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After summer of growth, QB Jaylen Mason determined to elevate Northwest football

After earning a pair of Big 12 offers this summer, junior Jaylen Mason returns for his second year as starting quarterback for the Northwest football team.

An up-tempo rushing attack has always been the calling card for Steve Martin’s Northwest football teams, but the Grizzlies have been at their best when they’ve had a balanced offense.

After a three-year span where Northwest only lost three total times (each year in a state championship game), the program has since lost three games in each of the last three seasons with no playoff runs deeper than the quarterfinals.

It’s not a coincidence that a Northwest quarterback hasn’t thrown for more than 1,700 yards since the team was playing for a title, as the dip in passing production has limited the offense’s potency come November.

That trend is poised to end this season, which kicks off Friday with Northwest playing at Bishop Carroll, as junior Jaylen Mason returns for his second season as signal caller. The 6-foot-2, 205-pound quarterback earned offers from Iowa State and Kansas this summer and Martin believes his ceiling is higher than any other quarterback he has coached.

“Jaylen put in a lot of time in the weight room and he was a pivotal leader for us with what we tried to accomplish this offseason with making sure we had the right people in the boat,” Martin said. “The kids in our program thrive off of Jay because they know he is going to do whatever is best for the team and lead in a positive manner.”

Mason was promoted to starting quarterback as a sophomore and had to work through the growing pains of shouldering so much responsibility at such a young age. He threw for 1,205 yards and 16 touchdowns, but only completed six passes in Northwest’s two postseason games and was picked off three times.

The Grizzlies were eliminated in the second round of the playoffs, their earliest postseason exit since 2016.

“It was definitely tough, but I’m also thankful for it at the same time,” Mason said. “I feel like it made me grow a lot more as a football player and made me mature faster.”

The growth started with his leadership.

“First off, I figured out you’ve got to lead by example,” Mason said. “And then you have to be a great locker room guy. You have to keep everybody’s heads up and keep the team positive and be vocal and lead guys in the right direction.”

Mason has become such a trusted leader within the program that Martin even invited him to sit in on Northwest’s offensive planning meeting for Friday’s season-opening game.

With the intangibles starting to come together, Martin believes the physical side of the game will come naturally for Mason. After all, there’s a reason why he convinced two Big 12 teams to offer the class of 2026 prospect after attending their summer camp.

“There’s not a lot of high school kids who are 16 years old who can throw a 20-yard comeback from the opposite hash to the opposite sideline on a rope,” Martin said. “People have only got to see a glimpse of what Jaylen can really do.”

That should change this fall, as Martin believes Mason is set up to succeed in Northwest’s offense. Maize transfer Augie Fast has brought speed to the backfield to pair with returner Franklin Ekue, while Chase Carter, Ryder Campbell, another Maize transfer, and Griffin Baker are a trio of 6-3 receivers on the perimeter. The offensive line is spearheaded by three underclassmen receiving Division I interest in sophomore Maddox McGinnis, junior Deongelo Williams and Dustin Cochran.

The defense, now run by former Andover head coach Cade Armstrong, returns a talented trio of linebackers in senior Quavon Harris, junior Johnmichael Fountain (six Division I offers) and junior Ja’Mari Bland. The defensive line also figures to be a team strength with seniors Peyton Dean and Brady Johnson, as well as junior Emorjai Buncome back in the fold.

On paper, Northwest should be an improved team, and Mason should give the Grizzlies their most potent passing attack in years. Those notions will be put to the test early and often, as Northwest’s September opponents include Bishop Carroll, Wichita East, Junction City and Kapaun Mt. Carmel.

But Mason isn’t interested in speculating what might happen this season. He’s focused more on proving it every Friday night and restoring the Northwest program to a championship contender once again.

“I’m just here to win as many games as we can,” Mason said. “If we need to throw it, run it, do the speed option, I’ll do whatever it takes. I just want to win.”

Friday’s Kansas high school football schedule

City League games

Andover at Kapaun Mt. Carmel (at Stryker Sports Complex)

Liberal at Wichita North (at Wichita Northwest)

Topeka at Wichita West (at Friends)

Wichita East at Wichita Heights

Wichita Northwest at Bishop Carroll

Wichita Southeast at Wichita South

AV-CTL games

Andover Central at Hutchinson

Chanute at Augusta

Coffeyville at Circle

Derby at Hays

El Dorado at Andale

Great Bend at McPherson

Junction City at Campus

Maize at Goddard

Mulvane at Buhler

Newton at Maize South

Rose Hill at Clearwater

Valley Center at Goddard Eisenhower (Thursday)

Wellington at Wichita Collegiate

Winfield at Arkansas City

Other Wichita-area games

Douglass at Remington

Eureka at Erie

Haven at Hillsboro

Hesston at Halstead

Hoisington at Pratt

Holcomb at Cheney

Hutchinson Trinity at Inman

Kingman at Chaparral

Larned at Smoky Valley

Lyons at Beloit

Marion at Herington

Medicine Lodge at Belle Plaine

Nickerson at Conway Springs

South Sumner County at Pleasanton

Sterling at Sedgwick

Uniontown at Bluestem

Wichita Trinity Academy at Garden Plain

8-man games

Argonia-Attica at West Elk

Burden-Central at Flinthills

Canton-Galva at Centre

Cedar Vale-Dexter at Udall

Goessel at Wakefield

Little River at Chase County

Norwich at Pratt Skyline

Oxford at Sedan

Pretty Prairie at Lyndon

Reno County Homeschool at Stafford (Thursday)

Sunrise Christian at Hutchinson Central Christian

Wichita Life at Wichita Independent

6-man games

Cunningham at South Barber

Tescott at Peabody-Burns