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High School 2006 North-South All Star Game Official Thread (merged all)

tedginn05

Legend
JJHuddle has the rosters at this time.

http://www.jjhuddle.com/update/NorthSouthRosters2006.htm

We have a kid(Trent Nwaru) who is in this game on the South squad. Anyone going to this game should watch this kid. Has great speed and you will probably see a lot out of him in college. He has been offered by Navy.

Another kid who is not recieving any offers at this point is Angelo Babbaro. RB at Canfield. He was a little hell raiser that was causing us problems all night when we faced them in the playoffs.

If you have seen Brookhaven and their backs, this kid is a white Markell Lacy.
 
CPD

2/3/06

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

<H1 class=red>Ohio's All-Star games will play on same day

</H1>

Friday, February 03, 2006

Doug Lesmerises

Plain Dealer Reporter

Columbus- On Saturday, June 17 at 7 p.m., 102 of the best senior high school football players in Ohio will play the final games of their high school careers - 68 at Columbus Crew Stadium and 34 in Hershey, Pa., against a Pennsylvania team.

For the first time, Ohio's two major football all-star games, the North-South Classic and the Big 33, are being played on the same day. It might be the last time.

With college football programs expecting many of their incoming freshman to report earlier in the summer, the Big 33 this year moved up its regular July date. It landed on what is seen as the only available weekend late enough to avoid conflicts with high school graduations and early enough to beat the college report dates. In Ohio, that's North-South day.

The in-state game is in its 61st year, the oldest high school all-star game in the country. The Big 33 is in its 49th year, though Ohio has been matched as Pennsylvania's opponent only 18 times, including the past 13 years.

Ohio coaches voted to give the North-South game precedent, and in December picked 22 starters for both the North and South squads before the Big 33 coaches selected 22 starters. The teams filled out the rosters position by position, the Big 33 picking last.

There is enough talent to go around.

"The cupboard's not bare for the Big 33 team," said Amherst coach Keith Grabowski. "We take a lot of pride in Ohio football. We want to go to [Pennsylvania] and win, but we want to put on a good show in Columbus, too."

The problem is the priorities. Pennsylvania plays an East-West game the week after the Big 33 game. No one plays in both, but the Big 33 game takes the best players.

"We're hoping Ohio goes to that," said Mickey Minnich, Big 33 executive director. "But I don't know if that's going to happen, so this could be the last year for the Big 33 game with Ohio. We don't want that, but it could happen."

Ohio's best is the preferred opponent for Pennsylvania.

Juggling the rosters for the two games is a headache when players back out. But the real problem is obvious: Ohio doesn't want to lose to Pennsylvania with its B team. And Pennsylvania really doesn't want to see Ohio's B team win.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

[email protected], 216-999-4479
 
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North-South All Star Game June 17th

Four Buckeyes are in Ohio's North-South All-Star Game this Saturday.

Robert Rose is on the North squad, and Connor Smith, Jake Ballard, and Tyler Moeller will play for the South.

theozone
 
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Link

[SIZE=+2]Raiders' receiver thrilled about North-South game[/SIZE]
Thursday, June 15, 2006
JEFF HUNT
ThisWeek Staff Writer When the rosters for the 61st-annual Grange Insurance Ohio North-South All-Star Classic were released early last month, receiver Armand Robinson of Reynoldsburg High School couldn't help but have a smile on his face.
Yes, he was excited about getting the opportunity to play in the longest-running all-star football game in the country, but he was even more energized about the fact that Nate Davis of Bellaire was selected as one of the two quarterbacks.
Davis, a 6-foot-3, 215-pound Ball State recruit, led the Big Reds to a Division III state semifinal and 13-1 record, throwing for 2,932 yards and 42 touchdowns. In his tenure at Bellaire, Davis threw for 7,348 yards and 81 touchdowns, both program records.
Robinson (6-0, 197), who had 82 catches for 1,375 yards and 15 touchdowns in his two seasons at Reynoldsburg, said he has bonded with Davis.
"We've already made a connection with play calls and signals," said Robinson, who had 40 receptions for 531 yards and six touchdowns last season as the Raiders finished 6-4 overall and 3-2 (third) in the OCC-Buckeye Division. "He understands me and I understand him. He has a good arm."
Davis emerged as a pocket passer as a senior in the Big Reds shotgun spread attack because his mobility was limited after having to wear a bulky knee brace after tearing an MCL in the opener.
Robinson took a liking to Davis' non-scrambling ways.
"He's a pocket quarterback whereas (Reynoldsburg quarterback Lance Lasker) was more of a scrambler if something's not open," Robinson said. "(Davis) is more of a pocket guy and he'll wait for me to get open."
"I stay in the pocket," Davis said. "I'll get the ball to our guys, who are really good and are really fast. They can put moves on guys and they catch the ball really well. We haven't had dropped balls at practice or anything. I just want to see what (the North) defensive backs are like."
Huber Heights Wayne's Alex Earley (6-1, 195), a Youngstown State recruit, is the South's other quarterback. He completed 200 of 323 passes for 2,558 yards and 26 touchdowns last season and was named the Division I Offensive Player of the Year.
Besides Robinson, the South's receiving corps consists of Josh Chichester (6-6, 215) of West Chester Lakota West and Eric Arnett (6-5, 210) of Watkins Memorial.
"Chichester is good," Robinson said. "He's tall and can go up and get it. Arnett is talented, too.
"I'm the shortest guy out here," Robinson said. "I'm more of a get out there and get open kind of guy. Just run my route correctly and Nate will get it to me."
Chichester, a Louisville recruit, is ranked as the 36th-best receiver by Rivals.com and the 14th-best receiver in the country by Scout.com. He had 36 receptions for 723 yards and seven touchdowns last season.
"What you have to be careful of is doing too much," said Bellaire coach John Magistro, who heads the South team. "One thing we do want to do is take advantage of (Davis') arm and the receivers. We want to get guys down the field to hook up with (Davis)."
Defensively, the South will have middle-linebacker Angelo Magnone (6-3, 218), who help lead Steubenville to the Division III state championship. He was named the Division III Defensive Player of the Year after recording 110 tackles and seven sacks.
LOCALLY -- There will be eight central Ohio athletes participating, all on the South team. They are Robinson, Arnett, Clark Crum (OT, 6-7, 280) of Dublin Scioto, Aaron Huffman (DB, 6-4, 210) of Newark, Don Matheney (DL, 6-2, 295) of Lancaster, Kris Luchsinger (DL, 6-4, 230) of Watterson, Trent Nwaru (DB, 5-11, 182) of Beechcroft and Bryant Potter (LB, 6-0, 190) of Centerburg.
"It's an honor," Crum said. "You have to appreciate being lucky enough to play in this game."
With the South expected to pass a lot, Crum, a Virginia Tech-signee, is expected to be able to work on his pass-blocking skills.
"It's a lot of running side to side and back to back," he said. "It's a good test for me."
Crum, who is rated the No. 40 offensive tackle in the country by rivals.com, was the district Offensive Player of the Year in Division II last season, leading Scioto to an 8-4 record after losing to Louisville 28-23 in a regional semifinal.
Luchsinger, an Ohio University recruit and Dublin resident, had 104 tackles last season, including 12 sacks and 15 tackles for loss. He was the Division II district Defensive Player of the Year.
"We have a great team here," Luschsinger said. "We're playing in Crew Stadium, an awesome venue, and against a great North team."
FACTS -- Of the 68 players, 12 are planning to attend Big Ten schools, including four to Ohio State, three to Indiana, two each to Michigan and Wisconsin and one to Iowa. Coaches and players arrived in Columbus last Sunday and practices will be at Otterbein College.
Each team will make a variety of appearances before the game, including a visit to Columbus Children's Hospital, Columbus City Council and a Columbus Clippers game. The scholarship banquet will be at 7 p.m. Friday at the Greater Columbus Convention Center.
FUTURE BUCKEYES -- Heading to Ohio State and playing for the North is Robert Rose (DL, Cleveland Glenville). Rose had 77 tackles, including 45 solo, with 17 sacks as a senior. Those playing for the South include Jake Ballard (TE, Springboro), Tyler Moeller (LB, Cincinnati Colerain) and Connor Smith (OL, Colerain).
Ballard caught 22 passes for 363 yards and three touchdowns in just eight games at Springboro. He was also named the Division II Defensive Player of the Year after totaling 35 solo tackles and three sacks.
Moeller was the Division I Defensive Player of the Year after totaling 123 tackles, 15.5 sacks and 29 tackles for loss. He helped lead Colerain to the state title (15-0) as a junior, as did Smith, who was the Greater Miami Conference Offensive Player of the Year as a lineman where he had 130 knockdowns as a senior.
THE NORTH TEAM -- Canal Fulton Northwest coach Vic Whiting will head the North team. With Copley's DeLone Carter, the state's regular-season rushing leader (2,440 yards) and Mr. Football, electing to play in the Big 33 Football Classic on Saturday in Hershey, Pa., the North will attempt to fill the void by going to Amherst Steel's Alex Knipp (6-0, 190).
Knipp finished third in the state in all divisions with 2,008 yards (8.7 per carry) and was the first Lorain County running back to rush for more than 2,000 yards in consecutive seasons. Knipp, who also scored 30 touchdowns as a senior and 53 in his career, is a Ball State recruit.
In the backfield, Knipp will be joined by Miami recruit Jamel Miller (5-11, 195) of Tallmadge and Northwest's Scott Weber (6-1, 225). Miller rushed for 2,278 yards and scored 24 touchdowns as a junior and 2,128 yards and 27 touchdowns as a senior in leading the Blue Devils to a combined 25-3 record and consecutive Division II regional championships.
Weber, who will play at Ashland, was the Division II Offensive Player of the Year, rushing for 1,673 yards on 263 carries with 32 touchdowns as a senior after totaling 2,007 yards on 277 carries with 30 touchdowns as a junior. He ran for 4,891 yards in his career with 72 touchdowns in leading Northwest to the playoffs in all four years.
The North's starting quarterback will likely be Iowa recruit Ricky Stanzi (6-4, 200) of Mentor Lake Catholic. He was the Division III Offensive Player of the Year.
Stanzi's top receiving target may be Illinois recruit Joe Morgan (6-2, 175) of Canton McKinley. Morgan caught 39 passes for 1,018 yards last season, setting school records for yardage and touchdowns in a season. Nine of his 13 touchdown catches were of 45 yards or more.
Defensively, Rose and Jefferson Area's Anthony Mirando (LB, 6-2, 232), a Kent State recruit and the Ashtabula County Defensive Player of the Year last season, should man the middle. He finished his senior season with 133 total tackles (5.5 sacks) and 127 as a junior.
HISTORY -- The Classic is the longest running state all-star game in the nation and is operating under its third title, formerly being known as the North-South All-Star Game and the Dial All-Star Game. It is being held in Columbus for the sixth consecutive year and eighth time overall. The 2001 contest was the first in Columbus since 1976, when it was played in Ohio Stadium. From 1977-2000, it was held in northeast Ohio, including 20 times in Massillon's Paul Brown Tiger Stadium. It has been held in eight cities and nine sites.
The North won the first meeting 26-21 on Aug. 17, 1946 at Toledo Waite under Notre Dame coach Frank Leahy. The next season, South coach Wes Fesler of Ohio State and North coach Ray Eliot of Illinois led their teams to a 6-all tie in Canton. Since those first two contests, the Ohio High School Football Coaches Association has selected coaches for the Classic.
Kerry Hodakievic (1998) was the most recent Columbus-area coach to earn a victory in the Classic when he was coach at Upper Arlington as the South won 10-9. There have been only two other area coaches to have won the Classic: Hugh Hindman (Columbus North, 1957) and Dick Walker (Watterson, 1966).
The Classic has showcased some of the nation's premier players, including four who have won Heisman trophies: Vic Janowicz, Roger Staubach, Archie Griffin (twice) and Desmond Howard.
At least one Classic participant has played in 38 of the 40 Super Bowls, most recently Findlay's Ben Roethlisberger (2000) of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
LAST YEAR -- North tailback Tyrell Sutton of Akron Hoban ran for 203 yards and three touchdowns on 21 carries en route to being game MVP as the North totaled a Classic single-game record for points in beating the South -- coached by Scioto's Karl Johnson -- 45-17. Sutton went on to be named the Big Ten Freshman of the Year after rushing for 1,474 yards at Northwestern last season.
 
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Dispatch

6/16/06

NORTH-SOUTH CLASSIC

OSU recruits get respect among their all-star peers

Friday, June 16, 2006

Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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There is a certain cachet that comes with being an Ohio State football recruit, even among peers.

Eric Arnett has noticed it this week as a member of the South squad preparing for the Ohio North-South Classic on Saturday night in Crew Stadium. Three of his teammates are tight end Jake Ballard of Springboro, lineman Connor Smith and linebacker Tyler Moeller of Colerain, all bound for the Buckeyes.

"Definitely you can tell they’re OSU recruits," said Arnett, a receiver from Watkins Memorial. "When you first see them walk into the room before practice or something, you can hear everyone talking and whispering behind their back, about how they’re going to Ohio State.

"Like that kid," Arnett said, smiling at Moeller as he walked past at the end of a practice at Otterbein College. "But they’re all good guys."

If fate had been a little different, maybe Arnett, Dublin Scioto lineman Clark Crum and a few others would be joining those three at OSU this fall.

"I always get asked the same question: ‘Why aren’t you going to Ohio State?’ Because they didn’t offer," Crum said. "But there is no disrespect there. We’ve been giving Jake, Connor, Tyler a hard time, ‘Oh, there’s the Ohio State guys,’ but it’s all in fun.

"They’re happy with where they’re going, and the rest of us are happy with where we’re going."

Even if those routes might be considered dream detours.

"Ever since you were little, you’ve always been an Ohio State fan, growing up in the Columbus area especially," Arnett said. "But once you get into high school, you realize it’s a dream only a few people get to realize, only a select few. So you start looking at other schools and eventually you’ll find one."

The 6-foot-5 Arnett, blessed with a 92 mph fastball, is going to Indiana on a baseball scholarship.

The 6-7, 285-pound Crum is headed to Virginia Tech to play football; he committed to the Hokies almost a year ago.

"I was always an Ohio State fan, and they have a great program," Crum said. "But they didn’t offer me right away. They got Alex Boone last year, so they already had a big tackle. And Connor, he might play guard or tackle.

"Whereas at Virginia Tech, they only had two tackles on their roster and they recruited two this year, so it might be a little bit easier getting playing time."

Who knows what would have happened had Ohio State offered him a scholarship last summer, but the Buckeyes put him on hold to see how the rest of the recruiting class formed. As it turned out, OSU signed just two linemen (the other one being Cleveland Glenville’s Bryant Browning) in the 2006 bunch.

"I wanted to commit early, and I thought if Virginia Tech had enough confidence in me to offer early, I should respect that," Crum said. "They’ve got a great program down there, as you know, and a great coach. I’m looking forward to the move."

Which makes the game Saturday night his finale in front of a hometown crowd. As for Arnett, it will be his final football game, a sport he said he has enjoyed playing since first grade.

"This is kind of weird, knowing this is my last one," Arnett said. "It will be strange going to games next year at Indiana and sitting in the stands. That will probably make me want to play a little more."

But at least he is going out as an all-star.

"That means a lot, playing with the best players in Ohio," Arnett said. "And it would be nice to get a touchdown or something, just get something in there so they will remember me for a little bit longer."

[email protected]
 
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Dispatch

6/17/06


NORTH-SOUTH CLASSIC

OSU recruits will square off

Slowing down Rose sets up as difficult challenge for Smith

Saturday, June 17, 2006

Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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</IMG> </TD></TR><TR><TD class=credit width=200>ADAM CAIRNS DISPATCH </TD></TR><TR><TD class=cutline width=200>Ohio State recruits Robert Rose, left, of Cleveland Glenville and Connor Smith of Colerain are expected to test each other’s skills tonight in the North-South Classic. </TD></TR><TR><TD align=middle>
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Robert Rose came to the conclusion a few years ago that on the basketball floor he would be just another Rose. But put him on the edge of a defensive line and tell him to rush the passer and he becomes a thorny problem for opposing offensive linemen.
"He’s scary," Canal Fulton Northwest coach Vic Whiting said.
As coach of the North squad in the 61 st Grange Insurance Ohio North-South Classic in Crew Stadium (7 tonight), Whiting has watched Rose, a 6-foot-4, 255-pound defensive end from Cleveland Glenville, work all week and is impressed.
"He’s scary because he is an equalizer," Whiting said. "He is the one who is two steps above everybody else."
Which sets up an interesting scenario tonight. On occasion, perhaps frequently, the Ohio State-bound Rose will line up across from South offensive lineman Connor Smith of Colerain, who also is headed to the Buckeyes.
The last time they were on the same field they were on the same team, which won the U.S. Army All-American Bowl in San Antonio in January.
Now it’s going to be head-tohead confrontation.
"He has a variety of moves he can put on you," Smith said. "You just have to go out there and compete, really. I’m not going to try to think about it too much, but just go out there to play and have fun."
There were indications that Rose has thought about it a little, though.
"We talk all the time; he always brags about his (2004 state championship) ring," Rose said. "We were going to have the opportunity to play them in the state playoffs when I was a junior, but we lost the game before.
"So he always brags about his ring, and I can’t really say too much. But we always talk about going against each other."
Or as Smith recalled, "He likes to talk a little bit about how they would have beaten us – it’s all in good nature."
Spectators will get the chance to watch them tonight partly because a couple of years ago Glenville coach Ted Ginn Sr. convinced Rose that football was his sport.
"Coach Ginn asked me, do I want to be a LeBron James in football or an average person in basketball?" Rose said. "When I thought about it, I’d rather be like a LeBron in football."
Not that he has a reverse slam move on his pass rush, though there were times in the U.S. Army game when he did look as though he was dunking the quarterback.
"I just started focusing more on football," Rose said. "I stopped going to summer basketball games, stopped going to summer AAU games, summer basketball camps. It was all football. Football. Football. Football."
Not that the switch was easy psychologically.
Basketball was his first love, he said, and as long as he was the biggest man in the post, things were looking good. But when he capped out at 6-4, which would make him a beefy guard or small forward in college and beyond, he started to see the light.
"I started seeing everybody else blossoming, and I wasn’t blossoming, because I didn’t have the skills other people have at my height, at my size," Rose said. "I had to think. I don’t want to just be an average person in basketball. I’d rather be like a star in football."
[email protected]
 
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Scout.com (free)

6/18/06

Recap of the game by Steve Helwagen. Congratulations to Robert Rose who was voted defensive MVP.


Dispatch

6/18/06

HIGH-SCHOOL FOOTBALL

Stanzi, Rose help North roll over South 34-13

Sunday, June 18, 2006

Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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Ricky Stanzi and the North came out firing last night and wound up smelling like a Rose.

With Ohio State-bound defensive lineman Robert Rose of Cleveland Glenville setting up the gamechanging play in the first half, Stanzi, Marc Krauss and the rest of the North offense picked up the scent and rolled to a 34-13 win in the 61 st Grange Insurance Ohio North-South Classic in Columbus Crew Stadium.

Stanzi, of Mentor Lake Catholic and headed for Iowa, threw three touchdown passes, completing 7 of 13 throws for 172 yards, on the way to being named the game’s MVP.

Krauss, of Patrick Henry and on his way to Ohio University, caught two of the touchdown passes and received the North’s offensive MVP award.

"The last time I played a game was back in the fall, so to be back on the field was nice," Stanzi said. "I felt a little rusty at first, but … "

The rust flew off when he connected with Alex Knipp of Amherst Steele on a 72-yard catch-and-run with 2:05 left in the second quarter to give the North a 14-0 lead.

Sharing snaps with the other North quarterback, Rudy Kirbus of Cleveland St. Ignatius, Stanzi tossed two more TD passes to Krauss in the second half.

But while both offenses were trying to find their way, the monstrous Rose played hide-and-seek with the South offensive line and it paid big dividends on what was the game-turning play.

Rose, whom North coach Vic Whiting called "scary" earlier in the week, proved Whiting to be right on the first big play. At the South 36 late in the first quarter, the defensive end lined up at nose guard over South center Matt Evans of Dayton Chaminade-Julienne and a shotgun snap promptly sailed high and wide of quarterback Nate Davis of Bellaire.

By the time Davis caught up with the ball, defensive tackle Skylaar Constant of Bedford was also there. Constant’s hit sent the ball bouncing into the end zone, where he recovered it for the touchdown.

"I really didn’t say anything," Rose said of his sudden nose to nose with Evans. "I guess he was shocked to see me at nose. They were trying to move me around to disguise things a little bit. So I guess I kind of scared him a little bit."
Rose added a sack and several other hurries by Davis on the hot night. His next stop is Ohio State, where he will begin summer quarter on Monday.

Stanzi said the evening was a good cap to a nice experience as the North increased its advantage to 36-22-3 in the series

"It was great week with my teammates; we really bonded," Stanzi said.

The South had some big moments, such as Davis’ 5-yard touchdown pass to Josh Chichester just before halftime that gave it faint hope. And his 29-yard pass to Reynoldsburg’s Armand Robinson, bound for Miami University, cut the difference to 20-13 midway through the fourth quarter.

But Stanzi always answered, and then got backup from Kirbus, who threw the game’s last touchdown pass, a 32-yarder to Canton McKinley’s Joe Morgan with 5:10 left.

Robinson was the South’s offensive MVP, with eight catches. But he said the difference really was the play of Rose and his pass-rushing North teammates.

"We couldn’t stop their D-line," Robinson said. "If we’d had more time to pass, it could have been a different outcome."

[email protected]
 
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Either the South QB is extremely mobile, or Connor Smith did a tremendous job to keep Rose to just one sack on the night.
rose beat smith a LOT... Davis just did a good job stepping up in the pocket or releasing the ball quickly. I didn't watch every ballard-rose matchup, but the 4-5 times I saw them go head to head Jake held his own very well.

Later today, I will have a mini-writeup to go along with my gallery (which will take a long time to prepare :dead:). I borrowed a better camera for the game, and will have some animated gifs to post. It should be interesting.
 
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