Close-knit, competitive family helps KC become top recruit

PUNCICANE

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013
by Jeff Greer

The note on Kc McDermott's bathroom mirror, typed in all caps and printed out on white paper, has two questions.

"What are you going to be doing on Feb. 5th, 2014? And what are you doing today to ensure that?"

This week, the 6-foot-7, 285-pound 16-year-old offensive tackle is visiting Notre Dame and Miami. By the end of this week, McDermott, one of the top recruits in the nation, will choose between the two schools, ending one of the most-followed recruiting sagas of the Class of 2014.

If he has his way, McDermott won't be mugging for cameras and signing a national letter of intent Feb. 5, 2014, next year's national signing day. He'll be practicing with a BCS football team: He's on pace to graduate in December from Palm Beach Central High and enroll early in college.

But this week's decision merely marks one spot on McDermott's decade-long quest toward a clear goal: Playing college football at its highest level.

Molding a "monster"

Kc McDermott, with his dark, scruffy beard and prototypical left tackle's body that has high school and college coaches already talking about his NFL prospects, is the youngest of three McDermott brothers. The eldest, Tyler, played at Colorado State. The middle brother, Shane, is the starting center at Miami.

"And he's better than all of them," former Seminole Ridge associate head coach Justin Hilliker said last fall. "He's a monster on that field."

Tyler and Shane's paths to college football educated Kc, giving him a template for training and practicing. They drilled those lessons into the youngest McDermott's mind on Sunday mornings, the most famous (or infamous) day on the family's busy weekly calendar.

"They taught me to push my body and my mind to their limits," Kc says.

Like mother, like father

Kc's parents met at Ohio University. Randy was a baseball player and Johnnie a basketball star, the fourth-leading rebounder in program history.

Johnnie, who grew up in Zanesville, Ohio, is all of 6 feet. Randy, a Philadelphia-area native, has an inch or two on her.

Randy's booming voice and no-nonsense-but-cool persona makes him the perfect mentor for his boys. Johnnie's warmth and gentle charm complements Randy, though she's just as deliberate as her husband.

The McDermotts made two rules for their young boys and adhered to them for the next 12 years.

First, for everything they did, they would give 110 percent.

"Brushing your teeth -- 110 percent. Showering -- 110 percent. Combing your hair -- 110 percent," Johnnie says. "Everything you do matters."

Second, each boy would do an activity outside of school. It could be chess, debate, sports, rocket-building.

"They weren't going to sit in their rooms playing video games," says Randy.

The boys bounced from baseball to basketball to football to golf to hockey.

A much younger Kc squealed with excitement as his family drove back from his first Florida Panthers game. He wanted to be a goaltender.

Kc started at Wellington-based Athletes' Advantage, the McDermott boys' athletic training gym of choice, in the fourth grade.

Athletes' owners and trainers, Sean Benevides and Ed Smith, keep a photo of Kc on the wall of their gym that foreshadows a future in football. There Kc is -- no beard yet -- almost entirely filling the frame as a gaggle of pint-sized peers encircle their massive friend.

The photo is signed "Thanks for the help! -- Kc McDermott."

But before he started personal training at Athletes' as a youngster, he started his dad's rigorous program, and he still has another eight months of it.

Sundays with the McDermotts

Johnnie filmed every game the boys played growing up. On Sundays, Randy sat down with his sons and watched the film.

"There are so many things you can learn from the film," Randy starts.

"Oh, God," Kc cuts in, leaning back into his kitchen chair as if there's somewhere to hide his enormous frame.

"Is that as fast as you can run? Is that the best you can box out? The tape doesn't lie," Randy continues.

And so they'd critique their every move. When the film sessions ended, the physical work began.

No football. Just dad, three boys and a lot of sweat.

"The sidewalk was about three-quarters of a mile, so it started out as eight minutes, then seven, then less," Kc says.

Randy interrupts Kc to recite the family mantra.

"It's Sunday -- what are your peers doing?" Randy says, delivering the line as easily as he breathes.

The culmination

The McDermotts, who both work in sales, moved out of their 3,100-square-foot home on the western borders of Lake Worth and Wellington and relocated to a smaller two-story house in a quiet eastern Lake Worth community, yards from the intracoastal. Only Kc lives there now with his parents.

Shane's hardly home, fully involved in his year-round football life at Miami. Tyler rarely gets home, either. In March, Notre Dame hired the Colorado State alum as a graduate assistant, days after he'd signed a lease on a new apartment in Colorado.

Randy insists the hiring has nothing to do with Kc's recruitment, and says Tyler made it clear to Notre Dame's coaching staff he would not help them recruit his brother, an Under Armour All-American who already has met Al Golden, Brian Kelly, Urban Meyer, Will Muschamp and Nick Saban. Shane also has vowed not to influence his brother's choice.

Because college-affiliated personnel cannot discuss recruits, neither of McDermott's brothers could comment for this story.

Kc knows after he signs his national letter of intent and enrolls in school his view on the totem pole will drastically change. He'll go from coveted recruit to college freshman who has to prove himself all over again.. His brothers taught him that.

"He knows something else is coming," Randy says. "There's a day of reckoning for every recruit."

Where that day comes doesn't matter. It could be Notre Dame, which holds a special place in Kc's heart and would please his late Irish Catholic grandfather. Or it could be Miami, the hometown team whose colors are a constant in Kc's life, from his car to his Miami-themed bedroom.

Either way, Kc says he'll be prepared.

"All the stuff (his brothers) did or do in college and bring back home, plus what my dad and coaches have taught me," Kc says. "All that made me want to do this even more."

As if he needed more motivation.

http://pbgametime.com/news/close-kn...-top-football-recruits-in-the-country/158863/
 
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Or it could be Miami, the hometown team whose colors are a constant in Kc's life, from his car to his Miami-themed bedroom.

this would take the Smith's slippers to another level!


dont know who this Greer dude is , but thats a legit write up on a recruit!
 
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Or it could be Miami, the hometown team whose colors are a constant in Kc's life, from his car to his Miami-themed bedroom.

this would take the Smith's slippers to another level!


dont know who this Greer dude is , but thats a legit write up on a recruit!

If this is true i just dont see him leaving and i mean no way
 
Must get, can't lose, whatever you call it, if he isn't a Cane is a huge failure. Flowers will be able to leave here after three years and KC would be a perfect fit to take over.
 
Must get, can't lose, whatever you call it, if he isn't a Cane is a huge failure. Flowers will be able to leave here after three years and KC would be a perfect fit to take over.

Yup, and Darling I believe prefers to play RT.
 
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This greer guy is the one who has been talking about the interest in ND, the guy has been on top of this through the whole process, i like the hurricane themed colors
 
Does anyone know if McDermott's mom's maiden name is Henderson? I live in Zanesville, and just wanted to know. I think I know his family back here in Ohio.
 
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Does anyone know if McDermott's mom's maiden name is Henderson? I live in Zanesville, and just wanted to know. I think I know his family back here in Ohio.

I think you're right. There was a Johnnie Henderson from a large family of Hendersons in Zanesville, according to my research. She would be 51 years old. Further, there was a Johnnie Henderson who is fourth all-time leading rebounder for Ohio U's WBB. She played there in '79-83. Must be the same person and family.
 
Does anyone know if McDermott's mom's maiden name is Henderson? I live in Zanesville, and just wanted to know. I think I know his family back here in Ohio.

I think you're right. There was a Johnnie Henderson from a large family of Hendersons in Zanesville, according to my research. She would be 51 years old. Further, there was a Johnnie Henderson who is fourth all-time leading rebounder for Ohio U's WBB. She played there in '79-83. Must be the same person and family.

Violation?
 
Does anyone know if McDermott's mom's maiden name is Henderson? I live in Zanesville, and just wanted to know. I think I know his family back here in Ohio.

I think you're right. There was a Johnnie Henderson from a large family of Hendersons in Zanesville, according to my research. She would be 51 years old. Further, there was a Johnnie Henderson who is fourth all-time leading rebounder for Ohio U's WBB. She played there in '79-83. Must be the same person and family.

Violation?

Are you serious? How could that be a violation? Are you familiar with the NCAA rules? Did I contact a member of the family? No.

What did I do? I researched easily and publicly available records on the internet. If you told my your name, I could use intelius or some other database and tell you what cities you've lived in, your age, and the likely names of your family members. If I wanted to pay, I could get even more. All I did was look for a Johnnie Henderson from Zanesville Ohio and found her.

I then went to the Ohio U sports site and looked at the very publicly available women's basketball media guide and skimmed through and found a Johnnie Henderson who played there in the early '80's.

You'd be surprised at how information is publicly available, the same way you could get most peoples addresses and phone numbers from a phone book. It's available for me, for you and for virtually everybody.

Since she said she played basketball at Ohio U, and this fellow said he knew of a Johnnie Henderson from Zanesville, it was easy to put this information together from very easily available records on the web. They're there for everybody.

Now, if Hurricanesohio is an alum, or a booster, and he contacts the family, that might be a violation. So, not knowing his status, he should be careful what he says and to whom.

Back in the late '80's, we had a player named Diego London. I knew the family. His father asked me for a tape of a game. I checked with our then compliance director, Doug Johnson I think his name was. I decided to tell the senior Mr. London to wait until Diego graduated. I didn't give it to them, because I lost touch, but I used to know what a violation is because I was active in the Hurricane Club and I used to come into contact with athletes' family members, especially the basketball players we had from Washington DC. Like Tim James, Brandon Scott and Jacob Morton. I also spoke to the Londons, and the family of Bukasa Kalombo, a DE we had in the late '80's. (Probably our first African player, and they were rare back then.) I only spoke to the families after the student-athletes enrolled (so it could not be construed as recruiting) and was careful never to do anything that could be remotely construed as an extra benefit.

Now, the person who should be careful, is Hurricanesohio, since he might be coming into contact with the family, and he should not engage in recruiting even indirectly, especially if he could be deemed to represent the school's interests, i.e., a booster or alum. (I'm neither). I suspect these rules and definitions are the same as they were in the late '80's, early 90's, when I was very active with the athletic department and the Hurricane Club.
 
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Imagine typing that whole response? Ol' boy must be new to the boards

You mean my response? I did write a lengthy response for several reasons.

In case family members, especially parents, read this thread, I want them to know they are not being the subject of inordinate snooping. You never know how people might react. They might be sensitive to having personal information put in a public message board, and I would want them to know it's very public information, easily available on the web. There were some messages following the article in the Herald about Alex Figueroa, and the kid's father actually posted. So, parents do read message boards.

Secondly, I read all the time about former players, other alums, etc., talking to recruits, etc. Now those might be violations. People were talking up Ray Lewis visiting with his son during a big recruiting weekend. That would worry me, since he IS an alum, and under the rules, as I knew them in the late '80's, alums were not supposed to be contacting recruits. I don't know what the rule is if the alum is also a parent of what they call a "prospective student-athlete," the older Ray Lewis would be. The NCAA probably wouldn't care unless the father who was the alum went crazy doing all kind of recruiting during a visit weekend.

I used to read the NCAA News and I used to see all kinds of self-reporting for even the most minor improper recruiting contacts. That usually happened with smaller schools when they happened to inadvertently be in the same place as a recruit.

It was not too long after I was active in the Hurricane Club that we were investigated and ended up with a very serious probation. It was probably the third probation I'd lived through as a Hurricane fan, starting in the mid-1950's when we had a top ten team and couldn't go to a bowl. We had the probation in 1981 which kept us out of a bowl, and the probation in the mid-90's. Now, we're facing another one.

Most here don't know that we had a recruiting coordinator in the early '80's who was also the same recruiting coordinator that SMU had before they got the death penalty. Now, the recruiting coordinator was not like a coach, like it is now. It was more of a glorified secretary-coordinator-scheduler. It was a woman. I knew who she was. I don't think she had anything to do with the problems at SMU or the problems later at UM. Her job was more administrative,not likely to be involved in stuff that would raise problems with the NCAA.

I don't want to see any more probations during my lifetime. I'm also a lawyer so I analyze the NCAA rules very carefully and treat them very seriously, as you can see. Like I said, no more NCAA trouble.
 
TheMatador,
The reason LACane wrote "violation" is because when you talk about a woman on the West End Zone forum without putting a picture, it's considered a violation.

But thanks for the thorough and informative responses. Actually learned quite a bit from reading it, as usual with your work.
 
#NotreDame put on the fullcourt press for Kc McDermott yesterday and today. Seeing #Canes tomorrow. "It's a tough decision," Kc's dad says.
11:34pm - 27 Mar 13
 
#NotreDame put on the fullcourt press for Kc McDermott yesterday and today. Seeing #Canes tomorrow. "It's a tough decision," Kc's dad says.
11:34pm - 27 Mar 13

Hopefully that's just the family trying to make the hiring of KC'd brother look to carry value in ND's eyes
 
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