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WR Peter Gwilym (Walk-on)

Buckskin86

Moderator
Posted: July 22
Take no offense, but he's needed most on defense
Peter Gwilym, the Fitzy-winning QB, will show off his defensive back skills in the Lobster Bowl.
By Mike Lowe [email protected]
Staff Writer

HEBRON - In the first team meeting for the West squad in this year's Maine Shrine Lobster Bowl Classic, Jim Aylward looked out at his players and took a big gulp.

"I've got to be honest," said Aylward, who has coached for 21 years and led Mountain Valley to four Class B state championships since 2004, "no matter how long you've coached, no matter how successful you are, it's a little intimidating.

"You know these kids are good. It's exciting in a way because you know you're going to have to up your game. You know you have to be at your best."

The East will play the West again in the 22nd Lobster Bowl at 4 p.m. Saturday at Biddeford's Waterhouse Field.

This is Aylward's second time as head coach of the West team. He knows what to expect and lets his players know what he expects.

"Everybody's going to play," said Aylward. "That is rule No. 1. I've watched too many years when I've sent kids from my own school down and watched them play three plays. That's not what this is about. You can try to win a ballgame and all these kids can play at the same time."

Just not necessarily at the position they're best known for.

Take Peter Gwilym, for example. The Fitzpatrick Trophy winner is probably best known as the quarterback who led Cheverus High to the Class A state championship. He's also a pretty good defensive back. Actually, a really good defensive back, as Aylward and his staff quickly found out.

"We spend the first day looking and watching the kids move," said Aylward. "And then we have a kid like Peter Gwilym. Peter Gwilym is an outstanding football player and we have him over on (offense) and he's splitting time with Jamie (Ross, of Deering). He's probably the best defensive back here. So we've got to take his skills and give him the best opportunity to be successful.

"And with Peter we really truly felt that his skills would be best showcased on the other side. You've got to give him opportunity to be successful. He'll play a little offense, too; we've got some packages for him. But it was obvious to us that his best skills are on the other side of the ball."

And for Gwilym, the move was welcome.

"I honestly feel more comfortable at defensive back," he said. "I just feel that I'm better at it. And we have good quarterbacks on this team (Thornton Academy's Josh Woodward joining Ross), so there's not that much of a need for me there."

Gwilym figures to get more playing time at defensive back as well, and that means more of a chance to make a play.

And he made plenty for the Stags -- and not just in football. He also played on a Western Class A championship team in basketball and on a state championship baseball team.

But it was in football that he made his biggest mark.

As quarterback, Gwilym completed 52 of 88 passes for 763 yards and nine touchdowns. He ran 120 times for 705 yards and 13 touchdowns.

On defense, where Coach John Wolfgram called him "a linebacker masquerading as a defensive back," Gwilym finished with 81 unassisted tackles, three forced fumbles and five interceptions.

His 106-yard interception return for a touchdown sparked the Stags past Deering in the Western Class A final.

The 6-foot-1 Gwilym will attend Ohio State, the Big 10 power that has been wracked by NCAA violations, where he will attempt to make the Buckeyes as a walk-on.

The staff there will play him at slot receiver, a reflection of his athletic talent.


"They saw some film and felt that's where I would fit best," he said.

And Gwilym, who began as a wide receiver at Cheverus before Wolfgram moved him to quarterback, is looking forward to a new challenge.

"I'm going in with a can't-lose attitude," he said.

"I don't think many people are expecting me to make it. So if I do, it will be a shock. If I don't, oh well."

http://www.pressherald.com/sports/take-no-offense-but-hes-needed-most-on-defense_2011-07-22.html

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XX73GhXNarw"]‪Gwilym Wins Gatorade Player Of The Year‬‏ - YouTube[/ame]
 
Cheverus grad makes Ohio State football team
By Tom Chard [email protected]
Staff Writer

Peter Gwilym, the 2010 Fitzpatrick Trophy winner who led Cheverus to the Class A state championship, has taken a step toward realizing his dream of playing big-time college football by making the Ohio State team as a walk-on for spring practice.

Gwilym was among seven players from a group of 50 who participated in a tryout in January to be invited back. A quarterback-defensive back in high school, Gwilym is listed as a wide receiver on the Buckeyes roster.

There is a picture of Gwilym and a brief bio on the team?s website.

?It?s awesome,? said Gwilym, who is back home in Freeport for spring break. He said he will return to school Sunday. ?They had us do a lot of drills and run the 40. They reduced it to seven and had us do more drills, lift weights and watch video. I thought I had a chance. When I learned I had been selected, I was pretty excited. I called my mother.

?I played wide receiver as a freshman in high school. It will be fun to
give it another shot.?

Gwilym is studying business at Ohio State and close to completing his first year in college. He is listed as a redshirt freshman on the roster.

?School is going really well. It?s a huge school,? said Gwilym. ?I have some classes where there?s 40 students and others where there?s 500.?

Spring practice for the Buckeyes begins Monday. Urban Meyer, the former University of Florida coach, is in his first year with the Buckeyes.

?I haven?t really talked to him yet,? said Gwilym. ?He talked to us as a group. He?s impressive and gets down to business. He?s a really good coach.?

Gwilym has added close to 20 pounds since his senior year at Cheverus and now weighs 192.

?I?ve gained quite a bit of weight through lifting and eating right through nutrition,? he said.

cont...

http://www.pressherald.com/news/Cheverus-grad-makes-Ohio-State-football-team.html
 
Upvote 0
Gwilym proves Maine has football talent
On the Bench
By DAVE DYER
Staff Writer
Published:
Monday, April 2, 2012

It was a rare occasion last week when former Cheverus football player Peter Gwilym, a native of Freeport, was selected as a walk-on to play for the Ohio State Buckeyes, one of the top NCAA Division I football programs in the nation.

It was once uncommon for Maine athletes to get to major Division I programs at all. That, however, seems to be changing.

In 2012, York County alone claimed not just one, but two area graduates who play for the same Division I hockey program at Boston College in Brian Dumoulin, of Biddeford, and Brian Billett, a Kennebunk graduate.

Maine is slowly becoming a Division I pipeline in hockey, but football is another matter. By Gwilym making the Buckeyes? roster, he now takes the responsibility of being the lone player in the state on a Division I football team. Not only that, but it?s been seven years since a player from Maine has played Division I football. The last was former Boston College quarterback and Portland High School star Quinton Porter.

Porter, who played for the Bulldogs from 1997-2000, set school and state records, throwing for 4,800 yards and 62 touchdowns in his career. He was named the Maine Gatorade Player of the Year in 2000, but lost out in winning the Fitzpatrick Trophy ? which goes to the top high school senior football player in the state ? to former Massabesic quarterback Jason O?Tash. O?Tash led the Mustangs to their only Class A state football title in school history.

*
But Porter?s future was set, as he signed a letter of intent to play football for the Eagles. At Boston College, Porter faced hard times. Early in his college career, his father, Michael Porter, died of a heart attack. On the field, Porter couldn?t escape a quarterback controversy. He spent his first two seasons as a backup under Brian St. Pierre, split time his junior season with Paul Peterson and lost the starting job his senior season to Matt Ryan, now the starting quarterback for the NFL?s Atlanta Falcons.

Porter finished his career with the Eagles with 3,203 yards and 23 touchdown passes.

Though he wasn?t drafted, Porter signed as a free agent with the Houston Texans of the NFL in 2006 and was their third-string quarterback throughout the season. He was cut by the Texans and signed by the Carolina Panthers the next season and was a member of the team?s practice squad.

Since 2008, Porter has played for the Hamilton Tiger Cats of the Canadian Football League. A backup quarterback for the Ti-Cats, Porter has played in 85 games in his CFL career, tossing 21 touchdown passes along with 4,095 yards.

Gwilym?s story is different than Porter?s as it follows more closely the classic underdog story, ?Rudy.? A quarterback/defensive back at Cheverus, Gwilym won the Fitzpatrick Trophy after the 2010 season. But the fanfare ends there, as no Division I team had a scholarship in hand for him, as they did for Porter.

Instead, Gwilym was one of 50 to try out for the Buckeyes and was one of seven walk-ons selected. As of now, he?s listed as a wide receiver, a position he hasn?t played since his freshman year of high school. He?ll wear No. 87.

Maine is not known nationally for football. Not long ago, Maine was ranked 49th, just above Vermont, in an ESPN poll for states with top high school football programs, mostly based on its number of players recruited to top college programs.

Plenty of Maine high school football players go on to play Division III football ? including the writer of this column. Others get lucky enough to play Division II, and on a rare occasion, Division I-AA football at the University of Maine at Orono. Thornton Academy?s Dimitri Skinsacos and Wells? Josh Ingalls, who will be in camp with the Black Bears as a freshman this fall, play for UMaine.

Gwilym?s time and success at Ohio State will be up to him. The going will not be easy, fighting for playing time and practice reps with some of the nation?s top recruits. His path may be an even tougher go than that of Porter.

cont...

http://www.journaltribune.com/articles/2012/04/02/sports/doc4f79b310456bb124907967.txt
 
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