Saturday, January 14, 2023

Best of the best: Arizona's elite high school program in each sport

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Arizona Private Schools Offering the Most Sports () - What’s the pecking order in 5A volleyball?



 

Robinson, the No. The Chandler Wolves are an Arizona powerhouse, winning five consecutive Open Division and 6A championships from There are currently 27 active players in the NFL who attended Arizona high schools. And cornerback Byron Murphy, another Saguaro product, is quickly emerging as a shut-down defender in his third season with the Arizona Cardinals.

With the extensive talent Arizona has and continues to produce, the Grand Canyon State is fast becoming home to top-tier high school programs that continue to churn out major college and pro football prospects.

Kids suggest plays during games. You wanna celebrate that touchdown or big hit, go right ahead. Mark Carter smiles. Just high school players and coaches and anyone who cares to watch. So why is everyone here? And Just Chilly, as any desert baller with a social media presence knows, is the s Chilly prefers not to divulge his birth name or his age, though he looks in his early 30s. His wardrobe is vintage hip-hop, which suits the former morning radio deejay. His stint at Chaparral ended long ago.

Chilly is cryptic about his past, too, though he allows that he was a decent high school linebacker in Massachusetts.

Whatever his provenance, Just Chilly is the truth to Valley footballers. Thus, coaches and, yes, college recruiters pay fealty to him. JCFC began in the spring of as the sobering isolation of the pandemic kicked in and Chilly received a plethora of texts from players and parents.

They were bored. They were restless. They were depressed. No cellphones. Flight Club, as in Fight Club. Keep it on the down-low. And simply for putting on an event of this scope, he deserves props.

Most guys his age are overwhelmed throwing a backyard barbecue. Tonight, in Maricopa, games are spread across seven fields; and with COVID restrictions lifted, coaches, parents and media types schmooze and dish. The biggest surprise of the night occurs during the Big Man Competition, an NFL-combine-style battery of skill, speed and strength tests.

Zachary Cook, who a year earlier had never played organized football, is named MVP. His prize: a comically large golden necklace. Flight Club does not end until after midnight. Two days later, an assistant at a school already overflowing with talent will shoot Cook a direct message on Twitter. He will decide that the juice is worth the squeeze. Forty-one years have passed since a public institution from the PUHSD—a city school—last won a state championship.

Those Trevor G. Browne High players are grandfathers now. In a town notorious for extended dry stretches, this is a doozy. Phoenix was then and is now the largest city in Arizona.

It also has a larger budget than any other district. And yet: 41 years. What gives? Part of the problem is, strangely enough, a lack of representation. For some struggling families, that meal plan alone is enough to ring the register. Urban flight translates into wins for the suburban powerhouses.

It also delivers cold, hard cash through something called Average Daily Membership ADM , the formula by which the state divides up the educational budget per district. Every three-star wannabe who transfers out is a budget cut; each one who transfers in is a windfall. The two schools are 15 miles apart, but those students, just by their ADM values, cover the cost of the transportation.

Steven Arenas is the coach at Phoenix Carl Hayden High, another campus located in a relatively blighted area. Last fall his Falcons enjoyed their first winning season in 25 years—but then, in late July, Kendre Pride, a 1,yard rusher as a sophomore, announced on Twitter that he was transferring to Basha High, one of a number of modern schools sprouting up amids the cacti in the burgeoning East Valley.

But what if that community never extends beyond the football team? Consider Chaparral, which during the —22 academic year employed no Black faculty or administration members. A search for community.

Mangini, under the watchful eye of his private passing coach, Jim Rattay, is throwing to a fixed target in the center of a circle as he orbits it.

First counter-clockwise, then clockwise. He also has a reputation as a QB whisperer. That would be his son, Tim. Max is finding it easier to toss a yard pass against his body while circling clockwise than to force a grin.

Lanky and giraffe-legged, Max is not well-suited for the new position. His dad is beginning to wonder whether the same may be said for the school. This tutorial arrangement is rife with irony. He was moved to cornerback. After his college career at Notre Dame and Arizona fizzled, Neal was employed as a security guard at Chaparral, but in he quit that job—curiously, at the time—without explanation. Relevant how? Rattay is sanguine as he assesses the Arizona high school landscape. He points out that Neal actually departed Chaparral after the fall semester of his senior season and finished his high school academics at Central High.

He acknowledges the pandemic of but does not blame it solely for the pandemic of unrestrained recruiting and cheating taking place directly under the nose of the AIA, with almost no repercussions. Zach, I was impressed with you at the Big Man competition this past weekend. You are way ahead of where our defensive linemen [sic] from Hamilton HS, Deuce Davis was as a sophomore and after 1 year at the varsity level, he had multiple offers and was selected as Gatorade Defensive Player of the Year.

According to Rule And he did, replying:. I was impressed with you at the competition. Our defense has ranked 1 in AZ for the last 3 years. The Chavez brass had learned a lesson from the Kezion Dia-Johnson episode. Which polarized the Valley. A surprising—or perhaps not so—number of coaches and parents admonished Doerfler to shut up and worry about his own school. Nonetheless, on Aug. And on Aug. I was just trying to [build up his confidence]. And, like the mobile classroom in which he teaches, somewhat untethered to the rest of Hamilton at the moment.

A pariah. I liked it. I was good at it. And I was… really… I was alive. Why coach? Walter White was a high school teacher, too.

But after hours he morphed into Heisenberg. He initially ventured into the dark recesses of the drug world believing that his mastery of chemistry would set him apart. He soon discovered that all of the ancillary duties—fending off the wolves, managing alliances, outsmarting the DEA—occupied as much of his time. And, well, he found that infinitely more stimulating. They all are. The paradox is obvious. Less obvious is the tug of war between opportunity and community.

With that in mind, here are eight key questions in fall sports, other than football, that we're watching. For football questions, The Republic's Richard Obert has you covered. Through the first month of high school volleyball, the top four schools in 5A seem to have separated themselves from the pack.

Separating them from each other, though, is a more complicated task. Take Horizon, for example. Notre Dame Prep, meanwhile, has its share of impressive wins over 6A schools, while Millennium knocked off Cactus Shadows in the season opener.

Corona del Sol has a No other school in the conference is above Those three schools could all make deep runs next month. Most of that disappointment, though, has come in two defeats to the Huskies.

   


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