The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Another challengin­g run awaits WRC teams

- By John Kampf jkampf@news-herald.com

The first day of fall practiced awaited Kenston coach Jeff Grubich. Before heading out the door of his office, he glanced at the schedule posted on the wall of the Gurd Family Fieldhouse.

“It’s a meatgrinde­r, man,” the Bombers’ head honcho said. “Week in and week out, it’s a grind.”

To be sure, Grubich isn’t looking past his team’s nonconfere­nce slate of Boardman, West Geauga, Chagrin Falls, VASJ and Lake Catholic. That five-game run has its own set of challenges.

What makes Grubich swallow hard is the list of five games that come after that. The five games that comprise the Western Reserve Conference slate.

The WRC is one of the most underrated conference­s in Northeast Ohio — perhaps in the state. It’s been whittled down from departures the past few years. But the six that remain — Chardon, Kenston, Mayfield, North, Riverside and South — spend a good part of the fall beating on each other for league supremacy with high-end talent and superior coaching.

In the past five years, the WRC has boasted three state champions (Kenston in 2018, Chardon in 202021),

four different league champions and a number of players who went on to play Division I college football while losing two former members — Brush and Madison — who left for competitiv­e balance reasons.

As camps opened this week, three of the six league members — Kenston, Chardon and Riverside — all featured players who voiced aspiration­s for winning a state title this year. And none is out of the realm of possibilit­y.

In short, the WRC is NOT for the weak, weary or faint of heart.

Just ask Grubich. When

his team won the 2018 state title, the Bombers weren’t even undisputed league champs. They shared it with Chardon and Riverside.

“The WRC is one of the premier conference­s in the state of Ohio,” Chardon coach Mitch Hewitt said.”You have a wide range of sizes, great players and coaches. It’s a meatgrinde­r, man.”

The past five years might be a smallish sample size, but it confirms just how challengin­g (and successful) the WRC is consistent­ly. Over that span:

• Chardon has compiled a 56-9 record, including a 17-3 playoff mark with two state titles.

• Kenston is 45-14 with a 10-4 playoff record and one state crown.

• Riverside is 37-18 with a 5-4 playoff slate.

• Mayfield is 29-22 with a 3-4 playoff mark.

• Only South (23-29, 2-4 in the playoffs) and North (13-35, 0-2 in playoff games) are under .500 over the past five years.

Number of games played varies because of the 2020 COVID-19 year when not everyone played the same amount of games.

None of the WRC’s teams have a losing record in nonconfere­nce games over the past five years. Kenston is 12-3 in non-WRC games, Chardon is 11-3, Riverside 11-6, South 10-4 and both Mayfield and North 8-7.

Add it all up, and the WRC has four teams with winning records in the past five years, with five of its members winning two or more playoff games.

Madison (11-37) and Brush (4-16) struggled competitiv­ely and left the conference.

“This is my 14th year here at Riverside, and last year was my first outright league championsh­ip,” Beavers coach Dave Bors said. “It’s brutal as heck. If you want to be an outright champion here or think you’re going to run the table, don’t plan on that. There are like 4-6 teams who can be one of the favorites every year.”

South’s Matt Duffy agreed. He said a penalty here or there, a dropped pass, a fumble, a missed kick — something deemed insignific­ant — can swing a game AND a season.

“It’s hard to win this,” he said. “There are a lot of really good players and really good coaches. There’s not a lot of margin for error.”

Hewitt said a big attribute of the conference is coaching. There’s little turnover in the league at the head-coaching spot or on the staffs. Duffy is the dean of WRC coaches in his 20th year, followed by Bors’ 14 and Hewitt’s 13. Grubich (12), Mayfield’s Ross Bandiera (eight) and North’s Shawn Dodd (eight) are also in long tenures compared to many schools in the area.

“Good players, they make you nervous as a coach,” Hewitt said. “Good staffs terrify you. There are great players in this league, but it’s the staffs that concern us the most. … The lack of coaching turnover in this league is somewhat remarkable, given the lifespan of coaches anymore.”

As usual, this year’s WRC race looks to be a nosebloody­ing slugfest for sure. In fact, three of the top five team’s in this year’s opening News-Herald Top of the Crop are from the WRC — Chardon, Riverside and Kenston.

Riverside returns a wealth of talent from a squad that finished 9-1 in the regular season with an undisputed league crown. The Beavers went 2-1 in the Division II, Region 5 playoffs, bowing out with a heart-wrenching 16-14 loss to Hudson.

Mikey Maloney, the reigning Tony Fisher Award winner as The News-Herald’s player of the year, returns at quarterbac­k. He has a wealth of talent around him such as 1,000yard running back Jason Mackey and receivers Brady McKnight, Dez Kirks and Ethan Ross.

The Beavers’ defense is anchored by ends Antonio Bottiggi and Dom Kirks — both Division I college recruits — and Sam Salimenin.

Over at Chardon, the words “angry” and “motivated” were prevalent the first week of practice after the 2022 season ended with a second-place WRC finish to Riverside and a 14-7 loss to Canfield in the Division III, Region 9 final ended the Hilltopper­s’ season.

Chardon returns most of its offense, including a gigantic offensive line, and a pair of Division I college recruits on defense in Andrew Bruce and Leo Colombi.

 ?? PAUL DICICCO — FOR THE NEWS-HERALD ?? Riverside will have its hands full defending its 2022 WRC championsh­ip this season.
PAUL DICICCO — FOR THE NEWS-HERALD Riverside will have its hands full defending its 2022 WRC championsh­ip this season.

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