Concussions have forced talented DSU athlete Trevor Willis to give up football

Killdeer starter may miss tourney game after father’s death, Cougars coach offers support

Killdeer sophomore Brock Pittsley's status for the Region 7 boys basketball tournament is uncertain following the death of his father, David. Pittsley is the Cowboys' starting power forward.

The Killdeer boys basketball team will be playing through some pain on Monday in the Region 7 tournament quarterfinals.

Sophomore Brock Pittsley, the Cowboys’ starting power forward, is dealing with the death of his father, David Pittsley, who passed away Thursday at age 45. David Pittsley’s funeral is at 10 a.m. Monday at St. John’s Lutheran Church in Killdeer. The Cowboys are scheduled to play Heart River at 4:30 p.m. that day.

Asked whether or not Pittsley will play, Killdeer coach Wayne Sanders said, “we’re not real sure.”

Sanders said David Pittsley’s death has greatly affected his team. The Cowboys practiced Thursday and Sanders said, “We had a tough day.”

Heart River head coach Greg Pruitt said he has reached out to Pittsley and the Cowboys for two reasons. First, many Heart River players are good friends with Pittsley. Second, Pruitt said he also lost his father at a young age.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with Brock,” Pruitt said. “Our hearts go out to him.”

One-on-one with Austin Dufault

Colorado junior center Austin Dufault, left, dunks on The Citadel's Mike Dejworek during a men's basketball game Dec. 17 in Boulder. Dufault is a 2008 graduate of  Killdeer High School. (AP Photo/The Daily Camera, Cliff Grassmick)

Less than a day after his best offensive effort of the season, Colorado junior men’s basketball player Austin Dufault wasn’t entirely pleased with his performance. Nevertheless, the 2008 Killdeer High School graduate and former North Dakota Mr. Basketball is pleased with the direction his team’s season is going as they prepare for Big 12 Conference play.

I spoke with Dufault on the phone on Thursday morning. He scored a season-high 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds during a 92-65 home victory over Maryland-Eastern Shore on Wednesday night at the Coors Events Center in Boulder, Colo. The win helped the Buffaloes improve to 9-4 on the season.

Dufault, a 6-foot-9 forward forced to start in the post for his undersized team, is averaging 8.9 points and 4.8 rebounds a game while shooting 56 percent from the field and 75 percent from the free-throw line.

Colorado visits Cal State-Bakersfield on Sunday and hosts Western New Mexico on Wednesday, Jan. 5 before opening the Big 12 season at home against Missouri on Saturday, Jan. 8.

Monke: With Colorado going into the Big 12 season soon, how are things going right now? How are you making the transition to new head coach Tad Boyle and being back in that same old center spot you didn’t expect to be in?

Dufault: I think so far, it’s been going pretty well. The beginning of the year we struggled a little bit right away, just with guys not knowing their roles — myself included. We had couple of losses early on that were really tough losses on the road that were games we should have won. We met as a team, players only, after we lost to Harvard and we just kind of talked about having a better effort, day in and day out, especially in practices and lately that’s carried over into games and we’ve been playing a lot better. We know what coach expects from us now. Overall, it’s been a pretty smooth transition besides the first three games. I think it’s been going well so far.

When center Shane Harris-Tunks was injured in the preseason, it thrust you back into the center spot. You know how to play the position, but it seemed like the coaches were more intent to play you at forward again this year. What was that like for you, having to go back to being an undersized center in the Big 12?

It was tough at first, I was excited to get back to playing some forward and being out on the perimeter a little bit more, then Shane went down in practice. That was pretty tough. I’m pretty close with Shane. It was tough to see him (get injured). He worked hard in the offseason to take over the center spot and put on a lot of weight, and did all the right things. He was in the weight room all summer. It was tough to see him go down with how hard he worked. I was down for a while, then I thought about it and the first guy who would want me to play well and do well is Shane. I’m trying to do things that Shane does out on the court and learn from things he did and fill in as best I can.

Are you a little more acquainted with the center role this year? Do you feel you’re playing better there because were in the same spot last year?

I definitely learned a lot last year. It was kind of like I had two freshman years. I had a freshman year playing forward, then I had a second freshman year trying to learn to play center and guard some of the guys I had to guard in the Big 12. It was a big-time learning experience. It was really tough at times, but it’s carried over to this year, I think, pretty well. Just the experience from this year has helped me feel more comfortable playing that role this year.

It looks like your team is playing better than you were at this point last season. What are your thoughts about this team going into the Big 12 season?

We definitely have a good shot to do some really good things, but the effort has to be there consistently every night. Last night (against Maryland-Eastern Shore), in the first half, we didn’t play really well. I don’t know if the score really reflected it that much, but we need to keep holding ourselves accountable to our standards and not worry about the competition that we’re playing. Just play the right way and I think we can match up with any team. In the Indiana game, we held them to four points in the first nine minutes of the second half. If we could do that on a consistent basis and have that effort game in and game out, I think this team could surprise a lot of people in the Big 12.

With the quality of guards Colorado has, do you think you have a chance to be a team that could shock a few teams in the Big 12?

It definitely helps having guards that can score the ball really well, but the main thing for us is going to be defense. Offensively, we’re in the top three of pretty much every category in the Big 12, but defensively, we’re sitting pretty much at the bottom. You look at the teams who go deep into the tournament every year, the NCAA tournament or are winning Big 12 championships, they’re at the top of every defensive category. That’s something that we’ve need to change. If we want to be a top team in the Big 12, we need to focus more on defense and not just look to compete with people, but completely shut teams down defensively.

How has the team adjusted to new head coach Tad Boyle? Are how things going under him?

They’re going pretty well. People kind of know their roles now. At the beginning of the year, there were little stretches in there where people we’re trying to feel out what coach asked of them. He just asked that everybody plays hard, defends. Offensively, we have quite a bit of freedom, a lot more so than playing in the Princeton system (under former head coach Jeff Bzdelik). He runs a motion where pretty much everybody gets involved. It’s nice for me, playing center, I can back-screen people and get on the perimeter and I have five-men guarding me who aren’t as quick as me so I can take them to the basket or make plays for other people. It’s been a lot better. We almost play kind of like a five-guard offense, with somebody always in the post, but it doesn’t have to be me. It can be the guards if they have mismatches. It’s been fun, I like the system a lot and there’s a lot more freedom and coach has confidence in everybody to shoot the ball.

How is Colorado preparing for next year’s switch to the Pac-12?

We’re just focusing on the Big 12 season right now for all the sports. Football finished up, and now it’s basketball season so everybody is just focused on having a good last season in the Big 12 and not really worrying about the Pac 12 stuff until next year. I think all of the schedules are pretty much done … I’m not sure about basketball. All the divisions are set. We’re in the Pac-12 South, so it’ll be us, USC, UCLA, Arizona, Arizona State and Utah.

What drives Derion? DSU senior All-American Williams plays to honor the person who inspired him

Sometime today, before he even thinks about putting on his uniform, Derion Williams will go into the training room at the Badlands Activities Center and get his wrists taped.

He will casually walk back to the Dickinson State football team’s locker room and find a marker. On the white tape, the 22-year-old will write the same words he has before every game since his senior year of high school.

L-Ray. 21-26. RIP. Believe. Bless. Never Quit.

It’s Williams’ way to remember, to never forget and to remind himself why he’s playing the game.

It’s how the Blue Hawk senior honors London Ray, who died on July 26, 2006, in a motorcycle accident in Las Vegas. Ray was Williams’ brother, best friend, mentor and father figure.

“Every game that I’ve played in, before that, I pray and I thank him and God for giving me this opportunity,” Williams said.

At 12 years old, Williams had an instant connection with Ray, then 16, when he entered the Ray family’s home.

Williams and his biological brother, Dequevies Williams, were two of hundreds of foster children from lesser means the Rays have accepted into their home throughout the years. London Ray was the only biological son of Roy and Radiance Ray.

“As soon as I went into the house, we made a connection because he loved football and I loved football,” Williams said. “He taught me everything that I know about football.”

When Ray moved out of his parents’ house to be on his own, Williams followed.

Williams moved in with Ray before his junior year of high school, even though it meant going to his third high school in three years.

Williams didn’t care though. He just wanted to be with his brother.

One year later and a week after his wedding, Ray’s life was tragically cut short. His death happened a little more than a month before Williams was to start his senior year of high school and football.

“That really crushed me,” Williams said. “I wasn’t going to play football after that. My foster family, they told me that that’s not what he’d want from me. I knew that’s not what he wanted from me.”

Williams began his wristtape ritual before the first game of his senior year at Sierra Vista High School in Las Vegas.

Now it’s habit.

Four years after nearly walking away from football, Williams is in his fourth season as a starting cornerback for the Blue Hawks, is a first team NAIA All-America selection, DSU’s all-time leader in kick returns (68) and kick return yards (1,320), and has established himself as one of more electrifying players ever to wear a Blue Hawk uniform.

“Everybody wants players to play hard and give an effort with it,” DSU head coach Hank Biesiot said. “But from day one, he’s a kid that busted his skinny, little tail all over the place. That’s a refreshing thing. That motor is a thing that makes some guys unique, and a lot of the better players have that for whatever reason. He gives an effort and isn’t always picture perfect, but he gives an all-out effort.”

Williams is a picture of determination.

He wants to win. He wants to make every play. But he doesn’t want to be selfish about it. That’s not the type of person he is.

Williams’ 58-yard, game-winning touchdown reception off a tipped ball to help the Blue Hawks to a 25-21 last-minute victory over Concordia College on Sept. 4 may go down as one of the most memorable plays in DSU football history. Williams was just happy he helped give Biesiot his first career win over the Cobbers.

“I’m very excited to say I was part of that team that year that helped coach Biesiot achieve one of those goals,” Williams said.

DSU football has given Williams a foundation upon which to be successful.

As a cornerback, teams haven’t thrown his way much the past two years, though he only has three career interceptions. Teams test Williams once or twice a game, Biesiot said. On kick returns — Williams’ favorite part of the game — fans, players and coaches hold their breath, waiting for him to break another big one. Williams has three career kick returns for a touchdown, which is tied for the school record, and had a 70-yard game-winning punt return for a touchdown to beat Valley City State his sophomore season. Last year, he returned a kick 90 yards for a touchdown to put DSU ahead of South Dakota Mines in the fourth quarter.

“When a kickoff is coming my way, I always think touchdown first,” Williams said.

Williams said he studies special teams and understands its importance, an attitude that makes Biesiot smile.

“He takes a very positive attitude on special teams,” Biesiot said. “We all talk about it and everybody preaches it. He lives it.”

On game day, Williams is as brash and loud as anyone else on DSU’s sidelines.

Off the field, he’s a quiet, deliberate speaker who rarely raises his voice.

“Once the game starts, he likes to be a leader and lead by example,” said Rashad Williams, a DSU running back from Las Vegas who was a sophomore in high school when he first met Derion Williams. “I’ve seen him growing in the past few years. He definitely became a better player and a better leader.”

Williams’ story is one he doesn’t like to tell. He doesn’t talk much about his beginnings in the impoverished parts of Las Vegas. He’s too humble for that and he surely doesn’t want anyone’s pity.

The way Williams looks at it, he is fortunate to be where he is today.

“That’s why you’ll see me with the confidence (on the field),” Williams said. “I have an attitude to where I don’t quit, or I don’t think anything is impossible. I made it from the ghetto, the hood, whatever you want to call it, to where I am today, to college.”

Williams is a solid student, one year away from graduating college with a bachelor’s degree in business administration major and a minor in management.

One day, he’d like to start his own business. He also wouldn’t mind staying in North Dakota.

“It’s grown on me,” Williams said.

First though, he has to finish a little business on the field.

About an hour after he finishes his memorial to Ray, he’ll put on his pads, say a prayer and step onto Fisher Field at the Badlands Activities Center to help DSU begin its quest for a third consecutive Dakota Athletic Conference championship against Dakota State.

“I’m very fortunate for what I have achieved here at Dickinson State,” Williams said.