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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Hunt
completes season as football player Kady Hunt is
a girl. She is in the eighth grade, and she is a good student. But what
makes Kady Hunt unique is that she plays football on the school team.
The Sisters eighth grade football
team recently completed a 1-4 campaign.
"We had only 16 players on
our roster," said Coach Paul Patton. "A couple of games we played with
only 12 players. Kady played both ways on the line -- she was an offensive
guard and on defense, she played nose guard.
"We played a lot of bigger
schools -- Redmond, Bend, and Crook County. The kids played hard, and
we had some close games. We lost one game 8-6. But, we won our last contest,
against La Pine by a score of 20-6."
Hunt is the first middle school
girl to finish a season.
"Kady plays hard, and she
does what we ask her to do," Patton said. "We've had other girls in the
past that went out for football, but she is the first girl to complete
a season."
That achievement pleases Hunt.
"When the coach told me that,
I felt that it was quite an accomplishment," she said. "I realized that
I didn't give up and I stuck with it."
Playing footbal isn't easy.
"I like the games best of
all," she said. "I like basketball, but in football you really have to
get into it and get involved. The practices are the hardest part."
Hunt held her own in the physical
game.
"It took awhile for her to
get used to the physical nature of the contact in football," her coach
said. "But at this age, girls can still match up with boys physically,
and she held her own. The guys were accepting of her and didn't give her
a hard time. She was as much a part of the team as anyone. I was worried
that the boys might not accept her, but they were pretty good about it."
Kady agreed with the coach.
"I like how the guys didn't
treat me differently," she said. "They'd treat me like one of them. I
learned that guys are different than girls in how they act, and it was
neat to see that."
Football might be in Hunt's
high school future, though the prospect of the grueling practice schedule
looms large.
"I would like to play football
as a freshman, but I don't know about daily doubles," she said. |
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