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Published: December 9, 2007
Before playing sports was about favorable draft positions, contract negotiations, media criticism and job instability, professional athletes enjoyed the purity of high school sports.
It was there athletes played simply because they loved sports. They were neighborhood heroes who wanted to win a state championship. The majority of people in their community wanted them to become successful. Their friends loved them for who they were, not because of any athletic ability. Meanwhile, proud parents created scrapbooks to save every radiant article about their child.
This week's Smackdown takes a step back to those wholesome days to determine which Tampa Bay player was the "Best High School Athlete." The competition is between right guard Davin Joseph, one of the best wrestlers in state history, and cornerback Phillip Buchanon, one of the finest multiple sports athletes from Florida.
While looking for an activity to occupy his time after football season, Joseph decided to try wrestling as a freshman at Hallandale High in South Florida.
He weighed 310 pounds and initially was unable to reach the 275-pound heavyweight maximum. Joseph eventually did make weight, barely missing the state tournament in what would be his least successful season.
As a sophomore, Joseph finished second in the district tournament, was a regional champion and placed fourth at state. Joseph was 35-3 that season, but was just warming up.
Joseph was 48-0 as a junior and won the Class 2A state championship. He also competed in the National High School Coaches Association National Wrestling Tournament in Birmingham, Ala., and placed eighth in the nation. Although Joseph was a standout football player, he started receiving scholarship offers to wrestle in college.
"His work ethic is best I've ever seen out of high school kid," former wrestling coach Allen Held said. "He was dominant. No matter where he went, people knew who he was. He was a heavyweight who could wrestle, but he moved like a lightweight on the mat."
Joseph's athletic domination continued his senior year when he was ranked as the 19th best guard in the nation by Rivals.com in 2002. He also was an All-State pick, plus named Broward County's Defensive Player of the Year.
Additionally, Joseph was 42-0 in his final year as a wrestler and never lost a point that season. In Joseph's state championship match, he pinned his opponent in 58 seconds.
Joseph received football scholarship offers from Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University, Iowa, Iowa State, Minnesota and Missouri, and he was told he could wrestle in college if he wanted. After deciding to attend Oklahoma, Joseph was unable to do both, but finished as one of the best two-sport athletes in state history.
Larry Gary, Buchanon's head football coach at Lehigh High in Fort Myers, and Eric McFee, his basketball coach, agree on one thing when it comes to the former NFL first- round draft pick.
"I actually thought he was better at baseball than football," Gary said.
Buchanon played football, basketball and ran track at Lehigh, but baseball was the sport everyone thought he would excel in.
As a sophomore, Buchanon had a .410 batting average and followed that by hitting .453 as a junior. Buchanon was a second-team All-State selection that season, which is a major accomplishment considering Florida's rich baseball history. Most expected him to play baseball professionally.
Buchanon, who ran the 60-yard dash in 6.2 seconds, injured his wrist and was unable to play baseball his senior year. But he still was offered a $500,000 contract by the Cincinnati Reds, which he turned down to play football at the University of Miami.
"A lot of major-league teams asked if I got drafted, would I sign with them, and I said I didn't know as opposed to saying yes," Buchanon said. "At that point, I loved football so much that they scouts told me to give up football for baseball and I didn't want to do that. In Fort Myers, all we knew was football."
In addition to being an exceptional football and baseball player, Buchanon also averaged double digits in points as Lehigh's point guard.
"Phillip was a playmaker," McFee said. "If you're down and need something to happen, he created the play. He was always even keeled, calm and tough. To show you how lousy of a coach I was, one day my assistant pointed out to me that Phillip was doing everything with his left hand. I called him over and asked why and found out he had been playing two games with a broken wrist. That is just how tough he was."
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