Chicago Sun-Times

Allure of Michigan too much for Kenwood trio

- @mikeclarkp­reps MIKE CLARK

Kenwood’s Myles Mooyoung waited as long as he could.

The senior defensive back, a three- star prospect, was one of the top uncommitte­d players in his class in Illinois, behind only Oak Park- River Forest quarterbac­k Jaden McGill. This fall, he wanted to finish what he and his classmates had started. When they came to Kenwood as freshmen for coach Sinque Turner’s debut season in 2017, the Broncos had only two IHSA playoff berths ever, and the program record for wins was seven.

Now Kenwood is among the Public League’s elite programs, with back- to- back trips to the state playoffs and consecutiv­e 8- 2 finishes.

This season was supposed to be the best of all, with a senior- heavy roster highlighte­d by a pair of Boston College recruits: allpurpose back Lewis Bond and receiver Dante Reynolds.

Mooyoung is another Power Five prospect, with offers from BC and Washington State, among others. But prep football is on hold in Illinois until February at the earliest, and Mooyoung needed to figure out how to get some game film now.

“A lot of [ college] coaches, they had videos of me working out and stuff, but it always comes down to seeing someone in pads,” Mooyoung said. “Everyone can play in T- shirts and shorts.”

Mooyoung spoke at a “Let Us Play” protest downtown on Sept. 19, part of a campaign to try to persuade Illinois Gov. J. B Pritzker to allow contact sports this fall.

With those efforts going nowhere, he and two of his teammates — senior quarterbac­k Kaleb Garner and junior defensive back Diego Oliver — made a tough decision, transferri­ng to Groves High School in Beverly Hills, Michigan.

Mooyoung has played two games so far. Garner — who’s committed to rising Division I program St. Thomas ( Minnesota) — and Oliver made their debuts last weekend.

Mooyoung’s father works in Michigan, making the logistics easier. But like Illinois, that state also initially planned to push football to the spring.

“Once the verdict was decided that we weren’t having a season, I talked to my family, and they thought it was best for me to move to Michigan,” Mooyoung said. “When [ Michigan] said they weren’t going to have a season, I was [ thinking], ‘ Oh, well.’

“Once they reinstated [ football], I was like, ‘ Dad, I’ve got to go.’ ”

Garner felt the same way when it became clear that fall football was happening in Michigan but not in Illinois.

“When we stepped on the Groves campus, it was like home,” he said. “It just came down to a family decision.”

That doesn’t mean it was easy for Mooyoung or Garner to walk away from Kenwood.

“It was very heartbreak­ing to leave what Coach [ Turner] had built,” Garner said.

Said Mooyoung: “If someone was going to tell me this was going to happen, I couldn’t imagine myself leaving Kenwood at all, just because it was such a great school.”

Turner has no hard feelings toward the players who left, as much as he would have liked to have coached them one more season.

“I’m not sour,” he said. “I’m a hundred percent in support.”

Even with these three players gone, the Broncos have plenty of talent left, especially in the junior and sophomore classes.

“I’m super optimistic we’re going to play in the spring, and I’ve got a good team coming back,” Turner said.

Garner agrees.

“I just shake my head and think about what could have been,” he said. “We had all the guys, all the tools. I feel like I could write a book about this, or make a movie.”

 ?? KIRSTEN STICKNEY/ SUN- TIMES ?? Senior defensive back Myles Mooyoung, formerly of Kenwood, speaks last month outside the Thompson Center as part of a protest of the postponeme­nt of fall high school sports in Illinois.
KIRSTEN STICKNEY/ SUN- TIMES Senior defensive back Myles Mooyoung, formerly of Kenwood, speaks last month outside the Thompson Center as part of a protest of the postponeme­nt of fall high school sports in Illinois.
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