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Hyde and Osbourn find title they sought

Dec 13, 2006 12:00 AM (670 days ago) by Brian McNally, The Examiner
This story ranks Not ranked
Related Topics: Woodbridge
Osbourn players celebrate their Virginia Group AAA Division 6 state championship. From left to right are seniors Marcus Hyde, Matt Johnson, Brandon Hogan, Scott Arvai and Julian Beale. Hyde had ‘never dreamed’ of a championship for the Eagles after suffering through losing seasons early in his high school career, including a three-win season in 2004.
(Jeff Mankie/Examiner)
Osbourn players celebrate their Virginia Group AAA Division 6 state championship. From left to right are seniors Marcus Hyde, Matt Johnson, Brandon Hogan, Scott Arvai and Julian Beale. Hyde had ‘never dreamed’ of a championship for the Eagles after suffering through losing seasons early in his high school career, including a three-win season in 2004.
Woodbridge (Map, News) - Osbourn senior Marcus Hyde took it all in, wide-eyed and with a smile that lit up the field at Freedom High on Saturday afternoon.

As his teammates celebrated their convincing 42-20 victory over Chantilly in the Virginia Group AAA Division 6 state final, the whole thing felt unreal. The Gatorade dumped on Osbourn coach Steve Schultze.

The chant of “state champs” reigning down from the thousands who made the cross-county trip from Manassas.

Finally hoisting the championship trophy with his teammates.

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It was a scene thought so far-fetched a couple of years ago that Hyde had never even bothered to visualize what it would be like.

Why waste the time?

“I never saw any of this coming. Never dreamed of it,” Hyde said. “I still remember when we won three games [in 2004] and it was actually considered a big improvement.”

Hyde saw firsthand how down Osbourn’s program was when older brother Gary quit the team rather than endure the misery of back-to-back 0-10 seasons in 2000 and 2001. After moving to Manassas from Miami with his family in fourth grade, everything Hyde knew about Osbourn football was bad.

“Then we started winning,” Hyde said, “and that all changed for us.”

The 6-foot-3, 215-pounder was understandably overshadowed by teammate Brandon Hogan (West Virginia). But make no mistake, the Eagles could not have won the school’s first state title without him. Hyde was one of the most versatile players in Northern Virginia. Osbourn used him as a pass-rushing defensive end, linebacker, and even wide receiver early in the season. By season’s end he was a vicious blocking back for Hogan.

“All Marcus wants to do is hit people,” Hogan said. “He doesn’t care if it’s the biggest, baddest person out there. He’ll smack them in the mouth every time.”

Hyde and seek

» Osbourn senior LB/RB Marcus Hyde was named the Northwest Region defensive player of the year.

» Hyde has drawn recruiting interest from high Division I schools like Virginia, Virginia Tech, Stanford and Navy, along with a host of Division I-AA programs. None have come through with a scholarship offer yet, although Osbourn coach Steve Schultze believes one will soon.

» Hyde sacked Chantilly QB Nate Worek three times in the state final victory and twice forced a fumble. Both turnovers led to Osbourn TDs. Hyde also tipped a pass that was intercepted.

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Comments from Examiner Readers

3:09 PM MST on Mon., Dec. 10, 2007 re: "Executives lock horns over football game"

Examiner Reader said:
Smith and Ulman are both fruitcakes. I would not wipe my feet on either one of them.

169 agree | 152 disagree
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7:51 AM MST on Mon., Dec. 10, 2007 re: "Executives lock horns over football game"

Examiner Reader said:
I can't beleive the Examiner fell for this obvious political stunt to get press on the backs of high school athletes. This isn't the pros and this isn't the super bowl. One of the main reasons student athletes use Steroids is because of the pressure to win at all cost. Having the County Executives bet on the game, is first a demonstration for the kids and second it puts additional pressure on the teams to win, since the county execs control most of the school budget. Now that River Hill has won, I'm sure that Jim Smith will try and turn this into more cheap press. I hope the examiner doesn't fall for it this time. The real stars are the student athletes.

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