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RB Chris "Beanie" Wells (All B1G, All-American)

in all fairness... Hoban D is pretty tuff.. and 10 of 11 are returning starters... and probably sent all 11 at Wells every play.. Hoban was brutal on Wells last year and I believe they hurt him last year too..
 
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BuckinMichigan said:
This was posted in the high school football forum on the Cleveland Plain Dealer web site, so take that for what it is worth. I found nothing on the Bucknuts or O-Zone sites.

I guess Wells had about 100 yards tonight in a loss to Hoban. Supposedly News 5 out of Cleveland is reporting he had a problem with his leg during the 3rd quarter of the game and is having it checked out. Maybe some of our NE Ohio Bucks can check this one out.
Make this confirmed, though reportedly not serious ...
Plain Dealer has the write-up confirming the Hoban vs Garfield performance, mentions 3q injury and highlights Hoban's rushing on back of Yoak.
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL



Hoban handles Garfield



Friday, August 26, 2005 Tim Rogers

Plain Dealer Reporter
About 6,000 fans showed up at Arch bishop Hoban's Dowed Field for the opening of the 2005 season and it's safe to say a hearty number showed up to watch Akron Garfield tailback Chris Wells.

They left talking about Steve Yoak instead.

Yoak and his Hoban teammates used a rare Thursday night opener as a coming-out party as they rolled past Garfield, 21-7, in a nonleague game that had some rough edges in the early going.


No one came out as definitive as Yoak, a 6-0, 193-pound sophomore making his first varsity start.

Quite simply, Yoak outrushed and outplayed Wells, who is regarded as one of the top running backs in the state.

Held under wraps until the second half, Yoak rushed for 126 yards on 20 carries and scored a touchdown on a bruising run of 10 yards late in the fourth quarter that wrapped up the Knights' third straight victory over Garfield.

Wells, headed for Ohio State, finished with 105 yards on 31 carries and failed to reach the end zone.

"I didn't expect that I would have a game like this," said Yoak. "I just hoped I'd be able to block well. I didn't think I'd end up carrying the ball that much. The whole thing is very overwhelming."

Wells, who suffered a leg injury late in the third quarter, never was able to bust loose for a big gain. Coach Bob Sax said the injury appeared serious at the time.

"He had a knot on his knee the size of your head," said Sax. "He was concerned. We all were concerned."

The 6-2, 228-pound senior returned in the fourth quarter, which Hoban dominated.

Hoban's defense kept the Rams out of the end zone four times after they had penetrated the 20-yard line. That included a goal-line stand early in the fourth quarter while protecting a 14-7 lead. On fourth-and-three from the Hoban 4-yard line, Wells was caught in the backfield on a sweep. He was able to spin free, but was met at the 3-yard line by several Knights.

Hoban, ranked 20th in the initial Plain Dealer Top 25, scored first when senior quarterback Paul McGough threw a 24-yard touchdown pass to senior Brett Talcott in the second quarter.

Garfield, ranked 13th in The Plain Dealer, tied the game in the third quarter following the second of two interceptions by senior Cortez Jones that put the ball on the Hoban 33. Wells carried four straight times before junior fullback Josh Suddeth scored on a 5-yard run.
 
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8/26/05


S4A.jpg


Great start to season -- for Hoban

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[size=-1]By Terry Pluto[/size]
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High school football arrived in Akron with a standing-room-only crowd, a perfect Thursday night in August and a stunning upset.

It was fans pouring down a hill from Hoban High School to watch Garfield's Chris Wells, considered to be perhaps the premier high school running back in the country. Fans packing the bleachers and lining the fence around the field, sometimes three to four rows deep. Fans learning the name -- Steve Yoak.

You can bet the estimated 6,000 fans didn't know they were being invited to a coming-out party for Yoak. The Hoban sophomore outrushed Wells, the senior Ohio State recruit.

The biggest number was the final score: Hoban 21, Garfield 7.

Yes, Garfield entered the evening ranked No. 1 in the preseason Beacon Journal poll.

The most startling statistics were: Yoak 20 carries for 126 yards, Wells 31 carries for 105 yards. No one would have guessed that.

The milestone belongs to Hoban coach Ralph Orsini, who gained his 100th career victory while serving notice that there will be plenty of fight and grit for his Knights in the post-Sutton era.

For the last six years, Orsini could always give the ball to a Sutton. First, it was Tony, who set several school records, then did the same at the College of Wooster.

Next came Tyrell Sutton, who was Ohio's Mr. Football in 2004 and now is at Northwestern, already No. 2 on the tailback depth chart.

Yoak is a 193-pound fullback who seems to play bigger and stronger than he looks. Orsini wisely stressed that Yoak will have his own identity, no need to put pressure on him to follow in the exact cleat prints of the incredible Sutton brothers.

``He ran like he was possessed,'' said Orsini. ``But everyone was good tonight. It was a total team effort. It's a great way to open the season.''

Lost chances

After the game, all Garfield coach Bob Sax could do was shake his head and talk about lost opportunities. Four times, his team had the ball inside the Hoban 20-yard line, but could not score.

That indicates Garfield and Wells still have work to do.

Understand that Wells is an impressive physical specimen. At 6-foot-2 and 230 pounds, he is assembled like a Big Ten running back. He seems to have excellent vision, as he usually picks the proper spot to run. He has a knack of being patient, waiting for his blockers to clear some space -- then accelerating in the blink of an eye.

But the senior has to learn the preseason hype and being a Buckeye recruit puts a bull's-eye right next to that No. 28 on his Garfield jersey. He's going to be hit hard on virtually every play. Defenses will be stacked to stop him, which Hoban did shrewdly under the direction of new co-coordinators Cornelius Parson and Renny Parnell.

A year ago, Wells had a hard time against Hoban. He came out of the game a few times and seemed discouraged, according to Sax.

The next week, Sax didn't start Wells on offense. Wells recovered and finished the season with 1,930 yards -- and at the top of nearly every major-college recruiting list.

This game can serve as another reminder to Wells that he's going to be pounded. Yes, his team relies heavily on him, and no one in the opposing uniform cares that Ohio State coach Jim Tressel loves your talents.

Football can be a very hard, unforgiving game. It demands an amazing amount of toughness and commitment to excel each week. And what Wells sees now is nothing compared to what he'll face in Columbus.

The good news for Garfield and Ohio State is Wells is a young man with character who has time to figure this out and continue to mature.

Hoban in good shape

Even better news for Hoban fans is the health of the football program.

The Knights dressed 80 players, sophomore to seniors. They have another 58 on the freshman team.

Quarterback Paul McGough is a 161-pound senior who looks like any kid in the hallway. But he's a scrambler. He is a pretty accurate lefty passer. He seems to have a knack for making clutch plays, as he did finding Brett Talcott for a 24-yard TD pass.

The Hoban defense swarmed all night. It's hard to single out a few players, because the theme was for everyone on the pile. They continually had five, six, seven players hitting the man with the ball.

These guys seemed to be there a lot: David D'Andrea, Stefan Buchanan, Kevin LaJudice, Anthony Congeni, Dave Maple, Otis Stallworth, Will Miller and Dan Garbinsky.

The entire defense deserved a game ball.

And the offense? They weren't too bad, either.

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Wells will be a marked man all year long.........no worries.:wink2:

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8/26/05
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL



Hoban handles Garfield






Friday, August 26, 2005 Tim Rogers

Plain Dealer Reporter
About 6,000 fans showed up at Arch bishop Hoban's Dowed Field for the opening of the 2005 season and it's safe to say a hearty number showed up to watch Akron Garfield tailback Chris Wells.

They left talking about Steve Yoak instead.

Yoak and his Hoban teammates used a rare Thursday night opener as a coming-out party as they rolled past Garfield, 21-7, in a nonleague game that had some rough edges in the early going.

<SCRIPT language=JavaScript1.1 src="http://ads.cleveland.com/RealMedia/ads/adstream_jx.ads/www.cleveland.com/xml/story/sh/shfot/@StoryAd"></SCRIPT>

No one came out as definitive as Yoak, a 6-0, 193-pound sophomore making his first varsity start.

Quite simply, Yoak outrushed and outplayed Wells, who is regarded as one of the top running backs in the state.

Held under wraps until the second half, Yoak rushed for 126 yards on 20 carries and scored a touchdown on a bruising run of 10 yards late in the fourth quarter that wrapped up the Knights' third straight victory over Garfield.

Wells, headed for Ohio State, finished with 105 yards on 31 carries and failed to reach the end zone.

"I didn't expect that I would have a game like this," said Yoak. "I just hoped I'd be able to block well. I didn't think I'd end up carrying the ball that much. The whole thing is very overwhelming."

Wells, who suffered a leg injury late in the third quarter, never was able to bust loose for a big gain. Coach Bob Sax said the injury appeared serious at the time.

"He had a knot on his knee the size of your head," said Sax. "He was concerned. We all were concerned."

The 6-2, 228-pound senior returned in the fourth quarter, which Hoban dominated.

Hoban's defense kept the Rams out of the end zone four times after they had penetrated the 20-yard line. That included a goal-line stand early in the fourth quarter while protecting a 14-7 lead. On fourth-and-three from the Hoban 4-yard line, Wells was caught in the backfield on a sweep. He was able to spin free, but was met at the 3-yard line by several Knights.

Hoban, ranked 20th in the initial Plain Dealer Top 25, scored first when senior quarterback Paul McGough threw a 24-yard touchdown pass to senior Brett Talcott in the second quarter.

Garfield, ranked 13th in The Plain Dealer, tied the game in the third quarter following the second of two interceptions by senior Cortez Jones that put the ball on the Hoban 33. Wells carried four straight times before junior fullback Josh Suddeth scored on a 5-yard run.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

[email protected], 800-683-7348
 
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I was at the game and Wells never got a chance to run. It looked like Ohio state o-line from the beginning of last season was doing the blocking. It was 8 to 9 hoban players on the line all game and when they tackled Wells they did some kicks and knees to him while. he was on the ground.
Alot of dirty play not being called by those game clowns

One of the main reasons he did not run to good besides hobans defense was he twisted his ankle which, caused him to hop to the sidelines all the time. I hope it nots severe but, friend of his family said he had ankle surgery when he was a freshman .

There was some good notes about Wells, he runs like a barry sanders or like a bo jackson with power when he has to. During the game only one hoban player had a single tackle of him the rest was 4 to 8. He got no blocking at all and was getting hit when he got the hand off all the time. I was surprised he got over 100 yards, I thought he might of got 60 at best.

The running calls were up the middle 90% of the game and was just making me sick
 
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8/26/05


The Plain Dealer's Top 40


Thursday, August 25, 2005

This summer while players ran sprints, lifted weights and reviewed the team playbook for final preparations before training camp, The Plain Dealer's high school sports staff was engaged in some studying of its own. Reporters combed scouting reports and notes to determine how Greater Cleveland players rank. Before games kick off tonight, we present our preseason Top 40 chart:

1. Chris Wells/Akron Garfield: Sr., RB/LB, 6-2, 228, Regarded as the top running back in Ohio and one of the best in the country, he verbally committed to Ohio State in February.

KEY STAT: He ran for 1,702 yards in 2004 and scored 18 touchdowns on 180 carries.

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155734300090.jpg

Chris Wells of Garfield maneuvers his way through Hoban defenders during the Hoban/Garfield football game at Hoban's Dowed Field Thursday night August 25, 2005. (Akron Beacon Journal/Karen Schiely)
 
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There's a semi-meltdown over on BN saying he might be overrated and didn't run hard. No wonder Buckeye fans get a bad rap sometimes. One game and they they're questioning him already. Pretty sad, imo.
If thats true, then thats #$%@ pathetic. Wells was a marked man all night and he got exactly zero help from the O-line. Hoban had his number last year also. I am not worried.
 
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Well let's all hope for the best, hopefully it's just a bruise. As far as anyone bashing on a tailback that isn't receiving any blocking obviously hasn't played the game or doesn't know the game.

Sucknuts' forums for the most part are just a piss poor representation of O-State fans. IMHO
 
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good pt HB.. Hoban plays a 3-5 and no doubt stacked 8 in the box if not all 11 focusing on nothing but Chris...

and for the record.. I find the comment about dirty play by Hoban as sour grapes.. Hoban Coach Orsini would never permit that... never... let me repeat.. never.. Orsini is a Tressel-like individual
 
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bucknuts44820 said:
Wells was a marked man all night and he got exactly zero help from the O-line. Hoban had his number last year also. I am not worried.
His performance doesn't worry me at all either. even Clarett had a game his senior year where he had like 25 carries for like 48 yards. nd he was national player of the year.

The only thing that I'm worried about his his knee. I hope it isn't serious. PD article said it swelled up the size of someones head.
 
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