Hawks getting ready for rare meeting: McKeowns flying high

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Brothers Chris (left) and Nick McKeown have made a big impact for the Oregon Hawks in 2009. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@svnmail.com)
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Nick and Chris McKeown are in the middle of the action, be it before, during or after Oregon football games.

Nick, a senior fullback/strong safety, and Chris, a junior running back/linebacker, live just a few booming punts away from Oregon High School.

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Duffy and Diann McKeown’s home has become the place for Hawks to roost for a few hours before games – a place to rehash the just-completed school week, talk turkey about that night’s opponent and generally stay out of trouble – most of the time.

At a gathering earlier this season, one of the McKeown’s teammates, Patrick Shaulis, was swinging away at Gatorade bottles with a softball bat.

One of Shaulis’s follow-throughs caught teammate Quinn Fagan in the jaw, resulting in a trip to the emergency room instead of the football field that night.

“Shaulis probably hit four bottles,” Nick said, “and Quinn, I don’t know – he just got too close. Usually it’s a fun, safe place to go before games.”

Nick is one of just four returning starters from an Oregon team that finished 12-1 a year ago and came within a whisker of playing for a Class 3A state championship. He was a major contributor, with 1,184 rushing yards while playing second fiddle to all-stater Nick Snyder in the Oregon backfield.

McKeown, at 5-foot-9 and 160 pounds, is small by fullback standards and gets by with a little help from his friends. He has 173 carries for 740 yards this season.

“As long as the line gives me a hole, it’s basically me against people my size instead of a lineman,” Nick said. “I’ll take that anytime.”

Chris McKeown is a first-year starter for the Hawks at linebacker, and is second on the team, behind fellow linebacker Josh Wiggins, in tackles with 75. Considering what he went through a year ago, he’s grateful to be playing at all.

In a fresh-soph game a year ago against Burlington Central, Chris suffered a broken right leg. He had a titanium rod that extends from just below the knee to just above the ankle. Before the season, he had a screw removed the rod because it was dangerously close to protruding through his skin.

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