HomeSchools & YouthIt’ll Have to Be More Than the Glazier & Shohfi Show

It’ll Have to Be More Than the Glazier & Shohfi Show

Titans Approach One of the Most Anticipated Seasons In Two Decades With High Hopes, But Still Need to Block and Tackle.

Junior Michael Chan gets his turn in Coach Mike Hobbie’s one-back offense. Daryl Chan Photo
Junior Michael Chan gets his turn in Coach Mike Hobbie’s one-back offense. Daryl Chan Photo

By Mitch Lehman

The numbers flew off the field like leftover confetti, colorful, festive and almost too plentiful to grasp. Touchdowns ringing up the Titan Stadium scoreboard like a pinball game. Yardage compiled like gratuitous handouts at the county fair, excessive, darn near superfluous.

Along the way, San Marino High School’s varsity football team amassed a school record 5,582 yards of total offense and 633 points in 12 games, an astonishing average of almost 53 per contest.

Quarterback Carson Glazier threw for an unheard-of 3,704 yards–48th best in the United States and 12th in California – even though the Titans played approximately 16 non-competitive quarters with a running clock and Coach Mike Hobbie content to plow away until the final gun. Glazier’s 54 touchdown passes were tops in the CIF Southern Section and fourth in the nation while his 138.8 quarterback rating ranked him third in the state.

Wide receiver J.P. Shohfi’s numbers were every bit as impressive as he grabbed 81 passes for 1,821 yards and an eye-popping 25 touchdowns–all school records. Shohfi was touted by Max Preps on their national pre-season ‘Top 5 Returning Receivers’ and ’10 Under-the-Radar Players to Watch’ for the upcoming campaign.

For the full story, see the print edition of the San Marino Tribune, or download the e-edition.

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