The number one ranked Lake Oswego Lakers (5-0, 1-0 Three Rivers League) took on the West Linn Lions (2-3, 0-1 Three Rivers League) before a raucous West Linn student body on Friday, September 28th. It was over before it started with West Linn receiving a 41-0 loss.
Justen Ruppe, senior quarterback for Lake Oswego, returned from an ankle injury to pass for two first quarter touchdowns. One to Nick Palermini, senior, for 57 yards and another to Connor Griffin, senior, for 21 yards to make the score 14-0.
Along with a 24-yard field goal in the second quarter, J.B. Holmes, senior running back, had two touchdown runs for 13 yards, and 60 yards. He finished the day with 108 total yards. To conclude the first half, Lake Oswego led 38-0 with 176 yards on 8 of 10 passing from Justen Ruppe.
Lake Oswego notched another three points to make the score 41-0. Justen Ruppe finished the night with 197 yards on 9 of 12 passing and two touchdowns. Lake Oswego’s leading receiver, Nick Palermini, caught one pass for 57 yards and a touchdown.
West Linn Quarterback, Hayden Coppedge, junior, threw for 57 yards on 9 of 18 passing. West Linn’s lead rusher, Louie Germain, junior, ran for 73 yards on 19 attempts. Jarrod Howard, senior, had three receptions for 38 yards to lead West Linn in receiving.







































![MORE THAN A GAME. With two diving catches in the outfield, the Lions showed up defensively, aiding in their victory over the Pacers. One catch was made by Atwood, and the other by McGraw. Throughout the game, the Lions knew that it wasn’t just about their victory today. “I think [playing for cancer] makes it bigger than just a game,” McGraw said. “Knowing that you have a bigger impact in this world than just who you are as one person.”](https://wlhsnow.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/I70A1454-1-1200x800.jpg)



























































![Students in the National Art Honor Society work on the Mount Hood mural on the window of SouthLake Church. The students brought a variety of paints and mixed their own custom colors. “Instead of brushstrokes, we’re doing more dabbing, because it gives [a] better impression of tree foliage, rather than looking like actual brush strokes, because if we’re painting trees, we need it to look like trees,” Crawford said.](https://wlhsnow.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/IMG_2397-1200x900.jpg)



