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About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1981)
Thur« In the tradition of Ed Jarrett, John Mills and Mark Hollenbeck, Scott Ogle hopes to be Aug 27 198) GRESHAM (O r* , OUTLOOK and SANDY (O r« ., POST —9 This year’s tailback If there's one single thing Barlow foot ball is known for, it's the tailback Linder head coach John Harrington, the Bruins operate out of the I formation, which means one guy — the you-know- what-back — gets the ball more than a few times every Friday night Any guy who's going to be picking up 20-25 carries every game is also going to be the sole object of the defense’s attention a like number of times So it's a good idea to make sure your tailback looks just a little bit like a Clydesdale. Fortunately, the Bruins have had the horses the last three years, two of which saw them make the state playoffs — guys like Ed Jarrett, John Mills and Mark Hollenbeck And now Scott Ogle For anyone who watched a Barlow game last year, Ogle was hard to miss He was the guy who trotted out on the field on fourth down to punt He was also the guy who stayed out on the field to play comer- back and run back the other team's punts. And if that wasn’t enough, he also played a little tailback That’s a position Ogle would like to see become his full-time job this fall He’s bat tling with teammate Paul DeKamp for the starting job “ My goal, personally, is to do the best I can,” he says. “ I want to carry the ball as much as I can and just get out there and do my thing.” Getting a chance to do his thing is what Ogle has been waiting for since eighth grade That season, playing at Orient, he gained more than 1,000 yards in six games. "I know that sounds hard to believe,” he says. “ But I have the team statistics and everything to prove it. It was really easy to do, too. It sounds funny to say that a eighth grade team has a really good line but we did I never had anything but holes to run in the whole year Every year, I’ve been hoping to carry the ball here but I haven’t yet.” Ogle has carried the ball for Barlow, but not very much as a tailback Still, it hasn't exactly been three yards and mud puddle for him. “ I guess I got the highlight of my season last year in the first game,” he says. “ I didn't start on defense because Brad Nizdil was starting But he got hurt and they put me in. I intercepted a pass and went 80 yards for a touchdown. Then another time I caught a pass from Nizdil that went about 50 yards. I didn't score on that.” But for Barlow and Ogle, the season end ed on a couple of sour notes An upset 21 20 loss to Columbia put the Bruins in a must- win situation against Clackamas in the season's final game and when that one ended, Barlow was on the short end of a 9-7 score “That loss to Columbia was something that was just uncalled for,” Ogle says. “ We went into that game thinking about the next one Afterward, we just couldn't believe it. But I guess that's the breaks of the game “Our loss to Clackamas is hard to ex plain We played good and they played good It was really a back and forth game, but it was really wet and muddy We called it the Mud Bowl I think we had about eight As Harlow’s tailback. Scott Ogle will meet Wilco defenses head on, fumbles in that game. I dislocated my thumb in the last quarter so win or lose, my season would have been over ” Ogle played baseball last spring and this past summer was one of the key members of the Division Plumbing team that nearly went all the way in the state playoffs before losing to Corvallis 9-8 in the finals Ogle had seven hits in the final four games. What goes around comes around, however, and now Ogle finds himself look ing at another football season Things have changed since last year, though “ We’ve got a whole new setup this year.” he says “There's only two people who started off last year’s defensive team, me and Kandy Rollins There's a lot of young bodies out there and not too much experience. I think we re pretty quick, though We don't have a lot of size We have the quick guys, but not too much size.” Ogle counts himself among the "quick" guys and at that, he doesn t fit the tailback stereotype While Jarrett, Mills and Hollenbeck all fit in the horse category. Ogle is more of a colt. “ I don't really have the size,” he says “ I’m 5-8 and about 155 But when I get out side I feel like I can really turn it on Peo ple say I look pretty fast, but I always feel like I can go a little bit faster ” Besides his tailback duties, Ogle will also be in the defensive backfield again and might be doing the punting again, too “There might be somebody coming out of nowhere < to do the punting i,” Ogle says “ But I feel like I still got it in me." Which is just what a coaching staff likes to hear JIM HAYS