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First and Ten

BOOK: First and Ten
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south
side
sports

First and Ten

Jeff Rud

O
RCA
B
OOK
P
UBLISHERS

Copyright © 2007 Jeff Rud

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

Rud, Jeff, 1960-
First and ten / Jeff Rud.
(South Side sports ; #3)

ISBN 978-1-55143-690-6

I. Title. II. Series: Rud, Jeff, 1960- . South Side sports ; #3
PS8635.U32F57 2007 jC813'.6 C2006-907052-0

Summary
: Matt is trying to make the football team while getting to know his long-absent father.

First published in the United States, 2007
Library of Congress Control Number:
2006940597

Orca Book Publishers gratefully acknowledges the support for its publishing programs provided by the following agencies: the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program and the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Province of British Columbia through the BC Arts Council and the Book Publishing Tax Credit.

Cover design: John van der Woude
Cover photography: Getty Images

Orca Book Publishers
PO Box 5626, Stn B.
Victoria, BC Canada
V8R 6S4

Orca Book Publishers
PO Box 468
Custer, WA USA
98240-0468

www.orcabook.com
Printed and bound in Canada.

010 09 08 07 • 4 3 2 1

For my brothers, Barry, Tim and Mike,
and their families.
JR

Contents

Acknowledgments

chapter one

chapter two

chapter three

chapter four

chapter five

chapter six

chapter seven

chapter eight

chapter nine

chapter ten

chapter eleven

chapter twelve

chapter thirteen

chapter fourteen

chapter fifteen

chapter sixteen

chapter seventeen

chapter eighteen

Acknowledgments

The author would like to thank Orca publisher Bob Tyrrell for his continued support of the South Side Sports Series, as well as Orca associate publisher and editor Andrew Wooldridge for his keen eye and sound judgment. The author would also like to thank Lana, Maggie and Matt for providing their love, support and plenty of peace and quiet.

chapter one

His thighs ached, his lungs burned for oxygen and his entire body was coated in sweat. Lined up with fifty other huffing kids wearing shoulder pads, white midriff jerseys, shorts, helmets and cleats, Matthew Hill tried to raise his own knees as high as Coach Reynolds was demanding from his spot on the grass ten feet in front of the players.

“Come on, you guys! Drive up those legs,” the coach shouted as he raised his clipboard toward the cloudless blue sky. It was four o'clock, and the hottest part of the afternoon had already passed, but it was still uncomfortably humid.

Mid-August was normally the time when Matt would be playing hoops at Anderson Park or swimming out at Long Lake. But this year was different. This year, he had decided to go out for middle-school football. And football, Matt was quickly discovering, was not a sport for wimps.

“Okay, bring it in,” Coach Reynolds ordered. The boys trying out for the South Side Middle School varsity team seemed to groan collectively as they gathered in front of the coach, some gasping for air with their hands planted on their thighs. After a couple of months of summer holidays, this was a rude awakening for everybody.

Matt thought he had kept himself in decent shape over the summer. It hadn't been that long since baseball season ended, and he had been playing pickup hoops at Anderson on an almost nightly basis. But this was a different kind of workout. He was finding Coach Rick Reynolds, a short, balding man in his mid-fifties who wore a matching maroon golf shirt and long-cut coach's shorts with a silver whistle around his neck, to be a slave driver. The main point of his drills so far seemed to be to show the players that they were in no shape to play a “man's game” like football.

“I hope you guys enjoyed your summer, because it's over now,” Coach Reynolds said, grinning slightly. “We're going to have to whip you into football shape in just three weeks. Anybody who's not ready for that knows where to turn in his practice gear.”

Several players groaned again. It was either a reaction to the workload ahead or, more likely, Matt guessed, a reaction to Coach Reynolds' hard-nosed style. There had been only two practices, but already Matt found himself missing the more even approach of Coach Jim Stephens, for whom he had played baseball and basketball at South Side as a seventh-grader.

“We'll do some more conditioning later, when it cools down a little,” the coach continued. “But right now we're going to work on positional play. I've got a coach stationed for quarterbacks, receivers, backs, defensive backs and linemen. So head on out to the station where you think you fit in best. We'll give you a shot at that position and then maybe move you around a bit before we decide where to put each of you.”

Matt had been waiting to actually touch a football. Through the first practice the previous afternoon, the coaches hadn't even taken the balls out of the large duffel bags dutifully packed around by the team's half dozen student managers. The South Side prospects had simply worked on stretching, calisthenics and running for the entire ninety minutes before heading for home, sore and exhausted.

That sort of experience wasn't what Matt had in mind when he had decided, against his mother's protests, to go out for football. He had pictured himself as a wide receiver, streaking down the sidelines and gathering in long passes, scoring touchdowns and spiking the ball in the end zone as the fans in the stands cheered wildly…

“Hill! Are you going to join us?” Matt's thoughts were interrupted by Kevin Stone, an assistant coach and the offensive coordinator for the Stingers. Embarrassed to be caught daydreaming, Matt hustled over to the fifteen or so kids who all wanted to be receivers.

It was a curious assortment of size, age and body type. At about five-foot-eight, Matt was in the middle of the group in terms of height and probably skinnier than most of the kids there. The tallest was Nate Brown, a ninth-grader who was already about six-foot-one and a blur in the open field. The shortest was five-foot-four Phil Wong, one of Matt's best friends who had also decided to go out for football as an eighth-grader.

“I know a lot of you kids have played football for a few years already,” Coach Stone said, addressing the group. “But for the benefit of those who haven't, I'm going to go over a few basics of the receiver position.”

Matt and Phil were among those the coach was referring to. Both had played organized basketball and baseball and even soccer, and both had thrown around the football plenty and played in pickup touch games in the neighborhood. But neither had strapped on football pads before, and their next real football tackle would also be their first. So far for these summer practices, they were wearing only shoulder pads, helmets and shorts, but even just having the pads sitting on his shoulders felt cumbersome and unnatural to Matt.

The coach explained how every receiver must run his “route” as if he was going to get the ball on every single play. If not, the defense eventually wouldn't bother covering him. Coach Stone showed the hopefuls how to get a quick start from a three-point stance off the snap of the ball. He then demonstrated how to catch the ball with the fingertips, absorbing the force of the pass before it hit the chest and securing the ball with two hands. Most of this just seemed like common sense to Matt. Somebody threw it and you ran fast and caught it. How hard could it be?

After watching the players catch passes from the coaches for fifteen minutes, Coach Stone blew his whistle. He motioned for Coach Reynolds to bring over the small group of quarterback prospects. There were only five boys in this group and they had all played football before. You had to be pretty confident in your abilities in order to go out for that position, Matt thought. The quarterback was the leader on offense and every play began with him. It wasn't a spot for somebody who wasn't absolutely sure of himself.

“Okay, guys,” Coach Reynolds said. “We're going to have you run a few routes for the quarterbacks. Nothing fancy, just simple ‘out' patterns. Let's do ten-yard routes, three-quarter speed. Quarterbacks, I want you to concentrate on footwork and form. Receivers, just try to run direct routes and make clean catches.”

Matt felt his heart race. He had caught hundreds of footballs messing around with Phil and his other friends. But he had never touched the ball in a real practice before today. Looking at the drill lineups he realized that he would be paired with Ricky Jackson, a seventh-grader who was just entering South Side this fall. Jackson wasn't big, but he was muscular and he had a swagger that Matt thought was unusual for a rookie. Ricky Jackson had a sizable reputation. He had been the star in Pop Warner football during his elementary school days at Hillside and had won the regional Pass, Punt and Kick competition, getting to perform in front of thirty thousand fans during halftime of a college game at Eton last fall.

Matt also recognized Ricky as the younger brother of Grant Jackson. Matt and Grant had had plenty of conflict the previous winter. Matt was relieved that Grant was moving on to South Side High and wouldn't be around this year. But he wondered whether Jackson's little brother would be trouble too.

Matt and Jackson were paired in the fourth group of the drill. Following Coach Reynolds' instructions, Matt blasted off his three-point stance, ran ten yards downfield and cut sharply out to the right. Just as he made his move outside, Ricky Jackson delivered the ball on a perfect, tight spiral. Matt gathered the pass in full stride with his fingertips, pulling it into his body, the way the coaches had shown them. It felt great to catch the ball like this with everybody watching.

“Nice job…Hill, is it?” Coach Reynolds barked. Matt nodded. So far, so good, he thought.

The passing drills continued for another fifteen minutes, with Coach Reynolds changing the routes of the receivers, from a ten-yard out, to a five-yard buttonhook, in which he directed the receivers to run straight ahead for a few steps, spin around and catch the ball in a play designed for short-yardage situations. Matt was paired with each of the quarterback prospects during these drills. He was most impressed with ninth-grader Kyle James, a lanky, six-foot left-hander who delivered the ball on a powerful line to his receivers. Matt knew James had shared the starter's job the previous season with ninth-grader Dave Tanner, who had since graduated. James was just about everybody's pick to be the South Side starter this year too.

Finally, Coach Reynolds called all the receivers into a huddle with the quarterback hopefuls. “Let's see how much speed you kids have,” the coach said. “Now that you're warmed up, I want you to run a straight fly pattern at full speed. That means explode off the snap, and just keep running straight down the field. The qbs will hit you at about twenty yards. Everybody got it?”

The players nodded. Although they had been mixed with different quarterbacks throughout the drills, Matt did a mental count and noted he would be paired with Ricky Jackson once again for this drill. When it came their turn, he again shot off the line and headed downfield at full speed. About eighteen yards into his route, Matt slowed a tad as he turned his head backward, looking for the ball. Bad idea. Jackson had thrown the pass hard, trying to hit him on the dead run. The football was coming too high. Matt leapt as far as he could to grab it, but it wasn't even close. The ball landed beyond him, bouncing harmlessly down the turf.

Jackson removed his helmet and shook his head. Then Matt watched as he turned and glanced toward the chain-link fence that lined South Side's practice field.

Leaning over the fence was a large heavy-set man with graying hair, a reddish face and a maroon South Side cap, just like the ones the coaches wore. He was kicking at the grass and appeared to be muttering under his breath. Matt couldn't tell what he was saying, but it was pretty obvious he wasn't happy.

“Hill, you have to run the pattern right through,” Coach Reynolds yelled. “You slowed down. That's an incompletion. Worse yet, it can cause an interception. Always finish your route.”

Matt nodded. He knew he had made a mistake. The quarterbacks and receivers came together as the coach called for a final huddle at midfield. Matt glanced at Ricky Jackson, whose spiky black hair was soaked with sweat. “Sorry, man,” he said to Jackson. “I should have kept running on that.”

BOOK: First and Ten
11.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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