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IN THE ZONE: Temple sophomore receiver Mikal Harrison-Pilot catches a 22-yard touchdown pass from senior Humberto Arizmendi during the first quarter of the Wildcats' 27-24 win at Killeen Shoemaker last Thursday night. Harrison-Pilot's 8-yard TD run from the quarterback position with 1:41 left put Temple ahead for good as Temple clinched its first outright district championship in the state's largest classification since 2007. Coach Scott Stewart's Wildcats (8-1, 6-0) will aim to complete a perfect run in District 12-6A in their regular-season finale when they host the Killeen Kangaroos (2-5, 1-4) at 7:30 tonight at Wildcat Stadium. (Photo by Matt Corley, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



By GREG WILLE

TempleBeltonSports.com

gwille2@hot.rr.com


After Temple surged ahead of Killeen Shoemaker late and then staved off the Grey Wolves' last-chance drive to seal a 27-24 win that clinched the outright District 12-6A championship last Thursday night, the loud music blasting from the Wildcats' victorious locker room at Killeen's Leo Buckley Stadium certainly wasn't Kool & The Gang.

Nonetheless, the lyrics from that band's 1980 classic song “Celebration” summed up how Scott Stewart – who admittedly has struggled to fully enjoy the good times during his career – was feeling after securing his first outright district title in five seasons as Temple's head coach:

“Celebrate good times, come on! (Let's celebrate)/ . . .

There's a party goin' on right here/

A celebration to last throughout the years/

So bring your good times, and your laughter too/

We gonna celebrate your party with you”

So instead of stewing about things that didn't go well against Shoemaker or immediately turning his focus to preparing for tonight's 12-6A finale against the Killeen Kangaroos at Wildcat Stadium, Stewart actually allowed himself to let his hair down – so to speak – and participate in a whole-hog celebration of a great achievement by his team, with his team.

“That's why I wanted to go overboard, because I know sometimes they kind of look at me like, 'All right, are we supposed to celebrate this or not?' I mean, I went in the locker room and started dancing,” Stewart said Tuesday. “This is not one of those deals where it's our 12th straight (district championship). It doesn't happen around here near as often as people think, as much success as this town has had. I'm damn sure going to enjoy it.”

Temple shared last season's 12-6A championship with Waco Midway, which it lost to. Competing in 5A, the Wildcats went undefeated in district play in 2014 and 2015, the two years when Stewart was their defensive coordinator. But Temple hadn't captured an outright league crown in the state's largest classification since 2007, when coach Bryce Monsen's Wildcats went 6-0 in 13-5A. And before that, Temple hadn't won a district title by itself since coach Bob McQueen's 1995 squad did so.

Because of that, Stewart went against his nature to make sure that he fully savored what his Wildcats have accomplished.

“I have always struggled in enjoying the moment. I was raised by a guy that did not – I mean, you'd throw for 388 yards with four touchdown passes and one interception, and he wants to talk about the interception. And I share that personality,” Stewart said, referring to his father, Larry Stewart, the former Troy coach who's a member of the Texas High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame. “And as I get older, I'm really trying to enjoy those moments. This is Temple's first (outright) district championship since there's been a 6A.

“It doesn't mean I work any less hard. The older I get and watching my kids and watching my daughter (Temple senior student-athlete Cameryn Stewart) getting ready to graduate and leave, you know, she gets really hard on herself. I see a lot of my personality in that, and some of that I regret. At some point, you've got to just enjoy this. This is still a game. I know every time we lose a game people want (the coaches) fired, but the fact of the matter is it is a game.”

Sharing Stewart's outlook was senior cornerback Keon Williams, who said there definitely was a sense of relief after Temple eluded dangerous Shoemaker but that the overriding emotion for the Wildcats was pure joy.

“It was crazy and exciting. After the game we came in the locker room and partied a little bit,” Williams said. “You can actually feel that all the hard work you've put in, all of it pays off.”

Temple (8-1 overall, 6-0 in 12-6A) shoots for its first nine-win regular season since 2015 when it takes on old rival Killeen (2-5, 1-4) at 7:30 tonight at Wildcat Stadium. The Wildcats will have an open date next week before they host 11-6A's Waxahachie (4-4) in a 6A Division II bi-district playoff game at Wildcat Stadium, likely on Friday, Dec. 11.

With the possibility of cancelations (such as Temple's scrapped home game Nov. 13 against rival Belton) or postponements always looming in this year of the COVID-19 pandemic, Stewart insisted that his district-champion team is grateful to be playing good football and isn't looking past Killeen or ahead to Waxahachie.

“We're practicing out there like it's the last game we'll ever play,” he said. “The energy's been very good, and the message I've sent is that we've all been shown – by powers beyond our own – that anything can be taken away from you at any point, so we need to play like this is our last game we're going to play. And if we get another one, then we'll treat that one like it's the last game we're ever going to play.

“The record we focus on is 1-0 this week. Again, who knows what we're promised moving forward?”

Wildcats display team mentality, maturity

in turning away Shoemaker's stiff challenge

Shoemaker had the opportunity in last Thursday's highly anticipated showdown to tie Temple for the 12-6A lead, and the Grey Wolves were in position to create that deadlock when Devin Brown's 2-yard touchdown run gave them a 24-20 lead with 4:15 remaining.

However, the Wildcats responded with a 70-yard drive that was capped by a weaving, diving 8-yard touchdown run by sophomore Mikal Harrison-Pilot, who leads the team in receptions but replaced senior starter Humberto Arizmendi at quarterback in that special situation and helped Temple seize a 27-24 lead with 1:41 left.

The Wildcats sealed their dramatic victory when defensive linemen Jayven Taylor, Eric Shorter and Jaylon Jackson combined to tackle Brown for a 1-yard loss on fourth-and-1 with a minute remaining, leading to Temple's aforementioned and well-earned postgame celebration – complete with another gold ball trophy to symbolize the district championship,

“I lost about a decade off my life Thursday night,” Stewart joked. “My dad was like, 'That was an exciting game for a spectator.' I'm like, 'Yeah, I bet it was.' Just shaving years off the end of my life.”

Added Stewart: “I love this group, because they don't blink. We talk about not blinking and not letting the pressure of the situation get to you. We went down and scored with several minutes left and our defensive guys were up yelling, and after we went back on defense our offensive guys (were up yelling). I think that's huge. You want those kind of groups.”

Arizmendi tossed an early 22-yard touchdown pass to Harrison-Pilot but threw for a season-low 75 yards against Shoemaker's speedy defense. However, Arizmendi exploited a Grey Wolves weakness identified by offensive coordinator Josh Sadler to rush 18 times for a career-best 139 yards, with five runs of 16-plus yards.

“It was pretty obvious early on and Sadler came to me and said, 'They're not even accounting for (Arizmendi as a runner), so we're probably going to do some read-game stuff.' And I was like, 'Well, everyone on the field's going to catch him, so make sure he covers the ball up,'” Stewart said. “And he can run a little bit, but not like that. And to watch Mikal get a shot (at QB late in the game), I don't know that Humberto makes that move (for the score).”

Stewart noted that Arizmendi was the first player off the sideline to celebrate the go-ahead touchdown with Harrison-Pilot (who also played 10 to 12 defensive plays in the secondary), a sign of the Wildcats' cohesiveness.

“They want to win games and do whatever it takes,” said Stewart, who got 178 yards and two touchdowns from junior Samari Howard in a 33-carry, workhorse performance. “This is not a real mature group as far as experience goes, but it's also not a group that thinks (it has everything figured out). That's a cool vibe to have, and I appreciate them for that. They don't blink and they don't seem to be affected. It's almost like they don't know that they're supposed to be panicking or freaking out. These guys just like playing football.”

As great as the Wildcats felt after overcoming a strong Shoemaker challenge for the second straight season (Temple rallied for a 38-28 home win in 2019), Williams said his team has many strides left to make as postseason play approaches.

“Yes, we have a lot to improve,” the senior cornerback said. “I feel like we still haven't put our best game together yet.”

With Temple off from school during Thanksgiving week, Stewart – who planned to clear his head by hunting on his grandfather's land near Jarrell – urged his players to enjoy and take advantage of this unique form of preparation.

The coach's message to his players: “This is going to be the most fun week of your life, because you get to be a professional football player. Not in the form of payment, but you literally get to get out of bed, go grind on ball and watch film, go home and eat, play video games, get in the rack and get up the next morning. You're dang sure not going to have that a year from now, or for some of you a couple years from now. You're going to have to get up every day and go grind, quicker than you want.”

Struggling Killeen out of 12-6A race, but

Temple coach wary of Kangaroos' Marshall

Killeen reached the playoffs in 2016, head coach Neil Searcy's second season. However, his Kangaroos have experienced a playoff drought since then, and with a 1-4 record in 12-6A with two games left, this will be their fourth consecutive year to miss out on postseason play.

After a 27-20 win over crosstown rival and seventh-place Killeen Ellison on Oct. 20, Killeen lost 45-27 at second-place Bryan and then 52-23 last week to Harker Heights, which shares fourth place with Belton. Kangaroos' postponed Nov. 6 game against last-place Copperas Cove will be made up next Friday at Buckley as the season finale for both teams.

But as long as 5-foot-10, 185-pound senior Kadarius Marshall is wearing a No. 5 jersey for Killeen, Temple's coach won't feel very comfortable about facing the Roos.

“He's a special talent,” Stewart said about Marshall before joking, “I think he's 28 years old. He's been there forever. It's nice to see those kind of kids graduate.”

Marshall was 12-6A's Offensive Newcomer of the Year in 2018, when the Wildcats limited him to 33 rushing yards but still watched the sophomore make two touchdown receptions in Temple's 35-13 road win. Marshall was a first-team all-district selection last season – he rushed for 1,300 yards and 18 TDs – but had to sit out with a shoulder injury as the host Wildcats amassed 564 yards and rocked the Roos 56-27.

Stewart and Temple expect to see plenty of Marshall tonight on both sides of the ball, as the senior is playing outside linebacker in addition to his duties on offense as he shares the running back position with small, shifty junior Emory Arthur, who rushed for 119 yards and three touchdowns in the Wildcats' one-sided win last year.

“I don't remember him playing on defense prior to this year. He's not playing as much on offense, because (Arthur) is pretty dang good,” Stewart said of Marshall, who rushed for 350 yards and six TDs and recorded a team-best six tackles for loss through Killeen's first five games (complete season statistics are unavailable). “He's still a horse (on offense); don't get me wrong. He's played quite a bit at outside linebacker this year."

Tall juniors Ahmad Bailey and Jacobia Thomas have split playing time at quarterback for Killeen. Along with Marshall, the Roos' leading defenders include senior lineman Taquon Jones, senior linebacker Jabez Eliam, junior outside linebacker Tyquan Scoby and senior safety Jayden Hill.

“Coach Searcy does a good job. To me, the biggest compliment that you can give a coach is, 'Man, your kids played their tail off,'” Stewart said. “And when I turn on the film, that's what I see from Killeen. You don't know the ins and outs of everything, but obviously those kids are buying what he's selling. That's not easy to do in 2020."

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SENIOR STRENGTH: Linebacker Peyton Miller (left) and safety/halfback/kicker/punter Wrook Brown are two of Salado's many seniors who have propelled the Eagles to an 11-1 record and a No. 6 state ranking entering their Class 4A Division II Region III semifinal against No. 1 Carthage (10-0) at 5:30 p.m. Friday at New Caney ISD's Randall Reed Stadium in Porter. Salado earned a 28-23 win over Bellville last Friday, while Carthage blasted Silsbee 49-0. The East Texas-based Bulldogs went 16-0 last season in winning the 4A D-I championship, their seventh state title in 13 seasons with head coach Scott Surratt. (File photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



By GREG WILLE

TempleBeltonSports.com

gwille2@hot.rr.com


SALADO – Before he got into the details of breaking down Salado's playoff clash Friday night against perennial powerhouse and reigning state champion Carthage, Eagles head coach Alan Haire offered a big-picture, optimistic view of the fact that his team still has more football to play in a year that's been overshadowed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Just to play on Thanksgiving is the reward. I'd say our guys are excited. They created this situation,” Haire said Thursday morning after Salado wrapped up its practice on Thanksgiving, one day before the sixth-ranked Eagles (11-1) challenge No. 1 Carthage (10-0) in a Class 4A Division II Region III semifinal at 5:30 p.m. Friday at New Caney ISD's Randall Reed Stadium in Porter. “These kids have handled all the protocols and had to commit to wearing masks and not doing some things they might normally do. I'm very proud of them, and that's what you would expect from a senior group and a mature group.”

Salado entered the season with great expectations and has done its best to reach lofty goals. The Eagles won the District 9-4A Division II championship with a 5-0 record, and their only setback defeat was a competitive 21-7 home defeat 2½ months ago against Grandview (11-0), winner of the last two 3A Division I state championships.

The only Salado teams to win more games than this year's group were coach Jeff Cheatham's 13-1 squad of 2007 and Haire's 2017 crew that finished 12-2.

“We're very proud to get to this point and to have 11 wins, which is tied for third-most in Salado history,” said Haire, who's 42-18 with four playoff treks to at least the second round in five seasons as head coach at his alma mater. “These guys are leaving a legacy here.”

After two consecutive weeks off, including a first-round playoff win by forfeit, Salado built a 28-10 lead last Friday night and then made a late defensive stand to stave off feisty Bellville for a 28-23 victory in an area-round battle at Mary Hardin-Baylor's Crusader Stadium in Belton.

Salado's reward is a third-round showdown with dominant Carthage (10-0), which blasted Silsbee 49-0 last week and has won seven state championships in its previous 13 seasons with head coach Scott Surratt. The Salado-Carthage victor will advance to next week's Region III title game – with a state semifinal berth at stake – to play the winner of Friday's 2 p.m. game in College Station between 9-2 squads China Spring and No. 9 Sealy.

To be sure, Salado is bracing for a gigantic challenge against Carthage, located 36 miles southeast of Longview in deep East Texas and not far from the Texas-Louisiana border. The powerful Bulldogs won last year's 4A Division I state championship at 16-0 and are 66-1 in their last 67 games, including 4A D-I state crowns in 2016 and '17. Surratt has compiled an astounding 174-28 record in 14 years at Carthage in his first and only head coaching job.

To hear Haire tell it, however, his Eagles actually might feel less pressure against Carthage – at least going into the regional semifinal – than they did entering the duel with Bellville after having to endure two straight open dates. It was the Eagles' third postseason matchup with the Brahmas in five years.

“Really it should (feel like less pressure vs. Carthage). We'll turn it loose,” Haire said. “Last week felt like more pressure – familiar foe, we were ranked and they were unranked, we were a district champion and they weren't. We had everything to lose there. You still have to play the game, and we hadn't played in 20 days, so there was anxiety all week.”

Paced by senior running backs Noah Mescher, Wrook Brown and Reid Vincent, Salado rushed for 349 yards and four touchdowns out of its Slot-T formation, and its defense limited Bellville – another Slot-T attack – just enough to withstand the athletic Brahmas' late charge and seize the second-round win.

The Eagles might be able to draw some inspiration from the fact that Carthage's only loss in its last 67 games was 44-41 against Liberty Hill in a 4A Division I state semifinal in 2018. Liberty Hill's Panthers, coached by former Rogers head coach Jeff Walker, are renowned for their relentless Slot-T rushing game.


GOLD BALL SEASON: Alan Haire has guided Salado to at least the second round of the Class 4A Division II state playoffs for the fourth time in five seasons as head coach at his alma mater. At 11-1, this season's Salado team – which won the District 9-4A D-II championship and is ranked sixth in the state – needs one more win to match the Eagles' 12 victories in 2017. (File photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)


As for his assessment of this season's Carthage team, Haire said the most difficult thing about the matchup from Salado's perspective is that the Bulldogs have no clear areas that the Eagles can exploit.

“I'd say you can't find any weaknesses,” Haire said. “When you face a team with a tremendous amount of talent, we rank their players and say, 'Who can we go at?' But there's just not a whole lot of weaknesses.”

Salado and Carthage received bi-district playoff wins because of COVID-19-related forfeits, against Rusk and Gatesville, respectively. The Eagles have outscored opponents 457-172, while the Bulldogs have outscored foes 402-67 in only nine on-the-field games. Two of Carthage's non-district victories came against fellow East Texas powers who remain alive in the 4A D-II Region II semifinals: 42-14 over Gilmer (11-1) and 35-7 over defending state champion Texarkana Pleasant Grove (9-3).

It was talent-rich Pleasant Grove that ended Salado's 2019 season one year ago with a thorough 42-14 area-round victory in Frisco en route to the Hawks' second state title in three years. Haire believes that the experience from that game and the tight battle with Grandview early this season have helped the Eagles prepare for the Carthage machine they're about to test themselves against.

“We had a tough pre-district schedule and we played in a tough district,” Haire said. “I think last year against Pleasant Grove we went in there with big eyes at the Ford Center, and that's helped us prepare (for Carthage). Our kids have not flinched. They prepare hard and they play hard, and that's all you can do.”

Versatile Salado senior Brown, who plays safety and kicks and punts in addition to rushing for 613 yards and 12 touchdowns, said after the close win over Bellville that the battle-tested, senior-laden Eagles carry more confidence into the Carthage game than last year's Salado squad had against potent Pleasant Grove.

“We're looking forward to it. It's a similar situation as last year, but we're not the same team and (the opponent is) a different team, so it's a new situation,” said Brown, who leads the Eagles with 86 tackles and ranks third in the area with 140 points scored. “We were a fairly young team last year, but we've got a lot of experience this year and that can play in our favor.”

Running behind a hard-blocking line in Salado's Slot-T offense that's racked up 379 rushing yards per game, fullback Mescher has 1,484 rushing yards and 20 touchdowns and tailback Vincent has 1,159 yards and 10 TDs. Brown contributed 93 yards and two touchdowns against Bellville as sophomore halfback Caden Strickland missed the game because of COVID-19 contact tracing. Haire expects Strickland (564 yards, nine TDs) to play against Carthage and share backfield time with Brown.

The Eagles' Slot-T will have to play at its maximum level against a Carthage defense that's shut out its last three opponents and permitted seven or fewer points six times despite having only two returning starters from last year's 16-0 championship team in 4A D-I: 6-foot-2, 265-pound lineman Kylon Lister and Austin Morgan in the secondary. Bulldogs senior defensive back Zay Woods has six interceptions, but Salado junior quarterback Hutton Haire averages only three pass attempts per game.

“They don't give up a lot of points, and their starting defense hasn't played in the second half a whole lot,” Alan Haire said of Carthage. “It's extreme speed. They're fast and physical.”

On the other side, Salado features a hard-hitting, well-balanced defense that's allowed just 248.5 yards per game. Complementing Brown are senior linebackers Kofi Stoglin (81 tackles), Lucas Morvant (68) and Peyton Miller (61) plus junior safety Josh Huckabee (74 stops).

The Eagles must be at their best to contain Carthage's explosive offense, spearheaded by prolific senior quarterback Kai Horton. The 6-4, 215-pound Horton passed for 3,746 yards and 49 touchdowns in 2019 and has added 1,957 yards and 20-plus TDs in nine games this fall.

“He's more of a pocket passer and does a real good good job of vertically stretching the field. He makes them very dynamic,” Alan Haire said of Horton, who has scholarship offers from Stephen F. Austin and McNeese State.”

Horton spreads the ball around to a deep receiving corps led by Craig McNew and Montrel Hatten. Versatile senior running back Mason Courtney scored four touchdowns against Silsbee last week and has rushed for 846 yards after running for 1,679 yards and scoring 23 TDs overall last season.

Whether it was a regional final against eventual state runner-up West Orange-Stark in 2017 or Pleasant Grove last year or Grandview early this season, Alan Haire said there's a common trait linking all of those great teams. It's the same one he fully expects Salado to see and have to deal with Friday night against mighty Carthage as the Eagles – who've already achieved special things this season – aim for an upset victory that would shock the state.

“It's extremely fast execution on both sides and there's more athletes than what you've seen before,” Salado's coach said. "When you play the West Orange-Starks and Pleasant Groves and Grandviews of the world, you have to execute under extreme pressure. We'll do what we can do.”

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SUCCESS STORY: Temple senior cornerback Keon Williams was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when he was in third grade, and through the years he's learned how to manage the chronic condition. The two-year starter is having a strong final season, leading the Wildcats with six passes broken up and ranking sixth with 30 tackles. District 12-6A champion and playoff-bound Temple (8-1, 6-0) plays its regular-season finale against the Killeen Kangaroos (2-5, 1-4) at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Wildcat Stadium. (Photo by Greg Wille, TempleBeltonSports.com)



By GREG WILLE

TempleBeltonSports.com

gwille2@hot.rr.com


Keon Williams has to take care of all the same things as his Temple football teammates: attending school, keeping up with homework, lifting weights, studying film, practicing and, of course, playing games. The senior cornerback also works a part-time job at Academy Sports + Outdoors to make extra money, some of which he spends but most of which he saves.

There is, however, one thing that makes Williams, a two-season starter, quite a bit different than his Wildcats comrades: His daily battle with Type 1 diabetes, the chronic condition he's lived with and managed since he was diagnosed during third grade.

Type 1 diabetes, once commonly known as juvenile diabetes, occurs when the pancreas produces little to no insulin, a hormone needed to allow sugar (glucose) to enter cells to produce energy. Its symptoms include fatigue, extreme hunger and unintended weight loss, and the condition can cause life-threatening complications if not handled properly and consistently.

Just as he welcomes the daunting challenge of defending the opposing team's best wide receiver, the 5-foot-11, 166-pound Williams has embraced the even more difficult task of learning how to thrive – not simply survive – as a football player who's also a Type 1 diabetic.

“I just took it as, it's part of me, so I've got to deal with it every day. I got used to it,” the good-natured Williams said Tuesday morning as District 12-6A champion Temple (8-1, 6-0) prepared for its regular-season finale against the Killeen Kangaroos (2-5, 1-4) at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Wildcat Stadium. “I've been very consistent with it in high school.”

Having battled Type 1 diabetes for approximately half his life, the 18-year-old Williams derives inspiration from NFL wide receiver and kick returner DeAndre Carter, previously of the Houston Texans and now of the Chicago Bears.

“The person I use for my motivation is DeAndre Carter. He's just always motivated me, because he has Type 1 also. If he can do it, I can do it,” said Williams, who leads Temple with six passes broken up and ranks sixth on the team with 30 tackles to help propel the Wildcats to their eighth straight playoff berth and their first outright district championship in the state's highest classification since 2007.

Temple head coach Scott Stewart has immense respect and admiration for how Williams – the latest player in the Wildcats' run of outstanding cornerbacks in recent seasons – has continued to perform at a high level on the field while doing his best to control Type 1 diabetes.

“I think when people have to deal with (something like) this as a young person, a 'Why me?' type deal kicks in,” Stewart said before the bald-headed coach used self-deprecating humor to offer a personal example. “I'm not going to lie to you. I was 26 years old, losing my hair. And that's not even a disease; it's just unfortunate genetics.

“I really respect kids and people in general who have to deal with hard situations like that, that were no choosing of their own. How do you not let it affect you? How do you function on a daily basis and keep the enemy from talking you into being mad and upset and all the things that come with that sometimes?”

Although Williams has persevered and overcome the constant obstacle that is Type 1 diabetes, he's certainly experienced some bumps in the road.

“Keon's come a long way with learning how to take care of himself. There's been a couple of times he hasn't taken care of himself and and can't function a whole lot,” Stewart said. “If he goes a while without eating, his body will just start to shut down. It's that kind of diabetes. He'll get himself in trouble in a hurry, and unfortunately that's happened a couple of times. He does a pretty decent job of managing it, but he still has to be on point with that.”

Williams expended a huge amount of energy last Thursday night at Killeen's Leo Buckley Stadium, where he and Temple's defense made a late stand to seal a 27-24 victory over a dangerous Killeen Shoemaker squad, clinching the Wildcats' second straight 12-6A title and first outright league crown since 2015.

On Friday morning Williams still was feeling the effects of that grueling duel, with his recovery process made tougher by diabetes-related factors.

“After the Shoemaker game, he went home exhausted. You go home after a game and you're exhausted and you just want to go to bed, then you wake up and mentally can't function very well,” Stewart said. “His mom called us Friday and told us, 'Hey Coach, his blood sugar was low this morning, so we're going to get him some food.' They've got this sugar-shock-type stuff that gets some calories in his system really, really quickly.”

Without much fanfare, Williams explained the daily regimen he must go through to ensure he stays healthy and on the field. He gives himself one insulin shot in the morning, then another at night. He makes sure he eats plenty to keep his blood sugar at the right level.

Among his favorite foods is waffles, washed down by apple juice. He's a big fan of the pasta dish Temple often eats for a pregame meal and of postgame chicken tenders or pizza.

If Williams makes his everyday process sound simple, perhaps that's just because he's been doing it for such a long time now.

“If we practice in the morning, I take my medicine before practice and I eat breakfast and I'll be good,” he said. “Some days I just have to make sure I eat a lot. Other days, I can just sleep. I'll always snack.”

A lifelong Temple resident, Williams was in third grade when one day he felt very sick, prompting a hospital visit that led to he and his family receiving the life-altering diagnosis that he had Type 1 diabetes.

“I've always been skinny, and I just wasn't feeling well one day and then we went to the hospital and got checked for it, and I had it,” said Williams, whose older brother, Merrick Williams, is a 2018 Temple graduate who was a Wildcats receiver. “My mom and dad were there with me. I would say they were nervous, but I don't think anybody was scared about it, because (diabetes) runs in our family. My grandparents have it.”

In his early years of living with Type 1, Williams experienced some difficult trials.

“One day after pee wee football practice, I forgot to take (the insulin shot) and my blood sugar went super high and I just started throwing up real bad,” he said. “That was the wakeup call.”

Having now lived with Type 1 diabetes for almost a decade, Williams is willing and able to be a resource for others who have the chronic condition. He said that includes D'Arius Wilkerson, a sophomore who plays junior varsity football for Temple.

“He just got diagnosed with it. He was asking me questions about it and I was like, 'It's nothing to panic about. You've got to just take it,'" Williams said.

Williams is serious about education and wants to extend his football career into college, hoping to catch recruiters' eyes with his senior-season highlight video. He also runs the 400-meter dash for Temple's track team and wants to return to basketball this season after not playing since his freshman year.

“I get into it,” he said of school. “For some reason, I'm starting to like English. I've never liked English, but now I like it, and government.”


LOWERING THE BOOM: Temple senior cornerback Keon Williams delivers a punishing tackle on Magnolia West punt returner JT Phillips during the Wildcats' 28-13 road win Oct. 2. (File photo by Matt Corley, Temple ISD/Special to TempleBeltonSports.com)



Williams absorbed a great deal of experience last season while starting at cornerback for Temple's 8-3 team that shared the 12-6A championship with Waco Midway but was hammered 41-10 at defending state champion Longview in a Class 6A Division II bi-district playoff game.

Two months ago, the Wildcats had the rare opportunity to begin their season against the same opponent that ended their previous year. Longview led Temple 13-10 at halftime at Arlington's AT&T Stadium, but Williams and the Wildcats dominated the Lobos by a 30-0 score in the second half to earn a statement-making, momentum-building 40-13 victory.

“I feel like everybody who played in that (2019 playoff) game had a chip on their shoulder for that team,” Williams said. “That impacted us a lot. It showed us what we can do.”

Temple's defense posted another second-half shutout in a 28-13 win one week later at Magnolia West, where Williams delivered a punishing tackle on punt returner JT Phillips inside the Mustangs' 5-yard line.

“That one's got to be right there,” a smiling Williams said when asked to select his favorite plays this season. “Man, you better fair catch it.”

With Temple already leading 16-0 late in the first quarter of its 12-6A opener at Copperas Cove, Williams made another stellar play on special teams.

“We were on kickoff (coverage). I was running down and I knifed underneath (a teammate) and dove and caused a fumble and we got the ball back,” said Williams, whose hard hit on Bulldawgs return man Justin Raines dislodged the ball before Wildcats sophomore Zion Moore grabbed it out of midair, setting up a touchdown run by junior Samari Howard.

As much as he focuses on covering fast, talented wide receivers, Williams also takes a lot of pride in his tackling skills, which he honed while trying to corral speedy teammates such as former Wildcats star running back Anthony Jackson.

“I feel like that came from Anthony and all the older guys from my freshman year. They toughened me up, and (I've been a good tackler) ever since then,” said Williams, who drew another challenging assignment when he had to defend 6-5, 240-pound junior receiver Terrance Carter of Harker Heights in visiting Temple's 38-36 comeback win Oct. 29.

Before this season, Williams said he hoped to produce a senior campaign similar to that of fellow cornerback Roman Jackson, who intercepted seven passes as a senior in 2019. However, Temple has collected only three interceptions in eight games played – none by Williams, who poked fun at himself for that fact.

“I've had a couple of good chances . . . I just dropped them,” he said, breaking into laughter. “I remember one from Magnolia West. I picked it but I dropped it.”

Added Williams regarding his elusive first interception: “It's coming – hopefully in the playoffs.”

As Temple's top cornerback as a senior, Williams is following in the footsteps of BJ Sculark (Houston Baptist/Trinity Valley) in 2017, Markel Reed (Boise State) in 2018 and Roman Jackson (Tarleton State) in 2019. It's important to Williams to carry on the Wildcats' recent tradition at that vital position.

“It's an honor,” he said. “It gives me chills just hearing their names.”

He credits much of his development to Reed, who as a senior took an interest in mentoring then-sophomore Williams on the finer points of playing cornerback.

“We'd go up to T-High on Saturdays and he'd give me these little drills and stuff to work on,” Williams said. “He taught me the press (coverage). I had an idea; he just helped me with it. He didn't want to put too much on me, but he put enough.”

In a prime example of paying it forward, Williams now serves as mentor to Temple's other cornerbacks. That includes fellow senior Carlton Mack, a first-year starter and one of his best friends on the team along with senior wide receivers Luke Allen and AJ McDuffy and senior nose tackle Jayven Taylor.

“If it's Carlton, I'll let him know what he messed up on and how to do it if he needs help,” Williams said. “He probably gets more (passes thrown his way) than me. He's gotten a lot better from Longview to now.”

Stewart has seen Williams' leadership abilities emerging.

“I think the kids listen to him. He doesn't talk a whole lot, which is fine with me,” Stewart said. “But people respect how he works, because he does work his tail off.”

Stewart considers the technically sound Williams to be “a cross between Markel Reed and BJ Sculark,” largely because Williams loves to play press coverage even in third-and-long situations, instead of backing up to give the receiver more cushion.

“It took an act of Congress to get BJ out of the press, and Keon's a little bit like that. They want to be in the (receiver's) hip pocket and chest to shoulder when that ball's in the air,” Stewart said. “Where Keon thrives is you've got to talk him off the ledge when it's third-and-18 and you want him to back up. He likes getting hands on and he likes the illusion of control in close proximity. You have to have a special mindset to actually warrant that. We'll call it loose (coverage) when it's third-and-20 and he's (upset). He'd rather press-and-bail than sit back there flat-footed at 15 yards.”

Late in the third quarter last Thursday, fleet-footed Shoemaker senior receiver Monaray Baldwin beat Williams' coverage down the left sideline to catch a long pass for a 48-yard gain. But true to his competitive character and desire to defend top players, Williams was undeterred.

“Keon was over the top and saw the ball, and when he turned to press him, obviously you lose speed doing that and (Baldwin) slipped by him,” Stewart said. “He was begging (Shoemaker) to throw another deep ball to Baldwin. He wanted them to do it again. He was like, 'Throw another one!'”

Williams got another opportunity to make a big play late in the fourth. With Shoemaker trailing 27-24 and facing third-and-15 from its 31-yard line with 1 minute remaining, De'Andre Exford caught a pass in the middle. Williams grabbed him and threw him to the turf, 1 yard short of the first down.

Said Williams: “I made contact and leaned him forward when I should have leaned him backward.”

Everything worked out well for Temple when Taylor, junior end Eric Shorter and sophomore tackle Jaylon Jackson combined to drive powerful running back Devin Brown back for a 1-yard loss and a dramatic turnover on downs, sealing the Wildcats' tight win and outright 12-6A championship.

Williams described his team's reaction as a mixture of joy and relief.

“It was crazy and exciting. You can actually feel that all the hard work you've put in, all of it pays off,” he said. “After the game we came in the locker room and partied a little bit.”

According to Williams, the manner in which Temple's defense performed in that pressure situation didn't reveal its character as much as it confirmed what the cornerback already knew.

“Everybody on defense has got the same thing in common. We've got this dog mentality. Everybody wants to do their job and win,” Williams said. “I would describe it as the whole team has each other's backs. So when one side's down, we try to pick them up. When the defense is down, the offense starts picking us up.”

Temple has secured a district crown and the top playoff seed, but Williams said the Wildcats won't change their routine as they prepare for postseason play.

“We've got to get up, grind, hit weights hard and go to practice,” he said.

Wise words from Williams, a young man who does all those things and because of his life obstacle that is Type 1 diabetes has had to do so much more to get to where he is today.

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