Biography
2009 Honors
Academic All-Big Sky Conference
CoSIDA Academic All-District
2008 Honors
Academic All-Big Sky Conference
Big Sky Conference Player of the Week (Oct. 4, Nov. 22)
National Player of the Week (Oct. 4)
2007 Honors
Academic All-Big Sky Conference
Big Sky Conference/National Player of the Week (Oct. 27)
Missed the 2010 season after having right shoulder surgery to clean out and tighten the capsule... had suffered a dislocation in the 10th game of the 2009 season... had knee surgery after the 2009 season to repair a subluxation of his knee cap that occured in the sixth game of 2009... has played in 24 career games with 20 starts... will compete with good friend Connor Kavanaugh for playing time in both of their senior seasons... has put himself on the list of PSU all-time leading passers with just 20 career starts... ranks fifth in all-time passing yards (6,358), sixth in touchdowns (42) and completions (482)... holds the school record for passing yards in a game (623), completions in a game (44), and PSU, Big Sky and national records for touchdowns in a game (9)... ranks third at PSU in 300-yard games (11), and second in 400-yard games (4)... has two of the top six passing games, and three of the top nine in school history... loves playing at home where his stats are dramatic: in 11 games, nine of which are starts, he has completed 259-429 passes (.604) for 3,732 yards, 30 touchdowns and 15 interceptions... has games of 623, 484, 474, 370, 370, 353, 343 and 305 yards, as well as games of nine and five touchdowns... won Big Sky Player of the Week honors in three of his first five career starts at home.
JUNIOR SEASON • 2009
Started all eight games he played in before knee and shoulder injuries knocked him out for the year... still passed for 1,976 yards with nine touchdowns and 12 interceptions... had four 300-yard games in a row early in the season - a career-high... completed 14 of 23 passes for 370 yards and four touchdowns in a win over Southern Oregon (9/12)... threw for 325 yards at Montana (9/19)... completed 17 of 26 passes for 353 yards and two touchdowns against Weber State (9/26)... was 31 of 50 for 370 yards against Sacramento State (10/3)... suffered a left knee cap subluxation in the final series of a win at Northern Colorado (10/10)... that forced him to miss the next two games and seriously affected his playing ability in a third... had a shoulder dislocation in the first period of the game with Montana State (11/7) ending his season... for the second year in a row was given the Mike Schrunk Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award by his team... named ESPN Academic All-District 8... also named Academic All-Big Sky Conference for a third straight year.
SOPHOMORE SEASON • 2008
Started eight of the 10 games he played in, passing for nearly 3,000 yards... for the season, completed 226 of 393 passes for 2,912 yards, 18 touchdowns and 15 interceptions... combined with Tygue Howland to produce the nation’s top passing offense for the second year in a row (they combined for 4,023 of PSU’s 4,094 passing yards) with an average of 372.2 yards per game... had five 300-yard games and two 400-yard games... twice named Big Sky Conference Player of the Week... the first time came on his marquee performance of the season in a win over 11th-ranked Eastern Washington, completing 44 of 73 passes for 623 yards, five touchdowns and no interceptions... also named Sports Network National Player of the Week after that game... in a win over Northern Colorado (11/22), was 28-36 for 343 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions, also earning player of the week... other big games: was 28-40 for 305 yards in relief in a win over Western Oregon (8/30)... completed 29-51 for 337 yards, three TDs and an interception in a loss to UC Davis (9/13)... was 27-46 for 474 yards, three touchdowns and two INTs in a win over Idaho State (10/25)... his 228 completions ranks eighth for a season in PSU history named Academic All-Big Sky Conference... earned the team’s Mike Schrunk Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award.... was the team’s Offensive Captain.
FRESHMAN SEASON • 2007
Originally expected to redshirt in 2007, he was forced into play due to injuries... proved to be ready as he tied a national touchdown record in his debut as a starter... very simply may have had the best starting debut by a freshman quarterback in college football history... completed 35 of 56 passes for 485 yards, a national-record tying nine touchdowns and no interceptions in his first start against Weber State (10/27)... amazingly, the Vikings lost the game, 73-68 - in the highest-scoring, regulation Division I football game in history... named the Big Sky Conference Player of the Week, and national Player of the Week by The Sports Network and College Sporting News... started the next week at fourth-ranked Montana (11/3) and proved his debut was no fluke, completing 29-52 for 404 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions... started the next two weeks as well, despite suffering from a dislocated thumb on his throwing hand, causing some throwing ineffectiveness... for the season, he was 123-217 for 1,470 yards, 15 touchdowns and 11 interceptions... played in six games, starting the last four the season... part of a PSU offense that led the nation in passing (3,970 yards, 360.9 yards per game)... named Most Valuable Freshman on offense by his teammates... earned Academic All-Big Sky Conference honors.
PREVIOUS TO PORTLAND STATE
Led his 2006 Corvallis High School team to the Oregon 5A State Championship... threw for over 2,300 yards and 28 touchdowns... was honorable mention All-Conference as a junior... competed in the 2007 Les Schwab Bowl... was 22-9 as a starting quarterback... also lettered in baseball.
PERSONAL INFORMATION
Son of Bill and Sally Hubel... was married on June 19, 2010 to Jacquelyn Graves, who also attended Corvallis High School... born July 19, 1988... has one brother, Nick... majoring in Criminology and Criminal Justice... hobbies are camping, fishing, trap shooting, snow boarding, video games, movies and golf... also plays guitar duets will fellow quarterback Connor Kavanaugh.