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SI article on Hamler "Meet KJ Hamler, Penn State's Brash and Blistering Emerging Star"

GreggK

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Reporter: Do you feel like you can score every time you get your hands on the ball?

Hamler: “Yes.”

Reporter: Why?

Hamler: “Because I can.”




https://www.si.com/college-football/2019/10/01/penn-state-kj-hamler


IMG Academy is not your typical high school. It touts itself as the world’s foremost authority in athletic, academic and personal development. From an expansive, shimmering campus in Bradenton, Florida, the school provides athletes with a college experience in nearly every sense. For instance, the Ascenders football team, just like many college programs, uses GPS-like sensing devices attached to players to monitor their practice output. Based on data from those devices, IMG coach Kevin Wright knows that a normal receiver during a usual practice covers about 2,800-3,000 yards of ground. However, during his seven years as coach, one guy averaged more than any other. “KJ’s was something off the charts,” says Wright. KJ Hamler averaged about 4,200 yards. “He was doing the same drills as everyone else,” says Wright, “but he never walks anywhere and he’d catch the ball and run an extra 10 yards.”

Some might call KJ Hamler cocky. Others might say he’s confident. But everyone that’s seen him play agrees: He’s damn good. “We all know that he’s a difference maker,” says Hamler’s current college coach, Penn State’s James Franklin. “More times KJ can touch the ball, we’re going to like what happens.” On Friday night just north of the nation’s capital city, Hamler gave a national audience a taste of what might be in store for his redshirt sophomore season. Among the many exploits of Penn State’s 59–0 dismantling of Maryland was the emergence—for those who hadn’t seen him before—of a 5 foot 9, 176-pounder who appeared to be faster, quicker and, well, better than anyone else on the football field.

Meet Kahlee Jacoby Hamler, the 12th-ranked Nittany Lions’ blistering, brash ball of energy. After his six-catch, 108-yard outing against the Terrapins—one that included a meandering 58-yard score—a postgame exchange between Hamler and a reporter unfolded during a scrum of media.

Reporter: Do you feel like you can score every time you get your hands on the ball?

Hamler: “Yes.”

Reporter: Why?

Hamler: “Because I can.”

If you don’t like Hamler’s style, don’t ask him silly questions. And don’t harass him during pregame warmups either. That’s what Maryland students did Friday night in College Park. An hour later, on his stride through the end zone, he blew a kiss in the direction of the student section and yelled toward them, “Love y’all too!” When a reporter afterward suggested that he showed some “new” moves during that tackle-breaking touchdown, a stoic Hamler corrected the questioner, “That’s not new. That’s regular.”

If you don’t know much about Hamler, that’s O.K. He didn’t play his final season of high school football after tearing his ACL, and he then redshirted as a true freshman at Penn State to continue recovery from said injury. Last year, during a somewhat forgettable season in State College, when the Nittany Lions lost a bowl game to Kentucky and were out of the championship chase by October, Hamler somewhat quietly set a PSU freshman record for all-purpose yards, topping the previous mark set by a guy named Saquon Barkley. Already through four games this year, he’s got 465 all-purpose yards: 353 receiving and 112 as a return man.

He ranks among the top 15 nationally in yards per reception (22.06), mostly because of his run-after-catch skills, the ones he’s be honing since age 4. Thomas Hamler, a junior college player back in his day, trained his son at an early age. Little KJ maneuvered among cones in the backyard, climbed up hills down the street and even ran with a parachute attached to him, his mother says. KJ was an avid lacrosse player, ran track and tried basketball. The latter didn’t work. “He was too fast,” says mom Latonya Hamler, “he always double-dribbled because he out ran the ball.” Nothing stuck quite like football despite his modest size (he weighed about 160 pounds as a senior at IMG, Wright says).

In fact, KJ’s mother cannot watch her son play. Latonya attends every game, but she’s often purposely buried in her smart phone. She catches the replays on the jumbotron. KJ is often the smallest player on the field, surrounded by 11 men, some of them weighing nearly twice his weight and all of them attempting to maul her son. The only thing keeping her sane is his speed. “I trust he’s going to run really fast and break out every move he needs too,” Latonya says. “I always get nervous when he runs a slant, ‘Oh god, that safety is going to kill him.’” On Friday night, his spectacular touchdown came on—you guessed it—a slant. He beat cornerback Kenny Bennett off the line, broke the tackle of safety Deon Jones and out-raced another defender downfield, boasting some nasty stop-and-start moves along the way.

KJ is fast, very, very fast. This past spring, Penn State coaches clocked KJ’s 40-yard dash speed at 4.28 seconds. The best 40-yard dash at this year’s NFL combine was 4.29 seconds. His blistering speed is one thing, his shake-and-bake moves are another. “To see him do what he does is amazing,” says running back Journey Brown. “I like to think of myself as a good football player, but the stuff he does even surprises me. It’s amazing.” And about his size, KJ lets his Twitter bio do the talking. A permanent message on it reads, “They measured my HEIGHT...they measured my WEIGHT...but they never measured my HEART!”

KJ models his game after a trio of receivers. DeSean Jackson is his favorite player, Steve Smith is where he gets that “dog mentality,” he says, and Stefon Diggs is the route-running king. Put all three together, and you’ve got KJ Hamler. “I’m just an electric player,” he says. “Getting me in space is dangerous for teams.” Penn State coaches have figured that out. Franklin has talked so much about involving KJ early and often that the player learned of his heavy role against Maryland from media coverage last week ahead of the game. The role should only expand from here, Franklin says.

The Nittany Lions (4–0) embark soon on a do-or-die stretch of conference games. They host Purdue this Saturday before playing Iowa, Michigan and Michigan State, all three ranked in the top 25. For KJ and his family, the Michigan and Michigan State games on Oct. 19 and Oct. 26 are special. He grew up in the suburbs of Detroit. For the last two decades, his mother has worked for automaker titan Ford. At one point, she thought her son would be staying home for college. Latonya was so confident that she told Michigan State coaches that KJ was East Lansing bound. Everything changed about his recruiting on Aug. 20, 2016, when on IMG Academy’s first possession of the first quarter of the first game, KJ planted, twisted and collapsed to the ground. IMG trainers phoned Latonya and Thomas, both in the stands that night. Come down here right now.

They arrived to the locker room to their son lying on a table and a doctor poking at his exposed knee, its contents freely wiggling around. It’s torn. “KJ screamed and bawled. I had to walk out of the room,” Latonya says. “So many things go through your head. Scholarships… spent all this money and time on sending him down to IMG. But I don’t regret it.” Some schools backed out on KJ, says Wright. Penn State wasn’t one of them. His lead recruiter, Josh Gattis, was the only college assistant to call Latonya a day after the injury, she says. That’s what makes the Michigan game so special—Gattis is now the Wolverines offensive coordinator. There’s plenty of work to do before that meeting, of course. The Boilermakers come to town and then the Lions travel to play the Hawkeyes. Along the way, the spotlight on KJ is sure to grow brighter and brighter with each snazzy return and swanky touchdown. KJ doesn’t mind. “It’s a blessing to have attention, but I don’t like changing up or acting different to friends. Try to stay true to myself and stay the same,” he says. “I look at myself as a regular degular guy.”

Is he really that regular? Maybe not. In fact, his mother shares a unique story about her son that she enjoys telling. It makes people laugh, including KJ. During her pregnancy, doctors told Latonya that she’d be having a girl. Friends and family members threw her two baby showers, where she received what you’d expect a soon-to-be-mother of an infant girl to get: pink everything. Days before her due date, she visited the doctor for an ultra sound and they found that the umbilical cord was wrapped around, they said, his neck.

Whose neck? I’m having a girl.

No, you’re not.
 
Not sure why everyone is clinging onto the term brash. I don't care, i love the confidence!
I love his answer to the reporters question, that is what we need!!!!!! And he is right.

Not sure Shane Conlin would have answered it differently.
 
Antonio Brown?
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9 wins and a New Year’s Day bowl is a forgettable season.

Damn, I guess we’re back
Fair to say it was a good season. Also fair to say it was a disappointing season for all with losses many considered wasted wins.

I hope the program is back. Most seem to think it is. But what’s the “damn” surprise? Unless I’m mistaking your point, that is. Since 2016, it’s been hard to look at this team and not expect wins v seemingly outmatched teams like MSU and KY.
 
I think we just need to enjoy him, like we did Saquon. He is special talent!
Yes, enjoy him this year because my guess is that he heads off to get paid next year. He doesn't need to get "bigger, faster, or stronger" by coming back for one more year. His attributes are his speed and being elusive in the open field. That's not going to change by coming back for one more year and risking an injury that could negatively impact a big pay day.
 
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9 wins and a New Year’s Day bowl is a forgettable season.

Damn, I guess we’re back
It didn’t say bad season.... 8 wins would have led to hand wringing, 10 or more would have had us in the conversation for division title or more. Yes, 9 wins doesn’t move the needle for me....
 
Sheeeesh, how about we celebrate the fact that one of our players is getting much deserved press rather than nitpicking word usage.

That’s why I posted it, I thought cool, I big story in sports illustrated about a player we all like.
 
Could be a really special season. If PSU coaches can figure out how to get him the ball in space, he probably will score an incredibly high percentage of the time.

As for "brash" etc., well writers like to use adjectives and labels but it never really captures the complexity of a human being. He seems to have a lot of fun playing, he seems to have a good sense of humor, loves playing in big moments, sounds like he's popular with his teammates.

If Ohio State hadn't concussed him out of the game last year, PSU might very well have won that game.

My only worry about any of this (and really maybe the biggest issue with the offense right now) is that PSU needs to have a minimum of four receivers, and probably 5, involved in the offense. Two is not enough. They need to have multiple receivers who cause headaches for defensive coordinators.

If you can beat PSU by taking out Hamler, then that is what teams are going to do.
 
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Merriam-Webster's definition of BRASH: "Uninhibitedly energetic or demonstrative." And that's supposed to be a bad or inaccurate thing? I think it's a perfect word to describe KJ. Good article. Liked the detail about Josh Gattis calling KJ's mother after the injury. Previously I was under the impression it was practically all Sean Clifford that got KJ to PSU. Whatever the case, WE ARE thankful.
 
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Merriam-Webster's definition of BRASH: "Uninhibitedly energetic or demonstrative." And that's supposed to be a bad or inaccurate thing? I think it's a perfect word to describe KJ. Good article. Liked the detail about Josh Gattis calling KJ's mother after the injury. Previously I was under the impression it was practically all Sean Clifford that got KJ to PSU. Whatever the case, WE ARE thankful.
KJ was widely assumed to be heading to East Lansing. It was said that the PSU staff was pleasantly surprised when Michigan natives Anthony Zettel and CJ Olaniyan chose PSU over the in-state schools. Seems like a similar situation with KJ Hamler. Just glad he and his family are Nittany Lions.



 
If Ohio State hadn't intentionally concussed him to get him out of the game last year, PSU might very well have won that game.

Wow. I have nothing good to say about the Bucknuts, but that’s one helluva accusation.
I’m sure you have something to back that up ‘cuz it sure didn’t read like it was just your opinion.
 
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Wow. I have nothing good to say about the Bucknuts, but that’s one helluva accusation.
I’m sure you have something to back that up ‘cuz it sure didn’t read like it was just your opinion.
Did you watch the play? Sure looked Intentional (and a cheap shot). Can’t recall if OSU was even penalized...probably not...
 
Did you watch the play? Sure looked Intentional (and a cheap shot). Can’t recall if OSU was even penalized...probably not...
I was at the game. Sure looked like they knocked him out of the game with that shot. Don’t remember him coming back.
 
As an OLSM alum, I’ll take credit for staying in his ear going to PSU instead of Sparty/Oregon. Kid is awesome, his parents are amazing people and role models. Nothing like AB at all. Smart, good kid, raised right who likes to have fun and yes, chirp, but good natured.

I’ve been all over this kid from the get go, he’s a playmaker, plain and simple. And he’ll rep PSU just fine in the future.
 
Did you watch the play? Sure looked Intentional (and a cheap shot). Can’t recall if OSU was even penalized...probably not...

Sure did. And, yes, it was nasty.
But somebody is going to have to show me some evidence that the OSU player as an individual or OSU as a team put a plan in action to intentionally injure a specific player in order to improve their chances of winning the game.
Stop and think for a moment how fast today’s players move, how quickly they change direction in the open field, especially after some level of contact. What would be a clean hit becomes helmet-to-helmet if Player A moves a certain way the instant before Player B makes contact.
Does anybody believe it was in the PSU game plan to injury default the MD quarterback last week? Was that Parsons’ goal for the game? He got a little aggressive rushing the passer and was rightfully DQ’d. Most everybody on this board would call BS if a Maryland fan made the same accusation as the OP.
I get so tired of the small minority of posters on this board who complain that the world is out to get Penn State football. The officials cheat. The opposition intentionally tries to injure. The TV broadcasters are mean.
When people make accusations, they should have some amount of proof.
 
Sure did. And, yes, it was nasty.
But somebody is going to have to show me some evidence that the OSU player as an individual or OSU as a team put a plan in action to intentionally injure a specific player in order to improve their chances of winning the game.
Stop and think for a moment how fast today’s players move, how quickly they change direction in the open field, especially after some level of contact. What would be a clean hit becomes helmet-to-helmet if Player A moves a certain way the instant before Player B makes contact.
Does anybody believe it was in the PSU game plan to injury default the MD quarterback last week? Was that Parsons’ goal for the game? He got a little aggressive rushing the passer and was rightfully DQ’d. Most everybody on this board would call BS if a Maryland fan made the same accusation as the OP.
I get so tired of the small minority of posters on this board who complain that the world is out to get Penn State football. The officials cheat. The opposition intentionally tries to injure. The TV broadcasters are mean.
When people make accusations, they should have some amount of proof.

In theory, I agree with you. But this is a message board, not a court room. People give unsupported opinions all the time. Generally, we're pretty good at figuring out whose opinions are worthwhile and whose aren't worth much. The poster who made the original claim that you challenged is famous for making long-winded posts, seemingly showing off how smart he is, but then never engaging with someone who challenges his positions. So for me, his opinions aren't worth too much because he doesn't support them when challenged.
 
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my favorite part of the KJ catch and run against Maryland is Dotson trying to block the defender who is trying to tackle KJ and somewhat sensing that Dotson cannot get to the block without clipping, makes the decision that KJ will probably get past him anyway, and he blocks the next guy who was in a great position to make the tackle.......
 
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In theory, I agree with you. But this is a message board, not a court room. People give unsupported opinions all the time. Generally, we're pretty good at figuring out whose opinions are worthwhile and whose aren't worth much. The poster who made the original claim that you challenged is famous for making long-winded posts, seemingly showing off how smart he is, but then never engaging with someone who challenges his positions. So for me, his opinions aren't worth too much because he doesn't support them when challenged.

Excellent post .... Spot on.
I appreciate your observations.
I try to hold myself to the following standard when I post here:
Words have meanings.
Facts are facts.
Opinions are opinions, and should be labeled as such, because they are not necessarily facts.
 
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don't confuse cocky with mentally unstable

OK. Its an unfair comparison. I am sorry, if that makes everyone feel better. I just see some overconfidence here.

Obviously none of us are a NFL caliber talent like KJ. I just don't understand how someone can say the kind of things he said in the article. It can attract negative attention and is not my style. If it ends right where it is now, no problem. If it continues an upward trajectory of confidence and bragging - that could hurt his opportunities long term. That said, I truly wish him the best.

By the way - AB lived in my community. He was "hardest" working 6th round draft pick to achieve success. Look at him now.
 
OK. Its an unfair comparison. I am sorry, if that makes everyone feel better. I just see some overconfidence here.

Obviously none of us are a NFL caliber talent like KJ. I just don't understand how someone can say the kind of things he said in the article. It can attract negative attention and is not my style. If it ends right where it is now, no problem. If it continues an upward trajectory of confidence and bragging - that could hurt his opportunities long term. That said, I truly wish him the best.

By the way - AB lived in my community. He was "hardest" working 6th round draft pick to achieve success. Look at him now.
If you don’t have confidence, you won’t be at that level. Hamler is a little more brazen about it than some, but all the great ones have confidence and aren’t afraid to show that confidence. Barkley is as classy as they come but he often says he wants to be the best to ever play...that’s confidence and a bit of arrogance, which you have to have to be great.
 
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OK. Its an unfair comparison. I am sorry, if that makes everyone feel better. I just see some overconfidence here.

Obviously none of us are a NFL caliber talent like KJ. I just don't understand how someone can say the kind of things he said in the article. It can attract negative attention and is not my style. If it ends right where it is now, no problem. If it continues an upward trajectory of confidence and bragging - that could hurt his opportunities long term. That said, I truly wish him the best.

By the way - AB lived in my community. He was "hardest" working 6th round draft pick to achieve success. Look at him now.
You are over reacting.

“If you done it, it ain't bragging.”

― Walt Whitman
 
Did you watch the play? Sure looked Intentional (and a cheap shot). Can’t recall if OSU was even penalized...probably not...

It was flagged. Either PF or the tOSU safety was ejected. But Ohio State has probably 6 more people it can play at safety. PSU did not have a replacement for Hamler.
 
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Wow. I have nothing good to say about the Bucknuts, but that’s one helluva accusation.
I’m sure you have something to back that up ‘cuz it sure didn’t read like it was just your opinion.

Well sure it is my opinion. I don't have video but my memory is clear -- the safety (the same one Hamler had embarrassed before) basically got on Hamler's shoulders and drove his head hard into the turf. It wasn't a tackle, it was a mugging. And, mission accomplished. They had no answer to him defensively so they took him out. It was a big factor in the game -- PSU offense was not the same without him.

And FWIW I don't hate the Bucknuts. I respect them and they don't play cheap most of the time. They don't play to injure generally -- only when they're really worried about losing.
 
You sound like a really good defense lawyer. I jump on someone's shoulders and drive his face into the ground, causing him to lose consciousness, I'm hiring you. Seriously, sometimes you're right, sometimes it's a bang bang play. A lot of the targeting calls are split second and clearly accidental. But this was not one of those. The safety saw the play all the way, got himself high, tackled high and drove Hamler's head down. Now, did he spend the night before premeditating it? No but Hamler had embarrassed that secondary and they were not happy.

But somebody is going to have to show me some evidence that the OSU player as an individual or OSU as a team put a plan in action to intentionally injure a specific player in order to improve their chances of winning the game.
 
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