Los Angeles Times

Runner finds the right direction

Wilmore, consistent­ly chewing up yardage, has helped Lawndale to a 3-0 start.

- ERIC SONDHEIMER ON HIGH SCHOOLS eric.sondheimer@latimes.com Twitter: @latsondhei­mer

As a young boy, Jordan Wilmore was so chubby his flag football coach put him at center. The first time he got to carry the football was on an intercepti­on and, as a 5-year-old, he ran the wrong way.

“You have 30-something parents screaming and hollering,” said his father, Romalice, one of the coaches. “I’m pointing, ‘Go this way,’ and he took off.”

Wilmore is still running away from defenders. The junior is a star running back for Lawndale, which is 3-0 going into a nonleague game Friday night at San Pedro.

Wilmore rushed for 133 yards and three touchdowns against Ventura St. Bonaventur­e. Then came 261 yards and five touchdowns against Encino Crespi. And last week, he had 232 yards and four touchdowns against neighborho­od rival Leuzinger.

“He’ll be the best running back on the West Coast,” coach Travis Clark said. “He’s got power, strength, speed, the work ethic, incredible vision, great hands. He’s an allaround back and he wants to play on Sundays.”

Last season, in a playoff game against Fontana Summit and future USC running back Stephen Carr, Wilmore ran for 325 yards in 39 carries and scored four touchdowns in a 38-14 Lawndale victory.

St. Bonaventur­e coach Tony Henney said of Wilmore, “I thought he was the real deal — fast, great vision, tough, a real D1 running back.”

Listed at 5 feet 9, 188 pounds, Wilmore started his high school career at Gardena Serra.

“I loved him,” Serra coach Scott Altenberg said. “He was going to be our guy.”

Except that Wilmore decided to leave for Lawndale last year, and now the Cardinals have a player everyone must deal with.

“The life of a running back is you have to have a lot of vision,” Wilmore said. “You have to be calm running the ball. You have to have great instincts.”

And you have to be ready for the aches, pains and bruises on Saturday morning.

“Man, I’m sore,” he said of his routine. “I’m not going to lie, but in the offseason I did a lot of weightlift­ing, making sure my body was right.

“Strength is important because if you don’t have strength, you’re going to get hurt. And if you don’t have speed, you can’t break away from defenders.”

Wilmore, trying to improve his speed, ran for the track team on its league championsh­ip relay team last spring. Aided by a solid offensive line, he makes it difficult for teams to stop him. And he loves running with the ball.

“Scoring, breaking long runs, breaking tackles, stiff-arming people — that’s the fun part,” he said.

Now that he’s a marked player, things are not going to get any easier. That’s fine with Wilmore. As expectatio­ns rise, he’ll be ready to deliver.

“I like to prove people wrong,” he said.

 ?? Eric Sondheimer Los Angeles Times ?? JORDAN WILMORE ran for 325 yards and scored four touchdowns in a playoff game last season.
Eric Sondheimer Los Angeles Times JORDAN WILMORE ran for 325 yards and scored four touchdowns in a playoff game last season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States