HCC’s Kinlaw is NJCAA def. player of the year

EUGENE KINLAW

EUGENE KINLAW

This just in — Hutchinson’s Eugene Kinlaw is the NJCAA national defensive player of the year.

Here’s the release from HCC sports honcho Steve Carpenter, and watch for an article in tomorrow’s Eagle on Kinlaw’s big award, the third straight year defensive honors have gone to a Jayhawk Conference player:

HCC’S EUGENE KINLAW IS NJCAA NATIONAL DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR

By Steve Carpenter

HCC Sports Information Director

Monday, December 15, 2008

Turning in one of the most dominant seasons ever by a Hutchinson Community College football player, sophomore defensive tackle Eugene Kinlaw was named the NJCAA National Defensive Player of the Year on Monday.

Kinlaw is the first HCC football player to earn National Player of the Year honors.

“It feels really nice. I wasn’t expecting this,” Kinlaw said. “We had a really great year.”

Monday’s award is the latest for Kinlaw, who also garnered first-team all-Jayhawk Conference and league Defensive Player of the Year awards as well as first-team NJCAA and JC Grid-Wire first-team All-America honors.

Kinlaw played a huge role in the turnaround of the Blue Dragon football program this season.

After winning only six games in the previous three seasons combined, the 2008 Blue Dragons went 7-4, tied for third in the Jayhawk Conference, advanced to the Region VI championship game for the first time since 1995 and achieved a No. 19 final national ranking.

“I knew he was a great player, but to be honored like that is an awesome deal for Eugene, our program and for the college to have a national player of the year. It’s pretty exciting.”

Kinlaw, a 6-foot-2, 295-pound sophomore from Homerville, Ga., quickly asserted himself as a dominant defensive lineman. The Blue Dragon defensive tackle led the Jayhawk Conference in tackles for loss with 45, which totaled 180 yards. He had 11 quarterback sacks, which ranked 10th in the NJCAA. The 45 tackles for loss were a Blue Dragon team record for defensive linemen.

“I wanted to dominant more than I did last year,” Kinlaw said. “I didn’t feel like I dominated my freshman year and I wanted to work hard this year so I could dominate.”

Kinlaw was fourth on the team with 65 total tackles (49 solo, 16 assisted). He also registered four passes broken up, 15 quarterback hurries, four forced fumbles, two blocked kicks and one safety.

Kinlaw led a Blue Dragon defense that allowed just 74.8 rushing yards a game, ranking sixth in the nation.

He had a season-high nine tackles in the regular-season game against Fort Scott. He had eight tackles, five for loss and 1.5 quarterback sacks in a victory over Air Force Prep. One week later, Kinlaw had eight tackles, six for loss and 1.5 sacks against Independence.

“He has a lot of God-given ability, but he just matured,” Rhoades said. “He decided he was going to buckle down and not take a play off. He had a new level of maturity. It got hungry to be great and he knew he needed to lead our football team. That was probably the biggest difference.

Kinlaw, who has already committed to Troy University for next season, is the sixth Jayhawk Conference player to win a National Player of the Year award since it was first given in 1990.

Blinn quarterback Terrance Cain was the NJCAA National Offensive Player of the Year.

4 Comments

  1. bendover
    Posted December 15, 2008 at 8:07 pm | Permalink

    TA;

    Is he ESQ. because he graduated from law school before he went to a JUCO? Or is this just another fraud of these 4th rate schools?

    Ben

  2. Tony Adame
    Posted December 15, 2008 at 8:25 pm | Permalink

    Not just for people who graduated from law school, Ben, although they seem to have staked a claim to it.

    es·quire (skwr, -skwr)
    n.
    1. A man or boy who is a member of the gentry in England ranking directly below a knight.
    2. Abbr. Esq. Used as an honorific usually in its abbreviated form, especially after the name of an attorney or a consular officer: Jane Doe, Esq.; John Doe, Esq.
    3. In medieval times, a candidate for knighthood who served a knight as an attendant and a shield bearer.
    4. Archaic An English country gentleman; a squire.

  3. bendover
    Posted December 18, 2008 at 10:08 pm | Permalink

    TA;

    So why is Kinlaw an esquire?

    Ben

  4. fiveeasypieces
    Posted December 18, 2008 at 11:12 pm | Permalink

    Ben,

    Not because he’s a lawyer.

    -TA