SUNDAY, MAY 2 SCHEDULE BY TIME SLOT
Noon — Division-III Select — No. 1 Calvary Baptist vs. No. 2 Parkview Baptist
Noon — Class C — No. 1 Northside Christian vs. No. 2 Claiborne Christian
3 p.m. — Class B — No. 2 Quitman vs. No. 4 Anacoco
For the second time in less than a month, Houston and former Tulane coach Willie Fritz dipped back into The Boot for a talented wide receiver emerging as one of Louisiana’s best.
Ruston standout Josiah Morgan announced his commitment Saturday to the Cougars out of a list of options that exploded this offseason with 16 new offers.
“It’s a blessing, a dream turned to reality,” he said. “It’s just something that growing up as a kid you always dream of, and it being here right now, being my reality, is just great. Coming into this past season, my junior season, I didn’t have offers, really no interest at all… I really feel like I had something to prove coming into this, my first year starting, and I really just turned up the switch. And so with the offers rolling in, it was definitely a great feeling to experience.
“Growing up, you always dream of that and you always see other people having it, so when you actually get to experience it for yourself, it’s just a surreal feeling. And the thing is with all the other offers coming in from everybody, when I went to Houston, it just really stood out. It was a place that really felt like home, a place that I could go there, and they could pour into me, and I could give back to the program.”
The 6-foot-1, 195-pound pass-catcher said he kept a patient mentality while awaiting his opportunities to “stay your own course and run your own race” and control what he could control.
“Sometimes it’s like running on the track, you know?” he said. ” You stay in your own lane, you focus on you. So that was just my mentality going into this season. I was focusing on me and how I can better myself on the football field and of course off the field as well, and it all just relayed, and it paid off.”
Both in production and colleges recognizing his potential.
Morgan earned all-district first-team honors in a loaded District 2-5A widely considered the state’s best league this fall and was a major contributor for a Bearcats team that made its fourth straight run to a title game in Caesars Superdome.
And the offers began to roll in on the heels of his breakout campaign, as well, including Arkansas, Southern, South Alabama, Old Dominion, Louisiana Tech, Houston, Louisiana (Lafayette), Arkansas State, McNeese State, Texas A&M, Tulane, Memphis, Texas Southern, Baylor, East Carolina and Oklahoma State.
He made a slew of trips to programs throughout the spring and was in the process of setting up official visits to return to some of his top options, but said he felt the Cougars continuing to separate themselves from the rest of the pack.
“When I went there, after the spring practice, they had set up somewhere where I talked to the school academics, I got a tour of the campus, I got a one-on-one meeting with (wide receivers) coach (Brian) Bell,” he said. “And they showed me that I was a top priority. They really made me feel that. And actually when I was on my visit, they made it known how much they really do want me, and they continued to show that. It just continued to grow, that relationship with coach Bell, and it’s just been great. Nothing but great things coming from Houston, and I’m blessed to be a part of the family now.”
Morgan joins Central wide receiver Marcus Watson Jr., who committed April 3 to Bell, Fritz and company as another fast-rising wide receiver prospect from one of Louisiana’s top Class 5A programs.
[ READ MORE: “UNBREAKABLE” MARCUS WATSON JR. MATURED THROUGH SPORTS, GALVANIZED THROUGH LOSS ]
He said he doesn’t know Watson yet, but looks forward to building that relationship and to “put on for The Boot and … go to Houston and do great things.”
Morgan has reported 4.5-second 40-yard speed, enough to be a threat to every level of the field, but particularly excels as a physical receiver with strong hands who can out-battle defenders for any ball thrown in his catch radius, including acrobatic leaping catches and tough plays through contact.
“I watch a lot of Jeremiah Smith, Ja’Marr Chase and Julio Jones,” he said. “The thing with those receivers is whenever the ball is in the air, it’s them and it’s nobody else, you know? So I kind of model my game after that. When a ball’s in the air or when I’m running a route, it’s just me. So I had a lot of confidence coming into this football season. I put in a lot of work, and I am now continuing to stack days, and that’s where it comes from is putting in that work. That’s where I get that confidence from that whenever the ball’s in the air or whenever I’ve got a DB lined up in front of me and they’re in man coverage, I just see an opportunity to go out and kill. So that’s just been my mentality, and those are some people that I look up to and I model my game after.”
With a college decision now in place, Morgan can continue to focus more fully on Ruston’s push to clear the final hurdle and claim its first state championship since 2023.

Ruston wide receiver runs into the end zone for a touchdown Friday, Oct., 24, 2025, against Alexandria. (Photo: Bret H. McCormick, One T Photography)
And he and a star-studded cast of offensive weapons — including tight end Ahmad Hudson, wide receiver KeShun Malcolm and running back Dalen Powell — at the disposal of rising senior quarterback Sam Hartwell, a second-year starter, figure to be among the highlights as the Bearcats aim to complete that mission.
“Going back-to-back in the state championship and losing, some people might get discouraged, but it’s honestly been fuel to us,” he said. “So coming into this year, we just it’s a continuously get better each day and work harder to get to the end and finish this time. So that’s been our mentality is just to finish. And we’re excited getting, you know, (Mississippi transfer) Shamar Evans coming in at linebacker and everybody going up in the rankings, it’s definitely a good look, and we’r super excited and we’re ready to show everybody that Ruston, we’re the best football.
“Having weapons like myself, Ahmad, KeShun and of course Dalen can come in at receiver as well, it’s definitely a great thing to be able to say that we’re not just a running team anymore, you know? That we have options to pass the ball as well. And this year I feel like it’s definitely going to be a great thing for everybody to watch the ball in the air. Sam does a great job of doing that, and it’s gonna be fun to watch. It’s gonna be amazing. And this year is gonna be a different year for Ruston as far as the passing game and the running game. We’re just evolving.”
Kevin Grisby, a former professional defensive back and longtime college coach, isn’t one for getting ahead of himself or celebrating an outcome before the process plays out.
But even he joked that he actually wished sometimes his even-keel son, Kameron Grisby, showed a little more excitement for his exploding (albeit early) recruiting process.
Kameron, the rising junior cornerback at University Lab, admitted Saturday was a special addition to his list of early offers, though, as he became one of Louisiana’s first 2028 prospects to receive an offer from LSU.
“It was a blessing,” Kameron said. “(U-High) coach (Andy) Martin called me and told me that he just got off the phone with (LSU cornerbacks) coach Corey Raymond and that I now have an offer from LSU … This is a definitely a big step right here to get an offer from LSU so soon, going into my junior year. So I know what I’ve got to work on now, and I know the position I’m in and I’ve just got to keep stacking days.”
He is just the sixth in-state 2028 prospect to report an offer from LSU and may be the first likely defensive back as Dunham’s Calvin Ursin Jr. and Westgate’s Cayden Lancelin, both of whom like Grisby have some experience on both sides of the ball, have been often projected as receivers.
Martin reached his budding young star just moments before the Cubs’ baseball team took the field prior to its 11-5 quarterfinal win against rival Parkview Baptist, a game in which Grisby scored as a pinch-runner as a highlight in a fifth inning that helped swing the game open.
Grisby said he hadn’t been told much yet about what Raymond and company saw that drove them to make the early move, though the eye test alone gives a pretty clear starting point.
At 6 feet and 2 1/2 inches and 183 pounds with a 78-inch wingspan, Grisby checks some immediate boxes Raymond and company look for in their secondary.
Grisby remains laser-focused on the work and the process, though.
“I feel a lot more comfortable at the corner position this year,” he told Louisiana vs. All Y’all on Wednesday on his development from sophomore season. “I’ve been doing a lot of work over the summer and at camps and stuff … I work out at 6 a.m. every morning before school, then we come after school and do afternoon workouts, then come to practice. And I’ve also been doing DB workouts to get my footwork down.”
He said the weight room has been a major focal point this offseason, and he has already visibly added notable muscle over the course of this school year, while also reporting 4.5-second 40-yard speed and positioning himself to be not only a top corner for the Cubs, but one of their top targets on offense.
Coincidentally, his quarterback will be 2028 classmate Knox Kiffin, who arrived this winter when father Lane Kiffin was hired by LSU, and another of U-High’s most promising wide receivers is Kevin Smith Jr., the son of the Tigers’ new running backs coach Kevin Smith.
“They’re great,” Grisby said. “Having to guard (Smith) every day is getting me better every day, so it’s a blessing. And then also me being on offense, us two on the same side and Knox throwing the ball is gonna be a great combo.”
[ READ MORE: HIGH-PROFILE TRANSFER QB KNOX KIFFIN FITTING IN SMOOTHLY WITH CUBS ]
LSU joins Mississippi State last summer and Syracuse, Florida State, West Virginia and UNLV already this year as the first six program to offer Grisby.
“It’s good to see that, but he has a long way to go,” Kevin Grisby said. “He’s still growing in himself as a man and also as an athlete, but it’s good to see those things happen for him at an early stage. I think it’s gonna be a big motivation step for him as far as him really, really putting the work in and getting himself better on and off the field and in the classroom.”
Martin was complimentary this week of Kameron Grisby already being among the hard-working leaders in the program alongside several seniors.
And while Kameron may have still have half of his high school career ahead of him, he knows he’ll be hearing plenty the next two years from former U-High stars such as linebacker Keylan Moses and defensive end Lamar Brown, who signed with LSU the past two recruiting cycles.
Brown, the state’s top-ranked 2026 prospect, had already shared the offer announcement Saturday via Twitter with the message, “You know this home!!! UHigh —> LSU!!” while Kameron was still on the baseball field.
“Seeing that from him brings a big step that I can lean on knowing I’ve got guys there that I already now,” Kameron said.
You know this home!!!
UHigh➡️LSU!! https://t.co/wM7RkHyCU1— Lamar Brown (@lamar1brown) May 2, 2026
LSU’s 2028 in-state offers
1. Calvin Ursin Jr., Dunham WR/DB (April 8, 2025)
2. Caiden Bellard, Lafayette Christian RB (Feb. 13, 2026)
3. Shamar Evans, Ruston LB (March 5, 2026)
4. Cayden Lancelin, Westgate WR (March 22, 2026)
5. Chance Archangel, Westgate EDGE (March 22, 2026)
6. Kameron Grisby, University Lab DB (May 2, 2026)
Lane Kiffin admitted concerns for LSU’s cornerback depth when second-year player Aidan Anding‘s strong spring ended three weeks ago with an Achilles injury.
The Tigers landed some potential immediate help late Saturday with the commitment announcement of Georgia Military College athlete Lavonte Williams.
“First off, I would just like to thank all of my family and friends and coaches who have all helped me to get to this point,” he posted via Twitter during a visit to Baton Rouge with a picture alongside Kiffin. “But for certain I would like to thank my coach Cedrick Malone for believing and pushing me every day on and off the fields. I would like to thank my dad for believing in me and helping me through this journey. I wouldn’t be the same person without him. I would like to give all glory to God. Without him I wouldn’t be here today. Thank you to Georgia Military College for the best year of education and football that I could’ve ever asked for.
“With that being said, I am 100% committed to LSU! Geaux Tigers.”
Kiffin and company were limited in viable routes to recruit as a result of the NCAA’s removal of the spring transfer-portal window, a dynamic the challenges of which the coach explained at length in April when discussing Anding’s injury.
But in the available junior-college avenue, the Tigers found the type of athlete in the 6-foot-3, 180-pound Williams that fits the protoype that secondary coach Corey Raymond likes at the position.
Prentice Mackyeon Jr. had long been on the grind and the recruiting radar, but the floodgates really opened this winter in terms of rapid-fire college offers.
The John Curtis standout, a hybrid safety/linebacker, admitted the onslaught was a blessing, but also overwhelming at times.
But Mackyeon said he and his family leaned on spreadsheets to help organize their questions and notes and make the process more manageable, while not dismissing the more intuitive component.
And the 6-1, 200-pound athlete has used that combination to zero in on a schedule of official visits to five programs that have checked boxes across the board.
“Especially after my junior year, it kind of went absolutely crazy,” he said. “It spiraled really, really fast, and I was kind of new to getting offers and looking into schools. It was really crazy at the time, but now we’ve kind of settled in. It’s slowed down a tad. A few schools are still coming and reaching out and having interest. But it’s been great. We’ve looked into each school — me and my pops and my family — and seeing which ones that’ll fit me, which ones the coaches will treat me like I’m one of their sons or just a school that I can fit and feel like I’m at home. But the recruiting process has been an experience for sure.
“We had a spreadsheet, and we kind of just wrote some questions down and asked each school what are they offering and things like that and specific details. We broke it down, but most of it was on the coaches as well — the love they showed me, but also me looking into it with my dad and my family that all came to the visit. I don’t want to be the only one that fits in. If my family doesn’t like it, then I can’t like it, because they want to be with me and they want to support me, so I need them there. But we kinda broke it down to the itty gritty, spread each school apart and got down to what we needed to to decide.”

John Curtis SS/LB Prentice Mackyeon Jr. is scheduled to visit Louisiana (Lafayette) again in June. (Photo: Courtesy of Prentice Mackyeon Jr.)
“I would say with the Cajuns, they showed great loyalty. Especially (assistant offensive line) coach P.J. Burkhalter, he’s been recruiting me since I was a sophomore. And I played a little bit as a sophomore, but he was like the first person to reach out and send me a camp schedule, and I ended up going to the camp and just building that relationship going and going and going. So I would say their loyalty is what got me, especially with coach P.J. And when I actually got there and spoke with coach Mike Des(ormeaux), it was awesome. It was awesome. The whole faculty is beautiful. The facilities are great. The field is great. The players are awesome. It’s got great energy. But if I had to give ’em one word, I would say that the loyalty that they showed, especially since my sophomore year, is awesome.”
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John Curtis SS/LB Prentice Mackyeon Jr. is scheduled to visit Tulane again in June. (Photo: Courtesy of Prentice Mackyeon Jr.)
“I was getting recruited by (assistant general manager) coach Kyle (Schexnayder), who actually went to Curtis. It’s just a small world. He went to Curtis, and I was playing quarterback at the time, and he was coaching me there (in seventh grade) and we always had that relationship. But when he actually came back, he said, ‘P.J., we like how you’re working and stuff like that.’ And then when they all came to the office, coach (Will) Hall, whose son actually plays on the John Curtis football team and I’m real close with, so it’s just like a real small world with Tulane, and it was just a lot of love. But you know Tulane. The facilities are awesome. Tulane’s newly renovated. But also I’ve got to talk about (defensive coordinator) coach (Tayler) Polk. His energy is amazing, I’ll say that. I’m actually getting recruited there as a linebacker, so that was a little bit of a change, but I’ve been hearing that a lot. But coach Polk has great energy. The whole faculty has great energy. I went into the special teams meeting room, and everybody’s screaming and yelling. It was crazy. And coach Hall’s running around the whole practice. When I was at practice, I was having a lot of fun, I’m not gonna lie. But Tulane is a great place. It feels like it’s a small. It’s right around the corner from the house. So it’s great.”
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John Curtis SS/LB Prentice Mackyeon Jr. is scheduled to visit Oregon State again in June. (Photo: Courtesy of Prentice Mackyeon Jr.)
“Beaver Nation, they’re one of a kind. Ever since I got that offer, they were commenting — I mean, the whole fan base. That was probably the first one that truly blew up, I would say. Their fan base is one of a kind. And then (New Orleans native and special teams coordinator ) coach Ricky (Brumfield) and coach Shep (JaMarcus Shepherd), they bring the energy, and he is all smiles all the time. He gets serious, but he knows how to flip that switch. He’ll be smiling and laughing. But it’s a great place, great energy. The practice was unbelievable. It was a great visit, I would say. The players were very interactive. I could ask questions, and they would answer. They’ll be cool about it. It was a great visit. And coach Shep is one of a kind. He came from Bama with Kalen DeBoer, so he knows what he’s talking about. He knows the game of football, and he’ll get on you for sure, but then he’ll pat you and say, ‘You’re good. You know.’ And also another thing is academics. Academics, they don’t mess around with that. Sitting in a meeting, we had almost an hour or hour and a half meeting with the education staff, and they were not playing at all. That was one thing he did get serious about is the education. But that, that fan base, that team, the loyalty they bring, the school, it was a great visit for sure.”
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John Curtis SS/LB Prentice Mackyeon Jr. is scheduled to visit Memphis again in September. (Photo: Courtesy of Prentice Mackyeon Jr.)
“Memphis, they’re another one that their fan base is great as well. But they say Memphis is almost like another New Orleans, and when I got there it kinda felt that way. It was a very quick, interactive visit just talking to all the coaches. Coach Corey (Phillips), the GM, he was awesome. He was pulling me and making sure I was talking to all the players, all the coaches. And speaking of coaches, I would say coach (Charles) Huff is one of the smartest coaches I know. I learned a few things going over there and just listening to him talk to the players. It was almost a little bit inspiring. I was like, ‘Dang, I could go play for this coach right now. I could go put a helmet on and run through a wall for him.’ That’s the vibes he gave, and it was great talking to him. But Memphis all in all, it was awesome. We went to the field, the stadium. It was a nice stadium. I’d never seen a stadium do what they did where it was kind of like a bowl almost, and that was pretty awesome as well. Memphis was definitely great. And I can’t forget about coach (Ronald Saulsberry Jr.), he was the nickels coach, and awesome as well. And he’s kinda young, so he’s been through what other players have been through, so it’s easy to relate and talk to him as well. So Memphis, it was awesome. It was awesome.
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John Curtis SS/LB Prentice Mackyeon Jr. is scheduled to visit Arkansas State again in September. (Photo: Courtesy of Prentice Mackyeon Jr.)
“The Red Wolves, coach Kody (Schexnayder) was over there, like you said. He’s great. Him and Kyle are great. He kinda brought me into it all, and then I talked to coach Kwame (Agyeman), the safeties coach, and coach (Jalen Ortiz), the cornerbacks coach, they’ve been together for 10 or 15 years coaching, so I know that their chemistry is great, so I know that it can help me with the people that I might be around if I end up going there. So I felt like that was a big part of going and seeing what was going on and that it could be a changing factor if I wanted to go to the school like that. But you know they’ve coach Butch Jones there, probably one of the greatest coaches ever. He coached with (Nick) Saban. He’s probably one of the most talented coaches ever. He’s coached great people, like some of the ones I can remember are Alvin Kamara and Antonio Brown as well. So just seeing his track record, you know, ‘OK, I have a chance to go to the NFL.’ Like, I have to put in the work, but he knows what he’s talking about. And that’s for sure. And it’s all over his room. I went to his office, and he’s got the rings and pictures everywhere. It was great. We went out to the field. The field was absolutely stunning. It had a waterfall, which I had never seen in no stadium ever. I thought that was a baseball thing. But, yeah, Arkansas State was beautiful — the red and black, the Wolves. The facilities were great there. That was one thing I was not expecting was the facilities. But Arkansas State, it’s a nice, beautiful place I could definitely see myself. It was very welcoming.”
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Marcus Watson Jr. has participated in sports essentially since he was old enough to run, though maybe not always so resolutely — in football in particular — early on.
Central’s rising senior wide receiver, who recently committed to Houston, actually spent more than five years away from the game after a miserably cold youth-ball contest and was pulled again in a teaching moment in junior high.
But as he continued to develop physical traits such as his explosive burst that now make him a coveted Division-I prospect, his maturation as a young man taught by both sports and his support system has been an even more impressive and critical area of his growth.
And when his biggest adversity struck June 26, 2024, suddenly losing his father and namesake, “M.J.” managed to process his grief in a way that only drove him harder than ever to reach his goals they had discussed.
“When I found out the news when my mom told me, I was hurt,” he says. “He was my righthand man. I was talking to him about everything, every situation I had, when schools had interest in me or anything sports-wise, being a man-wise, thinking-wise, lessons learned, everything. Then after that, he was just sending me text messages of how he loved me and how he was proud of me and everything else.
“So I still, even when I’m down or I feel less motivated, I go look at the messages and what he said about me, how I’m gonna be on ESPN or he’s proud of me and everything else. So, I use the messages that he told me for motivations, which make me unbreakable. I feel like I’m unbreakable every time I read that or every time I’m going through that.”
Lincoln Holland’s smiles are almost audible through the phone as she recounts milestones of her oldest son’s childhood — not only the early flashes of his special athletic potential, but the challenges from which he learned and ultimately bettered himself.
“One day had to be one of the coldest days we had, and M.J. had to be 8 years old,” she remembers of a couple years into his youth playing days. “It was freezing cold, and they won their little state tournament that day, and he was literally like, ‘I don’t want to play football no more. I want to play baseball and basketball only.’ So he played baseball and basketball up to his eighth-grade year.”
Even then, his return to the field was brief as Lincoln and her husband, Isa Holland, recognized a lesson their son needed to learn sooner than later.
“The second week of practice, he basically had a bad attitude, and we pulled him,” she said. “You can not have bad sportsmanship and play ball. And I think that was probably the best thing we ever did, because from that moment on, it taught him that just because stuff isn’t going your way, you can’t act a certain way. So when ninth-grade football came up, and he said, ‘Hey, I’m going back to play football.’ And we said, ‘OK, well you remember what happened eighth-grade year, so…’ And after that we didn’t have any more issues with that.”

Central wide receiver Marcus Watson Jr. poses with mother Lincoln Holland after a game. (Photo: Courtesy of Marcus Watson Jr.)
Lincoln and Isa, who coached Marcus in basketball and baseball from elementary school into high school, saw his athleticism standing out among his peers at times in those sports well before they knew if he’d return to football.
Isa maintains Marcus is actually an even better baseball player than football and told Isa as early as seventh grade that he had the potential in one sport or another that, “man, if you take this serious, you can go somewhere with it.”
Even after several years of layoff, Marcus immediately looked the part upon his return to football in ninth grade.
Central wide receivers coach Gregg Morris remembers the first time he saw Marcus running one-on-one drills, raw as could be, but blowing by one defender after another or another instance in summer-league basketball in which the springy young athlete hit his head on the backboard.
“As far as football, I would say watching him develop in his ninth grade year, playing ninth-grade ball and seeing him be so dominant, it was like, ‘Oh, he’s got it. He’s got what it takes to where if he takes it seriously he could go somewhere,'” Isa says. “Ninth grade, he returned punts and kickoffs. And starting out, his first couple of returns were touchdowns against big schools. Not even like, ‘Oh, these are small programs.’ These are Catholic, Zachary, and there was another one. And I was like, ‘Whoa, hold on, there’s something there football-wise. And watching him, you don’t see ninth-graders be able to track the ball on deep passes, and seeing him be able to do that was like, ‘OK, this is it. Stick to football.'”

Central wide receiver Marcus Watson Jr. poses with stepfather Isa Holland after a game. (Photo: Courtesy of Marcus Watson Jr.)
The more his parents and coaches recognized that ability, the more confidence Marcus gained in himself.
And as he saw older players he knew in the area earning college opportunities, he lasered in on the same goal for himself.
“I was making plays, and my coaches were telling me I could be something, having meetings with the coaches and I was just getting noticed from a lot of people, and they kept telling me, ‘Keep going, keep going,’ so I’m like, ‘I’m actually doing something great,'” he says. “People being motivated around me made me into the person I am today, which made me motivate myself into being the best version of me.
“The younger me, I was thinking, ‘Just play football.’ It wasn’t a outcome. Just go have fun… Then I started getting a little older in high school, and it was like, ‘I’m actually doing something. I actually can do this.’ And I started seeing people getting scholarships from here and there, and I was like, ‘I want one. So I’m trying my hardest to get one.'”
While the athletic profile was coming into focus as quickly as he put on the Wildcats’ uniform, other elements of the program’s culture emphasizing the importance of open and honest communication, including from an emotional standpoint, took more time.
“I think one of the biggest areas of growth he’s had is how he handles adversity,” Morris says. “When we first got him, it was more of ‘I want to coach him hard, but I need to find his breakpoint. I need to find out what makes him tick. I need to find out what motivates him.’ And he was so closed off … We teach being truthful, but doing it in a loving way, and part of that is being vulnerable, part of that is opening up and part of that is admitting, ‘Hey, I need help’ with whatever’s going on. And he’s opened up to that.”
July 26, 2024, presented about as much of a shock to the system as imaginable when Marcus Watson Sr. died during an emergency surgery in Texas to remove a grapefruit-sized tumor in the back of his brain doctors had finally discovered after years of not being able to identify the cause of his nagging, painful headaches.
“The boys didn’t have much time to know what was going on,” Lincoln explains. “He called them, and realistically, he was saying his goodbyes. His best friend who was there told me he told him he wasn’t gonna make it. He told (M.J. and his little brother) he had to have surgery, but they didn’t know the risk that he wouldn’t make it. He told them he loved them and to do what you know to do, and I think that was kind of his way of smoothing it over.”
The loss of a parent could have derailed many student-athletes or forced them to retreat further inside their own walls.
But, with the help of the support system around him and the earlier lessons learned, Marcus gradually found a way to channel his emotions into deepening his connections and strengthening his resolve to carry his and his father’s name on to the goal of playing at the next level.

A young Marcus Watson Jr., the Central wide receiver and Houston commit, and father Marcus Watson Sr. (Photo: Courtesy of Marcus Watson Jr.)
“I remember that day and getting a text from him telling me what happened and everything, and I remember asking him, ‘Are you OK? What can I do?’ and he says he’s OK,” Morris says. “And like I said earlier with how closed off he was, he struggled with that for a little bit and struggles with that every so often still, I would say. Like there was a game that we had, and we’re in our pregame meeting room, and I see he’s not being who he normally is. He’s kind of back to the old, ‘I’m gonna keep things bottled up,’ and, I mean, he’s doing what our society teaches young men to do: Bottle things up, and don’t show emotions. And I sent him a text because I didn’t want to bring attention to it, and I was like, ‘Hey, bro, are you OK?’ And he tells me that he’s thinking about his pops.
“But he uses those texts and those memories, and he’s got a lot of people in his corner between his mom, his step-dad and everybody like that, both little brothers and all of us coaches. He has everybody in his corner. And when old Marcus would’ve said, ‘I’m good,’ and he’s not gonna talk about it, he was able to open up. And that shows the growth of the young man that he’s becoming, being able to open up and just simply say, ‘No, I’m not OK, I’m struggling,’ and us be able to be there to help him out.”
Marcus has paired that great trust and those bonds both on the field and behind the scenes with an increasingly relentless work ethic always seeking extra work whether at school, with independent trainers or in camp settings.
And he has continued to become not only a bigger playmaker for the Wildcats the past two years, but a bigger leader.
College opportunities began to follow, too, with South Alabama offering first in November and then Cincinnati, Houston, Tulane and North Texas all following in rapid succession in March.
“That (loss) was definitely a big moment for him,” Lincoln says. “But I think that that pushed him even more so to do better than what he was originally doing and I think it just took him to a whole different level. He still even now has days, like everybody, and you’ll see he’ll post his dad on social media and things like that. But for the most part I think it’s one of those things that he uses it as motivation of, ‘Hey, I’m doing this for my dad.'”

Central wide receiver Marcus Watson Jr. scores a touchdown Sept. 12, 2026, at Denham Springs. (Photo: Courtesy of Marcus Watson Jr.)
The height of the recruiting process this winter and spring has epitomized to Isa and Lincoln the growth that Marcus has continued to exhibit.
They researched each school that communicated or hosted him and took trips with him throughout the past two years, but Marcus has taken charge more than ever before in his relationships with the coaches and his weighing of options toward an ultimate decision.
Lincoln admits, “Momma has definitely babied him,” as she notes the bittersweet emotions of seeing her baby boy becoming independent and preparing to branch out.
“I’m the big push for ‘leave him alone, let him figure it out,’ and momma is the push for ‘no, we’ve still gotta handle it right now,’ but then here lately, it’s just been like, ‘Nope,'” Isa says. “I can definitely say just in the past six months the level of maturity and the level of responsibility that he’s displayed and he’s taken has been amazing. It’s been crazy just to see him grow in that aspect. I’ve been very hard on him and very critical of him, and just to see him step up to the plate and be able to grow has just been amazing. It’s been a shock actually.”
Marcus quickly felt a connection with the Houston staff and a fit in their program from the offer March 12 to a visit March 28 and a commitment announcement just a week later April 3.
“The staff was treating me like I was at home already,” he says. “When I visited and they were showing me everything, I liked everything, the tour and everything I went to when I got there. The wide receiver coach, coach (Brian) Bell, he showed me a lot of love too. And when I talked to coach (Willie) Fritz, he was showing me love as well. The staff made me feel at home, basically, and I really loved the way they treated me.”
He planned to wait until June 26 to announce a college decision in honor of Marcus Sr.
“But I just felt something, like, ‘This is the moment,'” he says. “After I was reading the message of him saying how he was proud of me, I said, ‘I think the moment’s right now.’ I knew in that moment he was proud of me, and in that moment it felt like he just told me, ‘Just do it.’ So I just did it. And it made me excited, and I know he’s excited for me and the opportunity and being thankful about me being the person I am right now.”

Central wide receiver Marcus Watson Jr. announced his commitment Friday, April 3, 2026, to Houston. (Photo: Houston commitment graphic)
Marcus says hearing his — and thus also his father’s — name when he makes plays in college stadiums will “feel great. Like every time I score or make a play, it’s gonna give me a flashback kinda.”
He says he already thanks his dad after plays he makes for the Wildcats and is eager to carry that forward and realize their dream of him succeeding at the next level.
But Marcus Sr. is also far from the only person his son is grateful to represent and make proud.
“One thing I will say that I’ve learned about Marcus these last two years is that he loves kids,” Lincoln says, as she and Isa share stories about Marcus providing rides for fellow students, umpiring little-league games and working the Central Inclusive League for children with physical or developmental disabilities a safe experience to play baseball.
“He’s done it the last three years, and he loves it,” Isa explains further on the baseball league. “And every (Central High) team has a day they go out there, but last year he did the whole week, and this year he did the same thing… If I had to rely on somebody to watch a kid, it would definitely be him. I would leave anybody’s child with him and know they’re gonna be OK. He loves kids, is very family-oriented and is the big brother to anyone he’s around. He’s the neighborhood’s big brother for all the little kids around.”
Morris says “it speaks volumes to who he has become” the role model Marcus now is to the community’s youth, including his own son whose coach-pitch games Marcus has umpired.
Marcus says he’s just happy to pay forward the support he’s felt through the years, including helping him navigate loss, find his path and position himself to realize his and his family’s dream of taking athletics to a college education.
“I try to give the younger people or even people my age the motivation that my people gave to me,” he says. “So I try to make sure that everyone around me is OK and going well… The younger group, it’s crazy how younger kids come up to me and ask me about different things, and I just enjoy helping kids and helping other people. I know less people have got the opportunity I’m in today, and I’ve been blessed for this opportunity actually, so I try to help the community the best way I can with helping with the baseball league or picking people up and dropping people off. Making other people’s life easier just makes me feel like a better person.”