April 28, 2008 photo of Fuqua School
A rising sophomore basketball player (a member of the high school Class Of 2011) in the state
of Virginia is 6-8 185 Lavon Harper of Farmville, Virginia's Fuqua School.
[Photo courtesy of boyshoopscout.com]    

    March 7, 2008
There was a big state playoff basketball game today in Danville, Virginia, near the North Carolina border. photo of the corner of the court    
The state of Virginia's number one-ranked boy's team, George Washington High School of Danville, Virginia, was taking on Petersburgh High of Petersburg, VA. George Washington (GW-Danville) and the Crimson Wave of Petersburg both compete in Group AAA, the state's largest high schools.
    The game was being held at Averett University, a small school in Danville that had a small gymnasium: it would prove to be too small a facility to accomodate such a large crowd. I drove down to see the game: It was a long drive, 120 miles each say down Route 29 South from Charlottesville, and it was slightly raining the entire way. The game time was 7 P.M. on Friday night.
    Cadarian Raines (photo courtesy of DAVE MILLER of the Petersburg Progress-Index) was the main player I wanted to see play. He's an 11th-grader who's listed at 6-8 220, and he has almost unlimited potential as a high school player and as a future college star.
    Petersburg pulled away in the final moments for a shocking 65-59 win. Almost the entire crowd was against Petersburg, but Cadarian Raines was a smooth, unstopable force inside, scoring 22 points. He could be one of the nation's top 10 players as a senior in 2008-09! For sure, he will at least make the photo of Petersburg-George Washington scoreboard McDonald's High School All-America team. With his team down 57-49, he hit a great turnaround jumpshot from the baseline that started the rally that eventually won the game.
    Soon, Petersburg had tied the game at 59. Cadarian Raines could not be challenged on defense either. Although he was not a factor actually blocking shots, his presence discouraged the other team from taking the ball inside. There were so many fans packed in to the arena that they had no place to sit, despite the fact that a policeman told some to find a seat. This was a great basketball atmosphere. Too bad it took so long getting in to the arena (long lines) and so long getting the cars out of the parking lot!

    February 19, 2008
   
It was Tuesday, February 19, and I went to see a 7:45 P.M. game in the Richmond, Virginia area at Cosby High School. They were playing host to James River High, in a Dominion District Tournament first-round boy's basketball game.
photo of Matt Gorski     Both schools are Group AAA schools, which are schools of enrollments of over 1,000 students: these are the largest high schools in the state of Virginia. The player I came to see was 6-10 ninth-grader Matt Gorski of Cosby High School.
   Matt Gorski starts for Cosby High. He wears number 53 (see him in photo at right), and to describe him, his team wore black shoes, black socks, white shorts, white jerseys, and their warm-up uniforms consisted just of grey sweatshirts. Matt Gorski has slightly red hair, which is long by today's standards, has strong legs, has good fundamentals, but is a little ponderous with his offensive moves. Still, he has outstanding potential, particularly as a shot-blocker, for a player who is a mere high school freshman!
    The opposing team had basically all-purple uniforms. In addition to white, the other color that Cosby High School uses is Carolina Blue......The entire area behind each basket is Carolina Blue, as is the sideline area around the court. Because I go to games to scout potential University of Virginia, Virginia Tech, or other players who may eventually play basketball or football for in-state universities in the state of Virginia, the game itself doesn't concern me that much. [ However, I never, ever try to urge players to stay in the state of Virginia, nor do I even tell them that my website is about players who might be the target of in-state universities! I just tell them that my website is about high school football and basketball in the state of Virginia. ] So I'll just say now that this was an overtime game won by Cosby over James River, 56-47.
   

    January 26, 2008
photo of Albemarle High School wall    
On this Saturday night, I went to nearby Albemarle High School to see the Patriots host nearby Monticello High of Charlottesville. With the University of Virginia of the Atlantic Coast Conference just a few miles from each high school, will two players from this game one day wind up playing for one of the 12 ACC schools?
    Cameron Anderson, a 6-7 205 ACC prospect (YES!) as a sophomore, and Andre Brooks, 6-5 175, freshman, an even better photo of Andre Brooks prospect, are players to watch for Albemarle. Cameron Anderson wears number 35, and is a quick, strong leaper. Andre Brooks had a game high 17 points, 12 in the second half. He was 2-4 on field goals from the floor, 3-7 from three-point range, and 4-4 from the free-throw line. Andre Brooks has it ALL. He's wearing number 23 in the photo at right. Only time will tell what type of player he becomes. Much can happen between a player's ninth grade-year and his last year of high school: but as with all players, if this player has everything "together," the sky is the limit!!
    Albemarle won this game, 62-37. Monticello fell to 8-5, while Albemarle improved to 8-9 on the season.

    January 22, 2008
   
I went to see two high school freshman I went on this cold Tuesday night to nearby Charlottesville High School to see 11th-grade point guard/football quarterback Kenneth Leatherwood of Charlottesville High School play. His Black Knights (see the Charlottesville High School Black Knight banner below left) were playing host to visiting cross-town rival Western Albemarle High School.
   Kenneth Leatherwood (he's wearing number 25 in his photo at right) has started every game since the start of his ninth grade year for Group AA Charlottesville High as a varsity quarterback in football and a point guard in basketball. He's built very strong at a legitimate 6-2 205 pounds. His father was a college basketball player, then an outstanding high school basketball coach for this same photo of Kevin Leatherwood Charlottesville High, and now is the principal for this high school. Kenneth Leatherwood (see him wearing number 25 in photo at right) doesn't seem to be on any recruiting lists, but obviously he's going to wind up somewhere in one or both sports, if only because of the type of academic background he's from.
   His Black Knights (see the Charlottesville High School Black Knight logo on the center of the basketball court, shown at left) photo of center of the Charlottesville High School basketball courtled 8-6 at the end of one quarter. To be honest, the level of play I observed tonight was very poor. At the half, Charlottesville led by the depressing margin of 14-12. They won by finally playing well in the second half. Neither team had much of an inside game or outside game, to be honest. What else can I say? I try to be honest.
If I claim that every player and every game I see is good, then nothing I say will have any credibility!

    January 15, 2008
   
The scene was Thomas Jefferson High School of applied technology and science. Last year, U.S. World News And Report selected it as the top high school in the country academically. I had driven up there to see them this Tuesday night.
    They would lose to The Fairfax, Virginia W. T. Woodson Cavaliers, 54-51, at home. I had driven up by going 70 miles east to Max Lenox the state capital of Virginia, which is Richmond, and then about 70 miles north on Route 95.
    Max Lenox, a 6-1 sophomore all-around guard, was the player I was there to see. He appears in the photo at right, wearing number dark blue jersey number 42. But another player who caught my eye was surprising 6-6 junior forward Stephen Stepka, his teammate on W. T. Woodson. Each player had 15 points. Max Lenoxis one of the best sophomores on the east coast, and Stephen Stepka is a mid-major prospect...........and maybe better!

    January 5, 2008
   On this Saturday, I drove from Charlottesville, Virginia and went to see the 4-game SlamFest (see ticket I bought, below right) in Ashland, Virginia on the campus of Randolph-Macon College. The weather was in the 30's with a white sky. The gym is very, very old-looking, but the one court in there is nice. It's the court where Randolph-Macon, a Division III college (see gymnasium wall logo below left)logo on wall, plays it's home games.
   I was not really there to see the first game. 3 games in one day was enough for me. But I did see the last couple of minutes, and saw 6-6 sophomore Travis McKie (photo courtesy of DEAN HOFFMEYER of the Richmond Times-Dispatch) of John Marshall High, a Group AAA school (the largest schools in Virginia). slamfest ticket Travis McKie seems to have grown a little since last year when I watched him play and looks like a future ACC player to me. This first game, John Marshall High of Richmond, Virginia against Atlantic Shores Christian of Virginia Beach, Virginia, started at 3:30 P.M. Travis McKie of John Marshall, who wears number 15, had 26 points, 10 rebounds, and 4 steals in this contest. He could play Division 1 ball now. His team is now 7-2 after beating now 12-4 Atlantic Shores, 76-72.
   The second game was Hampton Roads Academy of Virginia Beach, Virginia against The Collegiate School of Richmond, Virginia.slamfest ticket Hampton Roads Academy had 6-7 junior Ovie Soko (wearing number 42 in photo below right). Soko has the ability to guard point guards out on the perimeter! He has quick hands and can snare passes easily. He had just 11 points, but his team never ran a play for him. Very interesting player. Lots of potential as a defender, and can slam dunk also. Division 1 prospect for sure. But there are 330 Division 1 schools. So, is he an ACC caliber prospect?
   At this point, "No." But he could become one on defensive ability alone. An interesting player for Hampton Roads Academy was freshman starting point guard Keith Hornsby, the son of famous musician Bruce Hornsby. Wearing number 2, the 6-0 Keith Hornsby(he could be actually closer to 5-10) is very fast, heady, and a good ball-handler. I could see him playing Division 1 basketball one day. He had 8 points. Hampton Roads Academy lost this game, however, 63-53.
   The third game was Benedictine High School of Richmond, Virginia against Booker T. Washingtondeshawnpainter High School of Norfolk, Virginia. In addition to 6-9 (looks 6-10) senior Ed Davis of Benedictine (headed to the University of North Carolina), I was there to see 6-8 Deshawn Painter(he's wearing the white jersey with the number 4 in the photos at left) of Booker T. Washington. Let's put it this way. If Deshawn Painter is ever to play in the NBA, it will have to be after 4 years of college. As for Ed Davis, he could play now. He had 30 points, 11 rebounds, and 13 blocks. Keep in mind that Ed Davis was playing against a Group AAA (largest enrollments) high school in the state of Virginia. Had Ed Davis stayed at Hanover High near Richmond, where he played his first marshawnpowell two seasons, he probably would have been averaging these statistics as a high school senior. 5-11 solidly-built starting point guard Eric Moody is a prospect for the future to watch for Benedictine. With a little more height, he could play Division 1 basketball. He did not score and I'm not sure why: too unselfish, I'd guess. His 15-3 team led easily throughout the game and won 69-51 over the now 6-5 Booker T. Washington High squad.
   The fourth game was Miller School of Crozet, Virginia in the Charlottesville, Virginia area against Meadowbrook High School in the Richmond, Virginia area. The player I came to see play, Marshawn Powell (see him in photo at right, wearing number 21) was joined by a couple of decent 6-8 sophomores I had not heard of Hippolyte Tsafack and Brice Kkofane. The two are so similar in size, appearance, and talent that it's hard to distinguist between them.
    Hippolyte Tsafack, who scored 9 points, is more muscular. Brice Kofane, though he had just 3 points, was more impressive: he's a very intense, outgoing player and appears to be the better athlete. Did Virginia Tech make a mistake in withdrawing their scholarship offer to 6-3 Shamarr Bowden, who is now going to North Carolina-Greensboro? True, Shamarr Bowden may be closer to 6-2 150 pounds. But he can shoot to 25 feet with his picture jumpshot, and after Virginia Tech's loss recently to the University of Richmond, it's obvious that Virginia Tech is lacking shooters. He had 25 points and his team won 78-55. No one for Meadowbrook High impressed me as a sure-fire future Division 1 prospect.

   
December 22, 2007
    I was in Fredericksburg, Virginia, was there to see Courtland High School take on Riverbend High. I drove from Charlottesville, Virginia 50 miles east toward Richmond, Virginia. I passed by a sign for Fork Union Military Academy. It's at left.photo of sign on the way to Fork Union Military Acadmey Fork Union Military Academy is known nationally for producing countless college football and basketball players over the past 30 years. Fork Union is located about 30 miles east of Charlottesville, Virginia, where the University of Virginia is located. I then drove north on Route 95 North toward Washington, D.C.
   I went to see Josh Hairston of Courtland High School play. He can be seen wearing the number 33 in the white jersey, in the photo below. He looks like a college sophomore, not like a high school sophomore. What a player! Hard to imagine there being a Division 1 school that won't want him one day. He appears in photo at left.photo Josh Hairston He looks every bit of 6-8. He's a sophomore who already has been offered college scholarships. Obviously tries to copy Grant Hill: or at least seems to. I can see him in a Duke jersey right now. They played at home, hosting Riverbend High, and they were blasted. Courtland High is a Group AAA school. It's located in a bizarre area: to get to it, you have to drive behind a shopping center, and then through another building's parking lot. Riverbend won 79-60. Josh Hairston scored 25, but almost all of these were scored well after the outcome had been decided. wall of Courtland High gym He was unable to score when the team needed him to. The Courtland High School gymnasium (see wall of gym at left) is big: the crowd was small. This game was much more one-sided than the final score indicated. No matter how many times these two teams could have played, the outcome would have always been the same. Josh Hairston is not a physical player, but he's an inbetween player.

    December 18, 2007
    I was in Norfolk, Virginia, which is 165 miles east of Charlottesville. It's home to the largest military base in the United States. I was there to see Booker T. Washington High School take on a cross-town rival, Norview High, also of Norfolk. The area near Booker T. Washington in Norfolk doesn't seem to have any new construction. It's depressing-looking, with gas stations and fast-food restaurants nearby, but no grocery stores or department stores. But the atmosphere inside the gym is always exciting: Booker T. Washington won the state Group AAA title 2 years-ago, and the large crowd, enthusiastic public address announcer, and pep band made for an ear-splitting combination at times tonight.
   DeShawn Painter of Booker T. Washington is a blue-chip 11th-grader (high school junior). He wore number 4 for the Bookers. To further describe his appearance, his team wore purple and brown uniforms: the back of their warm-ups had the capital letters "B T W" in a semi-circle with the "T" at the top. Listed at 6-8 and 205, he reminded me somewhat of ex-Maryland star Len Bias: he has unlimited athletic ability. However, I did notice that he has very little jump off of the floor on his jump shots. That's something he'll have to work on.
   DeShawn Painter of Booker T. Washington is an assertive offensive player: he looks for his shot almost every time he touches the ball. And why not? He has the talent to get it off at any time. He started off the game by shooting 5 times in less than 3 minutes. But his first basket didn't go in until the 5:25 mark of the first quarter. Neither team played well in the first half. DeShawn Painter's 18-footer from the corner gave his team a 20-14 lead near the half, and they took a 20-17 edge in to the locker room. DeShawn Painter had just 4 points and two rebounds, both of them offensive boards.
   DeShawn Painter looked like the star he was billed to be during the second half. He opened the third quarter by scoring Booker T. Washington's first points on a 15-footer. He later made one of two free throws, then soon made an old-fashioned three-point play. His team had a 37-31 advantage after three periods.
   DeShawn Painter also scored the Booker's first points of the fourth period. Then, he brought the crowd to it's feet with a two-handed slam dunk that gave his squad a 50-42 lead. They won 57-49 over a frustrated Norview team that had brought a good-sized number of it's own fans.
   On another note, a player I had never heard of, Kendrix Brown of Norview High, caught my eye. Wearing number 34 in Norview's all-blue uniforms, he made the game's best move when he did a change-of-direction dribble and then took the ball to the basket, was fouled, and then scored, later completing the three-point play with a free throw. I learned after the game that he has signed with William and Mary. He should do well there. He put on some great moves in this game. The 'ESPN.com RecruitTracker' comments about Kendrix Brown read like this: 'Evaluation: Great size for a point guard. He can shoot the three, and has excellent floor vision with the ability to see the next play. Plays out of control at times...'

    December 14, 2007
   I went to Chantilly High School. Why? To see John Manning (he's wearing his jersey number 54 in the photo that appears below right. This photo is from another game he played in this season, not from the game I saw tonight.) He's a player reported to be anywhere from 6-10 to 7-0 tall (he was obviously 6-10 when I saw him). This was his first home game ever.Chantilly, VA High School gymnasium lobby. He's a high school freshman. Both of his parents are graduates of the University of Virginia.
   John Manning carries himself like an NBA player, although he has the upper body of a high school player, of course. Chantilly High (see photo at right of gym lobby) is 97 miles from Charlottesville, Virginia, where I live. To get there, most of the trip involves going 88 miles straight up Route 29 North. By gametime, it was in the 30's, dark, and very windy: it was cold. The parking lot was small, packed, and people were running to get inside and out of the low temperature.
   Entering the game with a 3-0 record, Chantilly High was hosting Yorktown High. Both schools are Group AAA (the schools with the largest enrollments in Virginia). Game time was 7:30 P.M. this Friday night, December 14, 2007. Chantilly High has an odd-looking basketball arrangement. There are additional sideways courts behind each basket, so the wall behind each basket is about 30 feet away. The school is huge, but old-looking. It seems like a very affluent high school, and as a result, the level of basketball competition is poor for the Group AAA level. To further describe what I saw, the word "CHARGERS" is on the baseline behind each basket, facing the center of the court. The "key" area inside the free throw line is wood-colored, but the area outside of the key inside of the three-point circle is purple.
    Unlike most high schools in Virginia, Chantilly actually hands out a roster for each game. It even had the jersey numbers, heights, and full names for both Chantilly's AND the visiting Yorktown's freshmen, junior varsity, and varsity teams' players. I'd say about three percent of even the large high schools in Virginia do this, even if they have no ninth grade teams. It's nice to see that some high schools, which charge admission even to their own students to see their classmates play high school basketball, do their players a favor by at least publicizing who these players are by identifying them with rosters for the games!
   Chantilly came in to the game with a 3-0 record. Facially, John Manning john manning.(his photo appears below right. This photo is from another game he played in this season, not from the game I saw tonight.) looks like a college sophomore, not like the high school freshman that he is. It's obvious that he's been playing organized basketball for years: he's a polished performer. He had a quick, one-handed dunk during the game, and also a strong blocked shot after quickly reacting off of his feet that brought a roar from the home crowd.
    John Manning wears number 54. On the back of the Chantilly black warm-up shirts are the words: "Commitment To Excellance." To describe John Manning in more detail, he reminds me of a player who played recently for Duke University and then for the Philadelphia 76ers, Shavlik Randolph. While this might not seem like much of a compliment, I'm talking about comparing them in appearance, size, and style. It's way too early to compare a high school freshman to a player that I never saw play the first time until his freshman year at Duke.
   John Manning intimidated the entire Yorktown team with his defensive, shot-blocking presence. He has a huge upside as a future intimidator at the college level! But only time will tell: some players get worse after their freshman season of high school ball, and some keep getting better. At the end of the first quarter, Chantilly High led 12-6. Then then took a 31-17 half-time edge. After three periods, then had a 43-31 margin. Finally, they won by a score of 59-54.
    John Manning was 3-8 from the floor, 3-5 from the free throw line, and had 9 points and 8 rebounds in the low-scoring, slow-paced game.

    December 1, 2007
   
I went to see two high school freshman quarterbacks play on Saturday, December 1, 2007. I was at the Group A, Division 2, Virginia High School League State Semifinals football contest at King William High School, which is east of Richmond, Virginia. This is in eastern Virginia, toward the eastern shore. Despite the cold weather, the stands were packed.
   For a Division 2 (the second-smallest classification of the 6 football classifications in Virginia) school, the athletic tradition at King William High is good: the school has produced major college talent in various sports recently.
   The two players I came to see were King William, Virginia High School's 6-0 165 Lewis Redman (who wore number 18) and Gretna, Virginia High School's 5-8 157 Nick Miller (who wore number 10). Lewis Redman has a college-type throwing motion and arm. Nick Miller does not appear to have college potential as a quarterback, but is a better athlete. Only time will tell if winds up playing Division 1-AA ball or lower, but Lewis Redman will play at the highest level.
   As for the game, it was a rout: Gretna moved in to the state championship game by blasting King William, 41-0. Lewis Redman came in to the game having completed 62 of 121 passes for 996 yeards and 11 TD's, plus having rushed 66 times for 306 yards and 3 scores. Nick Miller amazingly had passed for 20 scores (on 93 completions in 159 attemps) and also scored 19 TD's! (with 1,026 yards rushing from 165 carries)
   In the first period, Nick Miller dodged a near sack, scrambled to move up 2 steps, and hurled the ball 50 yards in the air, throwing a 75-yard touchdown pass, that gave Gretna a 14-0 edge. Later in the quarter, Nick Miller had a spectacular 90-yard touchdown run at the 8:07 mark. Then in the second quarter, Nick Miller tossed another touchdown pass, this time a 43-yarder at the 7:26 mark, giving the Gretna Hawks a 28-0 edge.
   To describe Nick Miller, he's Caucasian, and his team had medium blue helmets, medium blue pants, medium blue jersey numbers, and white jerseys. As for Lewis Redman, he's Caucasian, and his team wore dark purple jerseys, dark purple helmets, light gold pants, and light gold numberals on their jerseys. Lewis Redman has two older brothers on the King William High team. Lewis Redman did not play well, but that appeared to be due to the fact that his receivers could not get open: he had to throw to where his receivers "should have been," and, (only in my opinion!) it's hard to believe that he will stay at King William High and not transfer to a private school where he'll be surrounded by better talent and play against a better schedule. Only time will tell!

   

        November 16, 2007
    Quarterback Tajh Boyd is listed in the game program as a 6-1 205 eleventh-grader who wears number 10 for the Phoebus Phantoms. After guiding them to a Division 5 state champion last year (in Virginia, Division 5 is the second-largest of the 5 Divisions, and Divisions 5 and 6 are Group AAA schools, the largest classification in Virginia) Tajh Boyd had led Phoebus to a 10-0 regular season entering tonight's game with cross-town rival Hampton High School. They were playing in a first-round Virginia High School League regional playoff football game.
    To get from Charlottesville in Central Virginia to Hampton I took the familiar route. I left very early for that 11-16-07 Friday night's 7:00 P.M. game, leaving Charlottesville at 1:30 P.M. After about 25 miles I got to Zion's Cross Roads, which college recruiters recognize as the exit for nationally famous Fork Union Military Academy. About 40 miles later, Exit 234 (for the College of William And Mary) appeared on my right.
    Right after that was Exit 243-A (for the entertainment park known as Busch Gardens). After going about 20 miles further on Route 64 east, the first sign for the city of Hampton appeared just before the 250-B Exit sign, and it said "Hampton 11(miles further)." Next, there was Exit 263 at the Hampton Coliseum. I took Exit 267, the Hampton University exit, which takes you through the downtown area past the space museum, and a mile away is Darling Stadium.
    The game was no contest. Hampton High may be 8th all-time in American high school football for most games won in their high school's history, but they lost tonight, 21-6. Hampton's offensive and defensive lines were pushed all over the field, any time Phoebus wanted to!
    More on Tajh Boyd. He is a graceful player who never seems to get flustered, hurried, or forced in to an awkward-looking play. To describe Tajh Boyd, he's an athlete who could play various positions at the Division 1-A level, including quarterback. He was wearing a gold helmet, jersey, and pants, with blue numbers. His team wore white socks and black shoes. Hampton High has the most expensive-looking football uniforms you're ever going to see on a high school team, which decades of success can produce: they wore black jerseys with red on the shoulders; black pants with red on the sides; red numerals with white outlines; and white shoes and socks. NFL teams would be satisfied looking like this. The field is surrounded by a reddish/orange jogging track for track and field events. When entering, fans must decide which side to watch the game from: fans are not allowed to switch sides of the stadium afterwards. Only one of the scoreboards was working. The weather was cold, around 40 degrees. Each school had a marching band, and Hampton High was the visiting team.
   The atmosphere was out-of-control on Tajh Boyds team's sideline, but he was unaffected by it (his coaching staff went bonkers during the first half over a call that was against Phoebus.) After the play, a Phoebus assistant could be seen walking up and down the sideline like a cheerleader, trying to get the fans to cheer. Is this against the rules? The officials did nothing about this particular act. My guess is that the referees didn't want to do anything further to increase the anger level in the stadium.
    Tajh Boyd scored first for Phoebus, zipping a 20-yard touchdown pass at the 11:36 mark of the 2nd quarter that gave the Phantoms a 7-6 lead. Unfortunately, he also threw an interception later on into an empty area of the field where a Hampton defender made a diving pick off at the 4:20 mark of the second quarter, which allowed the Crabbers to take over on their own 9-yard line.
    But Tajh Boyd came back with his second touchdown throw of the game, this time from 3 yards out, with just 20 seconds left in the first half, and this gave his Phoebus Phantoms a very surprising 14-6 advantage that they soon carried in to the halftime locker room. By then, the Hampton Crabber crowd had turned on their own QB, and the comparison between the two squad's quarterbacks was obvious.
    Boyd finished the first half completing six out of eight passes for 62 yards, two touchdowns, and one interception. In the second half, Phoebus simply pushed Hampton's defensive line all over the field, and controlled the game with their rushing attack: Hampton could not get their hands on the ball. When they did, the Crabbers had no passing attack. Finally, they gave up passing the ball, and even though down 21-6, they were forced to run the ball even when conventional wisdom would have indicated that the only hope would have been to try to pass in order to catch up.

        November 9, 2007    
   
A. J. Price . He's a senior at South Lakes High School, and I drove up Route 29 North, then took a right on to Route 66 East, to see him play tonight. It was very disappointing.
    A. J. Price is listed as being 6-4 175, and supposedly, according to 'rivals.com,' the University of Virginia is recruiting him very hard. South Lakes High is located in Reston, Virginia, but they were playing on the road in Vienna, Virginia against James Madison High in a
Group AAA (large schools) playoff game.
   To describe A. J. Price , he was wearing jersey number 2, his team had on a white helmet, white shirts, white pants, white socks with high blue socks under those socks, white shoes, and he had a blue towel facing backwards behind his waist. The home team, James Madison High, had dark purple shirts, and black helmets, pants, socks, and shoes. The field was an expensive artificial turf that looked brand new. It was a large stadium behind a very old high school. For most of the first half, it was cold and raining: it was a good thing I was wearing several layers of clothing and jackets.    So I drove 100 miles or so from Charlottesville, Virginia to see the game. But A. J. Price did not catch a pass the entire game. Even worse, South Lakes High didn't even throw him the ball until the 6:59 mark of the second quarter! (High school football games are composed of four 12-minute quarters).
   Why didn't they throw A. J. Price the ball? From experience, I've noticed that there are always the same reasons for this. Usually, it's because the player is just not that good: a coach gets the ball in to the hands of his best player.
   South Lakes lost this game 35-3, ending their terrible season with a 3-8 record, while James Madison improved to 9-2. A. J. Price may be closer to 160 than 175: he is very thin. He might need a year at prep school after college for that reason. Who knows how good he really is? The quarterback on South Lakes does not have a college-strength arm, and did not seem able to throw the ball more than 20 yards past the line of scrimmage.
    A. J. Price also punts for South Lakes High, and he had a punt blocked when the defense poured in on him at the 8:50 mark of the first quarter. The fumble was returned for a TD, giving James Madison it's first lead at 7-6.
    A. J. Price made a nice slashing kick off return at the end of the first quarter. In the middle of the third quarter, South Lakes finally threw to him again, but by this point they were down 21-6, and he was double-teamed on each play: James Madison High was using one defender 5 feet from him at the line of scrimmage, and a second defender 15 yards back behind the first defender.
   So what should I make of all of this? A player can be a big-time player but play for a team that has no quarterback, no running game, poor pass-blocking, and a coach that doesn't know how to use him. He can also be a late bloomer due to a lack of physical strength. But as of right now, I'm skeptical about this player, and he looks more like a very tall Division 1-AA player instead of a Division 1-A prospect. (Yes, I know: 1-A and 1-AA terms are no longer used. But I prefer to use them until I'm convinced that their use is not coming back. Haha.)

    November 4, 2007    
    6-4 190 quarterback Quinton Hunter (see photo at right with him holding the football, ready to run or pass) photo of Quinton Hunter plays quarterback for Orange County High School, which is about 25 miles north of Charlottesville, Virginia. He's a member of the Class of 2009, who colleges are watching closely.
    Quinton Hunter is a big-time threat as a runner or a passer for the Group AA school. He also has played basketball for the Hornets beginning with his freshman season. In his team's most recent game on November 2, Hunter passed for 186 yards and ran for 145. At least one ACC school has already offered him a scholarship. He played wide receiver as a freshman, when current West Virginia University quarterback Brad Starks was the Hornets QB.

    November 2, 2007
       Went to Sterling, Virginia. Drove up 29 North from Charlottesville up to Route 66, then took it east. Sterling is 112 miles from Charlottesville, Virginia.
   I was going to Dominion High School, a 5 year-old high school (Group AA) that was hosting Loudoun County High of Leesburg, Virginia in a 7:30 Friday night football game on 11-2-07.
   The Loudoun County Raiders won this game, 14-3. Dominion High looked terrible on offense: they had the worst passing game I've seen this year. However, I had come to this game to scout just one player-Dominion High's 5-9 165 freshman running back Deandre Reaves (see his photo at right, courtesy of Heather Terwilliger) of the Loudoun (Virginia) Times-Mirror.
photo of deandrereaves    Deandre Reaves is their whole offense. He came in to the game averaging over 137 yards-per-game rushing. But he was stopped tonight, running for just 65 yards on 17 carries. With no passing game, his team could not keep the defense honest After tonight's game, he now has rushed for 1,274 yards on 202 carries for a 2-7 team, for a 6.3 yards-per-carry average. He has scored 11 total touchdowns on the season.
   One thing that stood out as I watched Deandre Reaves was his quickness. He reminded me of a Tiki Barber-type runner. Notice that I didn't say that he was another Tiki Barber! He just reminded me of a Tiki Barber-kind of a runner: fast, quick acceleration, very hard for a defender to get a good shot at, and tireless.
   To describe Deandre Reaves for those who have never seen him: he wore number 20, is African-American with fairly medium colored skin, 5-9 165 but seems much stronger for his weight, wore tape on both wrists, and like his team, everything he wore was black-his helmet, jersey, pants, socks, and shoes. His jersey number is white, and in his team's old-fashioned offense, one player lines up to the quarterback's left, diagonally behind the left tackle and facing the player snapping the football. Deandre Reaves may play this position, or he may play the same position on the quarterback's right. Of course, he may also play the third position, which is that of a running back who lines up right behind the quarterback or slightly behind and to one side of the quarterback.
   This type of offensive formation is ancient. It's also odd, because even with 4 players in the offensive backfield, the four line up as close together as possible to confuse the defense, and Deandre Reaves then winds up taking the handoff literally just a couple of feet behind the offensive line. In my opinion, this cuts down on taking advantage of his speed, and turns him more in to an inside runner.
   To describe the high school that Reaves plays for, Dominion High has had a poor season, and fan attendance was weak. Only about 1/3rd of the stadium was filled. It had just one banner out, that said, "Crush County!" referring to Loudoun County. On the top of the scoreboard were the words, "Home Of The Titans." There was a big "T" in the middle of the field, which was very worn out down the middle between the 20 yard-lines.
   It's hard to imagine that Deandre Reaves is merely a high school ninth-grader. If Deandre Reaves continues to put on weight, he'll be the best running back in Virginia as a tenth-grader next season. But who knows? Only time will tell. So much can happen after a player's freshman season in high school: it's a long time between then and college football. A player who appears to be a college football prospect can wind up being a future NFL prospect or a Division III (non-scholarship) college player, depending on if he keeps developing.
   It will be fun watching Deandre Reaves play and develop.

    October 26, 2007    
    It was a disappointing day: I phoned Brooke Point High School in Stafford, Virginia early this morning to ask if tonight's home game against fellow photo of chasebarnett Group AAA member Albemarle High of Charlottesville, Virginia was still scheduled to be played. I was told that it was going to be played.
    So, I drove up. It was barely raining. Stafford is not too far from Washington, D.C. and about 80 miles from my home near the University of Virginia. When I arrived at Brooke Point High School, 3 hours before the game, I instantly knew something was wrong: the stadium was unlocked, but no one was there. A call to the local newspaper confirmed that the game had been postponed until Monday!
    Anyway, the player I had driven up to see was 5-9 180 11th-grader Chase Barnett of Brooke Point High (see photo above, courtesy of Fredericksburg.com). Chase Barnett rushed for 379 yards in his last game! On the season, he has ran for 1,301 yards on 172 carries, and has scored 15 times. He also was one of the summer stand outs at camps with his blinding speed.
    Unfortunately, in scouting high school players, bad weather and late cancellations come with the territory.

    October 19, 2007    
    Tonight I drove up near Washington, D.C. to Woodbridge, Virginia, and at Woodbridge High School I saw the host Vikings take on cross-town rival Forest Park High School, also of Woodbridge, VA.
    I was here to see Forest Park's Brandon Scott, a 6-4 190 11th-grade wide receiver. For the second straight Friday I also saw photo of awilliams Woodbridge High's outstanding running back De'Antwan Williams (see De'Antwan Williams in the photo at right, wearing number 34). Williams is a terrific player who has now gained over 1,000 yards in each of his four seasons on the Woodbridge High School varsity! One thing that makes this impressive is that Woodbridge is one of the largest high schools in Group AAA, which is the biggest classification in Virginia, and it has a long tradition of having winning records.
    Although I come to scout players, not to report on games, two things made this game bizarre. For one thing, the game was delayed for over an hour in the third quarter when a Forest Park High player went down on the field, not moving. It was eventually learned before he was removed from the field that his leg was broken. But almost immediately as soon as he went down, it began raining. The rain came down harder and harder, and was soon followed by winds that caused umbrellas to serve no use! It was basically like a small hurricane. Most of the fans left the stadium, as did the Woodbridge football team. The player lay there with almost no one around him, through out this weather. Finally, when the weather died down, he was carted away.
    The game resumed on the quagmire of a field. After two plays, another player went down, possibly seriously injured with a spinal injury, the game was stopped for 20 more minutes, and a second ambulance took this player away also. Incredibly, the game was still continued. The game finally was played to it's finish with a small number of fans remaining!Woodbridge won 17-12.
    De'Antwan Williams had several great runs in this game. He had a 55 yard-run down to the Forest Park High 12 yard-line with 5:30 left in the game. At the 10:24 mark of the first quarter, he had a 59-yard touchdown run called back due to a penalty. His 3-yard touchdown run at the 1:45 point of the first period put Woodbridge ahead 14-3.
   But the player I came to see play was Brandon Scott of Forest Park High. Wearing number 7, he looks like a future NFL player. But so what? It's performance that counts, and he was unimpressive, as he has been all year. However, he has been held back by injuries. He has been held out of games this year due to an injury, and as a result, didn't even start tonight. He did catch a 9-yard pass with 6:51 to go in the second quarter with Forest Park ahead 14-12. Brandon Scott also caught a poorly-thrown, too-high 7-yard pass at the 10:41 mark of the third quarter.
    Those were his catches for the night. To be fair to Scott, Forest Park's offense puts him out near the sideline, which means that there are no short passes designed to get him the ball, and because Woodbridge High's pass rush was fierce, the Forest Park High quarterback just didn't have enough time to set up to throw the ball. Still, Brandon Scott did not look like one of the top 100 juniors nationally, as "rivals.com" has him rated!

    October 12, 2007    
    I went to Potomac High in Dumfries, Virginia to see them host Woodbridge High of Woodbridge, Virginia. Woodbridge High is located outside of Washington, D.C. in Stafford County. Woodbridge has one of the top juniors in the country, 5-7 180 running back De'Antwan Williams. He's rated among the top 100 11th-graders in the country by "Rivals.com"
   The game was played at Potomac High's Chuck Hall Memorial Stadium, where I've seen the Panthers play in the past. De'Antwan Williams wore his usual number 34 in the first half, and number 11 in the second half. According to sportswriter Dave Utnik of the "Potomac News", De'Antwan Williams was hit "so many times...Potomac... ripped the jersey right off his back."
   Although he's 5-7, he's powerful enough to play Division 1-A football right now. However, he needs to build up his shoulders to ever star at the highest level.    Although he did carry the ball 36 times for 198 yards, he didn't dominate this game: his team could only manage 5 points. However, he did have one superb 75-yard run down to Potomac's 4 yard-line with 10:15 left in the 3rd quarter
   Potomac led the Woodbridge Vikings 10-3 at the half. Potomac won 17-5. After 6 games, De'Antwan Williams now has carried the ball 127 times for 836 yards and 8 touchdowns for a team that is small in numbers and size.

    October 5, 2007
    Went to see a football game involving Group A Wilson Memorial playing on the road against host James River High School. Wilson Memorial has 6-0 170 junior placekicker Ben Hopewell, who came in to the game having booted 9 out of 16 field goals in just 5 games. Ben Hopewell is already probably the best field-goal kicker in Virginia.
   He had a strong leg on place kicks. His punting was very poor: however he's not known for his punting, and is not predicted to punt in college. As for his kickoffs? I don't know if he's going to kickoff in college. The future? Nothing special really.
   To describe Ben Hopewell, he wore number 3, his team wore gold helmets, white jerseys, and green pants. James River High School won this game 31-17, but it wasn't even that close. James River High wore black helmets, jerseys, and pants. James River High is located about 30 miles east of Roanoke, Virginia.
   Ben Hopewell's first punt was a 38-yarder that was poor: it was low and wobbled. But with 5 seconds to go in the first quarter, and his team trailing 7-0, he boomed a 37-yard field goal that would have been good from 50 yards-out!
   His following kickoff was not good: it just went from the 40, where he kicked off, to the other team's 15 yard-line. At the 2:07 mark of the 2nd quarter, after Wilson Memorial High School scored a TD, Ben Hopewell kicked the extra point: the snap was poor, his place-holder fumbled it, but Hopewell kicked it through anyway.
   His kickoff was tremendous: it went 8 yards-deep in to the end zone. His kickoff to open the second half was good: it went down to the 5 yard-line. At the 1:16 mark of the 4th quarter, he booted the PAT for his team's 17th and last point. What kind of a prospect is he? Well, you don't get a scholarship, no matter how many field goals you can kick in high school, unless you can kick kickoffs well, and he can't do that yet. But there is certainly plenty of time to improve on that. His field goal kicking makes him one of the nation's best for next year.

    September 28, 2007
   Saw the Hampton-Woodside game at Darling Stadium on Friday, September 28, 2007. The game was played at 7:00 P.M. The home team was 4-0 Hampton High. The Crabbers were hosting the visiting Wolverines of Woodside of Newport News, Virginia. 5-10 170 junior running back Tron Martinez of Hampton is amazing. Fastest high school player in Virginia? What a player! Hampton has other players who are Division 1-A prospects although they're just juniors. Hampton won 47-0. Went to see junior linebacker number 66 of Hampton High, Tyrel Wilson play, but he was not impressive at all. His coach, Mike Smith, once said that by next year, this Class of 2009 player will be the "best high school player in the country"!? Number 78 for Woodside, 6-3 330 sophomore offensive-defensive tackle Venson Jones has some college potential Tron Martinez ran for a 1-yard touchdown at the 0:29 point of the 1st quarter. He ran for a 13-yard score at the 8:27 mark of the first quarter. Then he ran for a 17-yard touchdown at the 4:40 point of the 2nd period. Finally he ran for a 2-yard TD at the 11:00 mark of the 4th quarter. He also had outstanding runs of 37 yards at 4:36 point in the 1st quarter, and 44 yards at the 1:22 mark of the 3rd period. What a player this speedster is!

     September 21, 2007
    I went Oscar Smith High School in Chesapeake, Virginia to see visiting Great Bridge High School of Chesapeake play the host team in a 7:00 P.M. Friday night game.
   Tim Smith, a 6-1 190 junior wide receiver for Oscar Smith High, was one of the underclassmen I had come to watch in this game. He's a target of many Division 1-A programs as a member of the high school Class of 2009. Throwing to Tim Smith was Phillip Sims, a 6-2 190 sophomore quarterback photo of philsimms (see him in a not-very-good photo from the Oscar Smith High game program at below-right), wearing #14. He started as a freshman last season, and will be a Division 1-A prospect by his senior year.
    However it should be mentioned that only about 2/3rds of high schools I've been to even have game programs at all. And only about 1/5th of high schools have game programs that have individual photos of players. So let's hear it for Oscar Smith High!
    Oscar Smith destroyed Great Bridge, 47-0 in this massacre. Tim Smith caught a 9-yard touchdown pass with 10:20 left in the 2nd quarter of this game, making the score 27-0.
   An interesting side note to this game was the presence of a high school sophomore who has just transferred to Great Bridge High. I'll discuss him more later this year once he starts playing for Great Bridge. However, he appears to be anywhere from 6-8 to 6-10 and 300-400 pounds. He is brand new to the sport of football, and as of right now, is just out there on the field, giving moral support to his teammates as he observes pre-game warm-ups. We'll see what his interesting future holds.

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