tradition that began with Paul Durham in 1948 and continued through the
regimes of Ad Rutschman, Ed Langsdorf and Jay Locey. The Wildcats have enjoyed
64 consecutive winning seasons, most ever by a college football program at any
level.
"A little pressure is
always there," Joseph Smith conceded. "Nobody wants to be on the team
that ends the streak. But our goals are much higher than that. Our winning
percentage over that period is over 80 percent. I expect us to be in that range
every year."
Smith, 48, has been a part
of the success for 31 years. The Grants Pass native was a four-year starter at
cornerback under Rutschman and Langsdorf, earning second-team NAIA All-America
honors as a senior in 1992. The Wildcats went 12-1 and lost to Findlay in the
NAIA Division II national championship game that season.
Smith served as an
assistant coach at Linfield for 13 years, including seven as defensive
coordinator from 1999-2005. During that time, the Wildcats went 60-6 and made
five NCAA Division III playoff appearances, capturing the 2004 national championship.
As head coach, Smith has
won 10 NWC titles and gone as far as the national semifinals in 2014 and 2015.
Last season, Linfield went
7-2 and earned another league crown, but was not selected to participate in the
Division III playoffs.
"Nobody was very happy
about that," Wyatt Smith said. "That lit a fire in our team going
into this year. We've had a chip on our shoulder. Now we're having a great
season."
The Wildcats lead
the nation in pass offense (375.8 yards per game), are eighth in total offense
(495.3) and ninth in scoring average (46.4). They have outscored league
opposition 364-101 while averaging 52 points.
Wyatt ranks third
nationally in touchdown passes (39) and is fourth in completion percentage
(.720) and passing efficiency (185.5). Though he started only the last two
games, Colton ranks sixth in the NWC in receiving yardage average per game,
having caught 47 passes for 711 yards and nine TDs.
"This is one of the
better offensive teams we've had, and we're young," Coach Smith said.
"The majority of (players on) our two-deep are freshmen and sophomores.
We'll miss our senior starters, but on paper, we're a better team next
year."
The Smith brothers grew up
around Linfield athletics. Joseph Smith coached football and, for 12 years, was
an assistant in baseball under the Scotts, Carnahan and Brosius. Wyatt and
Colton were ball boys for Linfield football when Brett Elliott was quarterbacking
the Wildcats to the 2004 national title. Now Wyatt is challenging the school
records of Elliott, Linfield's current co-offensive coordinator and
quarterbacks coach.
"When we were kids,
Wyatt and I would always have our mom (Darla) drop us off at Linfield after
school," Colton said. "We'd go play around on the sidelines, find
something to do and have a blast doing it."
Both of the boys were
terrific three-sport athletes at McMinnville High. Wyatt was a three-year
starter at quarterback and an outstanding baseball player. Colton led the state
in receiving yardage as a senior.
Even as youngsters, they
got along.
"We've always been
very close," Wyatt said. "We haven't had a sibling rivalry."
"We always played
together," Colton said. "I'd always play with Wyatt's friends. There
were moments when I'd get on Wyatt's nerves and he'd have to let me know he's
the older one. He was bigger than me, too. I could always tell when it was time
to back off."
The Smith brothers
thought about playing college ball elsewhere, but it seemed inevitable they'd
wind up at Linfield.
"It was meant to
be," Wyatt said. "I always knew I wanted to be a Wildcat — Colton and
me both. We wore Linfield jerseys and played out in the back yard. I knew it
was where I wanted to go."
Wyatt wanted to play two
sports in college. He was a regular on the diamond for the Wildcats as a
sophomore, hitting .316 while playing first base and catcher.
"It's a little tough
with the time commitment," said Wyatt, a 3.6 GPA student majoring in
finance. "There's no offseason, but the benefits outweigh the problems. I
love baseball. I love football, too. Whatever season is in season, I go all in
on."
Colton had the added
incentive of getting to play with his brother for two years at Linfield.
"I was considering
some other schools," he said. "I had a dream of going bigger for a
bit, but as it got close to signing, I wanted to have an opportunity to play
right away. I knew by coming to Linfield I had a good shot to get snaps early
in my career.
"And Wyatt was here.
We had played together my sophomore year in high school, and it was really fun.
I realized there was no reason for me to go somewhere else."
Joseph Smith did not want
the boys to feel pressure to join his program.
"As a football coach,
I wanted them to come to Linfield," said Smith, who moved from coaching
receivers to tight ends this season so he wouldn't be Colton's position coach.
"What Darla and I wanted as parents was that they would make the kind of
connections and friends that would set them up for the rest their lives.
Linfield was the best place for them to accomplish that.
"Colton was the
best receiver in the state of Oregon last year. He's an FCS-level player. He
was a steal for us to get. I would imagine he's here because of Wyatt and me
and the program and the education he can get here. There's no school that plays
football on the West Coast that out-earns a Linfield grad."
The kids have enjoyed
playing for their old man.
"It's special,"
Wyatt said. "People ask me if it's odd. It isn't — it's all I really know.
He's always been great to me, but he doesn't play favorites. I know I'm going
to get yelled at, just like the other guys."
"I watched my brother
play for my dad, so I knew it wasn't going to be weird," Colton said.
"It's been great for me, too. When Dad is in his coaching mode, I'm just
another player. But he can flip the switch easy and go back to being my dad off
the field."
Joseph calls coaching his
sons "surreal."
"But I'm used to
it," he said. "I coached them growing up in baseball along with their
friends. We have seven kids off their youth baseball teams who are playing
football here. That's been really fun.
"Wyatt and Colton know
they're going to be held to a higher standard than everybody else. They're
respectful and able to compartmentalize coach and parent. For them to achieve
what they did in high school — to be good in the classroom and in three sports
— makes me very proud."
In Joseph's three decades
at Linfield as a player and coach, no freshman had ever started at quarterback.
In 2017, Wyatt began his
freshman year as the No. 3 QB but wound up starting the final four games.
"I didn't want
to start him, but we were struggling at the position," Coach Smith said.
"He did really well and showed poise in decision-making. We needed a guy
who could stay calm under pressure while everything was going to hell. He's really
good at that."
Wyatt was second-team
all-NWC last season and has developed into one of the best QBs in the country
this fall. By the time he is through, he'll hold every record for a Linfield
quarterback not named Brett Elliott.
"Wyatt has had a great
year," Colton said. "He has an ability to make reads. He doesn't have
many picks (seven), and for as often as we throw, that's something. He's also a
very good leader. He's a leader by example first, but he is getting more vocal.
It's been fun to see."
Colton has made an
immediate impact in Linfield's passing game this season.
"He's very
talented," Wyatt said. "He has a lot of assets to bring to the table.
He's explosive, fast, a play-making guy. He has the ability to change the game.
That's why I love throwing the ball to him."
It's going to happen for as
long as the Wildcats are alive this season, and for next season, too. And on
the sidelines, there will be the coach — and dad — soaking it all in.
PHOTOS FROM LINFIELD/LIAM PICKHARDT
- -Colton Smith (left) and Wyatt Smith (right), sons of
Linfield coach Joseph Smith, are top offensive players at wide receiver and
quarterback, respectively, for the Northwest Conference champion Wildcats.
--Linfield is back in the national football playoffs under
coach Joseph Smith and in part due to the exploits of sons Colton and Wyatt....