Overall winner: Jake Hubenak
Jake Hubenak is no Adrian Peterson, but he can relate.
And after Hubenak's remarkable 2012 season for
Georgetown (Texas) High School's football season, Eagles' coach Jason Dean can relate his star quarterback to the NFL's premier running back.
"I
don't know how much better he could have been or his numbers could have
been," Dean said. "He did everything we could have asked."

Jake Habenak, Georgetown QB
Photo by Jim Redman
In
2011, Georgetown was cruising to a 4-0 start when Hubenak, a 6-foot-3,
187-pound then junior, tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right
knee.
The Eagles went 2-4 the rest of the way and failed to make the Texas 5A playoffs.
Down
in enrollment, Georgetown was reclassified to 4A and Hubenak, much like
Peterson's nearly historic 2012 comeback season, came back better than
ever.
He completed 264 of 427 passes for 4,091 yards and 48
touchdowns. With a stronger leg and sculpted frame, Hubenak also came
back quicker and rushed for 513 yards (including sack yardage) and seven
more scores.
And all those yards and all those touchdowns led
Georgetown to its greatest season ever, a 15-1 campaign and spot in the
Texas 4A-I state finals.
For his comeback and a terrific senior
season, Hubenak was selected as the Austin area Capital One Bank High
Yield Student Athlete of the Year.
"He's
a great kid and twice was voted a team captain by the players," Dean
said. "And we had a team full of leaders. He was a quiet leader. He led
by example. Jake is very coachable, a great student of the game. He's
just an All-American kid."
With a resounding 56 seniors on a
roster of 65, the Eagles dropped their final game, 48-37 to Guyer at
Cowboys Stadium in Arlington. Hubenak threw for 315 yards and three
touchdowns, all to
Randy Knightner.
Knightner was one of three 1,000-yard receivers which also included
Austin Weston and
Ryan Bedford.
The Eagles also had a 1,000-yard rusher in
Tyler Moody
and four other runners who rushed for more than 300 yards. It was a
true team effort, but Hubenak led the way from his quarterback spot. He
was named the state's first-team 4A quarterback by the Texas Associated
Press Sports Editors.
He hasn't secured a college offer yet, but Dean said that's only because of Hubenak's untimely injury.
"Most
of the kids are all recruited their junior years and Jake was out,"
Dean said. "They missed out on a good one. Someone is going to get a
steal here late in the game."