"BUILDING LEADERS THROUGH FOOTBALL!" In football, all young men have a chance of success. In football, the more talented player is not always the best player. In football, with the correct attitude and work ethic, any young man can compete. In football, leaders are born and confidence is built. In football, attitudes can be adjusted and low self-esteem can be lifted. In football, all young men get a chance at success.
Bluegrasspreps.com will be at Ryle Friday night to take pictures that will be available for purchase. Click on the links below is see quality of work...THEY DO A GREAT JOB!!
Ryle Parents & Fans,
Rob (theguru) of
www.Bluegrasspreps.com will
be at our Ryle/Boone County game this Friday taking professional quality
pictures. He asked that I contact our Ryle parents and advise them of
this picture taking opportunity.
Many Ryle parents have used Rob for photography in the past and were very
satisfied with his service. You will receive a DVD full of high quality
pictures of your son playing football at a very reasonable cost. You will
have pictures that will be cherished for a lifetime.
Anyone interested in this service should contact Rob directly at the
following e-mail address by Thursday of this week:
theguru@fuse.net
Additionally you can view all Rob's work by clicking on the following
link:
http://photos.bluegrasspreps.com/
When your football program has been around for 140 seasons, there is a certain legacy and history that goes with the territory.However, you don’t need to research too far back in the archives to ascertain the impressive roll call of quarterbacks at Harvard, especially during the coaching era of Tim Murphy.Murphy and longtime offensive coordinator Joel Lamb have worked closely in tutoring a plethora of record-setting quarterbacks, including Neil Rose, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Liam O’Hagan, Chris Pizzotti, Collier Winters, Colton Chapple and new-kid-on-the-block Conner Hempel. Hempel, who made his debut last Saturday when the Crimson belted San Diego, 42-20, in Harvard’s first West Coast visit since 1949, is well aware of the red-carpet list of luminaries who have preceded him in the role of starting Crimson quarterback.“Absolutely, you definitely look at those names and see what they did at Harvard,” said the 6-foot-3 junior from Ryle High School in Union, Ky. “It’s a pretty impressive group and it’s quite an honor to maybe someday be one of those names to add somewhere down the road.“Over the years, coach Murphy and coach Lamb have coached us as to what their expectations are and what type of defenses we should be looking for and coach Lamb, especially, has helped me tremendously.”Murphy never doubted Hempel could handle the job and expects more of the same tonight at The Stadium against Brown (1-0) in the Ivy League opener for both teams.“Well, coming into the game, we thought that the kid was very talented and had the potential for a great demeanor as a Division 1 college quarterback. I don’t think we could have predicted that in his first college (start) that he would have played as well as he did,” said Murphy. “Not just the reads and the throws but the improvisation, the running ability, and just the total package. Now, as we all know, one game does not a career make. But, we’re not surprised.”“We recruited him as a kid that had some Division 1 scholarship offers and really liked the intangibles. He’s a really good person. He was a very good runner and overall athlete in high school,” said Murphy about Hempel, who threw for 6,139 yards and 60 touchdowns in high school. “He was a second team All-State as a punter. He rushed for a thousand yards. He put it all together. He’s right where we hoped that he would be, if not expected (to be).”Against San Diego, Hempel completed 25 of his 34 passes for 345 yards with four touchdowns.“I think that we’ve done a good job here recruiting, evaluating, and developing quarterbacks and you better be good at it because . . . it’s the most important position on the field, by far,” Murphy said. “But, in Conner’s case, it’s easy to see on film that physically he was a tough kid. (Ryle High) actually ran the ball a lot so, kind of like Ryan Fitzpatrick, he was just a tad under the radar as a thrower. But, in terms of being a tough kid, and leadership, their coaches raved about him. You could see his football charisma on the field and his very understated charisma in person, when we were getting to know him in recruiting, was very obvious.”Hempel downplayed any pregame jitters heading into the season opener.“Honestly, I don’t know why, but I’ve never gotten nervous before a football game before,” he said. “I think that once you get that first series of downs under your belt that you kind of settle in.”Murphy applauded the play of the offensive line during his talk at the New England College Football Writers’ luncheon hosted by Harvard at Dillon Fieldhouse. Harvard compiled 472 yards of total offense on 62 plays and produced 22 first downs.“We had zero sacks and that’s awesome. That’s what you hope to get every game. The only time I had to really move was when they brought pressure and I should have checked off against the blitz,” Hempel said. “But that’s on me.” - See more at: http://bostonherald.com/sports/college/college_football/2013/09/conner_hempel_may_be_latest_star_qb_from_harvard#sthash.jVRSQVYR.dpuf
Conner Hempel picked up a victory in his first-career start (Thomas Kovtran).
SAN DIEGO -- In Harvard's first trip to the west coast since 1949, the Crimson toppled San Diego by a score of 42-20 before 4,256 fans at Torero Stadium Saturday afternoon.
Making his first-career start, Harvard quarterback Conner Hempel was 25-of-34 for a career-best 345 yards and four touchdowns, while receiver Andrew Fischer had two touchdown grabs and 71 receiving yards on six catches overall. Seitu Smith led Harvard with 89 reception yards, catching four balls from Hempel. On the ground, Paul Stanton, Jr. gained 64 yards on six carries, while adding a touchdown run.
On defense, Zach Hodges recovered two fumbles, including one for a touchdown, and Norman Hayes led the way with 12 tackles and an interception to help the Crimson improve to 14-6 in season openers under Tim Murphy, the Thomas Stephenson Family Head Coach for Harvard Football. Harvard scored four touchdowns in the second half, outscoring USD (1-2), 28-7, in the final 20 minutes of action.
The Crimson got on the scoreboard with a 53-yard fumble return for a touchdown by Hodges. With the Toreros driving into Crimson territory, USD quarterback Mason Mills was sandwiched by three Harvard defenders and coughed up the ball. Hodges picked up the ball and ran down the left sideline untouched for the Crimson's first score of the season and first fumble return for a touchdown since 2007. David Mothander, who was 6-of-6 on PATs on the afternoon, added the extra point, as the Crimson went up 7-0 at the 5:22 mark of the first quarter.
The Toreros, who had a 91-6 edge in yards gained early in the second quarter, made it a 7-3 game with a 22-yard field goal by David Last with 13:09 to go in the second frame. Harvard answered with a 10-play, 64-yard drive that culminated in a four-yard TD dash by Stanton, Jr Hempel completed three passes on the drive and also ran for 28 yards on three carries, as the Crimson added to its lead, 14-3, midway through the second quarter.
Mills went 4-5 for 32 yards, as the Toreros got into the end zone on their next drive. Montell Allen dashed past the goal line on a one-yard run, USD made it 14-10 with 3:43 to play. On Harvard's ensuing drive, punter David Bicknell was forced to scramble on a low snap and was unable to get to the first-down marker, giving the ball back to the Toreros at the Harvard 29 with 2:19 on the clock.
Last added another field goal for USD, this time from 30 yards out, as the Crimson headed to the locker room up, 14-13.
In the third, Harvard moved the ball 75 yards on only six plays for a touchdown drive in only 1:44. With the ball at the Harvard 38, Hempel fired a pass over the top to Cameron Brate for 18 yards. On the following play, Hempel led Andrew Berg down the sideline for a 34-yard strike, moving the ball all the way to the USD 10. Hempel then completed the drive with a 10-yard strike through the air to Andrew Fischer for the Crimson touchdown, 21-13.
Hempel continued his torrid start to the second half, completing seven straight passes. With just over 10 minutes to go in the third, Hempel found Seitu Smith wide open for a 52-yard strike. Smith ran toward the goal for the score, but fumbled at the one-yard line and the ball rolled out of the end zone, causing a touchback and giving USD possession.
Trailing, 21-13, USD moved the ball down field on a 33-yard pass by Mills to Cole Naone and a 21-yard strike by Mills to Brandon White, setting up 1st and goal at the 1. On second down, USD running back Joe Ferguson tried to get across the goal line, but Joshua Boyd popped the ball loose and Zach Hodges recovered his second fumble of the day, giving the Crimson possession.
Early on in the fourth, Hempel led Harvard deep into USD territory again, getting to the 10-yard line after a 19 yard pass to Ricky Zorn on the left side. Hempel then found tight end Ben Braunecker across the middle for a 10-yard score, as the Crimson padded its lead, 28-13.
Harvard tacked on another score and began to pull away, as Hempel threw his third TD pass of the game with 9:11 to play. Hempel alluded pressure and lofted a pass to Zorn for a 10-yard touchdown strike, 35-13. After a 50-yard completion for USD by Mills to Reggie Bell, the Toreros quickly got into the red zone on their next possession. Harvard held USD on the first three downs, but on 4th and 10, Mills connected with Bell for a 12-yard score, making it a 35-20 contest with 7:27 to go in the fourth quarter.
In the closing minutes of the contest, Hayes picked off a pass by Mills and returned it eight yards to the USD 33 with 3:45 remaining. On the ensuing drive on 3rd and 7 at the USD 30, Hempel found Fischer, who scurried 30 yards and escaped multiple defenders for another Crimson touchdown, 42-20.
Mills finished the day 27-of-46 for 293 yards and one touchdown, while Bell had seven catches for 101 yards for USD.
Harvard will host Brown in the Crimson's home opener Saturday, Sept. 28 at 7:30 p.m. The game will be shown live nationally on the NBC Sports Network.
Junior Conner Hempel (above) faces a tough task in replacing Ivy League Player of the Year Colton Chapple under center.
The criteria, and expectations of the quarterback position, specifically the starter at Harvard, has not been altered, or tweaked in 20 years. Or since the day that Tim Murphy arrived at Dillon Fieldhouse from the University of Cincinnati. His first starting signal-caller, Vin Ferrara, passed the litmus test. Steady Rich Linden too. And Neil Rose . Ryan Fitzpatrick . . . Liam O’Hagan . . . Chris Pizzotti . . . Collier Winters. And yes, of course, Colton Chapple.
No greater winner, or definition of perseverance and development than the 6-foot, ½-inch quarterback from Alpharetta, Ga, who piloted the Crimson offense to an Ivy League-record 39.4 points per game in last year’s 8-2 run.Continue “You look for the intangibles first,” said Murphy, noting that Chapple first showed up on campus with “few” measurable quarterback skills.
“He had a long release, didn’t have a strong arm . . . no one could have projected when he was a college sophomore that he could become the Ivy League Player of the Year [as a senior].”
The measurables: leadership and toughness, decision-making, and accuracy.
And it has to be all three.
“You can be accurate, a good decision-maker, and a lousy leader, and it’s not going to work,” summed up Murphy.
“At the end of the day, can you produce?”
Murphy has a pair of “veteran” quarterbacks this season, junior Conner Hempel and senior Michael Pruneau, along with the highly-touted Joseph Viviano, a 6-5 freshman.
Hempel and Pruneau lack game-day experience, aside from a handful of snaps in a reserve role the past two seasons. But they have the intangibles.
Pruneau tore an anterior cruciate ligament in preseason camp a year ago. Hempel backed up Chapple all season, impressing in cameo appearances against Holy Cross, Bucknell, and Columbia. He received all the first-team reps last spring, and the majority of the reps in camp.
And when the Crimson kick off their 140th season Saturday afternoon against the University of San Diego — the program’s first trip west since the 1949 opener at Stanford (a 44-0 defeat) — the 6-3, 210-pound Hempel, confident and poised, will set up behind center, orchestrating Harvard’s multi-layered, read-option attack.
“We have a chance to be successful with either kid, but Conner has earned it,” said Murphy, while acknowledging his offense, minus the graduates: Chapple, slashing tailback Treavor Scales, All-America tight Kyle Juszczyk (Baltimore Ravens), and two all-league linemen, has a number of question marks. There are no such concerns on defense, where there is talent, and depth, at every level.
Bryson Warner has watched this script — a Hempel debut — play out before, to a thunderous ovation.
The 11-year varsity coach at Ryle High, a Division 6A program situated in the northern-most town in Kentucky (Union, pop. 5,512 as of 2011), Warner inserted his promising freshman under center for a specific play, after shifting his starter, Kyle Benke, out wide as a receiver.
Hempel hooked up with Benke on a 50-yard pass play down the sideline.
“That was his first play, he was a nervous wreck, but he had the total package,” said Warner.
Hempel was the starter the next three seasons, directing the Raiders to the state semifinals as a senior, when he rushed, and passed, for 1,000-plus yards. He was also an all-state punter (he’s listed second on the depth chart at Harvard).
Toughness? Warner points to a game-changing play, on defense, in Hempel’s final regular-season game against Highlands, the top-ranked team in northern Kentucky.
Ryle led, 28-26, when Highlands went for 2.
“We put Conner in at corner, felt like we needed him on the field, and he made the goal-line stop, knocking their quarterback, Patrick Towles (now at the University of Kentucky), out at the 1-inch mark, just before the pylon.
“A huge play for us. The official told me it was the closest call he ever had to make.”
It was just the third loss for Highlands in seven years.
“Conner is very tough, very physical, faster than he looks, very elusive, and his leadership was amazing,” added the Ryle coach. “He took command of the offense. As a runner, he was powerful, breaking tackles, which really generated a lot of power throughout the whole team.”
But fairly quickly, Hempel learned that it would not be such a seamless transition at Harvard.
“The biggest eye-opener for me was how much preparation it takes to be in this offense, and how much you have to know as a quarterback,” he said after wrapping up a late afternoon practice session in the setting sun earlier this week.
“It is very demanding, mentally and physically.”
For instance, the focus on ball security.
“Taking chances downfield have to be open,” he said. “In high school, it was a little bit different.” (Warner notes, however, that Hempel “refused to throw it to the opposition.”).
“It’s a lot different when you get here, very humbling.”
The reps in spring ball were integral in his development, along with the nightly 7-on-7 drills this summer back in Allston, with 50-plus Crimson players on hand. Along with the reps last week in a scrimmage up at Dartmouth.
“Every time you break in a new quarterback, it kind of takes a while,” said senior Cameron Brate, a 6-5, 245-pound All-Ivy tight end who hauled in 41 catches a year ago.
“But getting all those reps this summer with ‘Hemp’ and Mike [Pruneau] was very helpful. They both can throw the ball and run it.
“We just have to make sure that we finish our opportunities, on third down and the red zone.”
Hempel said it all comes down to “preparation, and how much time you spend in the film room, breaking down opponents and the defense. It’s a big learning curve.”
Murphy notes that the preparation time required to be a starting quarterback, in college, is akin to adding another class to an already demanding courseload.
And often, that work is tedious, and lonely.
Game day is the true measurable.
“Until you play, under a microscope, under pressure, you don’t know what you have,” said the coach. “That’s what is so exciting about the first game, and what’s also so . . . concerning. Conner has a lot of tools.
“He never gets too high, and he never gets too low. His leadership style is very well received by the coaching staff and his teammates. . . . But there is nothing like experience.”
Hempel, honored to be getting his shot at No. 1, said he will “never forget going through the process.”
Now, like those that have come before, it is his time.
“We do it every single year, we have great players that graduate, and year after year, coach Murphy and his staff are recruiting, bringing in guys to replace them,” he said. “And new guys step up. It gives new players the opportunity to step up.”
Hempel gets his opportunity on Saturday.Craig Larson can be reached at clarson@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @GlobeLars.
Coming into the 2012 season, then-starting quarterback Colton Chapple had seven collegiate starts under his belt. One year, over 2,500 passing yards, and 24 record-breaking touchdowns later, junior quarterback Conner Hempel looks to take the helm and attempt to continue Chapple’s legacy.
But Hempel has an additional hurdle to pass this Saturday when Harvard travels to San Diego to take on the Toreros: he has never started a game for the Crimson.
With senior quarterback Michael Pruneau out with a torn ACL for the entire 2012 campaign, Hempel became Chapple’s backup last season. The Kentucky native appeared in three contests and displayed some of his own dual-threat offensive skills, which Chapple was well known for, against Columbia, passing for 67 yards and rushing for another 28.
Hempel headlined Harvard’s spring intrasquad scrimmage, taking the number-one reps and finishing 13-22 with 113 yards to lead the quarterbacks with Pruneau sidelined.
The junior vied with Pruneau in a hotly contested competition for the starting spot with neither holding a clear edge throughout preseason practice. In what Hempel described as a “friendly battle,” both signal-callers appeared about even, with Hempel holding the advantage in snaps and Pruneau being one year older. But coach Tim Murphy pointed to Hempel’s advantage in experience under center as the final deciding factor.
“I feel like we could be successful with both kids, but Conner’s just more experienced through no fault of Mike’s—it’s just that Mike has missed so much,” Murphy said. “During that time, Conner was getting the number two reps… and then Conner’s gotten most of the number one reps throughout preseason. I think the sheer volume of reps compared to Mike has helped him to win the battle, and I think he’s going to be a very good quarterback.”
Saturday will be Hempel’s first real test under center as Harvard takes on San Diego in a hostile road environment, but having roomed with Chapple in his senior spring semester and spending the past three years mastering the Crimson playbook, Hempel feels ready to take the reins from his mentor.
“It feels great,” Hempel said. “I’m tremendously honored, coming after Colton Chapple and all of the great quarterbacks behind him, it’s just a great honor. I look forward to getting after game one in my first start.” —Staff writer Samantha Lin can be reached at samantha.lin@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @linsamnity.
Wayne Litmer took some great pictures for the Cooper game and will be on hand this Friday during the Conner game. If you want him to take pictures of your son please send him a message on Facebook.
UNION, Ky. -- Thousands of high school coaches across the country will pace football sidelines Friday evening.
One such coach is Adam Collinsworth, a linebackers coach at Ryle High School .
Collinsworth will be there when his Raiders run onto Toyota Field in Georgetown, Ky. to take on Scott County . But he won't be running out with his players. He'll take the field in a slightly different manner: by way of a motorized wheelchair.
Collinsworth was a standout linebacker at Scott High School before moving on to star for Thomas More College in Crestview Hills, Ky. 15 years ago.
A hard-hitting, tackle-making machine, Collinsworth was a fixture on the Saints defense.
But that all changed Aug. 9, 1998 when he broke two vertebrae diving into a friend’s pool.
He went into cardiac arrest, his heart stopping twice. He spent three months in a hospital, paralyzed from the neck down, and was initially told he would need either a ventilator or oxygen tanks the rest of his life in order to breathe. His ability to verbally communicate was even in doubt.
But Collinsworth didn't let that prognosis deter him from from living his life and going after his dreams.
Before his injury, his work ethic and determination to succeed helped him become the Saints' second-leading tackler during his sophomore season.
After his life-changing accident, that same drive enabled him to overcome his doctors’ expectations.
It took him several months, but Collinsworth regained the ability to breathe on his own and eventually the ability to speak. And while he still struggles with physical limitations caused by his injury, he now has some feeling in his hands and some movement in his arms.
While the lifestyle conversion from gifted athlete to being physically immobilized was difficult, Collinsworth credits football for keeping his head in the game.
"There is a lot of people that have more mobility than me that are just hermit crabs, who never get out of their house, just sit in their house all day long and do nothing. And without football I’m afraid that I probably would have became someone like that," Collinsworth said.
It was more than just the sport, though. It was the people, the players and coaches he interacted with on a daily basis who helped Collinsworth push forward.
He initially feared he would have to give up his dream of coaching football, but his former coach at Thomas More, Dean Paul, didn’t let that happen. He encouraged Collinsworth to stick around his teammates and coaches because he was still part of the team.
Collinsworth eventually became a member of the coaching staff.
From analyzing game tape to motivating players on the sidelines, to encouraging teammates to give an extra 5 percent in the weight room, Collinsworth was an instrumental part of the team’s successes on and off the field, according to Bryson Warner, a fellow assistant on the Thomas More staff.
The memories of Collinsworth’s connection with the team stuck with Warner, now Ryle's head coach. So when Collinsworth contacted him about possible openings on his team's coaching staff, Warner jumped at the chance to add him.
“I called him up and asked him if he had any openings and he was like, 'no, but we'll make one for you” an appreciative Collinsworth said about his conversation with Warner.
Having seen his ability to work with and motivate young athletes up close, Warner needed less than a minute to know he wanted Collinsworth to join him on the sidelines at the school's football field in Union, Ky.
"I didn't even listen for 30 seconds (before) I said you're hired," Warner said.
So far, the decision has worked out well for everyone involved.
"He's here every day, never misses practice, sometimes in the heat and things like that,” Warner said. “It’s tough on him, but he's always here."
And Collinsworth isn’t on the coaching staff simply to serve as a motivational tool or a glorified mascot. He’s a coach, a good one at that. He is at practice every day, working tirelessly to cultivate football players, young men into the best versions of themselves.
Collinsworth wants nothing more than to beat Scott County and help his team earn a berth in the state playoffs. But in the end he’s just glad to have the opportunity to be on the sidelines doing what he loves.
"It keeps a smile on my face, knowing that I get to come out to practice every day,” he said. “I know the kids probably don’t think that, but I enjoy coming to every practice. You know, I’m thankful."
Collinsworth feels fortunate to have a support system that has allowed him to overcome many of the perceived limitations in his life. In sticking with his desire to give back, he’s working off the field to raise money to improve the lives of other people who've suffered spinal cord injuries.
The Collinsworth Cause Foundation holds golf outings to raise money for the cause.
The organization held its second annual event in July at Boone Links Golf Course. The event raised $2,000 for Abby Marsh, a recent Ryle High School graduate
The JV football game this Saturday (10 am) AT Sycamore will be played on our New Turf Field at Sycamore High School. Address is 7400 Cornell Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 45242.
Please encourage everyone to contribute to the cause by purchasing a 'Raiders 4 the Cure' shirt or hoodie and to proudly wear it at our September 13th Ryle vs. Conner game.
Children's Sizes are available, but in the 'Sport Gray' color only - please write them in at the bottom. Shirts will be delivered at school during lunch and at the games.
Please call me if you have any questions or suggestions. Thanks in advance for your help to get the word out about this great cause.
Scott Co. 56, Ryle 14Ryle held tough for a half against last year’s Class 6A state semifinalist, trailing just 7-0 at halftime before Scott County poured it on 49-14 in the second half.
Scott Daniel tallied 187 all-purpose yards and scored five touchdowns to lead Scott County. Daniel caught six passes for 111 yards and four touchdowns and added a 76-yard punt return touchdown to cap off his night.
Gavin Brandt had a solid game for Ryle, finishing 6-14 for 135 yards passing and two touchdowns, both in the fourth quarter. Gavin hit Ryan Hill 3 times with two of the catches going for touchdowns. Hill scored on a 67 yard pass from Brandt and a 35 yard pass. Ryle's record is not 1-1