nvdaily.com link to home page

Traffic | Weather | Mobile Edition
Archives | Subscribe | Guide to the Daily


Sports arrow PrepZone arrow Sherando High School

Follow nvdailyTweets on Twitter
recommend Click STAR to Recommend Story Asterisk Asterisk Denotes Breaking News

| 0 | 0 Comments
NVDaily

Warriors' Boyd is making an impact

boyd.jpg
View larger image

Dalton Boyd


By Jeremy Stafford - jstafford@nvdaily.com

STEPHENS CITY -- Perhaps you've heard of Dalton Boyd; perhaps you haven't.

He certainly isn't an intimidating figure, nor is he an imposing one. Pre-snap, Boyd isn't a sore thumb the way his Sherando counterparts are: He isn't as tall as Nick Bakos, he isn't as brawny as Baxter Newman. But Boyd is sharp as a knife and, once that ball is snapped, it all comes rushing to you, and you realize you have heard of Dalton Boyd.

Boyd is quick as a whistle, and on Friday nights, he shimmers from head to toe in Sherando black and red. He's that streak of a shadow you saw return a kickoff 94 yards for a touchdown at James Wood, and that fleet-footed whisper you saw take a Jalen Brisco pass 81 yards for a score against Jefferson County.

For Sherando coach Bill Hall, Boyd's success this season didn't come from nowhere -- it was completely expected.

"He's got great athleticism, he's got really great speed," Hall explained. "I think when you combine those things, along with the fact that he's put in the time necessary so he could be successful, he's worked hard all offseason ... and it's been a four-year process for him."

Well, to be precise, it's been a three-year effort for Boyd to excel as a wide receiver. Before he moved to wide receiver, Boyd was a quarterback at Robert E. Aylor Middle School, as well as on the Sherando freshman team. Before that, he was a tailback on his youth football team, the Packers. He even played a bit as a guard.

As a seventh-grader, Boyd began a regimen of agility training, honing his zigs and his zags with cone and ladder drills. He focused mostly on quarterback-specific drills before he switched to wide receiver as a sophomore at Sherando. With Ross Metheny, now a red-shirt freshman at the University of Virginia, starting at quarterback, Boyd had to switch positions if he was going to see the field before his senior year.

He continued with his agility training, traveling to Heritage High School in Leesburg, dashing between cones, high-stepping between ladder rungs, and he concentrated more toward running precise routes. In his junior season, Boyd was Metheny's second option at wide receiver, behind senior Derrick Dehaney. Boyd caught 24 passes for 481 yards last season, and, disappointingly, Sherando failed to make the playoffs.

There's no single reason why Sherando missed the playoffs last season, despite returning a heavy core of the team that played in the Group AA Division 4 state championship game in 2007. Certainly the torn anterior cruciate ligament Metheny suffered was a major contributor, but many players this season point to a less reason less concrete: A lack of senior leadership.

"We have goals that we write down before the season starts, so that was something that coach Hall and all the seniors stressed [this season]," Boyd said. "That the seniors need to take control of the team and be better leaders and kinda pull the younger guys in more than last year."

To show for their rediscovered team unity, the Warriors have a 9-2 record, having barely lost to Loudoun County and Handley, and will play defending state champion Broad Run on Friday in the Group AA Region II, Division 4 final.

"Not many people gave us a shot this year," Boyd said. "But all the seniors are real close and we kinda got together and we knew what we wanted to do.

"We take the younger guys under our wing and show them around."

And then there's the personal responsibility Boyd shouldered this past offseason. Boyd bypassed playing baseball last spring -- though he will be the first to chuckle that he's not a great baseball player to begin with -- and took to the weight room instead. He put on size and increased his speed. In the summer he went to football camps at Boston College, James Madison University, the University of Richmond and U.Va. And when the college coaches Boyd worked with got in touch with Hall, it seemed Boyd impressed them all with how efficiently he ran.

"One common thread that I heard back from them is, 'Boy, he's a great route-runner,'" Hall said. "And so I think that speaks highly of his focus to things that we've been trying to instill in him.

"He knows if you couple those fundamentals along with his athleticism, it's a good combination for him to be explosive."

Boyd has 27 receptions for 627 yards this season, and has seven receiving touchdowns. He's returned two kickoffs for touchdowns, and is the only Warrior to average more than 100 all-purpose yards per game.

And while Sherando is a team which prides itself on its defense, Friday's game against Broad Run -- a team that features University of Pittsburgh-bound tailback T.J. Peeler and Syracuse University-bound wideout Adrian Flemming -- will depend on how consistent the Sherando offense can play. Putting together long, time-consuming drives will keep Peeler and Flemming on the bench, and out of a groove.

After scoring on their its two possessions in a win over James Wood last Friday in the regional semifinals, Sherando knows it can string together scoring drives, it's just a matter doing it again and again.

"I think if our offense puts four quarters together, we'll be able to score some," Boyd said. "If our offense could just be more consistent, I think we've got a good shot.

Then Boyd, the wide receiver you know you've heard of, slipped a slight smile: "It's gonna be wild on Friday."




Leave a comment

What do you think?

(You may use HTML tags for style)


Comments

Comments that are posted on nvdaily.com represent the opinion of the commenter and not the Northern Virginia Daily/nvdaily.com. Commenters agree to abide by our COMMENTS POLICY when posting. If you feel that a post is objectionable or does not adhere to our comments policy, please e-mail us at info@nvdaily.com.

Star Readers Recommend













Top Jobs

Alban Cat: Truck technician

Mentoring and Mental Health Specialist Positions

Eagle Express Lines: CDL-A Drivers

arrow View all Top Jobs



Topics

2009 Daily Classic 2009 Fall Review 2009-2010 Winter All-Area Teams 2010 Spring All-Area Teams Apple Blossom Festival Auto Big Picture Broadway Central High School Clarke High School College Community Sports Corrections Football 2009 Front Royal Flames Handley High School James Wood High School Local Sports Luray Massanutten Military Academy Media Millbrook High School PrepZone Randolph-Macon Military Academy Scores Shenandoah University Sherando High School Skyline High School Spring 2009 All-Area Teams Stonewall Jackson High School Strasburg High School SVCA Valley League Warren High School web_sports Winter Sports Review 2009






News | Sports | Business | Lifestyle | Obituaries | Opinion | Multimedia| Entertainment | Homes | Classifieds
Guide to the Daily: Advertise | Circulation | Contact Us | NIE | Place a Classified | Privacy Policy | Subscribe

Copyright © The Northern Virginia Daily | nvdaily.com | 152 N. Holliday St., Strasburg, Va. 22657 | (800) 296-5137

nvdaily.com
The best small daily newspaper in Virginia!


nvdaily.com | seeshenandoah.com