Helmets Off: Carleton Ravens’ Wide Receiver Nate Behar
By: Elizabeth Karchut If you’re from Carleton University, Nate Behar is the football hero who helped the Carleton Ravens win an exhilarating, back-and-forth, down to the wire Panda Bowl verses their bitter rivals, the Ottawa Gee-Gees. If you’re from the University of Ottawa, Behar is the man whose improbable catch put a dagger through the hearts of the Gee-Gee faithful and left the football team, who played 59 minutes and 55 seconds of tremendous football, in a state of shock. And if you’re not familiar with anything said above, you probably didn’t watch the annual football game between Carleton and UofO on Sept. 20, 2014, the game affectionately known as the Panda Bowl. (The game is named after Pedro the Panda, who was the unofficial mascot of UofO and is now immortalized as a trophy awarded to the winner of the Panda Bowl.) But what was this improbable catch? First, let’s meet the football player behind it all.
Behar, a current wide receiver with the Carleton Ravens, has been playing football for the better part of 12 years and made his football debut at the age of seven with Westminster of the London Minor Football Association. In grade 11, he was moved from running back to receiver after being deemed too small to play his prior position.
It was Behar’s mom and dad who decided he should go into football and it’s his family who helps inspire him off the field. It’s also his self-motivation and his love of the sport that keeps him going. “I would like to play as long as possible,” Nate said of his football future. “I would like to play pro football as long as possible with whomever will have me of course.” Now back to “the catch.” In the dying seconds of the Panda Bowl, the Ravens were on the Gee-Gees’ 55-yard line with five seconds to go and were down by four points when quarterback Jesse Mills lobbed a Hail Mary pass into the air. A Gee-Gees defender jumped up, tipping the ball right into the hands of Behar, who said it “was just luck for sure.” With ball in hand, Behar ran it into the end zone and in seconds was at the bottom of a pile of Ravens players with Carleton fans storming the field in hysterics. It was a game Behar cited as “the singular, most fun game” he has played. It’s this type of “never give up” mentality Behar displayed that sparks images of the sporting greats, such as pro-golfer Tiger Woods and ex-NFL legend Jerry Rice, athletes Behar notes as another source of inspiration. “I think the thing to take away from them [the athletes] is the various things that drive them and how deeply the desire has to burn inside of you,” Behar said. “How your entire life has to be moulded to your sport, a sacrifice most aren't ready to give." But a sacrifice, it appears, Behar is more than willing to make. Nate Behar is part of the House Edge Sports Network, which is a network that aids in promoting and marketing amateur athletes in North America.
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Helmets Off: Wide Receiver Cory Piepers of the Myers Riders
By: Elizabeth Karchut Cory Piepers is taking a year off football to rest his body, but the young receiver shows no signs of giving up on sport. The Myers Riders wide receiver is looking to break into the ranks of the CIS upon his return. He says he wants to be able to play football while earning a degree in criminology. Piepers made his debut in 2010 with the Bell Warriors of the National Capital Amateur Football Association. He said that, “from seeing my brother play high school football, I wanted to play myself.” In 2012, Piepers was named to the Myers Riders Junior Varsity all-star team and has since played three seasons with the team. He has been to two provincial championships with the Riders JV team and won a city championship with the NCAFA Riders. “Yeah just the shock that I finally happened to have won, I was happy because I lost two years before that too,” Piepers said of winning the city championship. Piepers draws from his own self-motivation and cites that as his source of inspiration. He wound up as a wide receiver due to coach’s intuition, saying that the “coaches thought that would be a best fit for me, so I kept playing it.” During his run in the NCAFA, Piepers showed some of his athleticism. He saw some time on the field as a quarterback and slot back as well. He has been regarded as being fundamentally sound with a well-rounded, offensive football mind. Piepers says he is ready for the challenge of learning a new and complex playbook that is associated with moving up through the ranks of football. He is a fast learner who has been known to quickly learn playbooks. The wide receiver is also touted as a leader on his team. In his second season with the Riders JV team, Piepers was picked to be one of the team’s captains. Unafraid to ramp up his physical game, Piepers puts his 182lbs to good use. When needed, he often looks to make the big block when on the field. For this intelligent, crash-n-bang receiver, it won’t be long until he is back on the field. Cory Piepers is part of the House Edge Sports Network, which is a network that aids in promoting and marketing amateur athletes in North America. |
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