Zamar Wise
won’t exactly say that it was his dream to play football at Rutgers University,
but he was elated about the opportunity when the Newark native and Barringer
High School standout received a scholarship offer to play for the Scarlet
Knights three years ago.
Wise
received the offer from then-Rutgers head coach Chris Ash and offensive coordinator and quarterback coach John McNulty.
“I
was pretty excited,” Wise said of the Rutgers offer. “I knew that if I stayed
home, I would get more support from family and friends. I’d rather play at home
in my home state. I thought everything was perfect. Rutgers was going to be my
home.”
Wise
was an electrifying player at Barringer, a talented and diversified kid who
lined up as a quarterback, wide receiver, safety and a punt and kick returner
for the Bears. Wise was blessed with a cannon for an arm, the ability to throw
the ball 75 yards effortlessly. He also flourishes in plays outside of the
pocket, making either the right pass or run at the last minute. His decision-
making
ability is among the best witnessed by a high school quarterback in recent
memory.
Former Barringer quarterback Zamar Wise
In
fact, even though he was only a sophomore at Barringer, Wise was so certain
that he was headed to Piscataway that he told all other prospective recruiters
that he was going to Rutgers. Wise had received offers from Maryland and
Temple, among others.
Dwayne Williams,
the former Bayonne High School All-State player who went on to play at the
University of Iowa, was hired by the Newark Board of Education to become the
new head football coach at Barringer.
Williams
had spent several years as the head coach of Schlagle High School in Kansas
City, after serving as the head coach at Marist in Bayonne and before that a
long-time assistant coach at Bayonne.
Williams
heard of Wise when he took the job in 2018, but had no idea how great of a
player the 6-foot-3, 180-pound Wise really was.
“I
didn’t know the kind of impact player he was,” Williams said. “I didn’t even
watch film of Zamar. I was actually still working in Kansas City and I got a
call from coaches from North Carolina and North Carolina State. Then I looked
at the film and I was amazed.”
Williams
had a long-standing relationship with Kansas State head coach Bill Snyder, who was an assistant coach
at Iowa when Williams played there.
“Coach
Snyder told me that Zamar was a special player,” Williams said. “That told me how
good Zamar was.”
And
then Williams developed a close relationship with Wise.
“I
found out how great of a guy Zamar is,” Williams said. “I also saw the loyalty
he had to Barringer and the loyalty he had to the state of New Jersey. It’s why
he chose Rutgers.”
“Since
my freshman year, it was all about Rutgers,” Wise said.
So
it was a done deal. Wise, the brilliant do-everything signal caller for
Barringer, who had 11 touchdowns passing and six rushing in his first four
varsity games as a freshman, was headed to Piscataway. Or so it seemed.
A
lot of things transpired from the time Wise gave Rutgers his verbal commitment
in 2017.
First
and foremost, his Newark home burned down, so he was shuttling back and forth
from his father’s residence in North Carolina back home to Newark. Because he
missed time from school, Wise didn’t have the core curriculum requirements from
the NCAA Clearinghouse in order to play right away as a freshman in the fall of
2020. So Wise had to take extra classes, as well as his regular classes, in
order to get his paperwork in line.
With
that in mind, Wise headed to Milford Academy, a New York preparatory school in
order to get his academia in line while playing football.
“It
was a good experience for me at Milford,” Wise said. “I’m glad I went. It wasn’t
the kind of offense I was used to running, so they moved to me to wide
receiver, but I’m a quarterback. I thought that I wanted to play no matter
what, so I went along with the move.”
At
the same time in Piscataway, Ash was fired as the head coach of the Scarlet
Knights, replaced on the interim basis by Nunzio
Campanile and eventually replaced by Greg
Schiano, the storied former head man on the Banks of the Old Raritan.
Wise
got all of his paperwork with the NCAA Clearinghouse taken care of before the
NCAA signing day in February.
But
before he had the Rutgers National Letter of Intent in his hands, Wise received
a series of messages on Twitter that the offer to Wise was no longer on the
table.
“He
was told that they were going to go in another direction,” Williams said.
Wise
never spoke to Schiano at all.
“After
going through everything to get there, I had nothing," Wise said. "I never spoke with Coach
Schiano. I tried to speak with him, but I was told he was too busy.”
Wise
said he never got a real reason why the scholarship offer was rescinded. The
timing couldn’t have been worse. After all, he was already at a college prep
school.
“I
was really stressing myself out,” Wise said. “I was really thinking about not
playing. I really wanted to stay home.”
Zamar Wise with Barringer head coach Dwayne Williams
Anyway,
Wise was left holding the bag, a satchel that did not include a scholarship.
But
once word got out – thanks to diligence and contacts Williams made through the
years – that Wise was back in the open market, the offers started to come in.
Wise received firm scholarship offers from Central Michigan, Hawaii and Temple.
The University of Kansas and Tulsa got in late to the Wise recruiting parade,
but still made a last ditch offer.
Finally,
it came down to a case of loyalty – just like what Zamar Wise is all about.
When
Walt Bell was an assistant coach at
the University of Maryland in 2017, he was the very first coach to offer a
scholarship to Wise when he was a freshman. Bell was recently hired as the new
head coach at the University of Massachusetts. The new offensive coordinator and
quarterback coach at UMass is a man named Angelo
Mirando. Williams knew Mirando from his days as QB coach at Coffeyville
Community College in Kansas, when Williams was at Schlagle.
“Therefore
by the grace of God,” Williams said. “It was karma.”
Bell
and Mirando liked what they saw in Wise, the pure athleticism, the ability to
run and throw. That’s the name of the game in football these days. It’s been
proven at places like Oklahoma, which produced two Heisman Trophy winners in Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray and almost had a third in Jalen Hurts.
A
quick glance around NFL rosters and you’ll find people like Patrick Mahomes of the Super Bowl
Champion Kansas City Chiefs, Deshawn
Watson of the Houston Texans, not to mention Mayfield (Cleveland Browns),
Murray (Arizona Cardinals) and reigning NFL Most Valuable Player Lamar Jackson of the Baltimore Ravens.
“That’s
my guy,” Wise said of Jackson.
Wise
has been working diligently with respected quarterback trainer Lamar McKnight, who has a stable of 75
prospective signal callers nestled in his resume. McKnight believes that Wise
has the talent to make it big time in college football.
“I’d
say he’s a lot like Pat White (the former West Virginia quarterback),” McKnight
said. “Zamar has that ‘It’ factor. He can do it all. He’s electrifying. He’s a
game changer. He will shine in college.”
So
last week, Wise put his signature on the national letter of intent he received
from UMass. If the pandemic subsides, then Wise is ready to jump right into
contention for the starting QB spot with the Minutemen in the fall.
“I’m
ready to go,” Wise said. “It’s a new chapter in my life. I feel like I can make
a major impact.”
McKnight,
who also doubles as the offensive coordinator at Union City High School, likes
Wise’s choice.
“I
like the fact he’s going to UMass,” McKnight said. “It’s the kind of offense
that he can thrive with. I think it’s a great opportunity. He’s going to get a
chance to prove himself. I’m excited for him.”
Wise
will major in sports management in Amherst. UMass has one of the top sports
management programs in the nation.
Wise
said that he wanted to thank everyone in his hometown of Newark that helped him
along the way.
“I
want to thank everyone in Newark who helped me out,” Wise said. “I wouldn’t
have made it without them.”
And as for Williams?
And as for Williams?
“If
he didn’t do what he did, I’d probably headed to a JUCO (junior college) now,”
Wise said.
So
what could have been a total disaster has worked out well for Zamar Wise. He
could have had nothing. But as it turns out, UMass may be a better destination
than the one he thought he was headed to for the last three years.
Congratulations Zamar. I’m very proud of you.
ReplyDeleteGlad and happy for the young phenom’n
ReplyDelete