WOODSIDE (VA) To Open Football Season in Canton, Ohio

Woodside will be traveling to Canton, Ohio, site of the
Pro Football Hall of  Fame, to open their football season
season in late August, against the GlenOak Golden Eagles.
As seen on Recruit757.com

For the second straight year, the Woodside football team will be traveling for their sole non-conference game. However, this season’s trip should be more memorable than last year’s jaunt to Rock Hill, South Carolina, as the Wolverines will change course and head north to Canton, Ohio, site of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, to challenge the GlenOak Golden Eagles in both teams’ season opener.

Last year’s opponent, Northwestern, ended last season as a 14-0 4A state champion in South Carolina, and also won the state crown in 2013. They gave the Wolverines fits last August with their ability to match the high-octane offense of Woodside, as evidenced by their 47-23 win.

This year’s opponent, GlenOak may be a better match for Woodside. The Golden Eagles finished its 2015 campaign with a 7-4 record and opening round 41-13 playoff loss to Mentor High. GlenOak can score bunches of points (28.9 avg. last year), but also sported a defense that gave up an average of almost 23. This could work well for Woodside, a team that has averaged 33 points per game over the past three seasons.

Many of the featured players for Woodside will be back in action as the team opens its season in Canton. Quarterback Tyhier Tyler returns as the starting quarterback and last year’s leading scorer Tamir Walker will continue to get his share of carries in the Wolverines Wing-T offense. Other key returnees include Demetri Banks on offense and D’Angelo Chesson on defense. Chesson single-handedly kept the Wolverines in games against Bethel and Denbigh with key touchdowns, as Woodside finished their regular season 7-3 before losing a thrilling 34-27 double-overtime playoff opener to Grassfield.

Before they attack the Peninsula District schedule next year, they will have a chance to witness football history.

Wolverine coach Danny Dodson plans to take his team up “a bit early” to get in some sightseeing before the game on Friday, August 26th, a wish that should be possible since school will not be in session until after Labor Day. The team will scrimmage against Lake Taylor (Aug. 11) and York (Aug. 18th), before leaving for Ohio on Wednesday the 24th.

One of their stops will be the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Dodson is hoping to pay the admission fee for all of his players, which is part of the $10,000 - $12,000 he feels the team will need to raise to cover the trip.


And after they get to Ohio, their next goal will be to cover the Yellow Jackets, and earn a key season-opening win before diving into their nine-game Peninsula District schedule.

TRACK SHORTS: VOL IV: PHOEBUS WINS 3A STATE TRACK TITLE

Virginia Catholic League -- Not Happening in 2016-17; Future Uncertain

The proposed Virginia Catholic League will not be forming for the 2016-2017 school year, and opinions vary as to whether the league will be conceived at all.

Under the initial concept, the four Catholic high schools from Northern Virginia (Bishop Ireton, Bishop O’Connell, Saint John Paul the Great, and Pope Paul VI), Benedictine from Richmond and Bishop Sullivan in Virginia Beach would merge to form a separate athletic entity.

The possibility of creating such a league was the topic of a Washington Post story on January 7, 2016 by Brandon Parker, and was published a week after five of the six school’s athletic directors met at Saint John Paul the Great in Dumfries to discuss the idea. The idea of a six-team VCL became realistic in late 2015 as O’Connell withdrew its football team from the highly competitive Washington Catholic Athletic Conference (WCAC). For a school to compete as a full member of the WCAC, it must compete in either basketball or football, or both.

At the time, O’Connell Athletic Director Joe Wootten told the Post that the “exploratory committee of sorts” was engaged in “very preliminary” talks. He added that “this is more so something to look at two or three years down the road.”

Six months later, little seems to have changed, except that the formation of a VCL for the 2016-17 school year will not happen. As for the future, there is no certainty of the league forming, mainly because the first meeting has not developed into a second.

Bill Simmons, Athletic Director at Ireton, recently said, “I don't see this happening. We talked about football just to see and fill up our schedules. The developments at (Bishop) Sullivan make it less likely even that will continue. Northern Virginia schools can get all of that approach in the WCAC without going to Virginia Beach.”

Rich Hine, Athletic Director at Bishop Sullivan, told Recruit757 that the Crusaders will stay in the Tidewater Conference of Independent Schools (TCIS), but that the football team will play an independent schedule, analogous to Notre Dame, which once competed at the college level in the Big East for all sports except football. At the time of the Post article, Hine noted that several WCAC teams had called him to explore the possibility of scheduling a game.

Bishop Sullivan’s entry into the upper echelon of prep football schools was cemented after the hiring of coach Chris Scott, who stepped down from the same position at Ocean Lakes after sporting an 86-10 record, while winning a state title in 2014. Several of Scott’s star players including Khalan Laborn, are also transferring to Sullivan, immediately making them one of the better teams in Virginia, private or public.

Ryan Hall, Athletic Director at Benedictine, also stated that the league “will not happen” next year, but left open the remote possibility of a future merger. Hall noted that there was a lot of work needed if a Virginia Catholic League was to be formed.

“We would need to sit down and draw up a mission and vision statement – one that matches with each school’s Catholic identity,” said Hall. “It’s not like you can schedule the games, hand out a trophy and call it a day.” He added that another meeting would have to be scheduled in the future to discuss these matters, and “that meeting has not happened yet.”

On the other side, Hall added, “We are definitely scheduling each other for football next year.”
Here’s how a Virginia Catholic League might look

1)    Benedictine (2015 record – 10-2 – VISAA Div. I State champions)
2)    Bishop Ireton (2015 record – 8-3 – VISAA Div. I runner-up)
3)    Bishop O’Connell (2015 record – 1-8, 0-7 WCAC, #12 in VISAA Div. I)
4)    Bishop Sullivan (2015 record – 4-6, 3-2 TCIS, #6 in VISAA Div. II)
5)    Pope Paul VI (2015 record – 2-8, #11 in VISAA Div. I))
6)    Saint John Paul the Great (2015 record – 7-4 - #5 in VISAA Div. I)

In fact, Ireton and Sullivan will square off in each team’s opening game, and Benedictine will open their season on August 27th against John Paul the Great. Last fall, Ireton and Benedictine met in the VISAA Division I state final, a game that Benedictine won 35-6.

Currently, Ireton, O’Connell, John Paul the Great and Paul VI compete (John Paul the Great on a limited basis) in the WCAC, a league which will become more elite with the recent $16 million donation from Under Armour founder Kevin Plank (’90) to his alma mater, WCAC member St. John’s College High School. The money will be spread throughout the school’s programs, but can be used for capital expenditures, such as enhanced athletic facilities.

Benedictine competes as an independent school, and all six Catholic schools are also members of the Virginia Independent School Athletic Association (VISAA) as Division I or II participants. There are four divisions in the VISAA, and inclusion in Division I is defined by the enrollment of over 180 students per gender.

However, according to Hine, “VISAA determined, after the 2015 season, to consolidate the football teams into three divisions - from the four that were previously in play.  With that re-divisioning - Bishop Sullivan was moved up to Division I, and is now the smallest school in Division I.”  All other major VISAA sports have three divisions, while several (i.e. cross-country and track) are divided into two.

The six schools vary in size from 429 total students at Sullivan to over 1,150 at O’Connell.




Track Shorts - VOL III: McElroy, Holloway Win Multiple Events at 5A/6A State Track

With the completion of last weekend’s 5A/6A state track championships at Todd Stadium, many athletes saw their season end. A few standouts will be competing in the New Balance Nationals, which will be held on June 17-18 at North Carolina A&T University in Greensboro. Others will begin preparing for next football season, at either the high school or college level.

Henrico's Craig McElroy en route
to 5A state winning 6-6 high jump
(Photo by Mary Ann Magnant)
The 3A/4A state meet, held at Harrisonburg High School, was abruptly stopped with three events remaining, due to lightning. The original plan was to not complete the final events or crown team champions. However, after a social media backlash from frustrated athletes and parents, the meet resumed, and was completed on Wednesday. Phoebus won the 3A boys title, while Lafayette placed fifth in the 4A boys’ competition. A good portion of both team’s points came from stars of the gridiron, and their accomplishments, as well as other winners from the 3A/4A and 1A/2A meets, will be highlighted in next week’s edition of Track Shorts.
MEANWHILE, AT THE 5A/6A STATE MEET…
Craig McElroy Wins 5A High Jump and 110-Meter High Hurdles for Henrico
The 6-foot-5 McElroy put his height and slender frame to good use, winning two gold medals for Henrico at the 5A state meet.
The senior, who plays receiver and cornerback for the Warriors, captured both the high jump and 110-meter hurdles. McElroy also anchored the fourth place 4×100 relay team (42.64). As a squad, Henrico finished in fourth place with 35.5 points.
McElroy fell short of his goal to break 14 seconds in the high hurdles, but did clock a 14.35 for his winning effort, just .02 seconds from a personal best. In post-race comments, he made note of the humid and blustery conditions, which hovered over Todd Stadium on Saturday morning.
His winning high jump of 6-6 matched his best height, which he cleared at this spring’s Colonial Relays, held at William and Mary.
McElroy will have a final opportunity to earn new personal bests this season at the New Balance Nationals, where he will compete in the Emerging Elite high jump and Championship 110-meter hurdles. Presently, McElroy is verbally committed to compete at Norfolk State.
The Grant Holloway Show Continues
Competing in his final state meet, Grant Holloway added to his record of individual championships while leading Grassfield to a second-place finish in the 6A Boys classification.
Holloway, a University of Florida signee, won the high jump (6-6), long jump (25-5.75), and 110-meter hurdles (13.78), giving him a final tally of 11 individual state titles.
Grizzly Seth Harrell Places 2nd in Shot-Put
While Holloway was dominating the jumps and high hurdles, teammate Seth Harrell (OL/DL) put his own exclamation point on a sparkling junior year season. Harrell placed second in the 6A shot-put with a throw of 59-11.5. Benedict Draghi of Washington-Lee, the state leader in both the shot and discus, won the event.
Western Branch’s Micaiah Harris Wins 6A 100 and 200 Meters
As T.C. Williams’ Olympic trials sprint qualifier Noah Lyles sat on the sideline with a tweaked hamstring, the 6A boys’ sprints were wide open for contention.
And Micaiah Harris busted through the window of opportunity, winning both the 100 (10.66) and 200 (21.05) meters, helping Western Branch to a state title, the 18th and 19th for Coach Claude Toukene, as the Branch girls also won.
Harris, a junior who plays cornerback and free safety for the Bruins, will be the odds-on favorite to repeat the double gold performance next year.
Norris and Hagins Lead Bethel to 5A Boys Title
Isaiah Norris had a rough weekend. On Friday, the footballer (RB/DE) was sidelined from the first day of the 5A boys meet with food poisoning. However, on Saturday, he composed himself enough to win the 300-meter hurdles (38.59) at Todd Stadium, helping Bethel to the first-place team trophy, matching the one it won indoors.
Teammate Josh Hagins (OLB/RB) placed second in the 200 (21.77).
The 300-meter hurdle race also featured a second place finish from Hampton High receiver Burnell Pulley (39.04), seventh from Menchville running back/cornerback Malik Dixon (40.56), and eighth by Albemarle running back Arun Turay.
Nansemond River’s Waller Wins 5A 100 Meters
One week removed from his regional title in the 5A South 100-meter dash, Nansemond River running back Javon Waller broke the tape first again at the 5A state meet, covering the distance in 10.75, just .03 seconds ahead of Naukym Morton of North Stafford.
Lucas-Roscoe Wins 5A Triple Jump
Edison’s Greg Lucas-Roscoe, who played running back for the Eagles this past fall, captured the 5A triple jump with a distance of 46-6.5. Lucas-Roscoe also placed third in the long jump (23-1), helping the Eagles to an eighth place team finish.
Lee-Davis’ O’Connor Wins 5A Shot
Scott O’Connor of Lee-Davis helped his team to a third place finish (41 pts.) with a winning throw of 54-10.25 in the shot-put. O’Connor, a junior, who is listed in the football program as 6-2 and 200 pounds, played tight end and defensive end for the Confederates, who finished the 2015 season with a 10-3 record, losing in the playoffs to eventual state champion Highland Springs.