RSS Feed
Print Story
E-mail Story
Foothill's Ragans honored as Boys Track and Field Athlete of the Year
| Friday, Jun 20 2008 10:33 PM
Last Updated: Friday, Jun 20 2008 10:52 PM
His high school state championships are behind him, but Foothill graduate Dayshan Ragans keeps throwing -- and continues to amaze coach Wayne Brewer.
"I was practicing discus with him the other day," Brewer said last week. "And he wasn't turning his feet, just trying to throw it far.
"And his arm is just 'WHOOOM!' You cannot teach that, you cannot coach that. I'm standing way back, and I can feel his arm, feel the wind it makes."
Say hello -- or just stand back as he creates a nice breeze -- to your Californian Boys Track and Field Athlete of the Year.
Ragans finished his career with the Trojans by winning state titles in both the shot put and discus May 31. He was undefeated in both events this season -- maxing out with a 63-7.75 shot put throw and 203-7 in the discus -- and will throw for Cal State Bakersfield next year.
"It's like everything we worked for from the beginning of the year to the end of the year," Ragans said. "It even goes back to freshman all the way through senior year. Everything you worked for is right there. It comes down to that point -- Who's going to be a state champion?"
All of those accomplishments shine brighter when you consider that Ragans had never picked up a shot put until his freshman-year P.E. class came around to its track unit.
"(I said,) 'All right, I'll do track.'" Ragans said. "Went to a few track meets, then 'OK, it's kind of fun, I think I'll keep doing it.' Then a couple more meets, 'OK, this is something I want to do.'"
Even with his career in its infancy, Ragans garnered attention at meets with his raw talent. Brewer, who was then at North High, remembers Ragans throwing the shot 50-plus feet without spinning, the favored technique by high-level throwers.
"That just tells you how remarkable of an athlete he is," Brewer said. "You look at (other elite throwers), they've been throwing since they were little. Imagine if he'd been throwing that long."
In fact, Ragans didn't truly take the sport seriously -- often skipping practices and being held out of meets -- until late in his sophomore year, when he qualified for the state meet in the shot put and finished 13th.
"If I knew then what I know now," Ragans said, "I would have never missed a day of practice."
Imbued with Brewer's love of the sport, Ragans has made up for it since then.
"Everything he's done, he's really worked hard for and he really deserves," Brewer said. "He deserves being a state champion. He deserves setting all the records he has. He deserved getting that 3.5 GPA. Everything.
"He's worked hard, he's put in the extra time. We throw, we lift, we go in the weight room after practice to jump boxes. Everybody else tries to get out of there; not Dayshan. He doesn't care. He goes and does it. Those medals he has around his neck, he deserves every single little bit of that."
The gold medals could increase at CSUB -- Ragans, the sixth of seven children in his family, is the first to attend a four-year college, and he said he refuses to waste this opportunity.
"It's somewhere he never thought he'd be, and he wants to take full advantage of it," Brewer said. "He's excited to start this chapter in his life."
One look in Ragans' eyes will tell you that's true. He's become a standout (a Central Section meet record in the discus and several school records), thanks to determination, hard work and a little bit of WHOOOM! to go with it.
"People can have a love for football, basketball, baseball, anything," Ragans said. "I just have a love for track. I don't know where I'd be right now if it weren't for track."
