August 2022

Page 22

Spartans hope veteran defense, offensive line can keep momentum going By RANDY CAPPS

oming from E.E. Smith High School in Fayetteville, Deron Donald was no stranger to challenging coaching jobs when he took the reins at Smithfield-Selma before the COVID-delayed 2020 football season. The Spartans finished with a 2-5 mark in the spring of 2021 and followed that up with an 8-4 record last fall. It was the first playoff appearance for the Spartans since 2008 and the most wins at the school since 2005. But many of the key playmakers in an offense that averaged almost 35 points per game have moved on, leaving some spots for Donald and SSS to fill. “We lost a lot offensively, but we still have some pieces,” he said. “We only lost one offensive lineman. Anytime you have

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a veteran O-line, you’ve got a chance. We may not be able to throw it all over the ballpark, but if those guys can block down and move their feet, we’ll be OK.” Gerard Sanders figures to get the first crack at the starting running back spot, after logging 96 yards on 17 carries in spot duty on offense last fall. He also piled up 63 tackles and recorded an interception at safety. “He’s one of those guys who’s kind of waited his turn, but I think he’s going to do some great things for us,” Donald said. “He’s going to start at safety as well. He’s done what he needed to do in the weight room to get bigger, stronger and more explosive. And he’s running track to make sure he can carry that load. We don’t always have the numbers, so some of our guys do have to go both ways.” With last year’s starter, Dashawn McCullough, heading to Lane College, there’s also a help wanted sign hanging at the quarterback position. “There’s going to be somebody new at the helm at quarterback,” he said. “We have three guys pushing for that spot. We haver rising senior John Renfrow, and he’s done a great job just being a leader

Schedule

Smithfield-Selma's Martez Anderson lines up before a play during a 2021 game. Photo courtesy of We Journal Great Sports.

22 | [ JOHNSTON NOW ]

Aug. 19 Aug. 26 Sept. 1 Sept. 9 Sept. 16 Sept. 23 Sept. 30 Oct. 7 Oct. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 28

Princeton Nash Central at North Johnston BYE *at South Johnston *at Wilson Hunt *Wilson Fike *at West Johnston *Southern Wayne *at Pikeville Aycock *East Wake

* — Quad County 3A Conference game

and just does what’s expected. He’s a very cerebral kid, and he’s athletic as well. ... Then we have rising junior Jayden Brinkley, who starts in the secondary. He’s a great athlete as well. When he has that ball in his hand, he can mesh it and run it. And we have a rising sophomore, Dwight Nesbitt. Great athlete, probably an 11.2 100 (meter) guy, so he can move. He’s young, but he’s in the mix.” Isaiah Dawson and Martez Anderson should be the starters at wide receiver after combining for 36 catches and almost 500 yards in 2021. “They’re both explosive,” Donald said. “They can go get it. Isaiah Dawson went to VTO Camp (recently) and won the fastest man award. He ran a 4.4, so that’s pretty fast.” Seven starters return on the defensive side of the ball, including leading tacklers Jalill Howell (115 tackles, 23 tackles for loss) and Jaylen Stancil (101 tackles, 35 tackles for loss). Throw in Michael Hightower, who had 80 tackles, and Joshua Hightower, who had 61 stops and 27 tackles for loss, and you have quite a few building blocks for what should be a solid defense. “Those guys can go,” he said. “We’re stronger defensively because we have more veterans coming back on that side of the ball.” “We’ve got a good chance to do some good things this year,” Donald said. “We’re looking forward to pushing for a conference championship. That’s the goal. We don’t focus so much on just that. I was talking to (UNC assistant head coach for defense) Gene Chizik when he came to the school, and he said, ‘We don’t talk about championships much. We talk about habits and behaviors.’ I kind of took that from him. So we try to make sure our habits and behaviors are positive and we’re doing things the right way. Everything else will take care of itself.”


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Articles inside

Junior Women's League of Smithfield's Big Night Out raises $8,000

3min
page 34

Johnston Community College, county commissioners announce promise program

2min
page 32

JCPS names Teacher Assistant of the Year

1min
page 31

Ava Gardner Museum completes mural and rose garden project

3min
page 30

Board of Education honors JCPS Employees of the Year

4min
pages 28-29

Cleveland High graduate wins Sam Narron Award

1min
page 12

Nurse, compliance coordinator named Johnston Health Ambassadors of the Month

4min
pages 10-11

Eastfield development starting to take shape

2min
page 8

Consistency is key for West Johnston

3min
page 26

Trojans hope to have same winning attitude with new faces in 2022

4min
pages 24-25

Spartans hope veteran defense, offensive line can keep momentum going

4min
page 22

Princeton hopes to take final step toward title in 2022

8min
pages 20-21

North Johnston hopes a simplified approach leads to more success

4min
page 18

Corinth Holders to rely on new players, staff for 2022 campaign

3min
page 16

Cleveland looks to reload after losing record-breaking offensive standouts

3min
page 15

New coach brings experience, excitement to Clayton

3min
page 14

Clayton set to host magical experience

3min
page 7

The aging process isn’t always graceful

3min
page 6

The faces change, but the game stays the same

2min
page 5
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