Under-the-radar recruit finds a home at UNR
Dion Washington woke up one morning in late April with a message from UNR defensive line coach Jackie Shipp, who had stumbled across his highlight video on social media and was interested in a talk.
A few hours later, the Shadow Ridge defensive lineman had a scholarship offer. He will sign a national letter of intent today with the Wolf Pack — one of about 20 Las Vegas-area players inking with a Division I school.
“I was surprised they offered that fast,” Washington said.
Washington is one of the lucky ones, especially with the pandemic postponing the season to limit the number of chances for under-the-radar prospects such as Washington to be recruited.
There’s no current game film, stats or opportunities for a coach to watch in person.
Washington has played about a dozen varsity games. His only other scholarship offer is from Division II Southwest Minnesota State, meaning if Shipp doesn’t find the video Washington would be like the thousands of others fringe prospects nationwide without a college home.
“I feel very lucky and fortunate that he found my Twitter profile,” Washington said. “I know others didn’t get the same opportunity.”
Washington’s highlights captured his “freak athleticism,” Mustangs coach Travis Foster said. Not only do the films show him rushing the quarterback from his defensive end position, they also showed the 6-foot-3, 260-pound senior running a 11.85 second 100-meter dash in track, and excelling in wrestling. He was second at heavyweight in 2020 in the Sunset Region.
He’s also accomplished in the weight room, benching 340 pounds and squatting 470 pounds.
“They see the potential. He’s strong as all get-out,” Foster said. “Their D-line coach saw something in the video — how he runs, his form and technique, and athleticism.”
Washington comes from an athletic family. His father, also Dion Washington, was a standout in baseball at Chaparral and played in the Yankees’ minor league system. Uncle Maurice was also a minor-leaguer.
The younger Washington stopped playing baseball when he got to Shadow Ridge to focus on track in the spring sports season. It was the right move — his speed, arguably, helped land the scholarship from UNR.
Washington says he used “his strength and speed off the edge” in his pass rush.
Washington’s potential was obvious in his junior season of 2019 when he had four quarterback sacks and eight tackles for a loss. He’s likely not a player who will make an immediate impact at UNR but one they have plans to develop into a future contributor.
“Who knows? If we would have played, he might have looked like a world beater,” Foster said.
Most prep coaches throughout the valley feel they have players also worthy of signing today — just unable to be properly recruited because of the pandemic. Another signing day is in February, but with a second surge of virus cases, a proposed six-week season for early 2021 is at the risk of being shelved. The winter sports season was already sacrificed.
“We have a couple of kids who certainly deserve a look at that level,” Foster said. “They needed this year to put it on film because kids mature a lot in that nine month window (between the end of the junior and start of the senior season). It’s been really detrimental to those kids.”