Published November 06, 2007 09:16 pm -
McDonald's improvement vital for Indians' progress
By Tom Halliburton
The Port Arthur News
PORT NECHES -- Jody McDonald did not appreciate Crosby's ploy one bit, yet it truly amounted to quite a compliment.
Crosby's left tackle, left guard and center all tried to triple-team the senior right defensive tackle for Port Neches-Groves on some of the Cougars' snaps early in the season.
Hey, the 6-0, 225-pound Big Mac isn't going to lie about it. Being triple-teamed was not any fun.
"I didn't like it, but I push back," McDonald said. "No matter what, I try my best to stop them from backing me up."
That's all Jody can do and that's why PN-G's coaches and fellow defenders shower Big Mac with a great deal of respect and appreciation. Besides that, when one defender ties up a bunch of offensive players' attention, it frees up the other defenders.
So if the fans, media, cheerleaders, Indianettes, and other educated spectators fail to notice McDonald, just consider what the Indians think about Jody. They know. McDonald gets the job plenty well enough.
Jody's hours in the trenches often winds up enabling Kaleb Walker, Austin Miller, Brett Doty, Clint Burnett or Zeke Schexnider to snatch the headlines and jump to the top of the tackle charts and player of the week lists.
There is a great deal of self-satisfaction over the fact that each Port Neches-Groves varsity football player can call himself a part of a 22-4A district champion right now. Or at least a co-champion. And McDonald knows he's been a big part of the Indians' ability to attain records of 7-2 and 6-0.
"The backs compliment me because I stop them from getting hit," McDonald said. "Those guys make quite a few tackles every game."
Yet in the grand scheme of PN-G's fine season, few purple and white players have made as much steady improvement from Week Zero to Week Ten as this 18-year-old son of John McDonald and Lisa Anderson.
There's a reason for all that steady improvement in Jody's game. It starts with his desire to improve and his application to practice with such diligence and intensity. It's been an obvious part of Jody's performance all season.
"I believe if you're going to practice, that you practice with everything you have to make yourself better," he said.
That's part of McDonald's strong work ethic which also has included running the stands in the summer, working on quickness and the concentrated effort in weight lifting.
The total package begins, though, at practice. That's quite evident to one of the sharpest eyes at PN-G's practices, Indians' head coach Matt Burnett.
"If Jody did not practice like that all the time, our whole staff would be in a panic," the Indians' chief noted. "He's consistent. He never misses. He's really one of the best practice players I've ever had. Sometimes we have to get him to back off in practice... He destroys the scout team."