Heavy Hitter
Perry
rising senior free safety Keinijus King is in love with the big hit. Like all
safeties and secondary players, he will look to make the big plays during the
season to come. It wasn’t always like that though. King was 8 years old when
his mother, Sanchez Williams, decided to put him into the Perry’s 9-10-year-old
football league. King wasn’t in love with hitting then; he wanted to be on the
other side of the ball.
“At
first, I wanted to be a quarterback, but one day I stopped being afraid of the
contact and now I just love the contact,” says King, who, along with fellow
rising senior defensive back Je’Cory Burks, gives the Panthers and first-year
head coach Kevin Smith arguably the best defensive backfield in the region and
middle Georgia.
Perry
played its spring game at home against Dodge County High School more than a
month ago and King can still feel the contact from that game. He’s looking
forward to playing in a regular season game and hitting someone with a
different helmet again.
“I
was ready to hit somebody other than my teammates,” he says. “Coming downfield
and hitting someone just hypes me up.”
The
regular season is near and King will get plenty of opportunities to duplicate
his performance from the spring game when he made seven of the Panthers first
10 tackles. If that game was any example of the kind of senior season King is
going to have then the heavy hitter is going to have a heck of a senior season.
“I
would like to accomplish a few things,” says King when asked what he wants most
from the upcoming season. “I want to lead the team on defense, get more
interceptions and continue keeping everybody straight. If anything, I would like
to play college football.”
King,
6’0”, 172 pounds and growing, has been in contact with coaches from both West
Georgia University and Alabama A&M University thus far.
“I
feel like the next level can bring more out of me,” he said.
The
Panthers rivalry game against Peach County High School will be one of the
season’s highlights, but King isn’t impressed with the Perry schedule regarding
who the Panthers are going to play.
“I
just take it a game at a time,” he says. “Whatever game we play that week is
the big game to me. Last year, I didn’t always have the same mentality, but
this year is going to be different.”
There
were a number of lessons learned by King during the Panthers’ three-win 2016
season.
The
lessons King continues to learn from his cousins and his mother (King considers
her his role model) keep him on the right path heading into the most important
season of his young career. There is also a particular heavy hitting free
safety that King looks up to as well. Arizona Cardinal Pro Bowler Tyrann
Mathieu is the player King looks toward as a future goal.
“I
look up to him because his game motivates me,” says King. “He’s a ball hawk and
he just comes out and hits people.”
The
ball hawk of the Perry Panthers’ defensive backfield is looking to take what he
has learned thus far and put it all together this season. One game at a time; one
hit at a time.
HHJ News
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