SportsLife 2016, issue 1 | Page 32

Spence Wins Grant Park Football Top Rookie Honours By Scott Taylor, Photos courtesy Darcy Spence and Grant Park Pirates Football Grant Park High School football coach Doug Kovacs can’t stop talking about Tyson Spence. Even when you think he’s said it all, Kovacs will find another good thing to say about this year’s Pirates’ Rookie of the Year. Spence, whose father, Darcy is still a tremendous athlete in his own right, is 6-foot-3, 240 pounds and is only 15-years-old. He has the build and quickness to be one of the top defensive linemen ever produced in Manitoba. “What a fantastic young man,” said Kovacs last week. “I would call him a pure football player. He works out five days a week. Nobody works harder. He started for us as defensive lineman in Grade 10 and he’s a stud with the provincial U-16 team. “Honestly, I don’t know anyone who works harder than Tyson. Next year, in Grade 11, he’ll be a two-way starter for us. He’ll play both O-line and D-line and it will be hard to keep him off the field. The kid’s simply a specimen. He works hard in school and he works hard at fixing the mistakes he makes on the field. He’s also a good basketball player and just a great all-around athlete.” Tyson started playing football as a Terminator with the old Rods when he was eight-years-old. From his first game he was an interior defensive lineman. Always a big kid, he liked the hitting, the chasing of quarterbacks and the sound it made when a runningback hit the ground. As a result, he’s developed into one of the best high school linemen in Manitoba. “When I started, I was the biggest kid there,” said Tyson. “When I left the Rods and moved to the Crescentwood Grizzlies (now the Corydon Comets), I stayed at defensive line and was there, at the same position, for four years. I’m comfortable at it and I love playing tackle.” Tyson Spence came by is athletic prowess and physical toughness quite Tyson Spence, Grant Park Pirates 32 / sportslife