Dispatch note: Last week, The Dispatch ran a story about Greenville Christian’s efforts to find a football team willing to play them. On Friday night Greenville Christian beat Delta Streets 74-0. The following story was originally published by Mississippi Today the day before the game.
Three football teams have canceled games with mighty Greenville Christian, the state’s top-ranked high school football team. All have cited small rosters, injuries and concern for the health of their players.
That has caused Saints coach Jon Reed McLendon to search in vain far and wide — as far away as Washington D.C. and south Florida — to fill open dates.
But McLendon did not have to look far to find Friday night’s foe. The Delta Streets Academy Lions are about 50 miles east, down Highway 82 in Greenwood. The game has been scheduled for months. Despite long odds, Delta Streets is not begging out.
If a betting line existed on the game, Greenville Christian would be favored by 40 points or more. The truth is, McLendon probably could name the score Friday night and make it happen. But that’s not the point, Delta Streets executive director T. Mac Howard and his second-year football coach Travis Upshaw say.
“We signed up to play this game and we’re going to play it,” Upshaw said. “We are not teaching our guys to quit.”
Perseverance is one of the school’s five stated and published core values, with this addendum: “We work hard even when we fail.”
Says Howard, the school’s founder, “We are building character here. Part of that is the discipline to do what you said you were going to do. We said we were going to play. We are going to play. Wins and losses are not what define us. We are developing young men.
“These young men will face difficult times later in life, maybe with their marriages or with their jobs or with life in general. We all face them, right? You do. I do. We all do. You can’t just quit, you know. You got to face up to them.”
Some facts about Delta Streets:
n The school is just nine years old, the brainchild of Howard, who grew up in the Barnett Reservoir area and played football and baseball at Northwest Rankin before attending Mississippi State, where he was a football walk-on under Sylvester Croom.
n Delta Streets, located in downtown Greenwood in a partially renovated (and still being renovated) automobile dealership, has an enrollment of 95, all boys, in grades 7 through 12. The school currently has no football field or gymnasium. The football team usually practices in an open field behind a nearby church.
n The school’s enrollment is about 75% African American and 25% Hispanic. The football team has 18 players, but only 14 of those are 10th grade or older.
n There is a strong emphasis on both Christian faith and discipline. Discipline is non-negotiable.
“We are not a fit for everybody,” Howard said. “If a student can’t or won’t follow our rules and values, they move on. Typically, they go back to public school.”
Howard, himself, formerly taught and coached at Greenwood High School, where he was dismayed with the lack of discipline — more specifically, he says, the lack of demand for discipline.
Delta Streets began the school year with 105 students. Ten have moved on. On the other hand, enrollment has steadily increased year to year.
Al’Javeez McGhee, who goes by AJ, is the team’s slender, 17-year-old senior quarterback who ran afoul of the school’s rules in the seventh grade, came back a year later and, said Howard, has blossomed as a student, athlete and citizen.
“AJ is going to be successful in life, no matter what he chooses to do,” Howard said.
McGhee, soft-spoken to the point coaches have had to insist he bark the signals, wants to be a scientist. Currently, he takes two college courses at nearby Mississippi Delta Community College and plans eventually to attend a four-year university.
Delta Streets, McGhee says, “has equipped me to be a better person. My teachers have pushed me. My mom pushes me. I have learned so much here.”
McGhee has known and competed athletically against many of Greenville Christian’s players for much of his life. Earlier this fall, he traveled to Ridgeland to watch the Saints dismantle defending MAIS state champion Madison-Ridgeland Academy 58-32. So he knows what his team is up against.
“Oh man, they are really, really good,” said McGhee, who is realistic about his and his team’s goals Friday night.
“I just want to compete,” McGhee said. “We want to score against them, put some points on the board — not many teams do.”
Upshaw, the head coach who once played as a 380-pound nose tackle for Texas State and later in the Arena Football League, says he has set some realistic goals for Friday night in terms of first downs, defensive stops and other statistical categories. He once played a game against nationally ranked Texas A&M when he was at Texas State, which was then a division below A&M and given little chance to compete. “But we were down only three points at halftime, and eventually lost a close game in the fourth quarter, but we were competitive,” he said.
Upshaw said he and his Texas State teammates left College Station feeling better about themselves and eventually finished the season ranked No. 4 in Division I-AA, winning two playoff games. He would dearly love for his small pride of Lions to have a similar experience Friday night.
Realistically, this matchup is far more one-sided than that one years ago in Texas, but running back Jaylen Lewis, the Lions’ best player, is eager to play. He ran for 240 yards and four touchdowns in a 33-20 victory over Rossville (Tenn.) Christian Academy last week.
“I want to compete,” Lewis said. “I want to show what I can do. I know how good they are, but I am not scared.”
Upshaw says his team is making strides. The Lions are on a modest two-game winning streak. Two weeks ago, in a 13-8 victory over Riverside, Cristian Ledesma, a 10th grader, kicked the first extra point in school history.
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