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Week 1 - Where I'm going. . . .

Don't know if anyone is looking at the message boards as we haven't updated them since the end of the coaching carousel (which extended into May). Figured I'd let people know where I'm headed each Friday. Feel free to chime in with what game you'll be watching this week as well!

It's been 9 years since I've seen a game at T-Town. That would be Tolleson Union HS and that streak ends this Friday when I see the season opener between the Wolverines and Mountain Ridge. It's a winnable game for both programs.

Both teams were 3-7, but improved as the year went on as each won 2 of its last 3 games. Mountain Ridge has a new head coach as Andrew Johnson was among the last hires in this cycle. Former HC Gavin Lutman left the last week of April for a college coaching position at Western New Mexico. He was replaced by former Saguaro offensive coordinator Andrew Johnson a month later. Johnson has had limited time with only a partial offseason, but has built programs before, at the youth level for the powerful Scottsdale Argonauts. Junior Lucas Baughman looks to be the QB. He started a game against Queen Creek and saw action the first half of the year in 2023 before having it cut short.

For Tolleson, it's a chance for me to see Rico Blassingame in a varsity game for the first time. The 6-3, 180-pound junior receiver is a major prospect and holds 16 offers (12 from Power Four programs). There have been a lot of departures from the Wolverines since 7's season ended in June. We don't know who will be getting the ball to Blassingame yet, or who some of the other pass-catchers will be, but this is a chance to find that out. Tolleson returns leading rusher Tyeshon Howard as well (6.5 yards/carry).

Coach Ballard Blog #64

Just watched the USA-France gold medal game in the Olympics. Here are some thoughts:

I related this in one of the other blogs, but after today this is worth repeating. I played basketball in France professionally in the 70's after a failed tryout with the Portland Trailblazers. When my agent called and said he had a job opportunity with a team in France, two things popped into my head immediately- the Eiffel Tower and the French language. The former was really the only image of that country that I could conjure up at that moment, and the latter was a language that I didn't speak a word of. I told the guy that I didn't speak French and he said not to worry, that there would be some people who spoke English. I told him that I needed a few days to think about it. The general reaction of my family and friends afterwards was mostly that I would be crazy not to go and that they couldn't believe there were people who would pay me to play basketball.

I called the agent back and asked him what the deal was, and he said I would get a round trip plane ticket and if I made the team, he had an associate there who negotiate a contract. I literally flew to Paris with not much more information than that. This was the 70's and I didn't know anyone in Phoenix who had played basketball in Europe that I could talk to about it. So off I went. My intent was to play a season over there- if I made the team- and then come back and try to get a free agent tryout in the NBA. I ended up staying for six years, meeting my wife, and having experiences that were off the chart. I knew immediately during the first practice that I was the best player on the team. Teams were only allowed two foreigners and the other one on this team was from Senegal. Back then, the French players were very mechanical and the bigs were stiffs- physical and rough, but unskilled. The American players brought a style and skill level to France that they loved. Most of the Americans were big- 6'6" and above- I was 6'8", and the things we could do with a ball just blew them away. In the game-within-a-game, the contests were really about how much your American could score versus their American.

What I didn't realize in the years I spent in France, was that part of the reason they brought Americans over was to learn from them. I remember being at a summer camp in Poitiers, and every day after lunch I would go to the gym and do an hour workout by myself to stay in good shape. Inevitably, French kids and coaches would come in and sit down and just watch. They didn't pick up balls and start shooting or playing or messing around. They just watched. That was happening all over the country, I'm sure. And boy did they learn.

Another side thought is that the Europeans only play their national anthems when they are competing against other countries. In all the sports I watched in France where it was one French team versus another French team, there was no anthem. But in those moments where they were playing another country, the Euros will really belt it out with gusto. Over here in America, we play the anthem so much- all the way down to pee wee sports, that it loses its effect. So when you watch the anthem being played in the Olympics, many American athletes don't really sing it like the Euros do, because they have heard it so many times. The French even belted theirs out impromptu before getting their silver medals today- and all the players sang it right along with them. You just don't see that here.

But, major props to the USA team. Great win. I watched the USA women's soccer match earlier and noticed that in their gold medal game, Rose Lavelle, a great player with a championship resume, had been removed from the starting lineup and, in fact, did not play. She was shown on the sideline, in uniform, ready if called upon, cheering on her teammates. She looked so happy when they won the gold, which was an astounding achievement for a program that many people had written off. She was a great teammate at a time when it counted most. So, naturally, I thought of Jayson Tatum and all the controversy surrounding his playing time. The Olympics is not club ball. You don't pay to play. It is an honor to be selected and you subjugate yourself to the bigger picture. I have coached a ton, and in a 40-minute game, your 11th and 12th players have a role to play, just like your 1st and 2nds. Granted, if this was club ball, Jayson and his mother would just quit that team and go somewhere to get playing time. All the chatter about playing everyone in every game was ridiculous. You are representing your country. It looks like Jayson was handling it OK, but many of the rest of us weren't. A sign of the times, I suppose.

Section-7

Well the girls Section-7 finished up last night and it was very clear that Arizona does not have high level basketball compared to Cali and some others.

I am hoping the boys perform better this next weekend...

Tomorrow and Tuesday is the Boys Qualifier. 96 local teams trying to qualify for 12 spots.

It should be exciting to see the Tuesday evening finals of the 12 pools...

Freshman?

Here is some talented freshman I have come across so far...More to come as I go thru my trek of the city..watching JV and some freshman teams that are stacked :)


Some of them are already their teams best players, some are getting a little run on varsity and some are STUD JV or Freshman players waiting for their chances as the older players graduate...

It is a good class but the 2026 class was better to start last year...

2023 5A Awards Voting Results

First Place votes are worth 3 points, Second Place Votes are worth 1
Tie Breakers are:

1) Most first place votes
2) Most second place votes
3) Most total ballots cast

If all three of the above are tied, the award is split

Player of the Year​

Adam Mohammed (Apollo)- 14
Daxen Hall (Higley)- 13
Deshawn Warner (Desert Edge)- 13

Offensive Player of the Year​

Daxen Hall (Higley)- 26
Brandon Phelps (ALA Gilbert North)- 12

Defensive Player of the Year​

Deshawn Warner (Desert Edge)- 30
Tony Cumberland (Desert Mountain)- 6
Nijrell Eason (Higley)- 2

Two-Way Player of the Year​

Dezmen Roebuck (Marana)- 12
Tyton Slade (ALA Gilbert North)- 11
Nikko Boncore Montoya (Cactus)- 9
Anthony Segura (Horizon)- 3

Coach of the Year​

Mark/Marcus Carter (14)
Eddy Zubey (11)
Aaron Walls (7)
Ben Kullos (5)
Ryan Freeman (1)

Assistant Coach of the Year​

Rand Baker (Higley)- 14
Brandon Whitener (Desert Mountain)- 10
Matt Allen (Central)- 10

Offensive Breakout Player of the Year​

Ronald Coty III (Kellis)- 24
Jay’vier Cook (Agua Fria)-8
Conner White (ALAGN)- 3

Defensive Breakout Player of the Year​

Boston Tilton (Higley)-18
Joshua Hopphaus (Desert Edge)- 14
Kody Thorley (ALAGN)- 3

Offensive Underclassman of the Year​

Gunner Fagrell (Higley)- 25
Cam Allen (Central)- 7
Donivan Dixon (Cactus Shadows)- 3

Defensive Underclassman of the Year​

Justice Braithwhite (Higley)- 16
Logan Guilford (Sunrise Mountain)- 14
Aveon Williams (Casa Grande)- 5

Most Improved Player of the Year​

Ezra Edmond (Millennium)- 14
Eric Washington (Browne)- 12
Dominick Norris (Ironwood Ridge)- 5

Quarterback of the Year​

Jaxon Knutson (McClintock)
Luke Moga (Sunnyslope)
Beau Devens (Canyon View)

Running Back of the Year​

Jordan Blake (Skyline)- 24
Bodie Zamorano (Horizon)- 9
Athan Ferber (Campo Verde)- 1

Dual-Threat Back of the Year​

Khameron Athy (Central)- 24
Prince Mugisha (Tucson)- 5
Noah Chanez (Tucson)- 2

Wide Receiver of the Year​

Brandon Phelps (ALAGN)- 25
Nikko Boncore-Montoya (Cactus)- 7
Kezion Dia Johnson (Desert Edge)- 2
Cooper Perry (Notre Dame)- 1

Tight End of the Year​

Dillon Hipp (Desert Mountain)- 27
Aveon Williams (Casa Grande)- 7
David Baba (Ironwood Ridge)- 1

Offensive Lineman of the Year​

Carter Lavrusky (Horizon)- 17
Matthew Lado (Apollo)- 10
Sean Tripp (Millennium)- 4

Team Offensive Line of the Year​

Apollo- 14
Horizon- 12
Higley- 8

Defensive Lineman of the Year​

Tony Cumberland (Desert Mountain)- 20
Damien Khaivilay (Apollo)- 7
Ryan Willey (Verrado)- 5
Jackson Murray (Horizon)- 3

Linebacker of the Year​

Deacon Shea (Notre Dame Prep)- 14
Jonathan Kamara (Desert Edge)- 13
Jacob Pitts (Higley)- 8

Defensive Back of the Year​

Santana Wilson (Desert Mountain)- 12
Trey Smith (Apollo)- 11
Nijrell Eason (Higley)- 7
Andrew Zubey (Higley)- 6

Return Specialist of the Year​

Aundre Gibson (Desert Edge)- 25
Trey Smith (Apollo)- 9
Noah Chanez (Tucson)- 1

Kicking Specialist of the Year​

Kanyon Floyd (Horizon)- 25
Talen Gallegos (Apollo)- 6
Colton Reyes (Gilbert)- 4

2023 4A Awards Voting Results

First Place votes are worth 3 points, Second Place Votes are worth 1
Tie Breakers are:

1) Most first place votes
2) Most second place votes
3) Most total ballots cast

If all three of the above are tied, the award is split

Player of the Year​

Kayden Luke (Canyon del Oro)- 27
Tayt Ford (Yuma Catholic)- 2
Bridger French Coconino- 2

Offensive Player of the Year​

Bridger French (Coconino)- 16
Brady Forst (Arcadia)- 14
Zech Owens (Glendale)- 4

Defensive Player of the Year​

Chase Laux (Canyon del Oro)- 9
Jimmy Leon (Mica Mountain)-
9
Cayden Gibson (Arizona College Prep)- 8
Carlos Montoya Jr. (Walden Grove)- 3
Rocky Stallworth (Yuma Catholic)- 3

Two-Way Player of the Year​

Sir Stokes (Yuma Catholic)- 21
Thomas Doxtader (4)
Uriah Tenette (4)
Nick Kennedy (4)
Noble Young Blackgoat (2)
Noah Petrauschke (2)

Coach of the Year​

Rhett Stallworth (Yuma Catholic)- 12* most first place votes
Ray Brown (Arcadia)- 12
Dustin Peace (Canyon del Oro)- 10
Stevann Brown (Lee Williams)- 2

Assistant Coach of the Year​

Scott McKee (Canyon del Oro)- 17
Steven Vaught (Arizona College Prep)- 12
BJ Pasquel (Arcadia)- 6

Offensive Breakout Player of the Year​

Braylen Rooney (Arcadia)- 20
Elijah Little (Thunderbird)- 14
Aiden Deleon (Apache Junction)- 1

Defensive Breakout Player of the Year​

Rocky Stallworth (Yuma Catholic)- 18
Carlos Montoya Jr (Walden Grove)- 10
Carson Minaar (Eastmark)- 7

Offensive Underclassman of the Year​

Nash Ott (Yuma Catholic)- 21
Javon Bell (Peoria)- 9
Dominic Kramer (Peoria)- 5

Defensive Underclassman of the Year​

Shaun Carter (Yuma Catholic)- 18
Cam Mitchell (Arizona College Prep)- 10
Broden Schmidt (Mica Mountain)- 7

Most Improved Player of the Year​

Brady Forst (Arcadia)- 19
Dennis Church (Apache Junction)- 11
Noah Petrauschke (Lee Williams)- 5

Quarterback of the Year​

Evan Tarasenko (Northwest Christian)- 21
Zech Owens (Glendale)- 12
Nash Ott (Yuma Catholic)- 1
Gabriel Smith (Walden Grove)- 1

Running Back of the Year​

Elijah Little (Thunderbird)- 17
Tayt Ford (Yuma Catholic)- 10
Coleman Samples (Eastmark)- 8

Dual-Threat Back of the Year​

Jantzen Ginger (Youngker)
Ben Lueders (Northwest Christian)

Wide Receiver of the Year​

Gunnar Penzkover (Northwest Christian)- 19
Darius Haskin (Buckeye)- 15
Christian Shetler (Greenway)- 1

Tight End of the Year​

Jaylen Coleman (Mesquite)- 21
Carter Pruitt (Arcadia)- 12
Isaac Higuera (Douglas)- 2

Offensive Lineman of the Year​

Sa’Kylee Woodard (Canyon del Oro)- 20
Nick Kennedy (Lee Williams)- 12
Karambir Singh (ACP)- 3

Team Offensive Line of the Year​

Canyon del Oro- 27
Yuma Catholic- 7
Mica Mountain- 1

Defensive Lineman of the Year​

Cayden Gibson (Arizona College Prep)- 19
Sa’Kylee Woodard (Canyon del Oro)- 9
Nick Kennedy (Lee Williams)- 3

Linebacker of the Year​

James Giggey (Bradshaw Mtn)- 15
Rocky Stallworth (Yuma Catholic)- 14
Carlos Montoya Jr (Walden Grove)- 6

Defensive Back of the Year​

Devin Hayward (Mica Mtn)- 22
Collin Minaar (Eastmark)- 7
Thomas Doxtader (Lee Williams)- 4
Ted Scow (Buckeye)- 3

Return Specialist of the Year​

Darius Haskin (Buckeye)- 27
Dontay Tyson Jr (Peoria)- 6
Hunter Hancock (Yuma Catholic)- 2

Kicking Specialist of the Year​

Nick Avalos-Lara (Apache Junction)- 15
Gehrig Heil (Arcadia)- 10
Jose Miguel Villanueva (Coconino)- 9
Cameron Main (North Canyon)- 1

2023 6A Awards Voting Results

First Place votes are worth 3 points, Second Place Votes are worth 1
Tie Breakers are:

1) Most first place votes
2) Most second place votes
3) Most total ballots cast

If all three of the above are tied, the award is split

Player of the Year​


Navi Bruzon- 19
Demond Williams- 13
Noah Carter- 9

Offensive Player of the Year​

Demond Williams- 30
Dylan Lee- 5
Enoch Watson- 5

Defensive Player of the Year​

Noah Carter- 25
Iverson Small- 5
Hudson Card- 4
Jeremiah Young- 4

Two-Way Player of the Year​

Kenny Worthy
Kody Cullimore

Coach of the Year​


Ty Detmer- 11
Kyle Enders- 11

Collin Thomas- 9
Richard Taylor- 9

Assistant Coach of the Year​

Max Hall- 19
Billy Carter- 10
Shawn Gloden- 10

Offensive Breakout Player of the Year​

Gio Richardson- 18
Diesel Taylor- 11
Raiden Vines-Bright- 10

Defensive Breakout Player of the Year​

Nathan Spivey- 17
Dean Vincent- 16
Beckham Barney- 6

Offensive Underclassman of the Year​

Kainan Manna- 27
Kamden Segall- 10
Tait Reynolds- 2

Defensive Underclassman of the Year​


Hudson Dunn- 26
Zeth Thues- 7
Grady Crandall- 6

Most Improved Player of the Year​


Charlie McGinnis- 24
Blake Heffron- 8
Jayden Williams- 7

Quarterback of the Year​


Enoch Watson- 30
Mason Bray- 9

Running Back of the Year​


Dylan Lee- 18
Ca'lil Valentine- 14
Jon Wilson- 4

Dual-Threat Back of the Year​


Breylon Blount- 18
Jaedon Matthews- 13
Don Tinsley- 8

Wide Receiver of the Year​

Braylon Gardner- 24
Jayden Williams- 10
Raiden Vines-Bright- 5

Tight End of the Year​

Ryan Wolfer- 23
Javery Mayberry- 10
Creed Hallows- 6

Offensive Lineman of the Year​

Kaden Haeckel- 17
Amare Taase- 9
Brady Bakke- 7
Camden Jury- 6

Team Offensive Line of the Year​

Liberty- 30
Centennial- 8
Highland- 1

Defensive Lineman of the Year​

Elijah Rushing- 17
Keona Wilhite- 10
Jeremiah Young- 12

Linebacker of the Year​

Champ Gennicks- 19
Keaton Stam- 15
Kash Cullimore- 3
Maddox Ford- 2

Defensive Back of the Year​

Kody Cullimore- 23
Miles Lockhart- 11
Nathan Spivey- 3
Iverson Small- 2

Return Specialist of the Year​

Noah Carter- 19
Gunnar Moore- 13
Dion Rogers- 7

Kicking Specialist of the Year​

Samuel Hunsaker- 17
Cyrus Aguinaga- 16
Timmy Tynan- 4
Nicholas Stoyanovich- 3

Coach Ballard Blog #63

When I left Mesa Community College, I didn't necessarily consider it a "retirement". It was just time for me to move on. I didn't think I wouldn't ever coach again, even though I knew it was a possibility. Almost everyone I have talked to since has asked me if I am enjoying retirement and I have the same answer that I just gave you in the first sentence. I just moved on from Mesa because we didn't have the same direction in mind. They really wanted to go Division II and I didn't. As soon as I left, they went Division II. Even though we have some very large community colleges in the Metro area, we now have no Division I junior college basketball program. That tells you something about the commitment to excellence in athletics by the Maricopa County Community College District. Mesa can use the excuse that they had no choice or tell you that the district would not fund a Division I basketball program at just one of their colleges. Neither of those would be accurate. It just isn't that important to them and that's where we had to part ways. If I am meant to coach again, then it will happen. If not, I am OK with it. Basketball has been good to me either way.

It gives me a lot of pleasure these days to follow former players and assistant coaches as they continue their careers in coaching. Mike Grothaus is the head boys coach at Basha, Ernest Shand is the head women's coach at Glendale Community College, Ty Wimbish is the head girls coach at Casteel, Jeff Bonner is the head boys coach at Fountain Hills, Kevin Torres is the head girls coach at Coronado, Mark Carlino is the head boys coach at Westwood, Josh Rosenbaum is an assistant boys coach at Sunnyslope, Cory Hoff is an assistant coach at New Mexico Military Institute, Ben Dalton is an assistant coach at Mountain Pointe, and Jimmy Herrera is an assistant boys coach at Coronado.

Social media has given me a lot of opportunity to follow basketball and basketball issues, so I still feel pretty connected. I actually joined a NFHS-Basketball Officials group to read and discuss current issues in officiating. When I got my master's degree in 1990 at Arizona State, my major was in Educational Administration and Leadership. People asked me if I got it because I intended to become an administrator, but I said no. I wanted to learn what made administrators tick, because they are the most important element in program success. That's why I joined the basketball official's group- I wanted to read what referees are thinking about and talking about, and maybe join in a discussion or two. It is very interesting, and I would advise other coaches to join in.

I have also gotten into a couple of basketball coaches groups- one is Basketball Coaches (Basketball Coaching), and the other is one run by Scott Fields, the head coach at Salt Lake City East High. Scott has coached in college and overseas and is in the Indiana Sports Hall of Fame as a player. Both sites have great discussions, and I would recommend them.

In the previous 62 blogs, I have tried to discuss as many issues about basketball as I could but am certainly willing to give my thoughts on anything related. Just reply to this blog and we can get something started.

Have a wonderful holiday season...
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HOME

How do you guys feel about the word "home" being used in many recruits tweets these days? Upon commitment this is "home" for me. When narrowing down their short list, where is "home" going to be for me? I'll be announcing my new "home" in three days etc.... Yes Kenny Dillingham used it in his press conference and this truly is home for him.

To me home is where you learn to overcome adversity. It's where you work through problems. It's where you truly find out who you are and what you can become. Home is not where you run from when another guy moves in. It's not where you leave when you might have internal competition and where you might not get everything you want.

While its great that guys have the freedom to go where they want. The way things are trending now, "home" is the transfer portal at the first sign of trouble.
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Where we're going - Semifinals

It's the last edition for the season for where we're going this week. Assuming next week anybody who's going to football games will be at Sun Devil Stadium (unless Arcadia beats Yuma Catholic, which will send Cody down to Tucson).

On Friday, I'm taking my first trip to Higley to see the Knights against Apollo in a marquee running back matchup. The Knights moved up from 4A in 2018, but I've only seen them either on the road or playing for a championship (which they did last year). Saw Apollo earlier this season and it was the only blowout I've seen all year as the Hawks ruined Goldwater's Homecoming, 52-7. Adam Mohammed (Apollo) went over the 2,000-yard mark for the season last week and Daxen Hall (1,881) could get there this week.

Saturday, I'll be at Mountain Ridge as I'm probably one of the few people that see games throughout the state each week that hasn't seen Liberty play. The Lions will be taking on Highland at the same site where they suffered their 3rd straight gutwrenching semifinal defeat. Will this be the year Navi Bruzon & Co. get over the hump? I saw Highland finish out the regular season with a 12-0 shutout over Desert Ridge. The Hawks haven't allowed more than 21 points in a game since their last loss, which was back on Sept. 22 against Chandler (24-22). Could this be a game similar to the 2018 classic that the Hawks won 15-12?

Quarterfinals - Where we're going

This week brings the quarterfinals, which includes the start of the Open Division. I haven't seen the defending state champs yet, so I'll be out at Basha to see the Bears against ALA-Queen Creek.

There is a different feel about ALAQC (8-2) than the past two years since the Patriots played a 6A schedule this year. That slate included Saguaro, O'Connor, Pinnacle, and Highland. I caught them in September against O'Connor and it was a first-quarter flurry (17 points) that enabled the Patriots to play with the lead and eventually win 24-10. The ALAQC defensive line played hard despite being undersized (none above 215 pounds).

Basha comes in at 9-1 with the lone setback coming by 1 point against Highland way back in Week 2. The Bears posted at least 30 points in each of the next 8 games in their current win streak. Demond Williams Jr. is a Player of the Year candidate in his fourth year as the starter. He has 2,614 passing yards with 28 TD passes and just 2 interceptions. A dual-threat, he leads the Bears in rushing with 900 yards and 17 touchdowns.

ALA-Queen Creek is in this round for the 3rd straight year. Can the Patriots break through and get to the semifinals? Basha is down a couple of coaches and a couple of players (barring a late appeal) due to some ejections in the season finale against Perry. Will the Bears be able to overcome those after a week off to prepare for them? I'm making the trip out to the Southeast Valley to find out.
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