SPORTS & RECREATION
SCOTTSDALE PROGRESS | WWW.SCOTTSDALE.ORG | SEPTEMBER 5, 2021
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Anthony Lucas aims for title in �inal high school season BY DREW SCHOTT Progress Staff Writer
D
errick Nsubuga knows a good defensive lineman when he sees one. The Chapparal High School product played the position at Southern Illinois University — Carbondale, Arizona State and Lindenwood University before returning as a coach at his alma mater. When he �irst saw Anthony Lucas, Nsubuga recognized his athleticism. His size and strength stood out. When Nsubuga pulled the freshman aside and asked him to run, he was impressed by his speed and �luid movement. It took little time for Nsubuga to realize that he was coaching a future top college prospect. “I was like ‘This kid’s gonna be a superstar,’” Nsubuga said. “Ever since then, he’s been getting better and better every year.” Nsubuga’s prediction was accurate. Lucas is now the top player from Arizona in the 2022 recruiting class and a four-star recruit. Receiving 26 offers to play college football, Lucas in August announced his top-seven schools: Alabama, Miami (FL), Notre Dame, Oregon, Texas A&M, Southern California and Louisiana State. Lucas’ path to becoming one of the best defensive high school players in the country has been unconventional, in that he took the gridiron for the �irst time during his freshman year at Chaparral. However, it didn’t take long for his skill to stand out. During his sophomore season, Lucas �inished with 29 tackles and second on the team in tackles-for-loss (10) and sacks (6). Since then, the 6'5", 280-pound lineman has grown into a defensive stalwart for the defending Division 6A state champions. “Where he’s at is what I saw as the possibility for him,” Chaparral head coach Brent Barnes said. “It’s not shocking, but it’s not easy to get where he’s at. I’m not gonna say I’m surprised by any means, but to be con-
uate early. Yet they helped his performance on the gridiron. Lucas credited baseball with improving his speed, reaction and hand-eye coordination and basketball with bettering his endurance and footwork. “I’d probably say that it takes countless hours and days of making sure your body’s in the top physical shape it can be for you to perform the best you can at all times,” Lucas said. At the end of his freshman season, Lucas was elevated to the Varsity roster after showcasing promise on the �ield. Yet Chaparral senior defensive tackle Anthony Lucas, who his football journey was has become one of the top recruits in the country, is aim- just beginning, as Barnes ing for a second straight championship to cap off his casaid he needed to imreer with the Firebirds. (Courtesy Andy Silvas) prove his understanding sidered where he’s at and what he’s done, of the game to become a it’s rare. It’s been certainly an awesome more dominant player. thing to see happen.” Lucas then worked hard in the offseason When Lucas arrived on the Firebirds’ to get ready for the pace of Varsity football. campus as a freshman, he expected to play According to Nsubuga, Lucas’ work ethic sports, but not football. Ready to contrib- in the weight room, at practice and durute his talents on the baseball �ield and ing conditioning set him apart — a quality basketball court, he was approached by a that he believes will ultimately help Lucas parent who asked if he was trying out for reach the National Football League. the football team. In the 2019 season opener against HamBarnes felt Lucas was ready to make an ilton, Lucas debuted his sophomore year impact when he arrived with the Firebirds. with just two tackles. He then went on a He remembers telling him that he couldn’t tear, racking up nine tackles, four tacklestell what his future would look like in bas- for-loss and three sacks in the Firebirds’ ketball or baseball, but that he had a bright next three games. one in football if he pursued it. One of those matchups was a 38-24 loss And he did. to Saguaro High School, in which Lucas Lucas still played his original two sports �inished with three tackles and a tackleat Chaparral — he participated in baseball for-loss. However, his statline was not the freshman and sophomore year and Varsity storyline of his performance. basketball sophomore and junior year — During a play, he swallowed the black but will not in 2021 since he plans to grad- crumbs of the turf and came to the sideline
choking on the beads. Attempting to wash the pellets out of his mouth and throat, Lucas remembers thinking “it’s nothing” and that he still had a job to �inish. He returned to the game without missing a snap. “At that moment, I was like, “Ok, yeah, he’s talented,’” Nsubuga said. “I was like, ‘This kid is gonna �ight. He’s gonna give us everything he has and he’s a competitor.’” Added Lucas: “It’s gonna take a lot more than some turf to get me off the �ield.” His sophomore season not only represented his improvement in fundamentals such as his �irst step and getting out of a stance. It was when opportunities to play college football started rolling in. At this time, Lucas shifted his main athletic focus to football. “That’s when it kind of probably clicked for him,” Barnes said. “He started to see the future. He still loves playing the game of basketball. He still loves those other things. But again, (he) just knew where his future lies.” Lucas’ junior season saw him notch 46 tackles, 15.5 tackles-for-loss and seven sacks. Lucas also caught one pass for nine yards at tight end — a position he hopes to play in college. In making his Division I decision, Lucas will consider how a team uses him, academics and their performance during the 2021 college football season. Lucas’ fondest memory of high school football so far is the �inal seconds of Chaparral’s 24-14 win over Highland in the 2020 Division 6A State Championship Game. After missing its �irst three games due to COVID-19, the Firebirds de�ied the odds and won a title. “No matter where we start, it’s about the �inish,” Lucas said. Nsubuga can’t wait to see his star pupil chase that aspiration: “He’s gonna dominate every single football game and I’m really excited for that.”