Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

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  • Tyro11
    Rookie
    • May 2020
    • 326

    #1

    Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)


    Hello,

    It has been years since I have done any type of dynasty/franchise on a site like this. Much of that has to do with the redundancy of replaying NCAA Football 14 over and over and over despite efforts to mix it up. I delved into Madden 20 some. Obviously, not the same but I believe my thirst for the entertainment of a great franchise made it enjoyable. However, that too grew rather old.

    So, I have always enjoyed writing. Not just about sports but I am sucker for television, movies, etc. I think a story mixed in with sports can be something really fun even if it is fictional. My goal with this is to do something I have never done mixed in with storytelling. Of course, I will be molding the story to what happens within the game.

    I will be starting with a Road to Glory player in his freshman season of high school. I plan to up the sliders high his ninth grade year then gradually move them back to down to normal levels by his senior season. Of course, I will have to restart the RTG three times to do this.

    My ultimate goal is to take his career through college and into the NFL (if he makes it). All throughout this I will be writing 25 chapters per season. It sounds like a huge undertaking, and it is to an extent, but I am going to try to pace myself so the joy of this journey is more evident than the pressure to stay on pace.

    Anyways, I hope everyone enjoys this.


    Unforgettable: The Story of JC Rhodes
    Last edited by Tyro11; 06-03-2020, 09:41 AM.
  • Tyro11
    Rookie
    • May 2020
    • 326

    #2
    Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Season One: Redwood HS (Ninth Grade)
    Chapter One: Danny Ainge
    Chapter Two: Carolina Sunshine
    Chapter Three: Juicebar
    Chapter Four: Red Tape
    Chapter Five: Or Bust
    Chapter Six: Eldridge
    Chapter Seven: Gravel Lot
    Chapter Eight: Real Guts
    Chapter Nine: Double Jeopardy
    Chapter Ten: How About It
    Chapter Eleven: Anger





    SEASON ONE STORY SUMMARY

    Spoiler
    Last edited by Tyro11; 08-02-2020, 10:55 AM.

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    • Tyro11
      Rookie
      • May 2020
      • 326

      #3
      Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

      ~RESERVED~

      Comment

      • Tyro11
        Rookie
        • May 2020
        • 326

        #4
        Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

        ~RESERVED~

        Comment

        • Tyro11
          Rookie
          • May 2020
          • 326

          #5
          Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

          Title fixed. You can now post.

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          • Tyro11
            Rookie
            • May 2020
            • 326

            #6
            Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)



            CHAPTER ONE: DANNY AINGE

            JULY 12, 2017 (Redwood, North Carolina)

            JC squinted at the sun. Checking out the surrounding sky for spots of clouds. He found a straggling puff of cotton floating off to the right. Wiping his face with his forearm covered in dirt and sweat he patiently waited for the cloud to cross the sun’s path giving him some relief from the overbearing North Carolina sun rays. To his benefit, he worked more ferociously to finish the section of weeding he was responsible for in the tobacco fields. Yes, there were machines made a century ago for some of this work but JC’s grandfather found it a source of character building for the youth.

            After finishing he started his trek across several acres of a flat farmland. Passing a barrel, he tossed his brown-stained gloves inside. He approached the farmhouse he had been living in for the past four years. It was a gorgeous home to say the least. Three stories with an intricate design that almost appeared to twist the roof upwards. Its bottom floor was wrapped in a cliche porch with enough chairs and swings to give everyone at a family reunion a seat.

            With it being midday in the middle of July, his grandfather was yet to take to his evening seat on the rocking chair facing the road. Instead, someone else was in his place. His older brother Tre. Though still a hundred yards away, he could tell Tre was there waiting to talk to JC… and he knew exactly what for.

            As the fourteen year-old approached he shouted, “I ain’t going.”

            “You are. Pap said you had to.”

            “Bull****. He don’t care if I play.”

            Tre stood up from the rocking chair stopping his younger sibling from crossing him into the front door. The two were spitting images of each other except Tre’s three year age gap gave him a five inch height advantage. He knew how to use his superior size. JC looked up at his older brother with an annoyed glare.

            Tre started again, “Give it one try. These coaches ain’t like the ones you had. They’re alright. It’s just conditioning.”

            “Man I’ve been working all day. I don’t wanna go run and ****.”

            His brother sighed, “Go grab your shoes.”

            __________________________________________________ ___________

            “You’re gonna like it man. You like to grind,” Tre said while behind the wheel of a ‘97 Accord.

            JC just stared out the window as they passed countless amounts of tobacco crops, “I’m just not trying to listen to some dude yell at me.”

            “Your coaches in Pop Warner were *******s. Not all coaches are like that. Pretty sure that dude got arrested anyways. Coach Penny ain’t like that. I mean, he got Coach Sampson out there but he only yells trying to make us better. Just don’t take it personal.”

            “How am I not supposed to take it personal when some dude is calling me soft and ****?” JC responded.

            JC pushed his brother playfully, “If you can’t take being yelled at sometimes than you are soft.”

            __________________________________________________ ___________


            A dozen and a half of players kneeled down in the corner of the endzone, or what was thought to be the endzone considering the lines had not been painted. JC kept to himself as his brother socialized with his team. There was a size difference with JC and the other kids. The real big kids, probably lineman, had huge arms compared to him. Their chests naturally protruded and some of them even had more facial hair than his own grandfather. Even the more slender players had profoundly more muscle with vascularity wrapping their forearms and shoulders that appeared three dimensional. JC was small and weak compared to these guys.

            “Ay, is that your little brother?” he heard someone ask amidst the group.

            “Oh yeah, hey JC come over here?” his brother called.

            JC stood up and walked through the small groups that talked and found his brother with two other players- one substantially larger than his brother and the other much smaller. They were also the only other non-white players on the field at the moment.

            “What’s good man?” the bigger fellow respectfully greeted with a dap up.

            JC obliged and the smaller friend dapped him up as well.

            “You playing this year?” the large friend asked.

            JC side-eyed his brother who kind of just shrugged, “I keep telling him to play. I brought him today to let him see what it’s all about.”

            The little dude spoke up, “You need to play lil’ man! I’m telling you, ain’t nothing like playing under these lights. I know you’ve been in the stands but trust me, it’s different down here. Out here playing with your brothers.”

            JC still remained silent but nodded to the recruiting pitch from his brother’s friends. The big friend was about to follow it up with more dramatic overkill but a shrieking whistle blew closeby. All the players scrambled and fell to a knee at the corner of the endzone- JC followed suit while hanging in the back.

            Crossing the track to the mildly well-kept grass field was the spitting image of a high school football coach. Twenty year old gym shorts hiked up halfway up the thigh exposing pale white legs. Equally high white socks with old black Nike’s that looked like they had been worn through nine paint jobs. A worn out polo with a faded school logo on the chest and an even more worn hat that’s bill had been bent from countless slams to the ground.

            He was a small man, roughly five feet eight inches. He was pretty skinny too except for a small gut that stuck out. If you didn’t know, you would probably guess he was in his late forties but in fact he was well into his sixties. Not only masking his age, he masked his emotions by wearing dark aviators so you could never see get a beat on what he was about to say or do.

            “Alright, alright, thank you all for being here today. There’s a lot of players around the state sitting on their asses and watching cartoons right now. I plan for you all to kick their asses. There’s also a lot of players outside working just like us! That means we need to go hard. How many points did we lose by last year to Milton East?”

            “ONE!” the players yelled back.

            The experienced coach nodded, “One damn point. They weren’t better than you. You kiddin’ me? They didn’t have a Tre Rhodes. They didn’t have a Lamar Perine. They didn’t have a Max Hightower. You know why we lost? Because we were tired. You guys attacked conditioning with all you could week one though eight. Then what? You took your foot off the gas. I did too. That’s not on you all- that’s on me. This year I am going to be better. I am going to keep pushing until we get to BB&T Field. But, y’all gotta come with me. Y’all gotta hold me and each other accountable.”

            Players all around nodded in agreeance so JC began nodding too.

            The coach removed his glasses revealing sunken green eyes that really showed his age, “I ain’t going to hold y’all long today. But that’s under the agreement that we go 110% on every rep. I plan for skill to go twelve reps of 100 yards and linemen to go twelve for 50,” a select few players groaned, “I know a lot of y’all are just getting back from vacation so make sure you hydrate. All you fat boys, there’s a difference between being tired because you’re fat and having an asthma attack. Wellington’s the only one here who has an inhaler so don’t try to play me. Alright, let’s get to stretching!”

            __________________________________________________ ___________

            What rep was it? Nine, ten, eleven? JC’s hands were planted on his knees as he was bent over gasping for air but nothing soothed his burning lungs and weak legs.

            “Stand up,” his brother said to him while also trying to catch his breath.

            A distant whistle blew as the trampling of linemen scurried across the field. It hadn’t rained in so long that dust rose from the field like a stampede of cattle in West Texas.

            It had been one minute and JC realized it was only rep five. Not even halfway. He felt the pain and weakness go through his body. He didn’t even want to be here. During this whole period he heard nothing but drill sergeant screaming from the assistant coach, Coach Sampson.

            “No air down there! There ain’t no air down there!” Sampson yelled from across the field.

            JC knew he was yelling at him but he didn’t care. Several other teammates told JC to stand up, but he was drained. He was weak. He was tired of this already.

            “Stand him up!” Sampson yelled again now walking over.

            Tre tried his best to get his brother to stand up but JC ripped his arm away saying nothing. Tre knew his brother well and knew when he had reached a point of unbreakable stubbornness.

            “Son, stand up or get out!”

            That’s all JC needed to hear. He stood up and slowly walked off the field.

            “Don’t you walk on my field. If you gotta get off, run off!”

            JC ignored the coach’s screams. He didn’t care. He really didn’t.

            He walked all the way off and sat down on the bench while grabbing a water bottle from the rack. Tre shook his head in annoyance but immediately took off once the new whistle blew. JC sat there with thick sweat falling off his face. He looked up and around at the stadium. It definitely wasn’t anything special. The homeside could fit a few hundred but the visiting side bleachers were practically falling apart. This place was a joke anyway.

            A hand came down on his shoulder. He looked up to see Coach Penny. He looked up and then redirected his eyes forward as he prepared for another scolding. The head coach sat down next to JC and watched the rest of the team continue their conditioning.

            “You alright? Feeling lightheaded?”

            JC nodded, “I’m good.”

            “I didn’t even see you come in today. I would’ve adjusted your reps down. These other boys been training for years. Hanging around for that many reps wasn’t bad considering you ain’t played since PeeWee.”

            JC remained silent.

            “Tre told me he was trying to get you out. He also told me you ain’t much into football. More of a basketball guy, right?”

            “Yeah, I can ball.”

            “Well, football can help your basketball career. A lot of things you can learn from this sport. You ever heard of Danny Ainge?”

            JC looked at the coach and shook his head, “Nah.”

            “What about Lebron James? Allen Iverson?”

            JC made the expression that of course he knew the two NBA stars.

            Coach Penny continued, “Both were high school football stars.”

            JC finally opened up a little, “It’s just all the extra stuff with football. The yelling and ****. I don’t get how coaches preach family then we come out here, and they yell at us to run until we pass out.”

            Coach Penny nodded and reflected himself, “I mean, that’s a pretty honest perspective. I’ve been doing this for thirty seven years and never looked at it that way. You know, maybe our methods aren’t perfect but trust me when I say that Coach Samspon and I would do anything for you boys. I’ve driven twenty minutes out of my way the last three years taking your brother home before he got that car. You know why?”

            JC realized he wasn’t going to continue until he asked the rhetorical question, “Why?”

            “Because I believe in him and want to see him succeed. I want to see all of you guys succeed. Football can open a lot of doors. It forces you to get good grades. I love that. But, being great isn’t easy. And, you can never rely solely on yourself to be great. You have to put yourself around people who will push you to be great even when you don’t want to be. That’s all we’re doing here. Trying to make you and everyone great. And maybe, if everyone buys in and probably a little bit of luck- we could go out and do something special.”

            The younger Rhodes brother wholeheartedly expected his time with football to be over the time he sat down on the bench. He would listen to his brother complain the entire ride home and then hear how his generation is soft from his grandpa. However, for some reason in that moment, JC felt the urge to stand up and go back out there and at least leave on a good note. He wanted to prove that he could finish and be great.

            He looked at Coach Penny and nodded. JC stood up and jogged back out into the group. No one was more surprised than Tre. Coach Sampson yelled something snarky but JC ignored it. A bolt of adrenaline ran through JC’s body. For the first time in a long time, he felt the urge to prove something. For the rest of the session, he won every rep by ten yards. He kept going afterwards to make up his missed reps. He then went for six more as the rest of the team huddled and broke in the corner. Coach Penny watched on. He wasn’t sure exactly what chord he had struck within JC Rhodes but something significant happened.
            Last edited by Tyro11; 06-10-2020, 10:23 AM.

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            • Tyro11
              Rookie
              • May 2020
              • 326

              #7
              Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)



              CHAPTER TWO: CAROLINA SUNSHINE

              August 8th, 2017 (Redwood, North Carolina)

              JC sat in the passenger seat while gripping a newspaper. His brother reached over and forced him to buckle up. He usually did it out of habit but was angrily focused on the article he was reading. Tre’s old car turned on blasting thick hot air out of the vents forcing JC to quickly roll down his window to gather some oxygen. The only problem was that outside was equally hot and dense with the humidity of the rising sun and morning dew evaporation. The first day of the two-a-days.

              “They saying we’re gonna be rebuilding? What?” JC said while pointing to an article in the local paper.

              Tre laughed, “Bro, you can’t read into that stuff. Those writers got quotas.”

              “Whatcha mean?”

              The air of the car finally began to cool down to at least mid-seventy degrees. Still not enough for the windows to be rolled up. A breeze of tobacco farming at thirty miles per hour was completely necessary.

              Tre answered, “They can’t predict every team good or bad. They gotta throw in some of the cliche labels. We lost a bunch of seniors so they’re gonna call us a rebuild. Redwood never been good until the last two years so they aren’t used to it. We’ll be fine.”

              “That’s what I’m saying. And they barely said **** about you in here. You had more points than this kid from Lowell East.”

              “Who? Ansley?” Tre asked, “I mean he’s solid. They only look at passing yards. They don’t even pay attention to my running.”

              JC nodded, “Like Mike Vick.”

              Tre shook, “Nah. I mean Mike Vick was good but he didn’t have that GOAT factor.”

              JC wasn’t very familar with football history. He knew the big names. Michael Vick. Tom Brady. Cam Newton (since he was the star quarterback for the nearby Carolina Panthers). From everything he gathered, Vick was the legend.

              “Legit QB’s win. Vick was talented… changed the game… but no rings. Brady, on the other hand, he has the rings. He got skill but it’s all up here,” as he pointed to his head, “that’s what makes GOATs and that’s what wins rings. So, yeah, my running is good but I need to be a better passer. Right now, Ansley is better.”

              His little brother listened but disagreed, “Nah, man. It ain’t even close. We’re gonna beat their *** this year. How bad y’all beat them last year?”

              Tre laughed, “We lost 48-7.”

              __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _________________

              “Bring it in! Bring it in!”

              The Redwood Raiders 2017 football squad jogged from their stretching positions to surround Coach Penny- still wearing the same old get up. Most of the players listened to the instructions to wear light gray shirts but some were forgetful enough to be wearing some red, some black, and even one blue. They would pay for that after practice.

              JC was readying to take off his helmet but he realized everyone else kept it on. He did unbuckle his chinstrap though as it was truly irritating his chin. His helmet was also highly uncomfortable with the stiff pads protruding into his temple and forehead. He tried to move it around some to alleviate the unpleasantry.

              “I don’t like the energy right now. I see feet dragging. I see heads flopping. Like I said: accountability. We’re nipping that **** in the bud right now. We’re going to try something different… idea of Coach Cunningham. We got some new faces around here. Instead of throwing y’all in drills for two weeks, we’re just gonna run it up. Offense versus defense. No contact but we’re tagging up. Full-speed. Let’s get it.”

              JC looked through the crowd trying to find Tre. He did and his brother shared the same confusion. This must be something new. Half the team didn’t know where or what position to get into. The coaches sorted them out. Most of the starters on both sides got into huddles. JC naturally went to the offensive side.

              After several confusing minutes, the team had been cleanly separated and plays were being called. And, just like Coach Penny said. They did begin running full-speed plays at one another. This probably broke several regulations but no one was up early enough at 8AM to come check or turn them in. The offense was surely better than the defense. Tre definitely stood out on the team. JC was proud to be his brother, and he felt inspired to play like him. He was thankful that he had been dragged onto this team.

              After ten to fifteen minutes, Coach Cunningham, the offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach, pointed out JC from the crowd of young freshmen and motioned him over. JC realized that he hadn’t even thought about getting thrown in this early. He thought they might teach him some things first. Nope, Coach Cunningham put his arm around JC and lifted up a written paper with routes written on it, “That’s you. You got a five and out, got it?”

              JC nervously nodded and jogged into the slot position replacing an older player. He didn’t get to see Tre’s reaction but lined up anyway. A coach yelled for him to back off the line of scrimmage. He tried to emulate what he saw as a wide receiver stance from memory but felt awkward.

              The snap count went off- JC probably would have been flagged for a false start in a real game but the play went. It was like a battlefield to him. He heard helmets collide yards away inside the box. Every player had their own personal battle. All engaged. All giving it their all to prove their worth. JC followed his feet, going forward. He saw about five yards up to make his cut but before he even got there he was looking at the sky. In the snap of an instance, JC was on his back. North Carolina morning sunshine blinded him as his back was now damp.

              Before he knew it, the play was dead. He wasn’t sure what had happened but he sat up to see his brother screaming at one of the defenders. His linemen held him back but everyone else was hooping and hollering over who JC assumed was the guy who had laid him out. Embarrassment ran through his body. Everyone surrounded and hyped up some small, pudgy kid while basically laughing at JC.

              “We ain’t even got pads on! Cheap ****!” Tre yelled in anger.

              His dispute fell on deaf ears while the team got hyped up. Whistles blew and Coach Penny called for everyone to come back to a knee. JC did not have to move, he just stood up and kneeled down with his pride hurt and head hanging. Tre watched from the other side of the gathering- still pissed off.

              “Alright, alright. I can’t let y’all boys kill each others in the first ten minutes. I love that intensity. I can feel the energy you boys are capable of. Knotts,” Coach Penny pointed at the boy who had blindsided JC- a short, pudgy red-haired boy with pasty skin and built densely, “I love linebackers that hit. I do. However, you went to the head. You do that in a game, guess what? Fifteen yards, first down, and your *** goes and twiddles your thumbs in the lockerroom. Also, no more of that without pads on. These are your brothers out here. Can’t be hurting each other. Knotts, you need Rhodes just as much as he’ll need you on that field. Don’t forget that. Alright, let’s break up into indy!”

              __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _________________

              A faded orange tint took over the room. It was a large, hollow space with a long oak dinner table occupying its middle. Despite its grand size, only three people sat at it. JC, Tre, and their grandfather. Their dinner continued as it always had. Pop would say an extended prayer and no one would speak until their plate was finished. That actually never took long when you considered that there were two growing boys and Pop was an excellent country-style cook. Tre was the first to finish his assortment of steak, potatoes, green beans, and corn.

              “Had a good first day today. Real good.”

              Pop, a 79-year old farmer born and raised, raised his gray eyebrows while continuing to slowly eat, “Y’all boys gonna be good again?”

              “Oh yeah. I mean, we gotta everybody back on offense. But, we’re still missing some dudes on defense. Won’t have the hitters we did last year.”

              Pop nodded in his cliche overalls and darkened black skin that had definitely been weathered, “Jeremiah, how you like it?”

              JC swallowed some steak and shook his head, “Well, I got jacked up. First play out there and some dude just cheap shotted me. Bull****.”

              For a 79-year old, Pop was no slouch. He might move slow here and there but his strong hands and stern demeanor never aged. As soon as the curse word left his lips, Pop’s hand dropped his fork and smacked him upside the head quicker than JC saw coming. The young brother quickly and adamantly apologized for the emotional language.

              Pop cleared his throat, “Well, you gotta go back out there and get ‘em back. No cheap shot though. You do it straight up like a man. Y’all still do them hitting drills where it’s just two players?”

              Tre nodded.

              “First day of pads. Coach always gets them boys out there to hit each other. Call him out.”

              JC nodded.

              “I’m glad you’re out there playing. It’s good for you. I know you’re into basketball but football will toughen you up.”

              JC and Tre agreed. Once Tre had heard what Coach Penny had said to JC that day of conditioning, he was relentless with his strategy to get JC to play football. Constantly bringing up more examples of great NBA players who played football. Film clips of basketball players doing football-inspired movements or just how durable some of their play was.

              Tre also had something to get off his chest, “I got some news today, too. Coach Penny pulled me in after practice. Said he got a call from Lenior-Rhyne and Winston-Salem State over the weekend. They’re both offering me full-rides.”

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              • djp73
                Coach Porter Davis
                • Jun 2009
                • 8504

                #8
                Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

                Great start. Following!
                ---

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                • Tyro11
                  Rookie
                  • May 2020
                  • 326

                  #9
                  Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

                  Originally posted by djp73
                  Great start. Following!
                  Glad to have you!

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                  • Tyro11
                    Rookie
                    • May 2020
                    • 326

                    #10
                    Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)



                    CHAPTER THREE: JUICEBAR

                    August 14th, 2017 (Redwood, North Carolina)

                    It was the first day of classes for Redwood High School and every other public school around the state of North Carolina. For JC Rhodes, it was his day of high school ever. It was a humbling experience to say the least. Arrogant would not be the right word to describe him but confident did not match either. JC was always gifted in many ways. He was always a natural athlete that stood out in football, baseball, track and field, and especially basketball. In his last two years of middle school, he shot up from 5’4 to 5’9 and became an All-County point guard. Known for his handle on a basketball and his ability to pass rather than just throw up countless shots, he was incredibly hyped up by his school mates.

                    JC was always online reading about kids in his class getting offers to play Division I basketball. Nearby Duke and North Carolina just had offered players in the 2020 class. That was just one ahead of him. He knew his time was coming and his freshman season would be time to prove that. Except, instead of playing for his usual travel team in the fall, The Carolina Bluehawks, he would be suiting up for the football team.

                    It was an out of place feeling for sure. In basketball, he was the guy. Usually every play revolved around him in some way. The ball touched his hands every few seconds. The people in the crowd came to watch him. But, here he was hesitatingly playing football. Worst enough, he wasn’t in line for a varsity position. Practices were not terrible but his instincts on the gridiron just did not translate.

                    They had moved him all around. Wide receiver? His routes were stiff and even though he could catch very well, his 140 pound frame was easy to get a hold of and slam. Defensive back? The speed of othesr coming at him threw JC off. He wasn’t scared to come up and tackle but his body held itself back. He was ran over more than anyone during the two weeks of two-a-days. If not for Tre staying on him constantly with positive reinforcement, he most likely would have quit already.

                    Tre was riding high with the offers he had received to play at the Division II level. JC didn’t quite get the excitement from his brother but didn’t try to steal his thunder. He just felt that Tre was Division I caliber and was underselling himself. Tre felt the same but always went on rants about how free education is free education. In other efforts to take his brother under his wing, he offered to teach him quarterback. JC could sling it just like Tre could at the same age but the football IQ was years away. For now, JC would reside on the junior varsity as a developing wide receiver and defensive back.

                    “I still can’t believe you’re playing football,” one of JC’s closest friend, Christian, said.

                    JC was surrounded by mostly his middle school crew at the Redwood High School lunch table. Only one of them also played football but him and JC were not that close due to a bit of altercation.. Girls also sat at the lunch table- one or two in which JC thought very highly of and cared deeply about their perception of him.

                    JC nodded, “Yeah, yeah. I’m just doing it for basketball. Talked to some college coaches, and they said they only recruit guys that play other sports. So, you know, I’m just trying to go D1.”

                    No colleges had sent JC a letter, ever.

                    Christian, basically JC’s personal hype man, exclaimed, “No ****, man! You been getting calls over the summer?”

                    JC nodded again, “Oh yeah. No big ones, but I mean they won’t start offering 2021 guys until next year.”

                    The rest of the table was caught up in their own stories of their first day. Some girl that JC didn’t even see when he sat down asked him a question, “Are you going to start this year?”

                    His eyes found the girl who asked the question. He had never seen her in his life. She was tall and tan with brunette hair and green eyes. If he had more time to think, he would probably have been more nervous with his answer. But, he quickly replied, “Oh yeah. Wide receiver. Tre at QB and me catching the passes.”

                    JC sounded slick and his friends, already used to hyping him up, all fed into it. The girl seemed impressed. The other football player at the table,Jeremy Knotts- also the kid who knocked him on his back the opening day of practice, looked at JC confused. Jeremy was going to object but then thought about the look on their faces two weeks from now after the first game when JC didn’t even dress. He just shook his head and continued on with his lunch.

                    __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _________________

                    “Raiders! Raiders! Come on grab a penny! Grab a penny!” Coach Sampson yelled.

                    JC’s practice so far had gone pretty well. Compared to two-a-days, these two hours practices after school were nothing. Also, though it hurt his ego a bit, JC had nestled into his role as a junior varsity player. The practices were much lighter. Less intense by a lot. That was, however, up until the final stretch of practice where they had to go live against the varsity.

                    Hitting was still an abstract concept for him. As he did before, he wasn’t scared of the pain but it was like a last second reaction from his body to fold up. This, of course, resulted in a series of pathetic tackle attempts made by him. It also did not help that he was a sneeze away from 130 pounds. Over the course of the fall camp, he did start to grasp coverage schemes and route running. It truly was the contact that made him nervous. After all the talk his Pop said, he awaited the big hitting days especially when pads came on. They never arrived. Just live drills and some safety tackling run-throughs despite full pads. It did seem conditioning and tempo was Coach Penny’s sole focus.

                    “Number one O! Number one O! Tre get your huddle together,” Coach Penny demanded while organizing his dumpster fire of playcall sheets.

                    JC observed his brother through the side of his facemask while Coach Sampson lined them up on defense. He, of course, did it in the Coach Sampson method of screaming nonstop. JC consciously began to notice that the screaming did not affect him that much anymore. He liked that. Sampson also began referring to JC as Juicebar. Insinuating that he went down easier than a cold glass of orange juice. JC did not like that.

                    “Juicebar! Get over here!” Sampson yelled while grabbing JC by the back of his jersey.

                    He showed him a relatively simple play. They were in man to man coverage. Just like basketball. They referred to it as Cover 1 because one safety stayed deep. Seemed simple enough. JC was not really sure what position he was in but when three wide receivers ran out to the left side, he went over top of the middle one.

                    Tre called the cadance. Out of the corner of JC’s eye, he noticed that the inside receiver, which he was pretty sure was called a slot, was Lamar Perine. Last year, Lamar was up there with Tre in being the best on the team. He played runningback and wide receiver. Opening play? This had to be going to Lamar.

                    The ball quickly snapped. JC’s man slammed inside. He was supposed to trail. But, he did not. He noticed Lamar backing up and swinging outside. It was definitely a pass to him. JC planted like a pro defensive back and took off across the line of scrimmage. It all happened so fast. He envisioned the ball leaving Tre’s hand and being immediately picked off by his freshman little brother.

                    That never happened though. Once again, JC was on his back faster than the first time he got blindsided. This time, he felt a terrible clutch in his stomach. At least that first practice the ground was a little soft. Now, it had been baked into a sheet of hard soil. When he hit the ground, every ounce of air in his body shot out. With his peripheral he saw the ball fly over to Lamar whom took it all the way for a “touchdown”.

                    JC was embarrassed. He wanted to hop on his feet but he couldn’t breathe. He did his best not to show
                    but he held his gut and stumbled walking back to the defensive side.

                    “Juicebar! You know why that happened! Because you didn’t follow the damn script! If you can’t follow the plays during raiders, you really think you can during a game! Numb nuts. That’s why you got put on your ass…. Again!” Sampson screamed and hollered.

                    JC was angry. He felt the his blood pressure rise. The embarrassment mixed with resent thrown in with the unpleasurable feeling of the wind being knocked out had his temper shoot up. Out of the corner of his eye he noticed Jeremy, a linebacker on raiders too, laughing. Without saying a word he stomped up and slammed his facemask against Jeremy’s.

                    He wanted to throw a punch but that wasn’t in his nature. He wanted to curse him out but it’s just not the direction the anger took him. Jeremy was confused but then the alphaness kicked in. Before the two could scrap, Coach Sampson, a much larger man than both, split the two up.

                    “Ay! Ay!” he said calmly after being the one to raise the tensions.

                    He then lifted his head to Coach Penny who stood in the offensive huddle, “Hey Coach Penny! I think it’s about that time!”

                    Penny gave the weasley grin of a veteran head coach getting the ropes taken off him. He blew his whistle loudly, “Alright! Alright! Circle it up! Little Rhodes and Knotts! You guys are up!”

                    Comment

                    • Tyro11
                      Rookie
                      • May 2020
                      • 326

                      #11
                      Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)



                      CHAPTER FOUR: RED TAPE

                      August 14th, 2017 (Redwood, North Carolina)


                      It is truly hard to describe the feeling. JC, a fourteen year old, had while in a small crouch. His knees bent, his arms up with his hands out. He did not want to blink. His feet felt light but his chest was heavy. Remnants of pumping testosterone circulated his body. Across him, another young teen stood in the same stance with the same nerves. Around them were three dozen of their peers. They hooped and hollered as if it were an ancient tribal battle. The coach, acting as the judge, stood near the boys ready to test their mettle in front of everyone. This drill had nothing to do with skill and everything to do with pride and aggression.

                      “Okay, keep your hands inside. No twisting. Drive the other man back!” Penny said while crouching down next to JC.

                      The whistle blew and JC hesitated. In a split second, he completely realized his mistake and already accepted the consequences. Jeremy Knotts was built like a pitbull. Short, stubby, but definitely not slow. The crown of his helmet plowed into JC’s facemask and he felt the harsh grip of hands on his shoulder pads. He tried to resist but his footing was misplaced as well. The young Rhodes brother was driven quickly to the edge only thanks to his teammates catching him, he stayed upright.

                      “Come on Rhodes, you got more in you than that! Run it back!”

                      For some reason, the fact that JC lost already helped calm his nerves. He was bummed as he walked back to reset but at this point things could get no worse. He was Juicebar. He had been labeled as soft and weak. It did not matter if he lost or won at this point. What he did have left to prove was that he would fight.

                      The whistle blew and JC got off much quicker this time. It was advantageous. The snarly Knotts kid did not get great hand placement and JC actually was able to get lower than him. For a split second, JC was actually winning as the team cheered. Tre hyped up his young brother. He made sure to not be overly protective though as he had caught himself doing during fall camp. Despite the great start, Knotts was just a stronger kid. He eventually pushed JC back to the edge but he had to bend over in exhaustion once the drill ended. To beat JC that second time really took it out of him. For the first time, JC felt actually kind of proud of himself regardless of the fact that he was living up to the name Juicebar.

                      __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _________________

                      Coach Penny sat in his humble coach’s office with his feet plumped onto his old wooden desk. He held a phone to his ear, an older Android cellphone, as he talked to the local sportswriter about the upcoming season.

                      “You know, I was really proud of the boys last year. I thought they all bought in. You know, we had twenty one seniors last year so replacing all those guys isn’t gonna be easy. When these seniors came here as freshman, this program hadn’t been to the playoffs since 2008. Last year, we make it to the semifinals and that switch just flipped.”

                      Coach Penny nodded and listened for several seconds to more questions, “Yes, yes. Yeah, we got Tre back of course. He threw for one thousand and ran for one thousand for the second year in a row. Already has the school record for touchdown passes. Will probably break some more this year. Yeah, then we got Lamar Perine back. He was second team all-state last year as utility. He’s a squirt but really fast and really smart. Really, really young receiving corps. Of course, we had Braxton Lucas last year and he’s gone to Elon. Line is really young too. Rodney Hudson is probably our best guy. A guard and defensive tackle. Yeah, he’s a senior. Uh, then there is Max Hightower. He plays middle linebacker. Started since he was freshman. He’s only a junior. Had about 120 tackles last year. Just a tough kid.”

                      More nodding ensued. Penny looked outside in his lockerroom to view some man he had ne ver seen out there standing with his phone in his hand. He answered his last set of questions. As the conversation with the reporter came to end, the man approached the doorway to Coach Penny’s office. He was a fine looking man. Easily over six feet tall with a crisp jawline and clean-shaven face to reveal smooth tanned skin. His nose was pointed and his eyes dark brown. His ash-blonde hair was cut incredibly short but full of gel. The most out-of-place thing about him was his white dress shirt tucked into dark blue dress pants.

                      Coach Penny hung up the phone and looked to the man who stood there with a smile, “How can I help you?”

                      “Ah, sorry to walk in on you. James Beck,” he greeted while extending his hand and revealing a quite fancy watch.

                      Coach Penny halfway stood up out of his desk to shake the man’s hand, “Reggie Penny.”

                      “I’ve heard an awful lot about you, coach. Never even heard of Redwood until last year some people said you all had a shot at the title.”

                      The coach sighed, “Ah, yeah we had a good bunch. Wish things would have went a bit different but that’s football. Outstanding kids, though. Never had a group buy in like that.”

                      James grinned and nodded, “That’s great, great. Yeah, I actually just moved into the area. Company buys some acres and says ‘Hey, how about you uproot your family and go run things or you’re fired,’” the man said while laughing.

                      “Where you moving in from?”

                      “Up from South Carolina. Good bit away but doesn’t look much different. But yeah, back where I was, I had built a really really good relationship with the local high school team. Big football fan. I just wanted to come in and introduce myself. I’d love to help out if I could.”

                      Coach Penny raised his brow, “Well, I appreciate the offer. We got a whole boosters club for all that. I can give you the head guys num-”

                      “Yeah, yeah, yeah definitely,” James subtly cut the coach off, “I will definitely be in the boosters. But, I don’t know how they are. The ones we had back in South Carolina had so much red tape and politics, nothing could get done. So, I’ll open my wallet for them but if you need anything, you give me a call, coach. I love football and I know what it can do for a town. And, I know you’re gonna have a helluva team this year.”

                      James casually dropped a phone number note onto Coach Penny’s desk.

                      Coach Penny could tell a businessman when he saw one. However, nothing he said was necessarily untrue or dishonest. He picked up the note with a grain of salt and smiled, “Well, I appreciate it. Hope I see you in the crowd in two weeks against Mount Randolph.”

                      The man responded with a huge smile, “See you there, coach.”

                      Comment

                      • Locke888
                        Rookie
                        • Jul 2016
                        • 354

                        #12
                        Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

                        I’m on chapter 2 but so far I can tell you have a gift for writing. Keep it up.
                        Just another Ohio State Buckeye
                        PSN:

                        Comment

                        • Razorback73
                          Rookie
                          • Jul 2012
                          • 125

                          #13
                          Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

                          Off to a great start -- I'm looking forward to seeing where this all leads for JC

                          Comment

                          • Tyro11
                            Rookie
                            • May 2020
                            • 326

                            #14
                            Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)

                            Appreciate the compliments everyone! Almost ready to get into gameplay. Excited to have you all following!

                            Comment

                            • Tyro11
                              Rookie
                              • May 2020
                              • 326

                              #15
                              Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)




                              CHAPTER FIVE: OR BUST

                              August 18th, 2017 (Redwood, North Carolina)


                              Hot was an understatement. There is dry heat. There is humid heat. There is desert heat. There is windful heat. There is Texas heat. There is Florida heat. Many Redwood players would argue that North Carolina heat be added to the conversation. One week out from their opening game against Mount Randolph, and they were hosting a traditional Grid-O-Rama. It went like they have done for decades. Four different opponents- one quarter varsity and one quarter junior varsity each. Plenty of good teams were present including a few that Redwood would play in the regular season.

                              The team showing out the most was probably Central Hills. They were considered the rival school to Redwood. Despite being very similar in many ways, the Central Hill Mustangs had a storied football tradition opposed to Redwood’s lack thereof. Their rival was known for big burly linemen that were heavily recruited. Though Redwood would not play them until the final game of the regular season, there was plenty to see with their smashmouth attack on other teams.

                              Redwood had performed well all day. No team they played was necessarily a legitimate challenge but that helped build confidence for an overall inexperienced team. Tre definitely stood out the entire day. He seemed to make all the right passes and know when to tuck it and run. However, JC overheard Coach Penny’s frustration with his brother never going after the deep routes.

                              Lamar was also stellar. Tre might have been the star but Lamar was gasoline for the engine. He had to always be accounted for and his shiftiness was a headache for every team they played. Defensively, the Raiders were a bit weak. The defensive line was sort of well-sized but kind of fat and definitely slow. The secondary played the run well but their lack of speed had them in trouble against passing attacks. Tre and Lamar, by far the best athletes on the team, would occasionally go in at safety and corner but truly sparingly.

                              The one redeeming factor of the defense was Max Hightower. A touted junior by his teammates and by the newspaper from what JC read. The dude just had a linebacker aura. He looked like your stereotypical backer. Teammates would tape pictures of some NFL guy named Pau Posluszny to his locker. He stood about six foot two and weighed a tad over 200 pounds. He was neither exceptionally fast or strong but pretty good in both departments. The boy just loved to hit and had the skillset to make it happen.

                              JC had a solid day. He could start to feel some things starting to make sense. He had better a grip on responsibilities. Do’s and don’t’s of certain techniques. As well as gotten used to conditioning that football requires- especially toting around pads and a helmet. He had only allowed a few catches as a cornerback- all due to mental errors. He didn’t get ran over at all unless you count some ugly tackles. Overall, it was a good day going into his last drive of their final opponent called Marion High School.

                              A lot of the junior varsity players went two ways specifically to fall in line with Coach Penny’s goal of conditioning. The North Carolina heat had all the players drenched in sweat ready for it be over. Redwood’s JV had not won any of their matchups. They currently held a one score lead going into this last drive.

                              JC lined up at corner over and over and over as they kept pounding away at the tired interior. They crossed the fifty within four plays. He looked at Knotts and almost felt joy watching him just get ran at over and over and over. A play action was called out of nowhere and JC was caught off guard. Luckily, the quarterback overthrew the pass to his man or else JC would have cost them the win.

                              Instead, they got another chance but the belly’s and dives kept coming until they were on the goal line.

                              JC hollered to his fellow tired teammates, “Hey come on, stop ‘em here!”

                              The obese linemen failed to even turn their heads. Knotts looked over with a “half-thank you” and a “half-shut up, you’re a cornerback doing nothing right now” look. Whether it was his words or not, they stuffed the powers three times in a row. The varsity started yelling with support from the sideline. The defense started clapping in momentum. JC loved it. He loved this feeling.

                              He watched adamantly as once more the Marion quarterback took the snap under center, turned and handed the ball off to the fullback. There, flying in was Jeremy Knotts for the stop in the backfield! But, he didn’t have the ball. At this point, JC realized what had happened. His wide receiver had snuck past him again on play action but he was already going down hill at the quarterback. He knew his man was wide open in the endzone behind him but chose to sprint anyways towards the QB rolling out.

                              It happened fast. The opponent tried to throw off his back foot to compensate for JC’s pressure. The ball went high and slow but JC was far enough away to leap high. His inner basketball star came out as his finger tips with no gloves caught hold of the pigskin. The ball was in his hands!

                              A rush of adrenaline ran through his body as he went sprinting past the off-balance quarterback. The entire varsity bench screamed in excitement especially Tre. Though the whistles blew because pick sixes aren’t a thing in scrimmages, no one cared. Both junior varsity and varsity chased after JC in excitement as he took it all the way to the endzone. Absolutely tired and exhausted, he turned around after scoring just to be monsooned by his entire team in excitement. You can’t beat that.

                              __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _________________


                              It had been a long day. It was the Thursday before their opener against Mount Randolph. Every year on the day before the opener, the entire team would ride on a firetruck through the small town of Redwood in parade fashion alongside the other sports programs. Afterwards, the team would have a group dinner at the local pizzeria known as Marino’s. Here the best players and coaches talked with the local radio hosts from WMK12 on the upcoming season.

                              JC sat in the back of the crowded and loud restaurant with the rest of the freshmen and sophomores. He had gotten to know them all pretty well. He had went to school with most but hadn’t spoken to them a lot due to always being basketball-oriented. Of everyone, he enjoyed the company of fellow wide receiver Jaden Tabor and a lineman they called Sweet Lou.

                              The reason for this trio was due to their arguments that entertained the junior varsity. JC was known for his love for history and science. A type of nerd that somehow managed to make it cool. He was passionate about it. Sweet Lou, a chubby redneck from the actual sticks, basically disagreed with everything JC had to say in an argument due to an opposing and sarcastic religious point of view. Jaden was a good looking, tan, and blonde kid that acted much as a surfer. His machine gun laughter encouraged the two to keep going.

                              Everyone wore their incredibly default-looking uniforms. Cherry red with white numbers. That was it. Redwood was not necessarily known to sell out for the jerseys. JC didn’t really care what number he got but the coaches, looking to show their respect of him toughing it out during a long preseason, gave him #8- the same number he wore in basketball. He appreciated the gesture.

                              The entire evening was a lot of fun. He really enjoyed the company of his newly found friends. JC already began understanding what Lamar had said about the family aspect of the team. Everyone goes through such brutal tests and trials. They all see each other succeed and fail. They encourage them when they’re tired and scream at them when they aren’t going hard enough. Off the field, it made it very easy to see these guys as brothers.

                              The normal North Carolina heat had subsided with the sun sinking down. The main event of the show was at full peak. The radio show hosts were asking the top players their predictions for the year.

                              “Alright Lamar, how do you guys think you will do this year?” the host asked as they all sat around a table covered in radio equipment- the whole restaurant of players, fans, and coaches looked on.

                              “Just gonna do our best. One game at a time,” he said softly- a textbook Lamar answer.

                              The hosts smiled and nodded, moving the mic to Max, “and what about you Max?”

                              “All I know is we’re gonna kick Mount Randolph’s *** tomorrow night!” he laughed in confidence- everyone cheered but the coaches shook their heads.

                              Finally, the mic moved to Tre. Not even JC knew what his brother would say. “What about the star quarterback? How do you think Redwood will do this year?”

                              Tre took a deep breath, “State championship or bust!”

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