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Sam Clancy, Jr., 1998 – former NBA basketball player; James Hoye, 1989 – MLB Umpire; Tom Cousineau, 1975 – Ohio State and NFL linebacker, first pick in 1979 NFL draft, member of College Football Hall of Fame [12] Andrew Dowell, 2015 – NFL player; Montorie Foster, 2020 – college football wide receiver for the Michigan State Spartans [13]
St. Edward High School is an all-boys Catholic high school in Lakewood, Ohio, United States. It was founded in 1949 and is operated by the Midwest Province of the Brothers of Holy Cross . It is one of three remaining all-boys Catholic high schools in the Greater Cleveland area ( Benedictine and Saint Ignatius being the others) and has an ...
While at St. Edward, Williams played limited time as a freshman on a team anchored by Sam Clancy, Jr. and Steve Logan that went on to win the OHSAA state title. [1] During his later years in high school, he was named first team All-Ohio and named to numerous All-American teams.
The 2023 Ohio High School Athletic Association state championship football games offer quite a bit for fans this weekend in Canton. The 14 teams competing for titles in seven divisions include six ...
Four-time defending Class 4A champion Boyle County has long been thought of as one of the best high school football teams in Kentucky.. After its 38-21 road victory against Ohio No. 1 St. Edward ...
Girls Soccer, Girls Golf and Girls Basketball 3: 2001-2002: St. Ignatius: Cleveland: Football, Boys Golf and Baseball 3: 2001-2002: Walsh Jesuit: Cuyahoga Falls: Girls Soccer, Girls Golf and Softball 3: 1998-1999: Archbishop Alter: Kettering: Boys Soccer, Boys Golf and Basketball 3: 1997-1998: St. Edward: Lakewood: Wrestling, Boys Basketball ...
The Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) is the governing body of athletic programs for junior and senior high schools in the state of Ohio. It conducts state championship competitions in all the OHSAA-sanctioned sports.
ESPN HS was a high school sports magazine published monthly during the school year in 25 markets around the United States. Founded as SchoolSports magazine in 1997, the publication changed its name to RISE in 2006 and was purchased by ESPN in January 2008. In 2011, the magazine's title was changed to ESPN HS.