GAMES
RANKINGS
A Class to Remember: FB Marshall seniors won't get shot at third-straight UIL State Track crown
Crushed.
It was one of the first words out of the mouth of Fort Bend Marshall men's track & field coach Lloyd Banks on Friday afternoon. Just minutes before the call, Banks had seen his team's season ended.
Not because of a dropped baton. Not because of an injury. But because of COVID-19.
"We were all on hold," Banks said. "Every announcement that the UIL dropped we were just hoping and praying that they were going to find a way for us to finish up. It stings because you want to see your kids go out and compete."
In less than a month, Banks was anticipating to be standing on the track of Mike A. Myers Stadium in the heart of Austin watching his 4x100-meter relay - which held the fastest time in the country at 40.40 - and the 4x200-meter relay team - which had the second-fastest time in the nation at 1:24.91 - race for immortality.
"I've told the boys all the time, this is arguably the greatest and most consistent sprint group of all time," Banks said. "When the lights came on in 2018, the catalyst of the group was three sophomores. They won a state championship."
At the end of the night it was his hope to win the program's third-straight Class 5A State Championship. It would have been the the fifth state title for the program in six years.
"No doubt," Banks said when asked if they could have won again in 2020. "That was the conversation. We all wanted to break the national record in the 4x100-meter relay but it was always 'let's try to get another ring'. That was always the goal. They would sacrifice an individual race here or there, all they cared about was winning the state championship. I love them for that.
"It was a selfless group, all they wanted to do was see each other shine and they were very competitive."
Instead, Banks has started his goodbyes to the Class of 2020.
It is a group that leaves with two track state titles and a pair of appearances in state championship football games.
"My hat goes off to the class of 2020," Banks said. "They did a great job. Proud of them. It's going to hurt to see them go."
In the Fort Bend Marshall community, the 2020 group has had to live up to the legend of the 2015 group.
That group - which included current Atlanta Falcon Kendall Sheffield, Arizona State receiver Jeremy Smith, University of Houston standouts Amere Lattin and Gerald Mills - finished as runner-ups in 2013 and 2014 but then capped their careers with a state title in 2015, which started the current run Fort Bend Marshall is on.
"I never thought I'd see a class like that again," Banks said. "But 2020 most definitely rose to the occasion. They did their thing, I'm proud of them."
Looking at this group of seniors it includes guys that will be talked about for a long time because of what they did on the track and football field.
Devon Achane is heading to Texas A&M to play football and run track, Bryson Stubblefield - who ran during the indoor season but hadn't competed outdoors yet - is heading to TCU, Malik Hornsby is going to Arkansas, Sylvester LaBome is going to Lane College and Avery Helm is heading to Florida
So, where does the Class of 2020 rank all time?
"They have to be No. 1," Banks said with a chuckle. "Just have to be No. 1. They had to stay hungry. They had to manage themselves physically, because football season is a long one and track is also. They had the wherewithal and they had to shine when the lights came on.
"They did just that."
K'Lavon Chaisson: North Shore coach Jon Kay reminisces on the potential first-round NFL Draft pick
HOUSTON - For this Hollywood movie, the script writes itself.
A kid from the East Side of Houston, who didn't play football his sophomore year of high school, would grow up to be a state champion, national champion and now potentially a soon-to-be first round NFL draft pick.
Before K'Lavon Chaisson was making national headlines for the 2019 National Champion LSU Tigers, he was representing North Shore High School , and to go where his story begins, you have to go back to the first coach who saw the potential - North Shore head coach Jon Kay.
"Obviously, he's a gifted athlete. I think his first love at the time was really basketball," Kay said reflecting back to his first memories of meeting K'Lavon. "He ended up finishing out the football season [his freshman year] but didn't play his sophomore year at North Shore. He just played straight basketball. We made another run at him in the spring of his sophomore year. Got him out at spring football and once he came out there you could tell he was incredibly gifted athletically, but was still a very raw football player."
Kay and his staff took that rawness, transformed it and the results were virtually immediate.
In Chaisson's junior season is here where he broke out In his first varsity game in 2015, it came against Clear Springs - a 49-13 victory. He didn't start that day but when he came in, he came off the edge and got a sack, which was a sign for what was to come.
That season, Chaisson battled some injuries including suffering a hairline fracture in his clavicle. He missed time during the season, Kay said and as their playoff push carried on Chaisson was cleared to play in games but not participate in practice.
North Shore reached the Class 6A Division I State Championship game in 2015 - which was Kay's second year of being the Mustangs' head coach - and was set to face Sam Ehlinger and the Austin Westlake Chaps inside NRG Stadium on December 19, 2015.
"So, here you have a kid playing in his first full varsity year and he didn't take a single snap in pads that entire week of the state championship game leading up to Westlake," Kay recalled. "Later on when I went back to watch the practice film he's in a sling standing there behind the offense while we were practicing. He was completely engaged in the gameplan and what was going on. Then he went out and played phenomenal and made the play to end the game in overtime at the goal line."
No practice, no problem.
In the state title game, Chaisson had a fumble recovery and blocked a potentially game-winning 32-yard field goal by Westlake with 16 seconds left in the fourth quarter, which forced overtime. His final play to cement the Hollywood script - he blew up a trick play in the backfield in overtime, which sealed the 21-14 victory for North Shore.
"The thing about K'Lavon was the way he prepared and I think he carried that with him to LSU," Kay said.
Chaisson's work ethic carried over to the Tigers, where he helped LSU win the 2019 National Championship defeating the Clemson Tigers in New Orleans this past January.
Now, Chaisson is projected to be a first-round draft pick. 2020 NFL Mock Drafts have the defensive end being picked in the mid-first round, a majority going with the Atlanta Falcons at No. 16 or the Dallas Cowboys at No. 17. Both need a pass rusher.
"I think athletically he had the potential to do that, but it's just so hard to tell at the high school level," Kay said about if he thought K'Lavon was first-round caliber back in high school. "We've seen a lot of kids with the potential to be NFL athletes. The problem is it takes a lot more than just athleticism to be an NFL athlete and I think that's where he made his mark when he went to LSU and did some of the same things.
"I think the best football of his career is ahead of him," "He's not a guy that's peaked out. I think he's got a lot of football ahead of him. He's going to learn a lot more. He's the kind of athlete that has the physical tools and the mental capacity to put it all together and be the kind of player that can stand out in the league."
The most recent former North Shore players to be drafted have been Emeke Egbule in 2019 (200th by the Chargers) and Dorance Armstrong in 2018. Armstrong went on to play at Kansas after his time at North Shore and was taken in the fourth round with the 116th pick by the Dallas Cowboys.
Over the years there have been others. Chykie Brown was a fifth-round pick (164th by the Ravens in 2011), Cory Redding was a third-round pick (66th by the Lions in 2003), Earl Mitchell was a third-rounder (81st pick by the Texans in 2010), Andre Gurode was a second-rounder (37th by the Cowboys in 2002) and Lance Gunn was a seventh-rounder (175th by the Bengals).
Chaisson in a week is posed to become the first-ever first-rounder from North Shore.
"I don't think if we've had a kid of his stature, despite we've had some pretty good players come out of our place," Kay said.
Despite all the amazing plays, big-game moments that Chaisson has had over his career at North Shore and LSU, Kay doesn't talk about that when asked about his former player.
It's not the on-the-field heroics but rather the off-the-field preparation he praises him for.
"He possesses a good work ethic and he's extremely intelligent," Kay said. "K'Lavon isn't one of those guys who puts it on cruise control and goes out and lets it happen and relies just on his physical gifts. He works on the game. He studies the game. I think that's the best example we can use, regardless of how physically talented you are you're still going to have to bring this to the table if you're going to make it to this part of your career."