Advertisement

Washington Is Back in the Running : Football: After being Santa Monica’s second-string fullback, the 6-foot, 240-pound player finally got a chance to showcase his running skills as a tailback.

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Brett Washington had heard the cliche. He just never planned to live it. You can’t tell a book by its cover. The 6-foot, 240-pound Washington is proof that the adage applies to football players.

From the first time he strapped on a helmet and pads in youth leagues, Washington has been burdened with a perception generated by his stocky appearance.

Initially, he was branded a lineman. Then he was made a linebacker.

“But I’m a tailback,” he pleaded.

“Uh-huh, yeah,” smirking coaches replied. “Well, just for now, why don’t you run on over there with the linemen.”

Advertisement

Just for now . Sooner or later, they will learn, Washington vowed. And they did.

After a year as a defensive lineman and reserve running back, Washington gained 2,794 yards and scored 34 touchdowns in two seasons as the starting tailback at Granada Hills High.

He had all the tools of a top college recruit: size, speed and elusiveness. The lack of an acceptable Scholastic Aptitude Test score was the only factor that precluded him from earning a football scholarship. Case closed, he thought.

But he was wrong.

At Santa Monica City College, Washington has been forced to take an even longer, more arduous route before he can reach his goal. Because of an abundance of talent at tailback, he again was miscast--this time as a fullback--during his freshman season.

The label almost stuck. Only an extraordinary sales job granted him a reprieve during this, his sophomore season.

When Gary Langer descended from the bleachers at Moorpark College six weeks ago, he had no idea he would help change the course of Santa Monica’s season--and perhaps Washington’s career.

Langer knew only that he had a bundle of questions--and no apparent answers.

Langer considered Washington a family friend. Langer’s son, Kirk, was the senior middle linebacker and inspirational leader of the Granada Hills team in 1989, when Washington first started turning heads as a junior.

Advertisement

The Langer home often was the place Washington and other Highlander players met to visit and watch game highlights. Washington usually starred in those films.

Now, there he was, after more than a year, still languishing on the bench, unable to crack the lineup in community college.

Langer, an avid football fan, couldn’t understand it. So, during the second quarter of a 21-0 Santa Monica loss, he initiated his own investigation.

Irritated by the Corsairs’ ineptitude and Washington’s lack of playing time, he shot a glance at his wife, muttered, “This is insane,” and headed down the stairs toward the field.

He found Washington in his usual place, watching from the sidelines.

After a short greeting, Langer began his inquiry.

Why wasn’t he playing? Was he not working hard? Had he skipped practice?

Washington offered little by way of an explanation.

“I’m listening to him and I’m really getting hot, you know?” Langer said. “But before I open my mouth, I figure I’d better do some more research.”

Langer next targeted Derrick Stewart, Santa Monica’s standout cornerback and a former teammate of Washington’s at Granada Hills.

Advertisement

Stewart couldn’t explain the situation either. “He said Brett was still working hard, had a great attitude and was as good as ever,” Langer said. “I said, ‘I’ve had enough of this. What (four-year) school is going to want him if he’s a second-string fullback for Santa Monica and they’re 0-10?”

A day later, Langer tried to enlist the help of Darryl Stroh, the Granada Hills co-coach.

Stroh, according to Langer, said he too was disappointed and frustrated by Washington’s lack of playing time. However, Stroh was not willing to call Santa Monica coaches on Washington’s behalf.

“He said he wouldn’t like it if he was on the other end of a call like that,” Langer said. “He said, ‘You do it.’ ”

So Langer did.

On Washington’s advice, Langer asked to speak to Steve Butler, the Corsairs’ offensive coordinator. Butler, as luck would have it, happened to answer the phone.

Langer tried diplomacy.

Ever heard of Brett Washington? he asked. Yes, Butler replied, he had. Washington was the Corsairs’ second-string fullback.

Ever seen Washington run? Yes, Butler said, he had. In practice, though usually not very far.

Advertisement

Ever seen Washington play tailback? Yes, Butler said, he had. In practice, though not very often.

Sensing that Butler might becoming defensive, Langer, a professional salesman, changed tactics. He cheerfully offered a compliment.

Jason Patterson, the freshman playing ahead of Washington, really is the better fullback, Langer said. The coach agreed and a fairly amiable conversation ensued.

Then Langer cut to the heart of the matter. He suggested that Washington would be better utilized as a tailback, and he offered conclusive evidence.

Langer convinced Butler that he must see a 45-minute highlight video showing Washington at tailback for Granada Hills. Langer sent the film.

On Oct. 27, Washington received his first action at tailback, gaining 93 yards and scoring the Corsairs’ only touchdown in a 24-7 loss to Glendale.

Advertisement

After the game, Washington was told by Coach Owen Hahn that he had won the starting job.

Since then, Santa Monica (3-5, 3-4 in Western State Conference play, 2-1 in Southern Division play) has won three of five games.

To Washington, Langer’s phone call borders on divine intervention. He has rushed for 897 yards in 120 carries and scored nine touchdowns.

“If it wasn’t for Mr. Langer calling and then showing them that videotape, I wouldn’t be playing tailback,” Washington said.

However, Langer’s influence has been downplayed in some circles.

Hahn says Corsair coaches were “well on our way to arriving at that idea anyway when this fella called our offensive coordinator and said, ‘You know, you really ought to continue with that thought process and explore it.’ ”

Hahn said Washington has been clocked in the 40-yard dash three times, all between 4.5 and 4.6 seconds.

“As big as he is, he has remarkable open-field ability,” Butler said. “That’s the thing people don’t realize. He’s not just beating up people in there. He’s avoiding tacklers and making nice moves. For a guy who weighs 240 pounds, he makes a lot of people miss.”

Advertisement

Instead of competing against Patterson, a 220-pound freshman, Washington teams with him in what Butler calls Santa Monica’s “jumbo backfield.”

“They’re quite a combination,” Hahn said. “Jason is absolutely pancaking people. He is the most physical, violent fullback we’ve ever had here. Jason’s thrill in football is to see how many times he can pick up people and put them on their back. He gets their legs up in the air. They look like roaches.”

On the few occasions when Patterson misses a block, Washington has proved quite capable of creating his own running room.

“Playing fullback taught me to hit the hole that much harder,” Washington said. So too have memories from more than a year of frustration.

Stewart vividly recalls Washington’s reaction last season when he realized he was not included in Santa Monica’s plans at running back. “It was after the Southwest game,” Stewart said. “When he didn’t play, he just broke down in tears. He was so disappointed.”

Washington considered transferring after the season, but Stewart and other friends persuaded him to stay. Hahn said if Washington was so inclined, he never gave a hint.

Advertisement

“As personally frustrated as he might have been, he never said a word to any of the coaches,” Hahn said. “For a kid who came here with all his accolades, I’m sure it wasn’t easy for him.”

Any lingering traces of bitterness have been lost in the vengeance of his monthlong attack on defenses.

“When they told me I was starting against Santa Barbara, I just went wild,” Washington said. “I told the linemen, ‘Just give me a little hole.’ ”

To Stewart he confided, “D, I’m ready to roll. I’m just going to explode.”

Making good on that prediction, he gained 276 yards in 28 carries to break the school’s 34-year-old, single-game rushing record. Included was a 77-yard touchdown sprint.

Advertisement