SPORTS Utile Bi Mart It he high school football regular season is over and the playoffs, which have been ex- panded this year, are under way. Jewish players made, or challenge bigger players and remain standing when the dust clears. Yellowjacket coach Joe D'Angelo called Wolkind "pound-for-pound, one of our toughest kids." Indeed, while Wolkind Country Day's Wolkind is an impact player among this year's area Jewish gridiron standouts. are still making, an impact this season. However, probably none made a bigger impact than a relatively small player, Eddie Wolkind of Detroit Country Day. The Senior strong safety and slotback stands only 5-foot-7 and weighs about 155 pounds. But, like Yoda from the Star Wars movies, he has a powerful ally — no, not "The Force," but an inner drive and intensity which allow him to scored three touchdowns as of mid-October, his most memorable plays were key hits on defense. D'Angelo recalls a game-saving play Wolkind made in Country Day's 14-13 victory over Muskegon Catholic Central, which entered the Oct. 20 contest as the state's top- ranked Class C team. "The key play in the ballgame," said the coach, came with Country Day trail- ing, 13-6, in the third quarter and Muskegon going in for another score "which would've put them probably so far ahead we couldn't catch them. "The quarterback was on the one-yard line and he was running the ball. He tried to turn up inside and Eddie came in and stripped the ball out of his arm." Country Day recovered the fumble in the end zone, then marched 80 yards for a touchdown. Wolkind, however, recalls a different play. "They had a big, All-American tight end Wolkind decked the All- American tight end. MIKE ROSENBAUM Special to The Jewish. News 62 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1990 and defensive tackle," said Wolkind, "about 6-5, 250 pounds, and sometimes they split him out as a wide-out. "I was back at safety and they ran sort of a slant pat- tern and he came right in. And as the ball came, I came right in and popped him and knocked him down." The receiver dropped the ball. "To me that was a real big highlight, just knocking down a big guy like that — a big All-American. It just energiz- ed me," said Wolkind. "I like scoring touchdowns, too. But I think, sometimes, a hit like that can excite the whole team and turn the momentum around." Wolkind does not rely ex- clusively on brute force. "He's smart out there," said D'Angelo. "He understands the defense and he's like a defensive quarterback out there, calling the secondary coverages." Wolkind, voted a co-captain by his teammates, moved up to varsity at the end of his sophomore season and has been a varsity starter for two years. He plays on most special teams, so he is on the field for almost the entire 48 minutes. Country Day finished the regular season 9-0 and gain- ed the Class CC playoffs. While Detroit DePorres was the pre-playoff CC favorite, Wolkind felt that Country Day could win it all. "We have the talent to do it," he said. "We just have to play our best. "We've shown that we can win the big games. It seems like we come up big in the pressure situations." Another smallish Jewish player who has "come up big" for Country Day this year is junior kicker Jeremy Michaelson. He kicks off and does all the place-kicking. Said Coach D'Angelo, "He's been just a real joy to have this year. It's an important position to have someone who can be very consistent." Michaelson, a 140-pounder, was also pressed into duty as the long-snapper on punts,