Week 1 Winner: Elijah Brooks
Elijah Brooks played for two legendary coaches at
DeMatha (Hyattsville, Md.) and now he's putting that experience into good use in his third year as head football coach at his alma mater.
On
Friday Brooks guided the Stags (5-1) to an impressive 21-0 victory over
archrival Our Lady of Good Counsel (Olney, Md.). It marked the first
time in at least 13 years that Good Counsel had been shut out and
snapped a four-game winning streak against DeMatha.

Elijah Brooks, DeMatha head coach
Photo by Ken Inness
The
impressive victory has earned Brooks the honor of being named this
season's first Capital One Bank Washington, D.C. Coach of the Week.
"It
was a huge win for us," he said. "We stayed unbeaten in the conference
(Washington Catholic Athletic Conference) and because we had lost to
them four years in a row. They've won the last four (conference titles).
They've been such an explosive team. For us to think we could come away
with a shutout — there wasn't even a thought."
The Stags' finest defensive effort of the year yielded only 107 yards and three first downs. Middle linebacker
Dale Matthews set the pace with nine tackles, four for losses. The game-changer was a 99-yard interception return by cornerback
Cam Phillips, and a 95-yard touchdown run by
Taiwan Deal was a clincher in the fourth quarter.
Brooks
played football under Bill McGregor and basketball under Morgan
Wootten. He helped both teams win a pair of championships in the highly
competitive WCAC. During his senior year (2001-02) he captained both
teams, leading the football squad in rushing and the basketball squad in
assists.
He played football for one year at Kent State
University before playing his final three years at William & Mary,
where he finished No. 6 in career rushing.
Graduating in 2007, he
was hired to teach history and psychology and as an assistant football
coach at DeMatha. He now teaches Body Composition, a weight-training
elective for upperclassmen.
Replacing McGregor as head coach could be a pressure-filled job.
"When
a guy has done such a fantastic job putting our program on the map for
29 years, it's big shoes to fill," said Brooks. "But I have a great
support system with the DeMatha community and my family.
"They
(McGregor and Wootten) paved the right way to prepare for games and the
way to lead as a player and coach. They provided so many life lessons
that I still carry with me today."