Still standing
Mike Sciacca
Tommy Grady’s journey through the Edison High School football
program reaches back eight years ago, well before he ever donned a
Charger uniform.
It was in his fifth-grade year, he recalls, that he first served
as an Edison ball boy.
A few years later, he still held those duties when his older
brother, Jeff, was a record-setting quarterback for the Chargers.
As those who follow local high school football know, Tommy Grady
has grown from ball-boy status to become one of the school’s
record-setting quarterbacks.
The senior is also considered to be one of the top quarterbacks in
the state and nation.
“He’s the best of the best,” said Edison coach Dave White,
referring to a long list of top-notch quarterbacks who have gone
through Edison’s illustrious program.
White, himself a former Edison quarterback, should know -- he’s
been around those former quarterbacks as either an assistant or head
coach.
“Tommy has such a strong and accurate arm,” White said. “He throws
a great long ball and knows how to take just enough off when he
throws the short ball.
“What’s more, he’s terrific in the pocket,” White said. “And he’s
got great height to top it all off.”
Ah, Grady’s height.
At close to 6 feet 7 inches, it’s hard to miss this young man who,
despite being relentlessly pursued by several top, major college
programs, remains humble and unchanged since arriving at Edison.
He just knows the offensive system a whole lot better.
The numbers he posted last year, as a junior, were staggering.
He re-wrote school records for most passing yards in one game and
in a single season, most touchdown passes in one game and in a single
season, most completions in a season and best completion percentage
in a season.
Surrounded by a cast of veterans, Grady helped guide Edison last
December to the CIF Southern Section Division I title game.
In this, his senior year, a season in which he was surrounded by a
new cast and with Edison in somewhat of a rebuilding mode, Grady has
picked up where he left off in 2001.
One of the best statistical games he had this season came Sept. 13
against San Clemente.
Grady threw for 276 yards in a 13-10 loss, but those numbers were
wiped away when the Tritons were forced to forfeit that victory.
Official CIF season statistical records do not count forfeited
games.
Still, by the halfway point of the current season, Grady had
established a new school record for career passing yardage, and he
now holds the record for most career touchdowns -- which is 47 and
counting.
He kept the Edison record for career passing yardage in the
family, however, as he supplanted his brother, Jeff, as the school’s
all-time leader.
Tommy Grady is closing in on 5,000 career passing yards and could
reach that incredible figure tonight when Edison plays Los Alamitos
in a key Sunset League showdown.
It could be his last game in an Edison uniform, too.
“I’ve had a great time playing here. It seems not so long ago when
I was just a ball boy and my brother was playing quarterback,” Grady
said. “We had an awesome season last year and we’re still battling
for a playoff spot this season. I’ll be giving it my all against Los
Al. It could be the last game for us seniors, and that is my
inspiration.”
Grady entered the 2002 season as a marked quarterback. Get to him,
opponents knew, and they would cut off Edison’s lifeline.
They went right at him, too, punishing him with blows to his
entire body, sacking him, on average, five or six times a game.
He sustained injuries to his ankle, hip, knee, even his head,
White said, and was so banged up at one point that the Edison
coaching staff considered holding him out of the Servite game.
“We had an inexperienced line and lost a couple of key players to
injury, and teams were getting to Tommy early in the season,” White
said. “He was pummeled.
“But even when he was beaten up, he had a great attitude. He kept
his head up and pushed through,” White said. “With his attitude and
will to play, there was no way he was going to be kept out of the
lineup. That’s a tribute to his character.”
Through this gauntlet, a killer schedule that included San
Clemente, Mater Dei, Servite and Esperanza, Grady was still standing.
Servite assistant coach Tim Rosencranz, a former Friar quarterback
who went on to play at St. Mary’s College in Moraga, was impressed by
Grady’s ability and toughness.
He called Grady “the real deal.”
Major college programs knew this, too.
The recruiting battle for Grady began in earnest early in his
junior year.
One of the first schools to recruit him, and eventually offer him
a scholarship, was Oklahoma. That alone would be enough to fill any
young player’s head with grandiose dreams, as the Sooners were coming
off a national championship season -- the school’s seventh.
The recruiting trail included five, sometimes six, calls per night
from various coaches, he said.
He whittled his list of prospective schools down to his top nine
picks, among them USC, UCLA, Tennessee and Washington State. He took
unofficial trips to the campuses of Louisiana State, Miami, Florida,
Florida State and Oklahoma.
His visit in late summer to the Oklahoma campus in Norman -- where
football is king -- left a lasting impression on Grady. A few days
after returning home, gave a verbal commitment to the Sooners.
He joins a long list of former Edison quarterbacks who have played
Division I football.
“Oklahoma wasn’t my first choice, but after my visit, I knew that
was the place for me,” he said. “They, by far, had the best coaching
staff. The way the coaches conducted themselves in team meetings
carried over to the practice field.
“The school also has some awesome facilities, and being around the
players gave me a great sense of how much fun everyone seemed to be
having in this program.”
Chuck Long, the former Iowa quarterback and current offensive
coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Oklahoma, came to Huntington
Beach in September to watch Grady and Edison take on Capistrano
Valley.
Grady had to have made Long proud, as he threw for 261 yards and
two scores in a 44-20 Edison victory.
He will see Long and the Sooners’ offense live for the first time
when he travels to Norman for the Texas Tech game on Nov. 23.
“It’s been amazing to watch Tommy grow into this incredible
quarterback,” White said. “I remember when he was this tall, gangly
kid. I watched him grow into his size, work hard and make great
strides to get to where he is today.
“I thought he’d be good, but never, really, did I think he’d turn
out to be the outstanding quarterback that he has become,” White
said. “I really feel he’ll make his mark at Oklahoma and, if he stays
healthy, five years from now, you’ll be seeing him play on Sundays.”
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