MaxWire National Blog

Covering High School Sports in America
  • Two of Florida's top four rising junior basketball players have been cleared to play for Oak Ridge (Orlando, Fla.) in the 2013-14 campaign, according to Buddy Collings of the Orlando Sentinel.
    Photo by Nick Koza

    Antonio Blakeney, Oak Ridge


    Antonio Blakeney and Alex Owens both transferred to Oak Ridge and enrolled in the spring, but their eligibility was just cleared by the governing FHSAA. Joining 6-foot-4 rising senior Marquel Willis, who averaged 19.7 points last season, they should make the Pioneers an instant Florida — if not national — power.

    Blakeney, a 6-4 shooting guard, averaged 24.8 points and 7.6 rebounds last season for Cardinal Mooney (Sarasota, Fla.). He is the No. 3-ranked junior in Florida. Owens, ranked No. 4, is a powerful 6-8, 230-pounder who played last year for Oldsmar Christian (Fla.).

    Owens and Blakeney both received scholarship offers in April from the University of Florida. Blakeney has also been offered by Kansas State among others. Owens has additional offers from such colleges as Miami, Cincinnati and Georgia.

    A recent power in Class 7A, Oak Ridge will move up to 8A this coming season.
  • Kohl Stewart of St. Pius X (Houston) has decided to forgo a football scholarship to Texas A&M to focus on a pitching career with the Minnesota Twins organization, according to a report by MaxPreps videographer and host Jeff Powers.

    Stewart threw for 8,803 career yards as a quarterback at St. Pius X and signed a National Letter of Intent to play for the Aggies. However, Stewart had a change of heart after being selected as the top high school player in the 2013 MLB Draft, the No. 4 pick overall.

    Powers tells the rest of the story with this report from Houston:

  • Photo by Jim Redman

    Rising high school senior Jahlil Okafor could earn the third gold medal of his young career with USA Basketball's U19 team in the Czech Republic.

    Two of the country's top rising senior high school basketball prospects will get a chance to play for one of the college game's top coaches next week in the Czech Republic.

    Jahlil Okafor of Whitney Young (Chicago) and Justise Winslow of St. John's (Houston) earned a spot on USA Basketball's U19 team, which will compete June 24-July 6 in the 2013 FIBA U19 World Championship in Prague.

    The American squad will be coached by Billy Donovan, a two-time national champion at Florida. Donovan has led seven Gator teams to the Sweet 16 or beyond.

    The headliner of the squad is Oklahoma State's Marcus Smart, the Big 12 Conference player of the year as a freshman in 2012-12. Smart bypassed an opportunity to be a top 10 pick in the NBA Draft to return to Stillwater.

    In addition to Smart, Okafor and Winslow will join Class of 2013 standouts Aaron Gordon and Nigel Williams-Goss, as well rising college stars Michael Frazier (Florida), Jerami Grant (Syracuse), Montrezl Harrell (Louisville), Elfrid Payton (Louisiana-Lafayette), Jarnell Stokes (Tennessee), Rasheed Sulaimon (Duke) and Mike Tobey (Virginia).

    Okafor, a 6-foot-10, 270-pound center, earned All-American honors from MaxPreps as a junior for nationally-ranked Whitney Young after posting 20.7 points and 8.8 rebounds per game.

    Winslow, a 6-6, 210-pound power wing, piled up 28.6 points and 15.7 rebounds per game as a junior at St. John's.

    Both players helped the United States capture gold at last summer's FIBA U17 World Championship in in Lithuania.

    Donovan will be assisted by Tony Bennett of Virginia and Shaka Smart of Virginia Commonwealth.
  • Photo by Dan Coppola

    Bergen Catholic standout Garrett Dickerson has his eye on three schools.

    Bergen Catholic (Oradell, N.J.) tight end Garrett Dickerson will soon be narrowing his recruiting list.

    Currently, the tight end/defensive end, ranked No. 124 in the Top247 has a Top 5 of Northwestern, Ohio State, Michigan, Stanford and Alabama.

    According to his father Ralph, Dickerson has been in near-constant communication with three of those schools and is now focusing solely on Stanford, Michigan and Northwestern.

    Dickerson made several unofficial visits during the winter but "will be low key for the rest of summer," Ralph said.

    That's probably a good thing, since the 6-foot-4, 240-pound senior is busy enough representing Bergen Catholic in the National Select 7-on-7.

    The team recently made the trip to Byrnes (Duncan, S.C.) for regional tournament action.

    Check out an interview with Dickerson, as well as in-game highlights, courtesy of PlayOn Sports.

  • Getty Images

    Keyshawn Johnson, shown here in Super Bowl XXXVII in 2003, will coach the Mission Viejo receivers this season.

    The wide receivers at Mission Viejo (Calif.) will be getting more firsthand NFL knowledge this season - and maybe some tips on how to talk on live television.

    Current ESPN analyst and former NFL star Keyshawn Johnson has been confirmed as an assistant coach at the Orange County powerhouse, according to a blog from the Orange County Register. Legendary coach Bob Johnson confirmed Johnson's hiring, and said that he will work with receivers on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. His ESPN commitments will prevent him from coaching every day, and he is likely to attend about half the team's games.

    Johnson went to USC (about 50 miles north of Mission Viejo) and played his high school ball at Dorsey High in Los Angeles. He will join a coaching staff that features Rob Johnson, the coach's son, who played quarterback from 1995-2003 in the NFL and also went to USC.

    Mission Viejo went 11-1 last season, taking a perfect record into the Pac-5 playoffs before losing to Long Beach Poly. The Diablos averaged 50.3 points per game and even scored 84 against Aliso Niguel.
  • Photo courtesy of USA Football

    Coaches demonstrate Heads Up tackling at a recent USAFootball event.

    The Indiana Football Coaches Association (IFCA) and the Minnesota Football Coaches Association (MFCA) have both decided to go 'Heads Up' in their support of player safety this fall.

    On Monday, USA Football announced that both football coach associations have formally endorsed its Heads Up program, which teaches proper tackling techniques as well as proper equipment fitting and concussion awareness.

    Both associations will encourage coaches to become certified with Heads Up, so that their players, parents and officials can be familiar with and practice the pillars of the program.

    "The IFCA is pleased to join with USA Football in support of its Heads Up Football program," Indiana Football Coaches Association Executive Director Dave Land said in a release.

    "It is extremely important to promote the proper instruction of tackling at all levels to ensure the well-being of our players, which is our No. 1 priority. Heads Up Football reflects the innovation that is woven into our sport's heritage by changing for the better how our game is played and taught."

    Indiana and Minnesota are the first state coach associations to endorse the Heads Up initiative.

  • File photo by Ken Inness

    Olivia Baker, Columbia

    The Newark Star-Ledger reported that the Columbia (Maplewood, N.J.) girls ran the second-fastest sprint medley relay in high school history (3:52.07) on Saturday while notching the title during the annual New Balance National Championships in Greensboro, N.C. The record of 3:51.90 has stood since 2007.

    Rising senior Olivia Baker continued her quest to gain legendary status when she ran the 400-meter leg in 53.1 seconds. Shanika Dessein ran the 800-meter anchor leg in 2:09.34. Baker also ran a 2:13.03 anchor as Columbia won the 4x800 national title in 9:01.12

    Baker had reached superstar status when she became the first athlete ever to win four gold medals in the New Jersey Meet of Champions. She also is involved in music, astronomy and wants to become a neurosurgeon.

    Union Catholic (Scotch Plains, N.J.) won the boys shuttle hurdles relay in 56.63 seconds, No. 3 all-time.

    Another New Jersey star, Keturah Orji of Mount Olive (Flanders, N.J.), won the girls triple jump at 43-9 1/4, which is No. 6 all-time.
  • Shannon Smith finished her brilliant softball career on Saturday as Massachusetts' all-time strikeout queen after pitching Milford (Mass.) to the Division I state softball championship.

    The 5-foot-7 senior right-hander struck out 13 - including the No. 3-4-5 hitters in the seventh inning - to stifle Agawam 1-0 in the finale. She yielded just one hit and retired the last 19 batters while winning the state-title game for the second year in a row and finishing her career with a state-record 1,218 strikeouts.

    Ranked No. 12 in MaxPreps Xcellent 25, Milford completed its season with a 26-1 record.

    For the second year in a row, a freshman - this time it was Jillian Powers - provided the crucial hit that won the title when she doubled to left with two outs in the sixth inning to score Allie Piergustavo from first base with the game's only run.

    Smith, a three-time state Gatorade Player of the Year, will play next year for the University of Kentucky.

    Coach Brian Macchi had plenty of praise for his standout pitcher.

    He told the Boston Herald, "It's been an outstanding career. To watch her work day in and day out for these four years, she wanted to cap it off with a win today. It just cements her legacy in Milford High athletics and obviously the game of softball in this state ... She's been an outstanding student-athlete to coach. It's been an absolute honor to watch her play."
  • File photo by Ken Reabe Jr.

    Tyler Boyd, Clairton

    University of Pittsburgh football fans have a special treat awaiting them, because dynamic Tyler Boyd will be playing for the Panthers in the fall.

    However, the 6-foot-2, 180-pound running back took a slight detour Saturday to help the Pennsylvania All-Stars demolish their Maryland counterparts in the 56th annual Big 33 game by a shocking 58-27 margin. Pennsylvania had lost the last four meetings.

    The two-time Pennsylvania Mr. Football, who led Clairton (Pa.) to the nation's current longest winning streak (63 games and four consecutive Class A state titles), ran the opening kickoff back 91 yards and was off to the races. He soon snared a 16-yard touchdown pass, later scoring on a four-yard run and firing a 68-yard halfback pass for another touchdown.

    Boyd told the Harrisburg Patriot-News, "It felt really great. My team told me they were going to block for me and they gave me a huge lane on that opening kick. I took full advantage of it."

    He finished with 244 all-purpose yards, including 144 on returns.
  • Zack Darlington stunned Ohio State recruiters on Friday when he chose the University of Nebraska, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

    Photo by Marc Estrada

    Zack Darlington

    The decision by the 6-foot-2, 205-pound rising senior quarterback should not have been too surprising, however, because the Apopka (Fla.) star long has been a fan of the Cornhuskers football program.

    Darlington, who led Apopka to Florida's Class 8A state title with a 13-2 record, is ranked as the No. 12 dual-threat quarterback in the nation by 247Sports.com. He also is the No. 1 player in the Sentinel's 2014 Central Florida Super 60. Last fall he passed for 1,725 yards and 19 touchdowns and used his excellent speed (4.5 seconds for 40 yards) to run for 708 yards and 10 touchdowns.

    The son of Apopka head coach Rick Darlington, he told the Sentinel "It was always more like a burning excitement" as he prepared to make his announcement. "I was always told that when you shop around, you become unsure and everyone I've talked to about the process has told me when you are in the right place it's going to feel like home and from the minute I set foot in Lincoln, Neb., I didn't want to leave."

    Darlington, who had offers from 17 other colleges, also cited the team Bible study and friendliness of the Lincoln residents as other determining factors.

    He regretfully cancelled his visit to Ohio State where he had built up solid relationships with the coaching staff.