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Published: Aug 10, 2008 11:05 AM
Modified: Aug 10, 2008 11:05 AM
Is Summer Over So Soon?
Tigers defensive about building on successCHAPEL HILL -- Nothing matches a good playoff run to get momentum going."Things are going extremely well right now," Chapel Hill High School football coach Issac Marsh said after opening preseason practices at CHHS. "The guys are enthusiastic and working hard."The Tigers are coming off a 2007 season that ended with a four-game winning streak and a run to the NCHSAA state 4-A quarterfinals.More than 50 players showed up for the first official day of practice -- slightly more varsity and slightly fewer freshmen and sophomore players, compared to last summer. Even the reduced JV numbers don't faze Marsh, since only 16 showed up last year before the Tigers grew to 30 by season's end.And those returning upperclassman include some all-star candidates. The best news Marsh received on opening day was the return of gifted quarterback Jon Haus, who many speculated might be missing after his father stopped serving as lacrosse head coach at UNC."He's a real general on the field," Marsh said. "He has a great mind for the game, knows our scheme and how it works."Not only did the rising CHHS senior return for his final season, his younger brother, sophomore Will Haus, has moved up to the No. 2 quarterback slot. Dylan Farrington will be No. 3.But it's the CHHS defense that might attract the most attention this year. The front line returns intact, anchored firmly by North Carolina recruit Jared McAdoo and rising junior Robert Crisp, who stole the limelight at last spring's Nike Camp at UNC by being rated as the Southeast's top defensive line prospect.Crisp is the lone junior on the CHHS defensive line, surrounded by seniors Keegan Ray, Atlas Fraley, Rodney Torain and McAdoo. Each of them returns bigger and stronger from a 2007 season in which they held their last five opponents to 13.6 points a game."There's no question our defense really came through last year and that it should be one of our strengths this year," Marsh said.Marsh's biggest concerns are the numbers of inexperienced players at many of the skill positions. He will have back two receivers with good experience -- Drew Stoltz and Farrington -- but he needs more. Even after the transfer of mainstay back C.J. Washington, CHHS has returning players expected back with potential at running back or receiver, such as Justin Giersbrook, Nick Holland, Josh Morrison, Steven Moore, Johnny Burks, Kyle Duffy, Pete Singer, Shaynon Peppers, Daniel and Dovey Watson, Abdur-Rahman Hassan, Christian Strong and Russell Suitt. But few in that long list had many touches on the ball last year, and many of them will be drafted into defensive roles, so Marsh will consider even more inexperienced players like Winston Washington at positions like running back."They are all very talented, but green," Marsh said.
CARRBORO -- Jaguar head coach Jason Tudryn recently showed his football players film from their first scrimmage.Not this summer's first practice game. The new school's first scrimmage, ever, from August 2007 against Roanoke Rapids. Just 10 plays on offense and 10 on defense."They all laughed," Tudryn said."They were shocked. They couldn't believe what it was like. They've learned so much and come so far since then, they couldn't even recognize themselves."The 2008 Jaguars barely resemble Carrboro's first football team, which completed a varsity schedule without a single senior and precious few juniors on the roster. Bigger, stronger and, above all, more experienced, they have high hopes for improvement this fall."We definitely have back all of our major contributors from last year," Tudryn said."The Monday after our last game last year, 20 guys showed up in the weight room and went right back to work," he said. "We had 32 guys in the weight room the morning of our first practice this summer. The level of commitment and dedication is just outstanding."The biggest and strongest of the Jaguars includes 6-4, 255-pound lineman Brandon Hunter, who was named All-Conference in the Mid-State 2-A as one of the rare Carrboro juniors last season. His performance at team camp in Boone this summer drew an immediate offer on the spot from host (and three-time FCS national champion) Appalachian State University. James Madison followed suit soon after.Another member of Carrboro's first senior class, running back and receiver David Brooks, represents more than a third of Carrboro's total offense returning from 2007. He rushed for 1,036 yards and 14 touchdowns in just nine games.Still young as a sophomore, starting quarterback Derek Bryant returns after compiling 1,188 yards passing and 14 TDs as a freshman."Derek Bryant has had a great summer, and now is building himself into being a great high school quarterback," Tudryn said.Bryant spent much of last year just trying to escape onrushing defenders. Most teams were able to take advantage of Carrboro's dearth of upperclassmen.Just as bad, other Mid-State schools took advantage of Carrboro's inexperience with the league's scheduling and front-loaded the Jaguars with conference opponents, the best teams first. Their first three games in high school competition were against NCHSAA playoff teams, beginning with shutout losses against Graham's Red Devils and the then-defending state champions of Burlington Cummings.Carrboro gradually closed the gap on its 2007 competition, and ended the year with a win at The Carlisle School of Virginia. The still-young Jaguars hope that all the hard knocks they took in the school's inaugural year will pay off this season."The kids all have their heads in the right spot," Tudryn said. "One thing I can't fault them for is their commitment and all their hard work."It's not about the wins and losses. But they've come so far is just one year, they've committed themselves so much to getting better, they can't help but improve." |