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'06 MD CB A.J. Wallace (Penn State signee)

For those of us who are lazy............:wink2:

scout.com

9/15/05

<TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=0 width="98%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=3>A.J. Wallace Gets Army Bowl Invite at Pentagon

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A.J. Wallace

</TD><TD noWrap width=3></TD><TD vAlign=top>By Scout.com
Date: Sep 14, 2005

WASHINGTON, D.C. (September 14, 2005) --- A.J. Wallace visited the Pentagon today, but it wasn’t to visit his father who works there. As his parents, Anton and Deidre Wallace, looked on Army Vice Chief of Staff Richard Cody officially invited the Maurice J. McDonough High School stand-out to play in the 2006 U.S. Army All-American Bowl in San Antonio’s Alamodome.
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The classic East vs. West match-up will be played and televised live on NBC January 7th at 12:00 p.m. (CST) and will feature the top 78 prep football student-athletes in the country.

A.J. Wallace is the #9 ranked cornerback in the country by Scout.com. he is a member of the National Hot 100 as well as the East Hot 100. At 6-1 and 195 pounds with reported 4.4 speed, Wallace has the versatility to play several positions on the next level, but we project him at corner.

He was a star in all phases of the game as a junior at Maurice J McDonough High School where he rushed for 1,367 yards and 26 touchdowns. He also added 12 receptions for 224 yards and two touchdowns. Wallace picked off three passes and deflected 17 others, while also racking up 65 tackles. He also had three punt return scores.

“Versatility is the name of the game for Wallace who could play a wide variety of positions in college,” according to Miller Safrit, Scout.com's East Scout.

Wallace currently lists Florida, Florida State, LSU, Miami, Nebraska, Ohio State and Oklahoma amongst his favorites, and he has already taken a visit to Ohio State and has a visit to Nebraska set up for October.

"It is a great pleasure to have this fine young man selected to represent his school and community as a U.S. Army All-American," said Colonel Thomas Nickerson, Director of Strategic Outreach for the U.S. Army Accessions Command. "He has proven himself to be a superior athlete who, like our Soldiers, takes pride in making a difference and turning in outstanding performances.

“Our slogan, 'An Army of One,' recognizes the strength of the individual in achieving team goals. A.J. demonstrates how football, like the Army, makes you a stronger person not just for today, but into the future. A national audience will see this when he takes the field in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl," said Col. Nickerson.

Wallace is a standout defensive back at Maurice J. McDonough High School and was one of 400 players nominated nationally and one of 78 selected to participate by the U.S. Army All-American Bowl Selection Committee.

Also given out at the U.S. Army All-American Awards Dinner will be the Walter Payton Trophy. This award will be bestowed upon the nation’s fastest, strongest and most dedicated high school football player. The trophy presented to the winner is set in the likeness of the Hall of Famer and NFL Great.

The winning team of the U.S. Army All-American Bowl will receive the Herman Boone Trophy named after the legendary Virginia high school football coach who was immortalized in the Disney feature film, Remember the Titans. The game MVP will receive the Pete Dawkins MVP Trophy, named after 1958 Heisman Trophy winner, Brigadier General (retired) Pete Dawkins.</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 
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he will most likely take his FSU visit on Oct. 1st. and his Nebraska visit on Oct. 29. he still hasn't set up the other two, even though he swears he is taking them. the other candidates are Miami, Oklahoma, Florida, and LSU.
 
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9/15/05

Fame Awaits, but Wallace Tries to Stay Grounded

By Alan Goldenbach
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 8, 2005; Page SM12

It's hard to pinpoint exactly when A.J. Wallace lost his mind. But that's what happens when, in a just a few months, you trade your anonymity for a place among the top 20 recruits nationwide.

It might have been in the cafeteria of Shippensburg University in July, while McDonough's football team was at camp. As Wallace was eating lunch with his teammates, someone came up to him and asked for his autograph.

It also could have been on any one of the nights when recruiters would call Wallace and talk to him about the dozens of schools that had offered him a scholarship as a defensive back.

Nebraska, Ohio State, Miami, Michigan, LSU, Florida State and USC.

USC? The two-time defending national champion? When did that offer come?

"I never got a letter from them" with an offer, Wallace said. "But people keep telling me they've offered me. [Coaches] from other schools are telling me that. Then I read in Sports Illustrated and on [recruiting Web sites] that I was offered, so I guess I was.

"I don't know what to think anymore."

In June 2004, after a solid sophomore season (1,023 yards rushing) Wallace attended a camp at Nebraska, and his life would never be the same. After seeing his dynamic raw skills, the Cornhuskers said they would offer Wallace a scholarship Sept. 1, the earliest date allowed.

That caught the attention of programs nationwide. Why would Nebraska act so quickly on a previously unknown kid from an undistinguished program nowhere near its back yard? The Cornhuskers must be on to something.

Since then, Wallace has been a celebrity on the national recruiting circuit. His process of wading through his offers has been chronicled thoroughly on Web sites and will continue this fall as he takes official visits to Ohio State and Nebraska and possibly to Florida State and LSU as well.

It's a lot for someone who started high school without any fanfare.

"I wasn't expecting any of this attention," he said. "You try to keep everything in perspective, but it's hard to do when you're hearing everything that's being said."

That is Rams Coach Dave Bradshaw's biggest task with Wallace this season -- prevent his star from overtaking the rest of the team.

"Football is a team concept, and we've talked to A.J. about that," Bradshaw said.

Fame is fleeting, Wallace said. It might be the most important lesson he has learned throughout this process.

"Once I leave here, it's like starting all over again," Wallace said. "I'm trying not to get too big headed because if I do and take it to college, well, you know."

He would be back where he was two years ago: unknown.
 
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