Friday, February 3, 2012

Two Words: Jermaine Hough

The biggest signee for the Gamecocks may have come in the smallest package. Here is an excerpt from an article on www.ihigh.com about Hough:

Begin quote here:

"The question, to which no opponent truly found a satisfactory answer, was this: What can't Jermaine Hough do on the football field?

“Throughout his career, he’s done everything on the football field — holder, snapper, punt returner, kickoff returner, quarterback, running back, wide receiver, defensive back,” Lovejoy coach Al Hughes said. “If you ask him to play nose guard, he could manage that. He’s a magnificent athlete.”

Hough, the Clayton News Daily’s Clayton County Player of the Year, said playing all those positions “made me smarter” — this coming from a student-athlete who maintains a 3.8 grade-point average in the tough classes. His football IQ was off the charts, and that’s why he always seemed to make the plays Lovejoy needed on the way to a season of unprecedented excellence, reaching the first state-championship game in school history.

“When I went from quarterback to defensive back, I knew how a quarterback would think because that used to be my main position,” Hough said. “That just made me smarter. I played wide receiver this year and that really put me in position to make plays."

The 5-foot-9, 170-pound senior made plays wherever he was put, and you're not supposed to be able to do that consistently at 5-9, 170. Otherwise, college scouts would be lining up for them.

“Jermaine Hough was our everything,” Lovejoy defensive coordinator Kevin Jones said. “The only passing touchdown we gave up all season came on a play after Jermaine Hough was out because he had rolled his ankle. He has a 40-inch vertical leap, which allows him to make plays over taller guys.”

He did his greatest good this season at cornerback. He was such a sure thing in the secondary that the defenders up front knew that passing wasn't a viable option for the opposing offense, giving them carte blanche to pin their ears back and have the quarterback for lunch. That in turn helped the Wildcats establish Class AAAA’s stingiest defense, allowing barely a field goal a game most of the season with eight shutouts in 15 games.

Opponents would test Hough because they wanted no part of the rest of the Lovejoy secondary. Rico McWilliams and Dushonta Broughton had already made believers of opposing quarterbacks, and the fact that Hough was smaller made him a convenient target. Or so opposing QBs seemed to think, especially in the playoffs. Region 4-AAAA quarterbacks already knew better.

“I took it as an opportunity to make plays, I didn’t take it as a personal challenge,” Hough said. “As the playoffs started, other teams didn’t know as much about me.”

Hough intercepted seven passes, including two against Warner Robins that helped the Wildcats reach the Class AAAA final against Tucker. Such on-field credibility earned the respect of his teammates.

1 comment:

  1. I saw him play in the GA state high school title game. He must have had 20 tackles in that game. And he played wide receiver on offense and returned punts. He is fast and an excellent tackler. We got a really good player. Maybe the only reason he didn't get more attention from the big schools, is his size.

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