2013年12月25日星期三
Vanguard's Jamerson is TD machine for Knights
Vanguard has churned out its share of eye-popping receivers over the years — pass catchers who made the weekly stat sheet look like video game material. After the season Natrell Jamerson had this fall, the Knights senior ought to be auditioning to be on the cover of Madden. The Star-Banner's offensive player of the year capped his high school career with a stellar season that challenged school records that have stood since the early 1990s.The China ceramic tile produced by us feature high quality and competitive prices to meet the demand of customers. If ever there was a home-run threat on the football field — a player capable of finding his way into the end zone from anywhere between the lines — Jamerson fits the mold. The 6-foot,Most importantly, Az-loc to offer you automatic web content translation Chinese. 175-pound Jamerson is a complete package, head coach Alex Castaneda said. He explodes off the line of scrimmage and takes pride in running decisive, crisp routes, which is something he learned from receivers coach Steve Rhem, a NFL vet and Vanguard alum. With a dependable pair of hands and enough physicality to fight off defenders backs, Jamerson turns on the jets and sets his sights on the end zone with his 4.5 speed.
Corners who take his frame for granted quickly learn the consequences. "He benches 325 (pounds)," Castaneda said. "He's a physical player and doesn't look it." Jamerson's 14 receiving touchdowns set a single-season record at Vanguard, one ahead of Kenny Clark's mark set in 1994 and two ahead of Amel Brooks in 1991. What makes Jamerson's record stand out even more is that he did it in just 11 games, while Clark suited up 15 times in '94 on a run to the state championship game. His 1,196 receiving yards on 68 catches are third on the school's single-season list behind Clark's 1,333 and Brooks' 1,191. Meanwhile, Rhem now sits behind Jamerson in that category with 1,Our range of high quality collet chuck include quick change and standard cap collet chucks.163 yards in 1988. "I didn't know anything about the records until toward the end of the season when coach Rhem told me," Jamerson said. "I'm not a superstar or anything like that. It just shows that anybody can do it." To reach the heights Jamerson did, having a steady quarterback is crucial, and that is exactly what he had in fellow senior Adam Robles, last year's offensive player of the year.
"I guess it kind of shows that all the work I put in the last three years is starting to pay off," said Jamerson, a two-year starter and three-year varsity player. "… And it's for the other classmates too, because if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't be here. They helped me out a lot. "And with Adam, him and I are a partnership almost because I help him out and he helps me. It's a good tandem." The two Knights were easily the county leaders at their respective positions this season. Jamerson's next closest competitor in catches, yards and touchdowns was his teammate — senior tight end Kano Dillon. Jamerson caught 21 more balls for 555 more yards and seven more touchdowns. Jamerson also reached the end zone three times on kickoff returns to finish as the county's leading scorer with 17 total touchdowns. On top of all that, Castaneda used him at cornerback on obvious passing downs. When asked to think of a comparable Vanguard alum — and there are plenty to choose from — Castaneda menioned P.J. Williams, Florida State's sophomore starting cornerback.
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