Los Angeles Times

Rattay enjoying rapid ascent

Lincoln High receiver is using his track speed to turn heads on the football field.

- ERIC SONDHEIMER

Fourth in a series of stories profiling top high school football players by position. Today, Jaden Rattay, Los Angeles Lincoln receiver.

When the boom from the starter’s pistol sounded at the start of the City Section final for the 400-meter race, Jaden Rattay of Lincoln began a race last spring no one gave him much of a chance to win against Granada Hills’ Dijon Stanley.

“I knew I was the underdog, so I knew I had to give it all my heart,” he said.

Running in Lane 5 next to Stanley, Rattay took the lead briefly on the final turn. It was a shocking scene. Rattay started the year running the 400 in 51 seconds in his first track experience. Now he was competing and leading one of the City Section’s fastest athletes.

“I got a little excited,” Rattay said. “I thought I kind of had a chance.”

Except Stanley turned on the afterburne­rs and finished in 46.94, the secondfast­est 400 by a City Section athlete this century. Rattay ran a career-best 48.15 to

finish second.

“I was really elated,” he said.

It was an example of Rattay’s fearlessne­ss and refusal to back down no matter the challenge and no matter what others might think.

“He did push me,” Stanley said of the race.

Rattay’s improving speed and strength mark him as an athlete to watch this football season. He’s a 16-year-old senior receiver and safety who figures to be one of the most versatile scoring threats in the City Section.

Last season in leading Lincoln to a 10-0 record in the regular season, he had 13 touchdowns receiving, two touchdowns rushing, two touchdowns on intercepti­on returns and one touchdown on a punt return.

He has grown to nearly 6 feet and 165 pounds and is a candidate to be the school’s valedictor­ian having never received a grade other than A on his report card since elementary school.

His father, Chris, used to be Lincoln’s football coach. His uncle, Tim, was an NFL quarterbac­k. And the fact he doesn’t turn 17 until October makes him one of the youngest seniors on the field and someone who figures to keep getting better with maturity.

“I’m definitely stronger than the last couple of years,” he said.

As a receiver early on in high school, teams would try to jam him at the line of scrimmage. It was an effective strategy against someone who needed more strength. It will be interestin­g to see how he might be able to burn cornerback­s this season as he frees himself and uses his speed to create opportunit­ies for big plays.

Lincoln will be using him in a variety of ways — getting him the ball on screens, fly sweeps and deep posts. Once he gets the ball in open space , will anyone catch him? “Hopefully not,” he said. During the spring, his father gave him a goal in the 400 to break 50 seconds. When he ran 49.8 in his next race and the reaction was, “Oh shoot, let’s keep pushing.”

The improvemen­t of some three seconds shows Rattay might be scratching the surface of what he’s capable of accomplish­ing as increased speed and strength combined with his work ethic and intelligen­ce could lead to some exciting sports moments at Lincoln High this fall and spring.

Friday: Nick Fernandez, San Pedro High tight end.

 ?? Craig Weston ?? JADEN RATTAY of Lincoln, left, challenged Dijon Stanley of Granada Hills in the City 400 final but came in second. Stanley ran 46.94 to Rattay’s 48.15.
Craig Weston JADEN RATTAY of Lincoln, left, challenged Dijon Stanley of Granada Hills in the City 400 final but came in second. Stanley ran 46.94 to Rattay’s 48.15.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States