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Trotwood-Madison's Freeman a big surprise
By Mark Gokavi
Staff Writer
Friday, August 29, 2008
TROTWOOD ? Chris Freeman wasn't little even when he was little.
As a seventh-grader, he said he was 6-foot-5 and weighed 250 pounds. What he wasn't was a football player.
"I was just a basketball player," said Freeman, now a 6-9, 340-pound Trotwood-Madison senior left tackle. "My parents didn't want me to play football because they thought I'd get hurt."
Freeman and his parents, Michael and Tishia, did have a nerve-wracking medical scare this week. On Tuesday, Aug. 26, Freeman collapsed while at practice. He was taken by ambulance to a local hospital, had his football helmet and pads cut away and was held overnight for tests.
Late Wednesday afternoon, Freeman was released and cleared to play in Trotwood's football game in Irving, Texas, on Saturday night.
The death of Trotwood freshman Lamar Davis while he played pick-up basketball on Oct. 6, 2007, was on Michael Freeman's mind. Davis had an enlarged heart, something doctors tested for with Freeman.
"That's the first thing I thought when I got the call at work," Michael said. "I couldn't help but think about Lamar Davis."
Freeman's father said doctors found out that Chris has asthma. That limited the amount of oxygen in his lungs and put pressure on one side of his heart. With some temporary breathing treatments and an inhaler, Freeman should be fine. His father said Chris had never passed out before.
"It (had been) tough, because of the unknown, just not knowing," Michael said. "I told him, if it comes down to it, it's just one game. ... That's my kid. I want to make sure he'll be able to lead a normal life."
"He's still the biggest unknown commodity in the state," recruiting analyst Duane Long said of Freeman. "He has physical tools that you can't coach.
"The offers are just on the physical tools he brings to the table. How hard (schools) push him to commit depends on how he does this fall."
Ohio State has not offered, probably preferring to see more video. Plus, Long said offensive linemen take a while to develop, and some schools may be concerned about someone who started so late.
Finding football
But with a current top five of Wisconsin, Michigan, West Virginia, Florida and Tennessee, Freeman is happy and bewildered about his recruitment.
"How?" he wondered. "I knew a lot of people said I'd get something off of my size. I guess a lot of coaches like my footwork and everything.
"It just shocked me. I guess it kind of came easy to me at first, but then it makes me want to start working harder and harder."
That includes in the classroom, where poor grades kept him ineligible last season. He now says school work is under control.
"I was just being a little bit childish in a couple classes," Freeman said. "Being a knucklehead."
Posted by Bill Kurelic
Offensive lineman Chris Freeman (Trotwood, Ohio/Madison) went out for football for the first time his junior year. At Madison, the 6-foot-9, 320-pounder had previously been a basketball player only. Freeman played in just one football game his junior season, making a start in his team's final game.
But recruiters, impressed with what they saw in that one appearance along with Freeman's size and potential, quickly came calling. Michigan, Florida, Tennessee, Wisconsin, West Virginia, Oklahoma, Missouri, UCLA and Oregon are all currently on Freeman's list. The first five are his favorites.
Continued...
Ohio lineman says he has two favorites
Offensive lineman Chris Freeman (Trotwood, Ohio/Madison) says he has scheduled his first official visit. Freeman plans to visit Wisconsin the weekend of Jan. 23. He also wants to visit Tennessee.
The 6-9, 320-pound Freeman also mentions Missouri, UCLA and Colorado.
"I know I want to go to Wisconsin, Missouri and Tennessee," Freeman said.
"I'd like to get at least three visits in, but I don't know for sure. My favorite would be between Wisconsin and Tennessee."
Freeman played basketball for Madison when he was a junior, but decided against playing the sport this season. When Freeman discovered he missed playing hoops, he recently asked Madison basketball coach Mark Baker if he could join the team. The answer was yes, so now Freeman must work his football visits around basketball