Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Two Area Players Named to U.S. Team
By B.J. Koubaroulis
Special to The Washington Post
Monday, July 16, 2007; E02

Duke-bound Jasmine Thomas (Oakton) and Virginia's Monica Wright (Forest Park) have been selected to the USA Basketball under-19 women's world championship team. Wright, the 2006 All-Met Player of the Year and Thomas, who earned the same honor this past winter, each earned one of 12 roster spots. They were selected from a pool of 36 players.

The team will travel to the Canary Islands for exhibition games against Australia, Brazil and Spain before competing at the 2007 FIBA U19 World Championship for Women July 26 through Aug. 5 in Bratislava, Slovakia.

Thomas, a 5-foot-9 guard, finished her high school career as Virginia's second all-time leading scorer (2,598 points) and was the McDonald's all-American game's most valuable player. After leading Forest Park to a state title in 2006, Wright, a 5-11 guard, averaged 15.1 points per game for Virginia and was named ACC rookie of the year.

"It's all about getting the gold and representing your country the best that you can."


"It's all about getting the gold and representing your country the best that you can," Thomas said. "I want to get the whole feel of representing America. Everywhere we go, we are going to be America, so our attitudes, the way we carry ourselves, the way we talk to other people is all going to affect what people think of America."

Former Riverdale Baptist All-Met forward Demauria Liles (Gulf Coast Community College) was one of 16 finalists invited to tryouts in Washington this week, but did not make the final roster.
USA women's teams have posted a 32-10 record in the tournament and last won the gold medal in 2005. Team USA will compete in Group B with China, Ivory Coast and Lithuania.



Honored For a Win Off the Field

Cancer Survivor, 15, Lauded by Athletes
By B.J. Koubaroulis

Special to The Washington Post

Sunday, July 8, 2007; LZ08

For 15-year-old Ramon Hilliard, attending sporting events has always been about watching his favorite athletes accomplish amazing feats. This weekend, 46 hall of fame athletes are applauding him for beating leukemia for the second time.



Hilliard, who has battled acute lymphoblastic lymphoma for the past two years, is being honored as the Patient Hero at the 17th annual Bobby Mitchell Hall of Fame Golf Classic. The three-day event culminates in a round of golf today at Lansdowne Resort in which hall of fame athletes play to help raise funds for research.



Since Mitchell -- a former Redskin -- started the event nearly two decades ago, it has attracted NFL Hall of Famers such as former Redskins Sonny Jurgensen and Charley Taylor and NBA Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson. The event has raised more than $5 million.



"To see Ramon realize how well he can play a sport and to find out [he has] leukemia, that has got to be devastating," said Mitchell, who was inducted into the NFL's Hall of Fame in 1983 after a career that included four selections to the Pro Bowl. "When I first met him, that smile and the intelligence jumped out at you, and it just blew me away."



Less than two months after making the junior varsity football team as a freshman at Northwestern High School in Hyattsville, the two-way starter learned in November 2005 that he had the disease.



"It's mostly like just trying to get back to what you had," Hilliard said of his battle with cancer. "Especially for someone who had so much, and you see it taken away."



After his diagnosis, Hilliard could no longer play football, and he has since been home-schooled.
"When I first went into the hospital, I couldn't tell [the doctors] what this pain felt like because I had never been sick," he said. "I couldn't tell them if it was a shocking pain or a pinch pain because I had never felt any of those things, even playing football."



He entered treatment immediately and was in remission by December 2005, but the following January, doctors told Hilliard's mother, Denae, that he needed a bone marrow transplant.
"Ramon stopped me from smoking years ago. . . . He was about 8 years old. He said, 'Mommy, I don't want you to get cancer,' so I quit," Denae said. "To have to tell him that he had it -- I just couldn't."



Denae organized about 25 bone marrow drives over the last year. A donor was found, and the transplant was completed last July. While recovering, Hilliard lost his sense of taste for two months and, after leaving the hospital, was isolated for 100 days at home.



He is currently in remission and has regular injections to boost his immune system. He will go back to Northwestern as a junior in the fall and has been practicing with the football team this summer with the expectation of returning to the field.



"I want this to be over," Hilliard said. "You want it to be done, and you never want to remember it, but you have to because in some ways you feel proud that you fought this thing and made it through."
According to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, the overall five-year survival rate has more than tripled in the past 40 years for patients with leukemia; however, leukemia still kills more people younger than 20 than any other cancer.



"The percentage rate of success has gone way beyond my expectations," said Robertson, who was enshrined in the NBA's Hall of Fame in 1979 after he retired as the league's all-time leader in career assists and free throws made. "You see people [with] this disease that know right from the start that there is an opportunity to recover. Years ago, that wasn't true."


Rookie Helps Oakton Move On
By B.J. Koubaroulis

Special to The Washington Post

Thursday, May 24, 2007; E03

Oakton's Ashley Abed picked up a lacrosse stick for the first time this spring. Last night she was instrumental in helping the Cougars limit visiting Robinson to its second-lowest scoring output this season en route to a 15-7 victory in the Northern Region final.


It was the first region championship for 10th-ranked Oakton since 1998 and the first time the Cougars won the title in four consecutive final appearances. It was also the sixth region final appearance for Oakton in eight years.


"If it didn't go this way," Oakton Coach Jean Counts said, "I would think the world was off its axis. It just feels like the right thing."


Oakton (15-1), which led 9-2 at halftime, enters next week's state tournament as the region's top seed. Both Oakton and Robinson (11-6) will be at home for the first round.


Robinson's top offensive player, senior midfielder Marnie Commins, scored six goals in the Rams' semifinal win over Chantilly Monday. Abed helped hold Commins to three goals and consistently interrupted the Rams' offensive flow. Abed also caused three turnovers.


"I wanted it so bad. Before the game I said 'I'm not losing again,' " said Abed, who as a star forward on the basketball team lost to Edison in overtime, 60-59, in the region final this season.
"She didn't even know basic rules," Counts said of Abed, who became a starter on the lacrosse team two games into the season. "She is so humble to come out here and do this. . . . This is an experienced program."


Oakton senior midfielder Hillary Freund scored three goals and added three assists. Junior midfielder Ashley Kimener scored three goals, and Victoria Cable scored four goals. Seven Cougars scored, and nine of their goals were assisted.


Robinson Boys Win


Senior attackman Danny Fritz had a front-row seat when his teammate, all-American Matt Kugler, etched his name into Robinson high school lacrosse lore as he scored five goals in a state championship victory last season.


Fritz carved his own spot last night by scoring five goals to lift No. 10 Robinson to a 15-8 victory over Westfield in the Northern Region final at Oakton.


The win gave Robinson (15-2) its eighth region title and earned the defending state champions the No. 1 seed in next week's state tournament. It was the third time this season Robinson defeated Westfield (13-5).


Fritz "missed the playoffs last year because he broke his collarbone," Robinson Coach Justin Fitzgerald said. "He worked hard in the offseason, and right before tryouts [this season], he had to have pins put in his pinkie finger."


Fritz scored three goals in the second quarter to help the Rams outscore the Bulldogs 7-1 in the period. He led a Robinson attack that outshot Westfield 29-24 and won the faceoff battle, 14-13.
"I wouldn't expect myself from a couple of months ago being injured to be where I am today," Fritz said.


"It's great to have him back," said Kugler, who recorded four assists. "To see him come back from the injury and play well tonight, I couldn't be happier for him."

Lybert's Power Play Is Woodbridge's Gain
By B.J. Koubaroulis
Special to The Washington Post
Tuesday, May 29, 2007; E08

Woodbridge Coach Scott Kerns has told freshman forward Kristen Lybert he wants her to be more selfish. He has seen what happens when she takes over a game.

Last night in Woodbridge, Lybert asserted herself and everyone in attendance witnessed the results -- her 25th goal and eighth assist, leading the top-seeded Vikings to a 3-0 win in a Virginia AAA Northwestern Region quarterfinal.

"We are trying to get her to be more selfish and take people on because that's what she's good at," Kerns said. "She is really worried about being seen as selfish by her teammates and I think that's something we have to break her from."

Lybert broke the habit long enough to pelt a shot off the legs of Osbourn senior goalkeeper Maddy Morrow and then buried the loose ball in the back right corner of the goal for a 1-0 lead in the game's second minute.

"I try to be as unpredictable as possible because I've seen players that are predictable and everybody can defend them the same way, so I try to vary it as much as possible," said Lybert, who finished the goal with her left foot after taking the first shot with her right.

Woodbridge sophomore forward Rihana Williams finished Lybert's left-footed cross near the left post to give the Vikings a 2-0 lead in the 42nd minute. Williams gave Woodbridge a 3-0 lead in the 63rd minute when she redirected senior defender Emily Hughes's 20-yard shot.
Woodbridge improved to 17-0-1; Osbourn's season ended at 12-4-3.

The Woodbridge defense, which has allowed just nine goals, recorded its 11th shutout. The Vikings have not allowed a goal in six games since a 3-2 overtime victory over Forest Park on May 1. Since then, Woodbridge has outscored opponents 26-0, won the AAA Cardinal District tournament title and earned its first Northwestern Region tournament berth since 2003.
"They are always solid. They never let us down," said senior midfielder Emily Danchak of the defense. "I feel like, no matter what, they will be behind us."

Woodbridge's smothering defense limited Osbourn to just two shots on goal in the first half and two in the second.

Woodbridge 3, Osbourn 1 Up Next: Woodbridge advanced to host Mountain View, a 4-0 winner over E.C. Glass, in tomorrow's region semifinals. Short-handed: Osbourn was without senior forward Brittany Johnson, its leading scorer. Johnson (11 goals, two assists) suffered a right knee injury in the Eagles' win over Battlefield in the Cedar Run district tournament final.


Hickey Leads a Huntingtown Three-Peat

Maryland-Bound Standout Stars On the Mound and at the Plate: No. 2 Huntingtown 4, Northeast 0
By B.J. Koubaroulis

Special to The Washington Post

Sunday, May 27, 2007; SM08

As Kerry Hickey's home run sailed out of the University of Maryland's softball complex Friday, it cleared the "Maryland" painted on the stadium's 10-foot fence in left field. It was fitting the Huntingtown senior's game-breaking shot soared over the word just as the All-Met has towered above the state's softball scene this season.


The University of Maryland-bound Hickey struck out 12 batters in a one-hitter that pushed second-ranked Huntingtown to the 4-0 win over Northeast in the Maryland 3A title game. Hickey improved her career record to 53-4 and helped the Hurricanes (22-1) to their third consecutive 3A title.


"She's going to be here next year, and she's got her head coach [Laura Watten] watching her, and she takes it into her own hands. I mean that was a shot. She crushed the ball," Huntingtown Coach Mike Johnson said. "This kid is something else. She can do things that no one else can do."
That's what Hickey has done at Huntingtown for the last three years, becoming what Johnson called "the best pitcher on the East Coast."


Hickey struck out three batters to close the bottom of the fourth inning with runners on second and third base to preserve a two-year, 48-game streak in which she has not allowed an earned run.


"I'd lie if I said it wasn't nerve-racking because the girl [on third] was very quick," Hickey said. "Any mistake could have changed the outcome of the game. I just had to stay focused and calm."
Over the last two seasons, Hickey has struck out 645 batters in 235 innings. She struck out 326 this season en route to a 22-1 record -- a long way from her days as a backup at Calvert High School.


"We've been open for three years and three state titles," said Hickey, who was part of Huntingtown's first softball team. "To be a part of that team is awesome."
Hickey was also went 2 for 3 with an RBI, and her home run sparked the Hurricanes' sixth-inning rally that pushed eight batters to the plate and resulted in four hits and all four of the team's runs.


Sophomore Becca Morgan hit a shot off the center field fence that drove in Jennifer Price and Jess Warner to give the Hurricanes the 4-0 lead.

Kugler Has a Passing Interest
Robinson Senior Keys State Title Win With Four Assists
By B.J. Koubaroulis
Special to The Washington Post
Sunday, June 3, 2007; E10

A prolific goal scorer during his high school lacrosse career, Robinson's Matt Kugler proved last night during an 11-3 state final victory over Westfield that he's a capable passer as well.
The senior All-Met attackman added four assists to his three goals to lift the 10th-ranked Rams to their second straight state championship. Kugler also completed a season in which he had more assists (56) than goals (51).

He has more than 300 points in his career.
"I really have nothing to prove. This team has nothing to prove," Kugler said. "My reason to pass this year is because I knew the slide was going to come faster, and they were going to double-team. If there is an opportunity to take it to the goal, I'll take it to the goal. You have to take what the defense gives you."

Robinson (18-2) finished having beaten every team it faced from Virginia. Last night was the fourth time Robinson beat Westfield (15-6) this season.

"Kugler is probably the best player in the region," Westfield Coach Gary Malm said. "We tried many things in four games to do something, and it doesn't work. I'm just happy he's graduating."
In four meetings, Robinson outscored Westfield 46-28. Three of the games decided the district, region and state titles.

"To beat them four times in a row is something pretty unheard of in sports," said Kugler, who had five goals in last season's 11-6 victory over Oakton in the state championship game. "I think that just says how great this team is."

After Westfield senior midfielder David Slover scored the opening goal on a 12-yard shot, Kugler scored to tie the game with 7 minutes 10 seconds left in the first half. The goal ignited a 5-0 run for Robinson before Slover scored again to cut the lead to 5-2 at halftime. Robinson outscored Westfield 3-0 in the third quarter.

Senior midfielder Sean O'Sullivan's goal with 7:36 left in the fourth quarter ended a 19-minute scoring drought for Westfield and cut the lead to 8-3.

Robinson won the faceoff battle 9-8 and outshot the Bulldogs 30-28. Robinson's Danny Fritz scored three goals and Tyler Zinck scored twice to finish the season with 41 goals.
"I'm just another member of Robinson, and I'm glad I got to play on the Robinson state championship team, and that's all that matters to me," said Kugler.

No. 10 Robinson 11, Westfield 3 Three-pronged Offense: Adam Dahms (40 goals), Sean O'Sullivan (38 goals) and Kenny Talbot (31 goals) scored 109 of Westfield's 203 goals this season (53-percent). They also combined for 49 assists. Brick Wall: Robinson senior goalkeeper Ryan Kleman had 10 saves and ended the season with a .680 save percentage.

For Bruins, A Date to Remember
By B.J. Koubaroulis

Special to The Washington Post

Sunday, June 10, 2007; E09

NEWPORT NEWS, Va., June 9 -- Lake Braddock senior Kat Weiler isn't sure how to ask Coach Liz Pike to pay up. She does know that she and her teammates are owed, however, after the fourth-ranked Bruins defeated Cox, 2-1, in overtime in the Virginia AAA girls' soccer championship on Saturday.


The night before, Weiler and eight other seniors skipped Lake Braddock's prom, instead staying in Newport News to rest and prepare for a chance to win back-to-back state titles.
"Our coach said that she would get us a limo and another prom," said Weiler, who scored the opening goal and assisted on Lauren Fleming's game-winner. "I don't know if that was a bribe, but this is much more fun than prom."


Lake Braddock (17-3-2) became the first repeat AAA girls' soccer state champion since W.T. Woodson won in 1997 and 1998.


Weiler, an All-Met who will play for Pittsburgh next year, was sidelined for five games this season and the entire first half of Saturday's game with a nagging injury to her right quadriceps. But she broke open a scoreless game in the 45th minute with a 35-yard, left-footed volley that barely cleared Cox goalkeeper Kristin Carden's leap.


Cox (18-6-1) got the game-tying goal from Finley Hines less than two minutes later.
Lake Braddock found a way past the 6-foot-1, Virginia Tech-bound Carden (12 saves) three minutes into overtime.


"Kat Weiler took it down to the goal line and I called for the slot-back [pass]," Fleming said. "She slotted it back to me, and I took the shot and it went in."


The Bruins outshot Cox -- a team that had 14 shutouts this season -- 19-7.
"We knew they were going to have a very strong keeper, and the only way to get a strong keeper flustered is to have shots coming, whether they get on goal or not," Pike said. "The girls kept on pounding at the goal."


The Bruins were making their fourth state final appearance in five years -- they beat Cox last year, lost to Kellam in 2005 and beat Clover Hill in 2003.


"It's definitely well-deserved, and [the players] proved themselves," Pike said. "There was no way they were going to miss their prom and not win the championship."


No. 4 Lake Braddock 2, Cox 1 (OT) Big, Bad, Bruins: In the 23-year history of the Virginia AAA girls' soccer tournament, Lake Braddock has the most final appearances (eight) and is tied with West Springfield for titles with five. Containing Chloe: Lake Braddock's Rachel Nichols held Cox's Chloe Russell, who has a team-high 20 goals, scoreless.


A Welcome Homecoming for New Falls Church Coach, Staff
By B.J. Koubaroulis
Special to The Washington Post
Thursday, June 21, 2007; VA29

T.C. Papageorge is sitting on a bench in front of Falls Church High School, his alma mater. At 24, he is only a few years removed from his days roaming the halls here as a student and athlete. Now, he returns, charged with the task of rebuilding the basketball program.

The team is coming off a 4-18 season, has won just 13 games the previous three seasons and hasn't had a winning season since 2003. Papageorge is asked how he intends to turn things around. He leans in and chooses his words carefully.

"Program continuity," Papageorge said, is one of his favorite terms. "We are going to have the freshman, [junior varsity] and varsity programs all running a consistent scheme, and everyone is going to communicate. When the seniors have to run with the juniors, we don't want them to be strangers."

Behind him, longtime friend and new Jaguars Assistant Coach Ryan Healy nods and offers a look that appears to say, "Just you wait and see. . . ."

Papageorge is the fourth coach in eight years at Falls Church. He was hired to replace Tony Harris, who left for the same position at Stuart.


Papageorge and Healy coached the freshman team at Fairfax the past two seasons. Their new challenges are difficult to understand "if you haven't gone to Falls Church," Papageorge said.
Papageorge, who owns and operates a painting franchise, and Healy, a special education teacher at Oakton, were starters on Falls Church's football, baseball, basketball and golf teams together before they graduated in 2001.

Papageorge's brother, 22-year-old Steven, was a member of the Jaguars' only district championship basketball team in 2003. He played basketball at Catholic University for the past four years and is expected to join the staff as a varsity assistant.


"It's almost like the stars aligned. [Steven] graduated, Tony Harris left for Stuart and the door was open, and we had to run through it," Papageorge said. "There isn't a place we'd rather be. The three of us together, doing what we love to do, affecting young kids, playing basketball -- a game that we love -- having them compete at a higher level and caring about their personal success."

Papageorge comes to Falls Church with little coaching experience but with plenty of enthusiasm and energy.


"The reason I'm really proud of him is because if he would have hung on and waited, and coached with me for a few years and been a varsity assistant for a few years, he could have landed a big job, but he is really embracing this challenge," said Fairfax Coach P.J. Kelly, who coached at Falls Church from 1994 through 1999. "This is not going to be easy, and he is aware of that."


Papageorge compares the challenges presented at Falls Church with those he faced in his first few years as a business owner. While pursuing his bachelor's degree in marketing at George Mason University, he purchased a painting franchise. He took the company from $50,000 in revenue in its first year to more than $1 million this past year.


"It took so much legwork to get out in the streets knocking on doors. There were so many different things I had to do to build the momentum," said Papageorge, who is the franchise's nationwide leader in sales. "Every year since, it's gotten easier and easier, and it's grown. . . . So I can see a direct comparison to that. We are going to have to work our tails off."

The work has started for the trio. They have reinstated the Falls Church High School summer basketball camp, which had been out of commission for six years. They have entered the Jaguars into two summer leagues and secured a spot in the Pohanka Chantilly Classic Annual Holiday Basketball Tournament in December. Even with school out of session, 22 players turned out last week to meet Papageorge and express interest in playing.


"We are going to bring players back from Steven's district championship team, and they are going to be working [the players] out for their very first workout," Papageorge said. "Other coaches who would have taken this position wouldn't have those resources. We know the community, we know the people, and we know what the students experience walking through these halls."

Monday, May 21, 2007

Scholarships With a Cost: Soccer Standouts Play Year-Round At Frenetic Pace

Scholarships With a Cost
Soccer Standouts Play Year-Round At Frenetic Pace



By B.J. Koubaroulis
Special to The Washington Post
Thursday, May 21, 2009


Sami Kuykendall woozily came off the field at Madison High, a bulge of gruesome purple swelling under her right eye after she withstood a soccer ball to her face from point-blank range. She gripped her new front tooth between her index finger and thumb, spotted her parents in the bleachers and shot them a smile. With Kuykendall playing her fifth game in seven days -- and having been tested seven times in the past three years for concussions -- the signal provided her parents some needed reassurance on the April night.

A 17-year-old junior midfielder, Kuykendall has spent each of the past three spring seasons splitting time between the Vienna high school's varsity girls' soccer team and the under-17 McLean Premier Soccer (MPS) Dragons, the sixth-ranked club team in the country. The ball to the face, the concussions, the shattered jaw suffered in an aerial collision during a game last year (and subsequent tooth implant) are just a few notable entries on the list of injuries incurred during basically a year-round soccer season with a singular goal: a college scholarship.


"I made a decision, consciously when I was a lot younger, that this was the way to get to college soccer," Kuykendall said. That decision has meant she has played approximately 90 games in the past calendar year, including three club league schedules and a barrage of tournaments. By comparison, consider: D.C. United plays approximately 35 to 40 games a season, including exhibitions and club competitions.


This weekend, Kuykendall will be one of many area players at the Player Development Academy Girls College Showcase at Rutgers University. The club schedule -- combined with the high school schedule -- makes for year-round soccer and is especially intense during the spring, when Kuykendall plays for both teams.

That grind puts players at risk of short- and long-term injury, according to doctors. The social sacrifices are, Kuykendall says, countless. Her family's financial sacrifice is considerable. And the tension between club and high school team is omnipresent during the spring season.


Kuykendall said the conflicts and pressures have been worth it. She has committed to a 60 percent scholarship to play soccer at Virginia Commonwealth University in the fall of 2010.


Outside experts, however, warn of the potential costs elsewhere.


"We've really created an animal here," said University of Notre Dame women's soccer coach Randy Waldrum, the president of the National Soccer Coaches Association of America. "It's just way too much soccer."


'This Constant Chase'


There are 98 soccer clubs in Virginia, according to Gotsoccer.com. In the under-14 to under-18 age groups, there are 11 girls' teams and six boys' teams from Northern Virginia ranked among the nation's top 25.


Varsity soccer is a spring sport in Virginia, making this an especially intense time for the area's scholastic athletes. Public schools in Maryland and the District -- as well as most of the area's private programs -- play in the fall, and many of those players compete with club teams then, subjecting them to the same pressures.


"You have to try to get on the best club team you can so you can get seen, to get seen in the best tournaments you can, to get seen by [the colleges] you want to get seen by," said Robinson junior Brooke Curtis, who also plays for the under-17 Vista Shockwave. "And now, it's like people are committing [to colleges] earlier and earlier, so there is this constant chase."


The Shockwave will be at the Rutgers event, the team's 19th showcase in less than 16 months -- a stretch during which it has traveled from Las Vegas to Orlando, playing in as many as five games in a three-day period. Ranked ninth nationally, the Shockwave has players from 14 high schools in Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. Eleven of its players have accepted college scholarships; nine of those are full rides.


"Parents start thinking about college expenses, and they see soccer as a vehicle to do one of two things: either get a scholarship or to help [the player] get in a school," Shockwave Coach Bob Childs said. "Parents have the expectations and they want to get their kid seen [at college showcases] and you have high school going at the same time. So, what do you do?"


Curtis, Ali Heck, Audrey Barry, Kathryn Johnston and LeighAnne Baxter have decided to do it all, engaging in a time-share between the Shockwave and Robinson. Since February 2008, those five players have played in two high school seasons, three club leagues (Washington Area Girls Soccer League, two Region I Premier Leagues) and 19 showcases, totaling roughly 140 games.


"It's really hard, but you have to know it's a sacrifice you make when you play at this level," Barry said.


In the 13 days leading up to this weekend's event, Curtis, Heck, Barry, Johnston and Baxter played in four high school games. They are scheduled for four games at the Rutgers tournament.


A deep high school playoff run with Robinson could mean 13 games total between May 11 and June 6.


After a stretch like that, "You're like drained, physically you're sore and mentally you just want to sleep," said Heck, a William & Mary-bound All-Met who said she often takes ice baths after intense game-stacked weekends.


"I have to rest kids at high school practice because they have to go straight from a high school practice to a club practice in the same night. Then the next day they've got a club game, and it just goes on and on and on," Chantilly Coach Melissa Bibbee said. "There's just too much pressure to win club games and get exposure. . . . The kid is right in the middle of it and being pulled by both coaches."


Much of that pressure can come from parents. While the NCAA restricts college programs to 19 regular season games and the Virginia High School League regulates the amount of high school games (16 regular season), regulation of club teams such as the Shockwave is often left to players' parents.


"The demand to win in Fairfax County by the parents is unbelievable," said Childs, 63, a full-time director with the National Defense University in the District. "These club coaches that coach four or five teams, they better win because that's what they're paid to do."


Clyde Watson, a full-time soccer coach with the under-15 McLean MPS Strikers, has seen the focus of parents, coaches and players evolve.


"The reality is that the pressure is there," said Watson, who led the under-16 McLean Freedom to a national championship in 2007. "If you don't win, chances are you are going to lose some of your better players."


That pressure on coaches to win has often made them demand more from their high-level players and required that they spend less time developing others.


"What's been developed at the club programs now is that those kids have to win or that coach is gone," said Waldrum of the NSCAA.


Waldrum added that club coaches "often are only really surviving because they can win games, so they're not as concerned in truly developing the player as in just trying to get the result. If that means [a club coach is] going to drop the bottom three or four players because he didn't win enough games this year and pick up three or four that's better, then, somewhere, player development is lost."


Not Doctor-Recommended


According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, adolescent athletes should take one to two days off per week from competitive athletics, sport-specific training and competitive practices.


Cynthia LaBella, the medical director of the Institute for Sports Medicine at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago, said that pressures from parents, coaches and other athletes often cause players to over-indulge during such a critical developmental stage.


"It's that workout and then rest and then workout and then rest cycle that builds strong muscles and tendons and bones," LaBella said. "But if you keep pounding and keep working out without allowing any rest for those structures, they just continue to break down and they're not allowed to rebuild and get stronger and so kids are getting things like stress fractures and tendinitis and that may be short-term, but once those injuries start accumulating, they have difficulty recovering from them."


LaBella said the AAP will be issuing a new policy statement on soccer in the next few months, one that details the medical risks associated with playing schedules like that of many area players.


"Just getting a few days off here and there would be nice," said Baxter, a Richmond recruit. "I mean, it just gets to be so much it just wears you down, physically and mentally because you've just been out here doing the same thing."


Often there is a disconnect between high school and club coaches who are unaware of injuries to players that happen off their watch.


W.T. Woodson senior Niki Mercier, who also plays for the Shockwave, played through a knee injury last spring and scored 12 goals in 10 high school games. She was named the Liberty District player of the year and first-team All-Met.


"In my opinion, against my advice, she went back [to playing] too soon," said Childs, the Shockwave coach. He said he benched Mercier for the entire spring club season, but she played with her high school team. A Florida State recruit, Mercier is sitting out her senior season and just had her second knee surgery.


"When she came back last year, I let her go at her own pace and make her own judgment," former W.T. Woodson coach Sharon Andrulot said.


Chantilly senior Cortlyn Bristol, a William & Mary-bound midfielder and two-time All-Met, also plays for the under-18 Virginia FC Netforce. In late March she suffered a concussion during a Friday night high school game. She played in five club games that weekend before the concussion was diagnosed, forcing her to miss one high school game.


Last week, in Chantilly's victory in penalty kicks over Robinson for the Concorde District title, Bristol wore a pain patch and played through a nagging back injury that has caused her to visit a chiropractor twice a month since she was 13 years old.


The five Robinson players each estimated they spend 30 to 40 hours per week playing soccer during the spring season. Each of them said that, at some point during their high school careers, they have considered leaving soccer altogether, but that they would never actually quit the sport.


"Sometimes I wonder what it would be like to just go home after school and not have anything to do," Curtis said. "To finish my homework and just be done with it and not have to worry about being in bed at 9:30 on a Friday night because I have a tournament in the morning."


Staff writer Paul Tenorio contributed to this report.

Sunday, January 21, 2007


'He is the most unsung player in the Northern Region.'
Richard Gore's hustle has made him a favorite in the locker room and unknown to scouts.
By BJ Koubaroulis
The Connection Newspapers
Jan. 17, 2007

Richard Gore is used to it: the hustling, the scoring, the rebounding, the bleeding, the winning, the respect from his teammates and the lack of it from everyone else. The 6-foot-2, 160-pound Herndon senior basketball player has cruised through four years of basketball excellence, including cutting down the nets after district and region tournament title games and finishing second in the state in 2006, only to be ignored by opposing coaches, collegiate scouts and newspapers. He’s done it all with an infectious smile that has made him “the most important player on the team. Bottom line,” said Herndon senior forward Danny Jones. “If we don’t have Richard, maybe we don’t have as many wins as we do,” said Jones. “When he is in the game he pushes the tempo and he always pushes us.”“He is the most unsung player in the Northern Region,” said Herndon coach Gary Hall of Gore. “He is a Player of the Year candidate in our district and a first team all-region player and I guarantee you, if you ask any coach to name the top 15 players in the region, Richard will not be one of those names.”


DESPITE BEING the second leading scorer on a Herndon team that has taken over sole possession of first place in the Concorde District (5-0) with a nearly flawless 11-1 record this season, Gore has remained a relative unknown.Collegiate scouts show up to sell their programs to his teammates, like the University of Mary Washington scout wooing the 6-foot-6 Jones following Herndon’s win over Westfield on Friday and the countless scouts that flirted with McDonald's All-American Scottie Reynolds (Villanova) during last year's run to the state final. Still, those scouts never seem to walk Gore’s way. "He is the heart and soul of our team. All he wants to do is win," said Hall.Gore, a lanky yet muscular athlete who plays with reckless abandon and the kind of hustle that can't be coached, has quietly pushed Herndon back into contention a year after falling short in the state finals.“We all got our roles,” said Gore. “Not a lot of people are going to get out and do the dirty work. A lot of people are scared to get hurt. I like to get on the floor and get after the loose balls.”


GORE IS SECOND on the team in points per game with 13.1 and second in rebounding with 8.3 per game. “He does so many things. Things that don’t show up in this book,” Hall said as he looked at his stat sheet. “What is he? He doesn’t have a position. He’s a basketball player.”He is also second in assists (51) and second in total rebounds (99). Gore is tied for first in freethrow percentage among starters and is tied for first in field goal percentage (62.3-percent).“Any time you need anything, Richard is the one to talk to and on the court when you are feeling down, Richard is the one right there to shake your hand and get you right up and his energy level is just amazing,” said senior point guard C.J. Glenn.Ask Gore about scouts and attention and he'll redirect."The sky is the limit," said Gore of this year's squad. "I see us going back to states and this time I think we are going to be victorious."

Friday, December 08, 2006


2006-2007 Hoops Preview by District

We Got Next
Girls basketball has gone from forgotten sideshow to unforgettable pastime.



By BJ Koubaroulis
December 8, 2006

Had they played 20 years ago, Lauren Reinshuttle knows that she and this year’s class of high profile Div. I girls basketball recruits, might not have been playing at all. “My parents always tell me that if you played basketball 20 years ago,” Reinshuttle, a South County Secondary senior who committed to Duquesne, begins to explain. “That you wouldn’t be playing basketball 20 years ago.” This year’s class of high profile seniors, which includes Reinshuttle; Oakton preseason All-American Jasmine Thomas (Duke); Doreena Campbell (UCLA), a guard who led Edison to the AAA state final last season; and South County’s Laren Robinson (St. Joe‘s), represents one of the strongest recruiting classes of girls to emerge from the Northern Region. Several factors, including the introduction of the Amateur Athletic Union, enforcement of Title XI, rule changes, media exposure, coaching and the physical attributes and growth of women over the last three decades, have helped the sport’s progress. “Point guards are now six feet,” said Langley head coach Cheryl Buffo. “It was tough to find a post player that was six feet 20 years ago. They are bigger, they are stronger and they are playing year-round. They are in the weight room.” Reinshuttle, Thomas, Robinson and Campbell are proof that the girls game, once tucked into after school time slots as a club sport, in a gym made available only when the boys were done with it, is “revolutionizing,” said Campbell.Campbell's Edison squad enters the season ranked sixth in the country by USATODAY and, according to Edison coach Dianne Lewis, seven of her players are receiving serious collegiate offers. “[Girls] are not playing above the rim like the guys, but they are certainly playing at the rim,” said Lewis, a 1977 T.C. Williams graduate. “When I played back then, you had your athletic teams and fundamental teams. Now, you have fundamental teams that are athletic. That combination can be pretty lethal.” Three area AAU teams finished ranked in the top 16 in the nation this past season. “The opportunities are there,” said Oakton coach Fred Priester. “It’s all about opportunities.”

“You’ll practice when the boys are done.”

Laura Beaver, who is now a Physical Education teacher at Centreville High School and the Commissioner for the Metropolitan Field Hockey Association, coached at Herndon High School for 22 years in the late 1970‘s. She’s what Priester called one of the early pioneers, one who had to fight for opportunities. “We fought those battles,” said Beaver, a 1971 Woodson graduate. “You’ll practice when the boys are done,” she was often told when she coached at Herndon. “We were fortunate enough to win a couple of district titles, so after a while we’d ask the boys, where’s your banner?” During Beaver’s playing days, girls basketball was still played with a regular sized men’s basketball. There was no 3-point line, and contrary to the boys 5-on-5 game, girls played 4-on-4 — a style which allowed each team two guards and “two rovers,” Beaver explained. “Rovers were two people on each team that could cross over the center line.” Even the amount of dribbles allotted to each player was limited. Girls games were also played after school at 4 p.m. in contrast to the prime time night games the boys played. Westfield coach Pat Deegan coached Madison to six regional titles and one state title (1991). “Title IX kicked open some doors,” said Deegan of the 1972 law that aimed to even the playing field between boys and girls. “Interest follows money and when girls basketball programs at the college level were fully funded, that is the kind of thing that just elicits interest.” Priester noted that WNBA games and televised college games, as well as the increase in media coverage of women‘s sports, has pushed the game to a new level. “It wasn’t long ago where they were lucky to get the scores listed [in the newspaper],” said Priester.

“There’s some girls we need to look at in this area.”

Larry Hubbard, in his 19th year as an assistant coach at Madison, helped create the local girls Amateur Athletic Union circuit (AAU) when he and a few area coaches started the Vogues — a program that began with one group of 14-year-olds and has since sprouted into 29 teams with multiple levels of participation, with age groups from 9-18. Hubbard, with Bob Schule, Tommy Orndorff and Judy Bageant, helped catapult the Potomac Valley District into an AAU circuit spanning Prince George County, Montgomery County and Fairfax County. “We had girls traveling from Maryland to try out,” said Hubbard of his first organized tryout in 1980. He estimated that there are currently nearly 150 girls AAU teams in the metro area, which includes prestigious programs like the Vogues, the Fairfax Stars, the Virginia Cardinals, the Aces, No Limits and others. Hubbard helped organize the first and only AAU National tournament in Fairfax County in 1985. Even then, it was difficult to raise support for what many saw as a dying sport. The 16U national tournament was held at Lake Braddock, Chantilly and Fairfax High Schools after Congressman Tom Davis, who was a district supervisor at the time, convinced the school board to welcome the event. “The county wanted to charge us $94 an hour for air conditioning,” remembered Hubbard. “[Davis] went to the school board and superintendent of schools. He helped us bring it here.” The tournament brought with it recruiters and college coaches who saw that “there’s some girls we need to look at in this area,” said Hubbard.

“There is no such thing as offseason.”

Christy Winters Scott brought South Lakes girls basketball its only state title. Winters Scott, who won a national title with the 12U Vogues in the AAU circuit, posted 1,785 points, 1,075 rebounds and 492 blocked shots in her high school career and helped South Lakes to a 29-0 record and state title in 1986. The 38-year-old, who was inducted into the University of Maryland’s Hall of Fame in November, now coaches the South Lakes girls basketball team after having played professionally overseas. She was one of eight players from a 16U national runner-up team to a earn Div. I scholarship in the late 1980‘s. “Over the last 15 years, the explosion has been tremendous,” said Winters Scott of the girls game. “The athleticism has tremendously improved. I don’t know if I could go out there and do anything against Jasmine Thomas. You see so many girls that are playing [in high school] now that have the college athleticism that I didn’t have in college.” Winters Scott credits the explosion to the opportunities that girls have today. “There is no such thing as offseason,“ said Winters Scott. “There is time to improve, but no time away from the game.”

“You are going to college from the time you are 10 years old.”

Thomas, who broke nearly every Oakton basketball record (boys and girls) as a junior, is a prime example of how players no longer take time away from the game. After the end of girls basketball season in March, Thomas traveled to the Nike Skills Academy — a camp that welcomes only the top 21 girls high school players in the country, 16U Nationals and Nike Nationals, and competed at the USA 18U Women’s Olympic Team trials, U.S. Junior Nationals and several camps and tournaments. That schedule left her with only two weeks off in August this entire calendar year. “I guess it’s good because you don’t really realize all the opportunities you are getting until you see some people who don’t get the same ones as you,” said Thomas, who has seen AAU teammates fall off the circuit because of lack of skill, lack of desire or lack of funds. “AAU ends in the beginning of August and then you are off, but that’s time for you to rest and recover for high school, so it’s non-stop, it’s just constant.” Campbell has played for the Virginia Cardinals AAU program for three years and keeps a similar schedule. Reinshuttle and Robinson are no different. West Springfield coach Billy Gibson has coached several Div. I recruits, including the WNBA’s Kara Lawson. Gibson knows that the promise of scholarships is what drives most players to keep such intense training schedules. “You are going to college from the time you are 10 years old,” said Robinson who trains three days a week for two hours with coach Aggie McCormick-Dix’s Faiffax Stars, an intense program which has pushed an overwhelming number of girls from this region into the collegiate ranks. “If you want to do that, if that is your goal, they are going to push you full-force.” Campbell realized her potential early.“Basketball seemed like somewhat of a ticket,” she said. “In ninth grade, I started getting letters and thinking ‘wow, I can get a scholarship.’”

“It’s gotten a little out of control.”

Many area coaches, parents and administrators believe that the offseason has created an unhealthy environment, including a schedule that could see players engaged in too many games. First year Herndon coach Reggie Barnes has done the math. “The difference between a player that does [play AAU] is over 400 hours of court time, depending on how many tournaments you are in,” said Barnes. Madison coach Denise Weinig, who is enshrined in the Madison High School Hall of Fame, took a full scholarship to play at the University of Delaware after playing on Deegan’s dominating Madison squads in the early 1990‘s. “The reason we dominated early on is because there wasn’t the parity there is now,” said Weinig. But Weinig believes that parity in the region has come at a cost to the individual. “We have about 1,700 students,” said Weinig of the Vienna-based school. “Last year there were three athletic scholarships and 150 academic.” Weinig is part of a growing belief that many girls are specializing in a chosen sport too soon and are chasing elusive athletic scholarships. “They don’t realize how difficult it is to be in that elite group,” said Weinig. “Just because you are the best in Vienna and the best in the Liberty [District] doesn’t mean anything.” With the increase in scholarships at the collegiate level, many girls have waved good-bye to the days of playing multiple sports and have begun focusing on year-round hoops. “I think it’s gotten a little out of control,” said Weinig. According to Oakton head coach Fred Priester, who started coaching with the Vogues in 1985 after taking over the varsity girls program at McLean in 1979, the numbers tell the story. “In 24 years of coaching high school basketball, I’ve coached on a varsity level, about 550 games,” said Priester, who owns a 398-156 record in those games. “I’ve coached twice as many AAU games as I have high school games in a shorter amount of time.” Priester has coached nearly 1,200 AAU games.“We are almost at a saturation point,” said Priester. “Virtually any girl that wants to play in the offseason, there is a place for them to play.” Hubbard knows that the intention of his start-up has been skewed. “In my opinion, they play too many games,” said Hubbard. “Back when I got started, we would have a local tournament and maybe go up and down the east coast once or twice.” That schedule gave his teams up to 12 off season games. “Now, they are playing 50-80 games, and I’m talking about 11-year-olds,” said Hubbard. “It’s great for them to play year-round, but I don’t want them to wear the kid out by the time she’s 14.”

Additional reporting by Paul Frommelt, Rich Sanders and John Marcario.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Morgan State 29, Norfolk State 20
Simpson, Bears run to .500 with win
Transfer's 192 yards ground Norfolk State
By BJ Koubaroulis
Special to the Baltimore Sun
Originally published November 5, 2006

NORFOLK, Va. // Morgan State running back Chad Simpson warmed to the challenge of leading his team to victory yesterday.
The transfer from the University of South Florida had a career-high 192 yards and two touchdowns to pace the Bears to a 29-20 victory over Norfolk State before 15,501 at Price Stadium.
"You figure, at this point in the season, everyone is playing for character and respect, especially this young man playing away from home," Morgan State coach Donald Hill-Eley said of Simpson.
The 5-foot-10, 205-pound junior accounted for 113 of Morgan State's 177 yards of total offense in the second half to help the Bears score 22 unanswered points and rally from a 14-7 halftime deficit.
"That's why I came here -- to get in the cold. So if I ever make it, they can say, 'He played in all types of atmospheres,' " said Simpson, who missed Morgan State's single-game rushing record (229 yards, Ali Culpepper vs. Hampton, 2001) by 37 yards.
"We wanted to go out winning the last two games of the season. It's just a little overview of next year, what the MEAC's going to get next year," said Simpson, who was making his fourth start.
Morgan State (5-5, 4-3 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference) stopped a two-game skid and handed Norfolk State (3-6, 1-6) its fifth consecutive loss. Morgan also played homecoming spoiler in a game that featured 10 fumbles and three interceptions.
"We turned the ball over too many times. Too many miscues," said Hill-Eley, whose offense lost two fumbles and watched quarterback Mario Melton (8-for-16, 72 yards) throw an interception with 3:42 left in the first half.
Morgan State cornerback Dakota Bracey took teammate Kofi Nkrumah's forced fumble back 22 yards to set up Simpson's second touchdown, a 15-yard run that gave Morgan State a 27-14 lead with 4:31 left in the third quarter.
"Our defense has been playing well all year and today they played well enough to buy some time for our offense," Hill-Eley said.
Morgan State's defense, which entered the game ranked third in the MEAC in points allowed (20.1), allowed 113 yards of offense, recovered three fumbles, intercepted a pass, recorded a safety, and stuffed a late two-point conversion attempt in the second half after allowing 14 points on 136 yards of offense in the first half.
"I just blew past the guy and made the safety," said Morgan State defensive tackle Robert Armstrong, who dropped quarterback Casey Hansen (18-for-32, 198 yards) for a 29-14 lead with 9:11 left in the fourth quarter.
Armstrong also recorded three of the Bears' four sacks for a loss of 18 yards, and teammate Darius Leak had a team-high 11 tackles.
"It puts us at .500 with a chance to go 6-4 and we play South Carolina State [4-4, 3-2] at home at night, so it's looking pretty good," said Armstrong of next week's 6 p.m. meeting.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Kedrock Slams The Hammer on Robinson
Senior fullback emerges as workhorse in win over Robinson.
By BJ Koubaroulis
October 25, 2006

Oakton's football team started a new tradition during last season's 12-2 run to the Div. 6 AAA state title. Oakton senior Taylor Naleppa, a stocky fullback known for his gritty running style and toughness, would lead the Cougars onto the field wielding a burgundy and gold sledge-hammer with the words "Whoop Ass" inscribed on the handle. Naleppa would swing and bury the sledge-hammer into the opposing team's end zone in an effort to spread his toughness to his teammates and intimidate the opposition. In Friday's 14-7 victory over Robinson (5-2 overall, 3-1 Concorde District), neither Naleppa, who graduated last year, or his sledge-hammer were present, but Naleppa's replacement, senior fullback Jonathan Kedrock, was. Kedrock, who ran for a season-high 126 yards on 25 carries, wasn't just the fullback — he was the sledge-hammer and the blood seeping from his right arm and the mud clinging to his uniform said one thing, "Whoop Ass.""You can imagine what our defense faced every week, facing Kedrock [last year in practice]," said Oakton head coach Joe Thompson. "He didn't get much playing time because Taylor was there, but every week he practiced as hard as he played tonight."

WITH OAKTON quarterback, sophomore Ryan Harris (7-of-16, 78 yards, 2INT) still learning at the position and Robinson's defense keying on several of Oakton's other running backs, Kedrock established his presence running for 32 yards on seven carries in the first half."Once we figured out that this guy was going to play as hard as he was going to play and run the ball like that, we wanted to keep it in his hands," said Thompson, who spread the ball to four different rushers in the first half, including Orlando Bryant who took his first carry of the half for a 34-yard touchdown run with 1:07 left to give Oakton the 6-0 lead."It was [Kedrock's] turn this year and he wasn't going to be denied. He's been patient...He's wanted it and tonight one of our assistant coaches said 'it's time to get him in the ball game and give him the ball, I was ready to respond,'" Thompson added.Kedrock, a 5-foot-10 and 218-pound senior, wasn't just breaking tackles, he was aiming for contact with defenders, lowering his shoulder nearly every time he touched the ball."They are smaller than me," said Kedrock, who said he ran with a single purpose in mind on Friday. "Playoffs. This is playoffs. All the games for the rest of the season are playoffs. Ever since we lost to Westfield, we realized what we had to do to make the playoffs and this is it."Kedrock rushed for the game-clinching 2-yard touchdown with 5:33 left in the fourth quarter to give Oakton the 12-7 lead."He has a switch that he turns on and when he turns it on, no one is stopping him," said Oakton senior Jared Green, who caught the ensuing two-point conversion pass to put the Cougars up 14-7. "When it comes down to it. He plays better under pressure. We put the game in his hands and he took care of business."Robinson head coach Mark Bendorf was impressed with the Cougars offensive line."They've got a better football team than we have and we knew that going in," said Bendorf. "Just look at their backs and they got their lineman back from their state championship team."

ROBINSON ENTERED the contest without starting running back Mike Meier, who dislocated his right elbow in practice last Tuesday. Meier, who has rushed for 593 yards and six touchdowns this season, is uncertain about his return this season. Without Meier, Robinson ran for a season-low 149 yards on 34 attempts. Robinson senior David Laiti ran for a team-high 77 yards on 13 carries. Alex Murray rushed for Robinson's only touchdown with 7:44 left in the third quarter and finished with 46 yards on 11 carries. The Rams lost two fumbles."It hurt," said Bendorf. "One turnover on the screen was a first down and there at the end that was a chance to go ahead and try to tie it up."With 5:02 left in the fourth quarter and trailing 14-7, Robinson's Wynton Fox (8 carries, 29 yards) was stripped and Oakton recovered. The Cougars ran down the clock and kneeled on the ball on Robinson's one-yard line opting not to go for the knock out punch with under 10 seconds left."Basically, we are a team that has the talent all we have to do is execute," said Green. "Honestly, it is open this year. You see Westfield, they are No. 1, we were right up there and we almost snagged that one. The playoffs is what it's going to come down to."

NOTE: Oakton coach Joe Thompson said that he and his staff went through four years of film in the week leading up to the match up with Robinson. "We haven't beaten Robinson," said Thompson. The win marked the first time that Oakton, which has been outscored 147-105 by Robinson in six games since the 2002 season, have defeated Robinson since Nov. 30, 2002.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Herndon's All-American Bosnians


Herndon seniors Ermin Mujezinovic and Adin Kavazovic left Bosnia and became All-American distance runners.
October 25, 2006

Herndon High School senior Adin Kavazovic was 10 years old when he picked up his first rifle. Ermin Mujezinovic, also a Herndon senior, was eight years old when the grenade he was playing with in his grandfather’s backyard malfunctioned and a minor explosion buried shrapnel into his face.“I was bleeding so bad. Those pieces stayed in my face for so long,” said Mujezinovic.Standing on Herndon High School’s track, the 18-year-old cousins recount their journey from their birthplace, Vitez, Bosnia, and how it is that they have come to help Herndon coach Peter Sherry’s cross-country team become one of the top teams in the state. They try to explain how the country’s civil war, which raged from 1992 through 1995 and claimed a reported 250,000 lives, put them among the millions of refugees by the time they were barely teenagers. They try to explain their hatred for Serbs through quick jokes and laughs. They try to explain how the war changed the lives of their family members and took the lives of some of their friends. It’s different over there, they try to explain.“You can go outside your house and just start shooting,” said Kavazovic.Just a few years removed from war-torn Bosnia, Kavazovic and Mujezinovic — who run with Herndon's cross-country and track teams — helped Herndon’s Distance Medley Relay (DMR) team climb to a sixth place national ranking last season. Their athletic achievements have given them something that most of their American classmates take for granted — a chance. They have gone from future freedom fighters to All-American distance runners and in Wednesday’s Concorde District Cross Country Meet at Burke Lake Park, the seniors will look to make good on the chance to take Herndon to the top of the district.“When you consider it, here everyone gets a chance. But where we come from no one gets a chance; you have to fight for that chance,” said Mujezinovic, who along with his cousin gained All-American status after their DMR team took sixth at the National Track and Field Tournament in Greensboro, N.C. last June.The DMR team took third at the Penn Relays “Which is significant in that it is the most prestigious high school relay meet in the country/world,” said Sherry.

ON MAY 7, 2001, Mujezinovic left behind an uncertain future in Bosnia — one that most likely would have pushed him and his cousin into required service with Bosnia’s army.“Last year, when I went to my country they were ready to call me into the army, because in Europe when you are 18 you have to serve,” said Adin, whose father — a solider in the war — was nearly killed 13 years ago and was evacuated to the United States to receive the medical care he needed. That event set in motion a chain of events that led to both of the families emigrating to the United States. “He was supposed to lose his arm and a leg,” said Adin, who followed his father to the U.S. four years ago — a year after Ermin. “Over there, they couldn’t help [my dad]. He had to come here because, over there, they were shooting in the hospitals.” The Herndon seniors smile when they talk of their American citizenship. They take nothing for granted.“If I can bring five Bosnians to practice with me, we would be ranked No. 1 in the nation,“ said Mujezinovic, whose gritty and tough style of running has pushed him into the forefront of the Concorde District’s cross-country scene. “Toughness. That is best aspect of his running,” said Herndon senior teammate Matt Giorgis of Mujezinovic. “No matter what kind of shape he is in, he has that aspect. You can’t really train for it, you just have to have it.”Last season, Mujezinovic’s toughness led him to a second place finish in the Northern Region tournament. He took ninth in the Virginia High School League state tournament, helping Herndon to a fifth place finish. Also a track star, Mujezinovic’s personal bests include a 4-minute 13-second 1600-meter, and top times in the 800-meter (1:57) and 3200-meter (9:22). Mujezinovic was the district champion in the 1600-meter and 1000-meter and was part of the 4x800 relay team that won both indoor (2006) and outdoor (2005) state titles.“Once you start running you cannot stop,“ said Mujezinovic. “You get addicted to distance running. When you get to know the people, you don’t want to give up on them.”Kavazovic, who ran the 800-meter leg of the nationally ranked DMR team last season, was all-Concorde district last season and has run personal bests in the 1600 (4:36) and 800 (2:00). His motivation is simple. He thinks of where he has come from.“I think about it and it definitely pushes me harder,” said Kavazovic.

FIVE YEARS AFTER breaking the language-barrier, Mujezinovic and his cousin are still learning the do’s and don’ts of the American culture.Mujezinovic, a team leader, still commits many of what Sherry likes to call “social faux pas.”Mujezinovic’s motivational tactics “which doesn’t let anybody quit,” said Giorgis, include a spicy vocabulary and what can be interpreted as harsh and sometimes degrading comments to his teammates.“He’s tough on people,” said Giorgis. “That’s just him rubbing off on people because he is so tough. It doesn’t let anybody quit. If they are running with us, they are running hard.”Herndon’s team has adopted Mujezinovic’s hard-nosed style and his comments do not offend them. His comments fuel them. Mujezinovic has a simple goal for the upcoming district, regional and state tournaments. “I don’t plan anyone that can stick with me,” said Mujezinovic, who has taken second in the Virginia Tech and VMI Invitational tournaments so far this season. “I am going to try for the school record which is set by Rasheed Thompson, which is 14:57. I am trying to break that, but I am going to be by myself and I know it’s going to be difficult.”Thompson is a 2003 Herndon graduate and runner at Georgetown University. According to Sherry, Mujezinovic is being recruited by Div. I programs like George Mason University and Iona College (New York).“It’s wonderful to see,” said Sherry, a former collegiate runner. “Here is a kid that gets a chance to go to college for free because the kid worked hard. I don’t know what he would be doing if it wasn’t for running. I use him as an example a lot

Sunday, October 22, 2006

MLB's No. 2 Overall Draft Pick (1971) Jay Franklin's Struggle With Mental Illness

Jay Franklin, Madison Baseball
1971 Northern Region's highest MLB draft pick continues 20-year battle with mental illness.
By BJ Koubaroulis
August 9, 2006

To send assistance to this family:
Trudy Franklin-Cahoon
7208 Woods Edge Ct.
Warrenton, Va. 20187

Each time that Jay Franklin takes a sip of his soda, he unwillingly flashes the scar on the bottom of his right arm. It’s a reminder to his mother, Pat, and sister, Trudy — sitting just feet away and listening to him tell his story — of just how bad things have gotten. Franklin, a 1971 graduate of Madison High School, is still considered the Northern Region’s greatest high school pitcher of all time. He earned the scar after he attempted to jump out of a four-story window in Arlington County Courthouse during a court-sanctioned mental health assessment in 1991. It lies just below his right forearm — an arm that carried him to AAA state records, two state titles and local immortality among those that know the Northern Region’s baseball past. Major League Baseball’s No. 2 overall draft pick (1971) takes another sip, bends the bill of his dirt-riddled Washington Nationals hat and adjusts his gray collared shirt. It’s a less than hygienic outfit that the 53-year-old Franklin chooses to wear daily. He parts his grayed and tobacco-stained whiskers so that his lips can utter words that dash his mother’s ears.“I think I have AIDS,” says Franklin, while a collage of old photographs, newspaper clippings, letters from major leaguers and autographs are spilled across the table in front of him. In fact, Franklin does not have AIDS. It’s just one of several delusions, or what he refers to as negative thoughts, that constantly run throughout his brain on a daily basis. Jay, known to his friends as John, is a diagnosed paranoid schizophrenic with fixed delusions. He also suffers from depression and has been heavily medicated for the past two decades. Every other week, Franklin visits his mother’s one-bedroom apartment in Centreville — in what she calls his ‘comfort zone’ away from the Reston-based group-home type atmosphere in which he resides with others suffering from mental illness. Pat, a lifelong baseball fan — as the daughter of legendary Baltimore Orioles scout Floyd Tuthill should be — watches baseball games with the volume on as low as she can. John won’t watch the games if he can help it. “I try to watch it, but I’m paranoid and I think that they’re talking about me on the games, the commentators. It’s like, I know what’s going on, but I can’t accept it,” said Franklin, who is sometimes aware that his delusions are part of his illness. He visits with a social-worker once a week and a doctor once a month. “Every day he lives like someone is trying to kill him,” said Pat. “It’s not like you can turn it on and off like a spigot.”

FRANKLIN, WHOSE fast ball reached 98 miles per hour in his prime, was gassing his best pitch by anyone willing to take the plate for the opposition in his days spent playing baseball in Vienna. He was on both of Madison’s first two state championship teams and was on the mound for the Warhawks’ 4-1 victory over George-Wythe High School in the 1971 state title game. It was a glorious year for the 6-foot-2, 180-pound senior who struck out 202 batters in 100 innings pitched and gave up only seven hits and 23 walks en route to a 29-1 career high school record making him one of the most highly sought after prospects in the country and an easy choice for high school All-American. As a senior, Franklin struckout 42 batters in 21 innings in just the regional tournament. He is listed in the Virginia High School League record books tied for the record for the most strikeouts in a game after he struck out 29 batters in 14 innings in his senior year of high school."Back then there weren't guys throwing 90 miles per hour," said Madison head coach Mark Gjormand, who added that Franklin is still a legendary figure within his baseball program — he is the bar for pitchers. "From my experience [in baseball], I never saw anybody throw as a hard as Jay Franklin," Gjormand added. His basketball skills were nearly equivalent, but it was always baseball for Franklin, the proud grandson of Tuthill, who used to hit ground balls to Jay in cow pastures where his early 50‘s semipro teams would carve out makeshift practice fields."He just loved the game and always had his cleats and his glove and everything ready to go," said Pat. "Since he could walk, he had a ball and bat in his hand."Franklin also helped American Legion Post 180 to the state championship in 1970.“By the time John was finished [with high school], I think people were expecting him to be a very big time draft choice,” said Mike Wallace, a 1969 Madison graduate that pitched 117 major league games after helping Madison to the 1968 AAA state title. “He was a pretty all-around player. He not only threw hard, he could hit well," said Wallace, who is part of a small group of local baseball legends that hope to get their legendary baseball teammate and friend Franklin, who 35 years later remains the highest drafted player in Northern Region history, the help that they think he needs and deserves."There are a couple more routes we can go," said former teammate Ronnie Slingerman, a 1968 graduate of Madison who is also part of that group. "I'm hoping we don't lose Jay before we get him help."



FRANKLIN NEVER needed help in his younger days. “I don’t know,” said Franklin of where he got his arm strength. “Practice. Just God-given, I guess. Mr. [Tom] Christie, coach at Madison, had a theory that the more you throw, the stronger your arm gets and I can believe that.” Franklin threw a lot of innings. Some believe he threw too many in his stint in the minors. He powered his way through the baseball ranks from an early age as he and his childhood friend Clay Kirby would steal cans of Ajax from Pat’s cupboard and spread the white powder across the backyard drawing out the lines of a baseball diamond. During those backyard whiffle-ball days, Kirby and Franklin, who were neighbors in Arlington before the Franklins left for Vienna, never knew that their baseball futures would intersect as both made it to the major leagues and both with the Padres (Kirby’s MLB career: 1969-1976, 3.84 ERA, 75-104 record). Kirby, who died in November of 1991 from a heart attack at the age of 44, was Franklin’s best man at his wedding.“I was too young and inexperienced,” said Franklin, who made his major league debut less than seven months after his 18th birthday. “It was a mental struggle. But I go back and there’s a lot of things I would have done differently if I had been more mature. I just wasn’t mature enough to be pitching in the major leagues. I had the fast ball, but as far as intermingling with the rest of the players, it was tough. They were all older than me and had more experience.”Franklin admittedly ‘fastballed’ his way through the minor league system, but found that at each level, more and more batters could catch up to his speed. His 5-0 record in rookie ball was exactly the fast-track that the Padres organization hoped that he would be on. To them, Franklin was worth the $65,000 contract they had given him right out of high school. According to numbers compiled by baseball-almanac.com, Franklin's salary was more than $35,000 over the average MLB salary in the early 1970's which was just over $29,000 per year. Minimum wage jobs would have paid an annual $12,000 a year. Franklin made three major league starts in 1971 and gave up three home runs in 5.7 innings pitched. In a matter of four days, Franklin accumulated a 6.35 ERA giving up home runs to the Braves’ Hank Aaron and Darrell Evans. 1971 was ‘Hammerin Hanks’ greatest home run year as he belted out a career high 47 homers en route to his Hall of Fame career total 755. Franklin, who gave up No. 638 to Aaron, would never find his way back to a major league pitching mound again. Injuries and surgeries on his pitching arm took away Franklin’s coveted arm-speed and, with it, his financial future. His fastball dropped to 85 miles per hour and his new sidearm delivery — one that he fashioned to make up for snapped elbow tendons and shoulder problems — just wasn’t cutting it anymore. The Padres sent him home in 1976 and his major league career was over.

MARRIED AT the age of 19, Franklin and his wife Jordi moved back to Vienna and lived with his mother, Pat, and father Gilbert. They had children, John and daughter Jennifer. He worked in construction, maybe a trait he picked up from his father, a perfectionist who built homes in Northern Virginia. “I helped build [route] 66 over there in Arlington,” Franklin says with a smile. “To tell you the truth, I didn’t mind [construction]." But ask him about his wife and the smiles abruptly stop.“I would have girls coming on to me, but I’d rather go hunting and fishing with my dad,” said Franklin of his early days. “I just didn’t date that much. So, I go to San Diego and the first one that comes along, I marry.” Courts did not stop Jordi from taking their children back with her to California after the two split in 1985. The split was the beginning of a series of tragedies that have sent Franklin into a spiral of insanity and paranoia that keeps his sister Trudy in tears. “My goal is to see him live in a better place than he has been in for the last 20 years,” said Trudy. Franklin never recovered after the split with his wife and the 1988 suicide death of his father — who had also experienced mental health problems and was manic depressive. It is unknown if Franklin's mental health problems have anything to do with his father's. Kirby, one of few friends that stayed close with Franklin even throughout his latest and more difficult years, died early at the age of 44 just weeks apart from the death of Jordi, who also died in 1991. It was all too much for Franklin to handle. "For the last 10 years I’ve been pretty much depressed all the time,” said Franklin. “I get paranoid. I think everybody knows about my business, which my business is not too good in the last 15 years. I have some things that I wish I had never done.”He tries to position himself back near the game he so passionately loved, but after an inning or two, the stares, which are mostly out of admiration for Northern Virginia’s greatest pitching legend, are just too much for Franklin’s paranoia to withstand.“I go out in public and I feel uncomfortable because I think people know about my skeletons in my closet and it’s just uncomfortable,” said Franklin, who claimed that he has been sober for three years now after a five-year battle with alcoholism. Gambling is his new vice and smoking is not a habit for him, it’s a lifestyle.“I just take each day as it comes and do the best that I can do,” said Franklin, who sleeps up to 14 hours a day. “I feel like if my day has come, then I have had my day in the sun, so be it. I don’t think any medication in the world can help this.”

WHAT’S NEXT for Franklin? Trudy says that her brother is just “existing, not living,” she says as the tears flow. The rotting teeth and missing front right tooth and poor hygiene are evidence that Franklin is just, as he says, “existing.” “He doesn’t understand how powerful he can be. I saw him laughing and smiling,” said Trudy of the day she took her brother, who still gets autograph requests mailed in from all over the country, to a youth clinic at RFK Stadium. Trudy, Pat and Wallace are in the beginning stages of paperwork they hope will cross through MLB’s red tape in order to get John financial help from Baseball Assistance Team (BAT) — described by MLB.com as “a group of former Major League Baseball players [that] help members of the baseball "family" who have come on hard times and are in need of assistance. Franklin currently lives on a $1,000 a month social security disability — all money that Trudy handles in his name. Franklin has a mere $1,000 in his savings account. He hasn’t been able to work since 1993. “We struggle as a family to take the little money we’ve had and stretch it,” said Pat. At times, she can’t keep up with the overflow of medical bills. “When he was on the mound under the bright lights, everyone wanted to come to his side,” said Trudy. “And now, no one comes, no one calls.”

COMMENTARY: Stained

"Stained" is a column that I wrote when the Duke lacrosse team was being served up by the media all over the country. Facts were misreported, more opinions were heard than facts and almost everyone had piled up on the Blue Devils' lacrosse program. I took a lot of heat for taking the stance that I did in this column. Looking back on it, I'm glad that I took the unpopular side of the argument. It appears that I was dead on.

Stained
Commentary: Lax enters Virginia's high schools in first official year with a publicity black eye.
BJ Koubaroulis
May 24, 2006

Play along for a moment: Grab the closest pen and paper. Write out the names of the four major sports — football, basketball, baseball, and hockey. Leave a space next to each sport. Now, in less than 30 seconds, write down the first thing that comes to mind when you think of each sport. Do it. Quickly. Don't ponder. Just do it (sorry Nike).
Now, write down the word lacrosse. I think you know where this is going.
"This whole Duke thing this year has really scarred our sport," said Langley boys lacrosse coach Earl Brewer, who is in his 12th season with the Saxons. "It's a shame. I wear my lacrosse stuff somewhere and people say 'hey, what do you think about that Duke?'"

UNFORTUNATELY, every sport has its defining moment. The word 'unfortunately' was a purposeful and hand-picked descriptor, but can and should only be applied to the circumstances surrounding the sport of lacrosse. There is nothing unfortunate about the images that come to mind when thinking about basketball. Christian Laetner's buzzer-beater? (The Duke reference was unintentional.) Anything unfortunate about Michael Jordan's fist-pumping leap after "The Shot" over Craig Ehlo in the 1989 NBA playoffs? Of course not. Football is better for having had Joe Namath's guarantee, now known as "The Guarantee." Or what about "The Drive" which catapulted John Elway to fame and defined the NFL in the late 80's. Maybe for baseball fans it's Sammy Sosa and Mark McGuire's awkward chest-bumping moment? I hope not, but, either way, the point is that the sport of lacrosse — a sport that has recently been earmarked as one of the fastest growing sports in the country — has, in its mainstream infancy, already acquired a defining moment.
To this point, the sport's defining moment is "The Rape."
Whether or not the Duke lacrosse players are guilty or innocent, at least in this argument, has no bearing. The sport's ambassadors to the mainstream are accused rapists. More importantly, the sport's defining moment didn't even take place on the field. It's not a game-winning shot from 20-feet out or an overtime thriller. Instead, the images of a vacant white house in Durham, N.C. — the scandal’s backdrop — or the speech on the courthouse steps delivered by the third Duke lacrosse player indicted for a potential sexual assault are the only mainstream images that most of us have seen. Both memorable images will be force-fed to the public over the next several months, forever scarring the sport and linking the words "lacrosse" and "sexual assault."
And if the accused are guilty — then the stigma will, and probably should — stick. It's the only way things can change for the better. And while it is important to note that America's major sports have all had their share of on and off the field scandals, none suffered these terrible blows in their mainstream infancy.
Locally, the sport enters its first season as a Virginia High School League recognized official state championship. The high school level is still where the sport is most popular. T.C. Williams boys lacrosse coach Charles Juris is using the scandal as an opportunity to teach lessons. “We all have to learn things from Duke — to have integrity," said Juris. "I tell my guys all the time, ‘Just because you’re a varsity athlete, you don’t have privileges.’"



THE SPORT is stained. It's unfortunate, but it's true. And for those fans who are too shortsighted to see the long-term effects of the Duke scandal, just take a step back and remove yourself from the depths to which you are entrenched in your love-affair with lacrosse. Think about the mainstream. The mainstream doesn't know who your heroes are. Most, probably, couldn't name one professional lacrosse player or if there even is a professional lacrosse league. Is there?
This is not about lacrosse anymore, or what its true core values are really about. It's not about what its players and coaches have learned to love about it. This is about how the sport will be received by those who don't know what a long-stick middie is. This is about how your subculture will be perceived.
“Lacrosse is such a tight-knit community. We build lacrosse programs to build strong characters,” said Annandale girls lacrosse coach Cindy Hook.
This case has treaded through a minefield of explosive and controversial topics including race, class, gender, and education and has questioned the character of not just three lacrosse players or one team, but of lacrosse players in general.
"I just hate that it's given us a black eye," said Brewer, who remains optimistic. "I told the guys on the team after it happened that my best friends, still to this day, are guys that I played lacrosse with or I coached with or had something to do with lacrosse. They are going to find out that when they go one day and they walk into a job somewhere and on that resume it says 'played college lacrosse, played high school lacrosse, ' It's going to help open a door for them, I guarantee it."

Jasmine Thomas Picks Duke


By far, Jasmine Thomas is the greatest girls basketball I have ever seen play at the high school level. As a four-time preseason All-American, she is not only a great athlete, but a great person. She has WNBA written all over her and is one of the top ranked high school basketball players in the country. I have built a relationship with her and her family and I was honored when they gave me the scoop on her collegiate commitment. This is that story:

Jasmine Thomas Picks Duke
Oakton senior girls basketball star verbally commits to Blue Devils.
BJ Koubaroulis
September 7, 2006

The thousands of recruiting letters that have been boxed up and stored at the homes of Oakton senior Jasmine Thomas and her two coaches — Oakton coach Fred Priester and AAU coach Aggie McCormick — can finally be cleaned out. Thomas, one of the most sought-after girls basketball recruits in the nation, told the Connection on Thursday that she has verbally committed to Duke University. Thomas, the three-time Concorde District Player of the Year, three-time Northern Region Player of the Year and the AAA state Player of the Year (2004-2005), gave a smiling sigh of relief as she revealed her choice while sitting on the bleachers of the Oakton High School gymnasium Thursday.
“I trained myself to be open-minded because I was getting offers from the best schools,” said Thomas, who by mid-summer had narrowed her choices to Duke and the University of Virginia. “I had to be open-minded and it was fun because I got relationships with most of [the coaches]. But towards the end, when I was still feeling that Duke was my top school, I was like ‘I can’t keep [waiting]’ because I know that there are people waiting to see where I was going to go so that they could make their decision.”
Over the last three seasons, Thomas has averaged 22.1 points, 8.1 rebounds, 4.3 assists, and 4.5 steals per game while leading Oakton to a 74-8 overall record.
The 16-year-old senior called Duke University women’s basketball coach Gail Goestenkors on Wednesday at 1 p.m. from Priester’s office.
“Coach Gail was so excited because I have been telling everyone where they stood in the lineup and she always knew she was first. But it always made her nervous,” said Thomas.
According to both Priester and Thomas, Duke has been the program that has been there “from the beginning,” said Priester. “That played a big part in [the decision]. I think [Jasmine] was in a great situation in terms of having some really awesome choices. She had four ‘Final-Four’ teams coming at her ears. She was in a situation where she could not lose.”



THOMAS, WHO ENTERED Oakton in her freshman year as a preseason All-American, will join a Blue Devils squad that has established itself as a threat in the Atlantic Coast Conference and as a top competitor nationally.
Goestenkors, who has spent 14 seasons elevating the Duke women’s basketball program from obscurity to national prominence, has been named the ACC coach of the year six times. She led the Blue Devils to the NCAA tournament championship game this past season – a game they lost to Maryland. Before leaving this summer to polish her skills at the Nike Girls Skills Academy — a camp that welcomes only the top 21 players from the country to Nike World headquarters in Beaverton, Ore. — Thomas named her top five schools as Duke, Maryland, Connecticut, Virginia and Louisiana State University.
Near the end of August, Thomas shut herself off from the recruiting calls, letters and visits and “went with my gut,” she said. “It was always a gut feeling.” Thomas, who has made visits to Duke twice, also noted that she wanted to stay close to home.
“Duke’s not too far,” she said of the Durham, N.C. campus.
The 5-foot-9 guard, who has played several positions for Oakton, noted that she will work on ball-handling, three-point shooting and defense because “They recruited me as a point guard,” said Thomas. “I have been told I need to shoot more ‘threes,’” she added.

IN HER HIGH school career, Thomas has tallied 40 double-doubles, three triple-doubles and has set Oakton records for points in a game (34), season points (650), career points (1,817), assists in a game (12), steals in a game (11), and rebounds in a game (16).
According to the Virginia High School League record book, Thomas is currently
1,473 points from tying 1993 Phoebus graduate LaKeisha Frett's state career scoring record (3,290), but only 647 points from passing 1996 Madison graduate Katie Smrcka-Duffy, who is second on that list with 2,463 career points. Over the last three seasons, Thomas, who has averaged 605.6 total points per season, is considered one of the region's more accurate jump-shooters and has recorded a 52-percent field goal percentage and has shot 31-percent from the 3-point line. She took Oakton to the state tournament as a sophomore before leading the Cougars to a 25-1 record last season.