Wiregrass Ranch XC Teams Sweep SAC

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The Wiregrass Ranch boys and girls cross country teams both captured their respective Sunshine Athletic Conference championships on Oct. 8. It was the second straight title for the boys, and for the girls in was their eighth title in the last nine seasons.

Senior Julia Blankenbaker didn’t just beat a muddy course to help her Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH) team win the Sunshine Athletic Conference (SAC) cross country meet on Oct. 8. She also beat some pretty sizable odds.

Diagnosed a month ago with anemia and running on a sloppy course, the Bulls runner somehow looked to be back in top form, finishing the 5K (3.1-mile) course in 21 minutes, 33 seconds, as WRH won its eighth conference championship in the school’s 10 years of existence.

The Bulls boys also won, earning their second straight SAC title.

Blankenbaker led the charge for the girls, finishing fifth overall at the SAC meet, tops among the pack-oriented Bulls. She was followed by junior Reis Ehman (21:50), freshman Kylee Ehman (22:07), senior Lauren Payne (22:09) and Abbie Dodge (22:10), who finished eighth, ninth, 10th and 11th, respectively.

The top five finishers at the SAC for WRH all finished within 37 seconds of each other, which Bulls head coach Don Howard calls a recipe for success.

A month ago, Blankenbaker couldn’t imagine running such a good race, much less in harsh conditions. The course was beat up by heavy rains and winds from Hurricane Matthew and, as a result, most of the runners posted slower times than usual. “It was really muddy at the start,’’ Blankenbaker says. “People were kind of shocked. You could here people gasp when the race started.”

However, Blankenbaker said once she reached the paved portion, “It felt like you were flying.” She finished only two seconds off her best time despite the conditions…and her condition.

“At the very beginning of the season, I was running a lot slower,’’ Blankenbaker says. “I was so tired during the meets.”

A trip to the doctor for some blood work revealed that Blankenbaker had anemia.

“Since then, she says, “I’ve been taking iron supplements and getting better. I had a lot more energy (at the SAC meet). I don’t know what 100 percent will feel like until I get there.’’

She’s pretty close now, says Howard.

“She is ready to run,’’ he said. “She’ll be ready to go in the postseason. That was the first time she ever ran No. 1 for us, and it was the best race of her career.”

As a team, the Bulls girls scored 43 points, bettering Land O’Lakes, which was second with 55. Wesley Chapel was sixth. The WRH team reclaimed a title it had won seven straight years before being upended by the Gators in 2015.

“We wanted to get our title back,’’ said Howard. “I know you’re probably not supposed to say that, but it felt like ours after winning it seven straight years.”

Howard thinks Blankenbaker is ready to make her mark in the postseason.

Howard has once again proven his mettle as arguably Pasco County’s top cross country coach. He went into this season without his two best runners because of injuries — Kerry Reilly, who was fourth at the SAC in 2014, and Brenna Moran, who was sixth and fifth the past two years, respectively — because of injuries. Without a front-of-the-pack runner, which he has had almost every year at WRH, Howard molded his current roster to run together in a tight pack.

“We have had a really good year and have won a couple of invitationals,’’ Howard says. “None of the girls are super elite, but all of them are good, good solid runners who run together. We have two (injured) No. 1 runners walking our halls, but we have depth. We benefit from having a large school, and I think we’ve created a program that good athletes want to be a part of.”

That pack mentality suits Blankenbaker perfectly. She qualified twice for the state championship meet as a diver on the Bulls swim team, but she was the only diver on the team. The solitude of the sport made her decide to focus on cross country this year.

“I love the team atmosphere,’’ Blankenbaker says. “Everyone is out there pushing each other, not just running their own race.”

Boys Not Shabby, Either

The boys team at WRH scored 45 points, outdistancing runner-up Sunlake, which scored 81. Senior Joseph Salerno was the Bulls’ top runner, finishing fourth in 17:16. Salerno was followed by juniors Kevin Jaquez (sixth in 17:34), Giovanni Duran (eighth in 18:04) and Carlos Cruz (12th in 18:14).

Sophomore Christian Velez round out the WRH scorers, with a 15th-place finish and a time of 18:21.

Note-Wesley Chapel High senior Dominic Moreno, the defending individual champion, was the top finisher for the Wildcats, taking third in 17:16. The Wildcat boys team finished seventh overall.

‘Changing Chapel’ With One Big Football Victory At A Time

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left to right, DB Isaiah Bolden, QB Jacob Thomas and RB Dexter Leverette.

Anthony Egan knew his first head coaching job wouldn’t be easy.

He was inheriting a Wesley Chapel High (WCH) team that had gone 7-33 the previous four seasons. Five of those seven wins were against teams that were either 0-10 or 1-9.

In 2013, the Wildcats only scored 68 points all season en route to a winless campaign.

“Change Chapel?”

Yes, please.

“When I first came to Wesley Chapel, I heard guys like (senior running back) Ellrie Allen and some of the seniors saying, ‘Changing Chapel,’” Egan says. “We cut the ‘ing’ off and made it our own.”

The “Change Chapel” mantra is paying dividends, as the Wildcats head into the toughest stretch of the season, starting with tonight’s home Class 5A, District 8 game against Anclote. 

The Wildcat players have clearly bought into shedding their image as a losing football team. In fact, Wesley Chapel is now 6-0, the Wildcats’ best start since posting back-to-back 10-0 regular seasons way back in 2001-02. The Wildcats are 4-0 in 5A-8, tied for first with upcoming opponents Zephyrhills (Oct. 21) and River Ridge (Oct. 28).

Wesley Chapel won its first two 2016 games against two teams with the deepest tradition of playoff football in Pasco County, knocking off Land O’Lakes 13-3 in the season opener on Aug. 26 and following that up with a 34-21 win over Pasco on Sept. 9. It was the first time since 2007 WCH had beaten the Pirates.

The Wildcats were just warming up. In its next three games, it outscored opponents 137-28, beating Ridgewood (42-22), Gulf (50-0) and Fivay (45-6). Last week, the Wildcats rallied from a 28-20 fourth quarter deficit to beat Hudson 39-34.

“Week one, we had about 90 percent buy in” Egan says. “Now we’re at 100 percent,” Egan said.

New Coach, New Attitude

It started with Egan. He had two coaching runs, at River Ridge High as well as a short stint at Hudson. He’s a 2003 River Ridge graduate. Last season, when Egan was still at River Ridge, the Royal Knights devoured the Wildcats in the first half, 35-0.

“We were up big but Wesley Chapel came out in the second half and outscored us 21-7,” Egan says. “I saw a lot of athletes, a lot of guys moving around fast and I knew this was a place I wanted to go.”

Tony Egan talks to his team at a recent practice.
Tony Egan talks to his team at a recent practice.

Egan was set on finding a head coaching job somewhere after serving as a defensive coordinator and line coach for several years. It wound up that the only place he applied was Wesley Chapel; he was hired in January.

“What I saw right away was a good group of respectful kids ready to work,” Egan says. “We had 40-50 kids in the weight room, 40-50 all through the summer.”

In the spring game, Wesley Chapel thumped Weeki Wachee 54-20, showing off the steady running game that was the hallmark of the Knights’ attack the past few seasons. The Wildcats seemed to be on their way.

“As soon as Coach Egan came in, you could feel it in the air — there was that hunger,” senior quarterback Jacob Thomas said. “This was not going to be the same Chapel. We weren’t going to do what we’d been doing for years and years.”

A Perfect Mix…

A few new players have been contributing to the Wesley Chapel turnaround, including highly-regarded junior defensive back Isaiah Bolden, a Florida State verbal commitment and 4-star recruit, according to the Rivals.com.

Though he transferred in from Jacksonville-area Bartram Trail (to be with his father), Bolden is not new to Wesley Chapel — he went to Thomas E. Weightman Middle School and played football for the Weightman Wildcats. He had moved to the Jacksonville/St. Johns area for high school to be with his mother, where he developed into a top recruit.

“It was different, real different when I came back from Bartram Trail,” Bolden says. “I just wanted to see where I’d fit in.”

He has fit in just fine. Last season, Bolden had a 108-yard interception return for a touchdown for the Bears, and those skills were in full effect against Pasco, when Bolden ran a kickoff back 95 yards for a TD.

First-year running back Dexter Leverett is another transfer having a big impact. Leverett played for Eastside High in Taylors, SC, as a freshman but spent a whole year on the sidelines, waiting for his chance. After transferring to Wesley Chapel for 2015, he was on the team but ineligible to play.

He now leads Pasco County in rushing, with 906 yards (7.6 yards a carry) and six touchdowns. Leverett’s 906 yards is more than the Wildcat team rushed for the entire season in 2013, 2014 and 2015. Teammate Malik Melvin is tied with Leverette for the team lead with six rushing touchdowns, while contributing 297 yards.

Thomas, the senior leader at QB, continues to excel, even if he isn’t throwing the ball as much as he is used to.

Last year, Thomas threw an average of 33 times a game for a county-best 1,825 yards and 17 touchdowns as a junior for the Wildcats, but he has sacrificed his prolific numbers, throwing only seven times a game this season, for the sake of the team.

The 6-foot-4, 180-pounder has completed 17 of 42 pass attempts, but almost half his completions — eight, to be exact — have gone for touchdowns, including three to junior WR Justin Trapnell and two to freshman RB Keith Walker.

“If I don’t buy in (to Egan’s gameplan), then who does?” Thomas said after the win over Pasco. “We are going to run his style (of offense), I knew how it would be but he makes the calls and we execute them.”

“Jacob’s been great, he’s been patient,” Egan says. “He’s a big kid that’s still waiting on that first (college) offer. He can really hit receivers when they’re open and that’s what the running game (sets up). He is such a good leader, he could hand off 60 times and pass two. It’s all about winning. He’s worried about the team and winning.”

That’s what it is all about at Chapel these days.

Change, indeed.

Wharton’s Zachary Godbold Wins Javelin Event At Junior Olympics

Wharton freshman Zach Godbold (center) receives his gold medal for his career-best throw of 167 feet, 5 inches, in the javelin at the AAU Junior Olympics in July.
Wharton freshman Zach Godbold (center) receives his gold medal for his career-best throw of 167 feet, 5 inches, in the javelin at the AAU Junior Olympics in July.

Looking for something new to try, Zach Godbold’s eyes caught a javelin sitting in the grass near where his Running Tigers of Hillsborough County Track Club teammates were training.

Uninterested in the long distance runs that had lured him to the club with his big brother Frankie, Zach had been only mildly satisfied with throwing the shot put and discus. “They were just okay,’’ he says.

But, the javelin? Now, that looked a little more interesting.

Turns out, Zach made an excellent choice that day. He is now the best 14-year-old javelin thrower in the country and the reigning  AAU Junior Olympic (JO) champion. In August, the New Tampa teenager turned in the biggest throw of his life, a whopping 167 feet, 5 inches — at the biggest event of his life — to capture the gold medal.

“It was pretty big,’’ Zach says. “Especially because it was such an important event.”

The JO win capped a huge spring and summer for Zach, a 14-year-old freshman at Wharton. He won a handful of local and regional events, and improved his throws by more than 40 feet from the beginning of track and field seazach_godbold_4son to the end.

“I think that’s what was most impressive, how he went from throwing 120 to 140 to 160,’’ said his father, Frank. “That’s pretty impressive.”

Frank and his wife Maria hardly imagined such heights were attainable five years ago,
when Zach first noticed that javelin laying in the grass near the track at Turner-Bartells K-8 School, where the Running Tigers practiced.

Coach Gig Brown told him to give it a try. It was a natural fit.

“I wasn’t the best at it (right away),’’ Zach says, “but I learned it quickly.”
There aren’t many sports at which the natural athlete hasn’t succeeded. He plays top-flight club soccer for the Temple Terrace Spirit, he was an exceptional pitcher on the Little League baseball diamond, he has run track and he’s currently playing junior varsity football — as a kicker and punter — for the Wildcats.

zach_godbold_2But, it is this most unique sport that has brought Zach his greatest success.

Once Brown got him started, Zach took it from there. He would find a place to throw while his teammates raced around the track, and he and Frank would search out empty fields near their Arbor Greene home to practice, often at the overgrown baseball fields across from Pride Elementary. Because actual javelin coaches are about as rare as an uncongested road in New Tampa, Zach studied YouTube videos in his free time to hone his craft.

“The javelin is much different from other throwing events because you don’t need to be big and strong and have a lot of muscles to throw it,’’ says Zach, who is 5-foot-9 inches tall and roughly 160 pounds. “If you’re smaller and want to try throwing because you don’t like running, you can be good at this.”

Or great, as Zach was this summer.

He had competed at the Junior Olympics the three previous years, in the javelin and the discus, but had never had his breakthrough.

In 2013, he finished seventh, followed by a second-place finish in 2014 and 12th-place in 2015.

Taking It To His Rival

His primary rival was No. 1-ranked Jack Caudle of Atchison, KS, who beat out Zach for the gold in 2014 and set a national record for 13-year-olds while winning again last year, with a throw of 147-11.

If he were to win, Zach knew it was Caudle he would have to beat as they squared off with 58 other competitors at Turner Stadium in Humble, TX.

Competitors are allowed three throws in the preliminary round, with the top eight advancing to the finals, where they get three more throws. The best throw, including those in prelims, wins gold.

Zach wasted no time — on his first throw, he delivered a career-best toss of 167’-5”.

“I felt pretty confident, and I knew that was going to make it into the finals,’’ he said.

Zach didn’t manage a better throw, though he did clear 160 feet with two other throws.

He didn’t need to improve, however. He anxiously watched as the other competitors tried to better his top distance, including Caudle, who had come up short on his first five throws.

But, the tall lefty had one throw — and one nerve-wracking moment for the Godbold family — remaining, and he sent the javelin sailing high into the Texas sky, his best throw of the competition.

“I was so nervous,’’ Zach said. “I knew it was going to be really close.”

It was — Caudle came up with a throw of 166’-10”, just seven inches shy of a third straight championship, and in the stands Frank and Maria Godbold jumped with joy.

“I thought Maria was going to lose her mind,’’ Frank said, chuckling. “I’m real proud of him, obviously. Not just about winning, but doing it on the biggest stage. The other guy had just been better than him, and to see him get over the hump, it meant a lot. Never in our wildest dreams did we imagine this kind of moment when he started throwing a javelin.”

As a former Little League pitcher and back-up quarterback in football who was only used for long throws like Hail Marys, the javelin was the perfect fit. Most in his age group send their javelins arcing high into the air; Zach is known for his low, long throw.

“He always had a tremendous arm,’’ says Frank. “His uncle used to tell him he should be throwing a baseball.”

In five years, Zach has developed into one of the best young javelin throwers in the land. He has put away his 600-gram (21-lb.), 7-foot-long javelin for the winter, while he focuses on football and soccer.

Despite the fact he can’t compete in the event in high school because the javelin is not a sanctioned high school field event in Florida, like the discus and shot put, Zach plans on throwing the javelin all the way to college, and maybe beyond.

Next spring, he moves up to the 800-gram (28-lb.) javelin, which is between 8’3’’ and 8’7” long, the same one you see being thrown at the Olympics. He will continue to travel the state and country as he competes in AAU track season and competitions, with one goal in mind — to keep getting better.

“It’s definitely something I love doing,” Zach says, “and I’m definitely sticking with it.”

Like five years ago, that’s probably another good choice.

Trip To Ireland Spurring Olympic Dreams For Wharton Junior

yasmine_gillespieWatching the 2016 Summer Olympics was a real treat for 15-year-old Paul R. Wharton High junior Yasmine Gillespie. It provided a nice respite from the young athlete’s busy schedule, as she got to see martial artists from all over the world compete for gold in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

What the second-degree black belt did not know was that during the Olympics, several new sports were given a chance to be included in the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, and making the cut was karate, both kata (one-person forms) and kumite (two-person grappling/sparring).

The former infused instant dreams into the mind of Yasmine, who over the summer found out she would be representing Team USA at the World Karate & Kickboxing Commission (WKC) World Championships in Dublin, Ireland.

In June, she attended the WKC national tournament in Dearborn, Michigan on the University of Michigan’s Dearborn campus.

“The way it works is they call you up, you do your form, they score you, then you go again and it repeats until you eventually get a compiled score,” Yasmine says. “When they called the top four qualifiers up, I didn’t realize that was what it was for, I thought they just called me up to perform again.”

Instead, one of the other girls leaned over to her and said, “You’re coming with us to Dublin. Welcome to the team.”

“I was so shocked,” Yasmine said. “I got the medals and took pictures and I was thinking, ‘Oh, my God. I’m on Team USA. That’s real.’”

From October 30 through November 4, Gillespie will be representing Team USA at the WKC World Championships, where more than two dozen countries will be participating.

yasmine_gillespie_2Yasmine says she has always wanted to be an Olympic athlete, and she is headed in that direction.

But before 2020 rolls around, she has other goals. She was advanced a grade level when she started public school, and plans to finish in the top 10 of her graduating class academically. She plays Libero on Wharton’s varsity volleyball team, and also is a varsity tennis player.

How does she manage all of this?

“I’m really good with time management,” Yasmine says. “I find time to work on homework after lunch and in that hour between volleyball practice and karate class. It’s hard to fit it in but I make sure and find time; I plan ahead.”

That careful planning and management has helped Yasmine succeed not only academically, but also in her athletic pursuits.

She trains under fourth-degree karate black belt, Master John Augello at Core Martial Arts in New Tampa. While Yasmine cracks the pads and rolls around on the mat with the other students in the adult class, her specialty is one-person forms, called “katas” in Japanese or Okinawan martial arts disciplines.

A form or kata is a series of movement combinations fused together to simulate combat against an imaginary opponent or opponents. Oftentimes, an intense energy/vocal expression called a “kia” is used to punctuate some of the techniques.

“She just has this natural flow,” Augello says, “and you can’t teach that.”

Yasmine competes in both regular kata and classical kata. She started training in martial arts when she was three years old, and advanced quickly, especially in her teenage years. She now competes in the adult class.

“She was just too big and strong for the little guys,” Augello says. “We had to set the bar higher for her.”

Yasmine keeps jumping over that bar.

In July, she earned her second black belt, and also competed in the U.S. Open Karate World Championships in Orlando and won the International Championship in regular kata in the 15-16 age group.

Her brother Sammy, who is 11, also competes and will join her in Dublin.

“My wife and I wanted to get our kids into karate at an early age,” Yasmine’s father Brian said. “And, not just for self defense but also for confidence and having experience getting out and performing at a young age.”

Wharton Volleyball Kids Could Lead Way

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Wharton volleyball players (l to r) Jamie Koopman, Kathryn Attar, Jeanette Henderson and Ella Hileman could mesh this season to form a formidable group.

Wharton volleyball star Kathryn Attar poses for a picture, with a freshman to her right, and two others to her left.

“My babies,’’ the senior says, only half-jokingly.

This year, the Wildcats’ outside hitter might just be feeling like the team mother, as she adds a larger leadership role to go with her prodigious talents at the net.

Not that leadership is a new thing for Attar. The past three seasons, she has led the way for Wharton volleyball on the court, with 1,110 kills, including 358 last season. She has established herself as one of the top players in the state.

However, she has always been younger than other players on the team.

But, now that three starters — setter Tyler Sroufe, middle blocker Lindsey Schaible and libero Chanelle Hargreaves — from a team that went 43-12 the past two seasons are off playing Division I-A college volleyball, all that remains from that experienced and cohesive group is Attar.

She does have her babies, however:  the freshmen trio of hitter Jeanette Henderson, middle blocker Jamie Koopman and setter Ella Hileman.

“It’s great for Jeanette or anyone in that position that every day, she gets to see and learn from the best in the game, in the state, at that position,’’ Barber says. “Kathryn is very much like an assistant coach this year. She’s always been the youngest on the team, so this is her year to really kind of be the leader not just physically, but also from a maturity level.”

Wharton Senior Providing Leadership

Barber says having Attar, who has verbally pledged to play college volleyball at Yale University, makes the Wildcats instantly competitive. But they they will need more. The team does return sophomore setter Gracie Viloria, who played a lot last season after Sroufe got hurt. Senior Allie Schneider, who transferred in last season, her first with Wharton, and junior Devyn Kettner, who was called up from junior varsity late last season, return.

What could push them even deeper into the playoff picture, though, will be the development of the youngsters.

“It goes in waves,’’ Barber says. “We were in this situation (losing a lot of starters to graduation) 3-4 years ago. Now we’re back to a new start. To me, that’s what keeps it fun in coaching. The challenge will be getting them far enough along to make a push at the end of the season and take advantage of having Kathryn.”

Because Wharton is changing from a 5-1 alignment (with one setter) to a 6-2 (with two setters), Hileman will play a key role. “She is going to be a really good setter,’’ Barber says.

Henderson, who plays the same position as Attar, is only 5-6 but has the kind of vertical leap that would make a lot of basketball players jealous. “She has great jumps,’’ Barber says. “She’s already has some good kills against some tough teams. I’ve been impressed.”

Koopman will try to step into Schaible’s role in the middle. Last year, Schaible had a team-best 180 blocks to go with 229 kills. Koopman, who is 5-foot-10, won’t be expected to put up those kind of numbers her first season, but Barber expects her to improve and become a force under the tutelage of Attar.

“Even though she doesn’t play the middle (blocker position), she knows everything,’’ Koopman says about learning under Attar. “She just knows what to do. It’s great, I love playing with her.”

Hileman agrees. “Kathryn can teach because she knows how everybody’s position is played,’’ she says. “I’m a setter, and she knows what I do. It’s good, because she’ll help all of us, not just one of us.”

Freshman Class To Help Wharton Volleyball For Years

While Barber says Hileman, Koopman and Henderson  — all starters — will play the biggest role among his freshman, they won’t be the only ones making their mark in the next few years. He says he has a dozen first-year prepsters playing this year, some of whom he will reveal later this season when they get called up to varsity.

“Overall, our freshman group is outstanding, it’s the best we’ve had,’’’ says Barber, whose team is now 5-6, but after a stumble at the Academy of Holy Names tournament the Wildcats have won their last three matches, including a win over Wiregrass Ranch.

Attar thinks that talent will develop enough by the end of the season to make the Wildcats a team to be reckoned with come playoff time in October.

A player of her All-State talents can carry a volleyball team to a successful season, but the kind of help the freshmen can provide could mark the difference between good and great.

“I’ve seen noticeable improvement already, and there should be more noticeable improvement by the end of the year,’’ Attar says. “You wouldn’t look at us and think we haven’t played together before. We should be really good by the time Districts (begin).”

Wharton High 6th Annual Harvest Volleyball Tournament

WHEN: September 30-October 1.

WHERE: Wharton High gymnasium, 20150 Bruce B. Downs Blvd.

TEAMS: Wharton, Brandon, Durant, Freedom, Sunlake, Gaither and two teams to be named.

OUTLOOK: This annual event is also a food drive, with fans urged to help fill a large box outside of the gym with canned or boxed food items which is used to help feed people at three local food banks.