Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Foothill High School gets the attention of www.rivals.com

The following appeared on Tuesday in Rivals.com Sectionsports.com section…on Northern California high school football:

Forget everything you know about Northern Section football.

Didn’t take long, did it?

Teams from way up north in California like

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Zach Ray is the brother former 49er Ricky Ray.

Palo Cedro’s Foothill don’t get the attention from colleges and fans that they sometimes deserve due to relative location, but Cougars’ coach Bryon Hamilton is trying to change that perception.

“Part of the problem with recruiters is they can come up here and see four or five kids, or they can spend the same amount of time in the Bay Area and look at 40 or 50 kids,” Hamilton said. “People forget we’re here sometimes. We’re trying to change that mindset.”

After being snubbed for a state bowl game invitation after a perfect 12-0 season in 2007, Hamilton started scheduling tougher games outside of the Northern Section, and California for that matter. In 2008, the Cougars defeated Oregon’s South Medford, ranked No. 1 in the state of Oregon in some polls. A year later, Foothill beat Washington’s Union High School, a team that was ranked as high as No. 2 in Washington in 2009. Both victories came on the road in hostile environments.

“We tried to upgrade our schedule as much as possible, and we’re doing a better job of going out there and competing with other teams outside of our section,” Hamilton said

One team the Cougars were able to impress was Sacramento’s Grant High School, a perennial powerhouse that won the 2008 open division California state title. The Pacers travelled with Foothill up to Washington in 2009 to play Bellevue.

“The coaches (at Grant) couldn’t believe the level of football we were playing,” Hamilton said. “They really hadn’t seen us play, and there’s the misconception that Northern Section football isn’t very good football.”

Aaron Rodgers, current quarterback of the Green Bay Packers, played at Pleasant Valley in Chico and started to change that mindset. This season, a host of Cougars are trying to continue the notion that quality talent does indeed come out of some of California’s more remote locations.

Ray on the Rise
One current Foothill player who has NFL bloodlines is senior quarterback Zack Ray, whose brother Ricky played for the San Francisco 49ers and New York Jets before starring in the Canadian Football League. Through three games this season, Ray has passed for 538 yards and seven touchdowns in Hamilton’s shotgun zone-fly offense.

“He reminds me a lot of Kellen Moore,” Hamilton said, comparing his senior signal-caller to Boise State’s star quarterback. “He’s got that great poise in the pocket, and I think he’s going to grow to 6-foot-4, so he’s only going to get better.”

Two-headed Monster
The Cougars have a punishing running game,

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Slaton is averaging close to 10 yards per carry for Foothill.

which can be a quarterback’s best friend. Junior tailbacks Tevin Slaton and Addison Gillam form a powerful rushing attack. Slaton, a 170-pound speedster, gashes defenses after the 210-pound Gillam softens them up.

“I think Gillam is a (Division I) prospect,” Hamilton said. “He’s a 6-foot-3, 210-pound kid with legitimate 4.7 speed. He’s got great redirection skills that you don’t see from a lot of 6-foot-3 football players.”

Slaton has been the more productive of the two thus far, having rushed for 467 yards and five touchdowns, including a huge Week Two performance against Stockton’s Edison, where the junior ran for 233 yards and two touchdowns on 22 carries.

Perfecting the 3-3-5
Part of the reason Slaton has been slightly more productive has been Gillam’s commitment to playing defense. The Cougars have one of the best linebacker units in California, with Gillam leading a group that also includes seniors Mitchell McCarthy, Garrett Miller, Josh Latham and Rocco Taylor.

“We’re blessed with those five guys. We feel really, really good there [at the linebacker position],” Hamilton said.
All five players get significant minutes in

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Gillam stars at both running back and linebacker for the Cougars.

Hamilton’s 3-5-3 defensive scheme, and each full-time defensive player is averaging over six tackles per game for Foothill. Hamilton continues to be impressed with McCarthy, who earned the top linebacker award at the Boise State camp this summer and is fast approaching the Foothill school record for career tackles.

“He’s our strong safety/linebacker this year, and he’s the kid that gets the most attention,” Hamilton said of McCarthy. “He’s got a chance to be a D1 player, and he can definitely play a lot of places with his (3.6) GPA. Between him and Latham we’ve got two legit linebacker prospects.”

Led by the strong group of linebackers, Foothill’s defense got off to a strong start to the season, holding Dixon and Edison to six points each. The Cougars’ defense, a question mark coming into the season, answered all doubts by picking off six passes against the Vikings, as Trent Knight, Tucker Wilson and Ryan Smith each intercepted a pair of passes in the victory.

“At least they weren’t being selfish,” Hamilton joked.

Hamilton: “I want to get my kids signed”
But the head coach knows that his remote position in the state is no laughing matter, and that the team needs to continue to work to change the perception on Northern Section football. Hamilton isn’t just doing it for the sake of the program, however.

“Slowly but surely we’re changing people’s attitudes for the state games, because that’s obviously what’s on everybody’s mind,” Hamilton said. “But I want to get my kids signed. I’ve legitimately had 10 or 12 Division I players (in my eight years here), and I’ve only signed one.”

“This year I’ve got at least two or three of those type of kids, and if they don’t get looked at or signed it’s going to be a shame.”

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