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Following his dream

Paul Honda
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PAUL HONDA / PHONDA @STARADVERTISER.COM
Jaymason Lee prayed for weeks before making his decision to attend Castle.

In the biggest game of his life, Jaymason Lee led the huddle as the Castle Knights faced a monumental task against Farrington.

Any third-down play against one of the state’s top defensive units is difficult, but third and 20?

Come on. No way.

Way. The visiting Governors had everybody on the trips side blanketed. On the other side of the field, Josh Kong, Lee’s former Kahaluu Broncos (Pop Warner) teammate, had an opportunity.

"Josh was the backside receiver. He ran his route hard and I went through my progression. He was going full speed. I felt the defensive end next to me," Lee recalled. "I didn’t care if I got hit."

Fortunately, a running back picked up the pass rusher in the nick of time.

"Once Josh caught it, he got nailed, but he has great hands and good concentration," Lee added.

For Lee, it was the most memorable play in a 29-28 comeback win over then-No. 2 Farrington on Sept. 3. It was also the best example of the senior’s voyage through the world of football; when the going gets tough, he makes the play and does it with full conviction.

He grew up playing football for the mighty Kaneohe Knights before switching to the aforementioned Kahaluu Broncos as a ninth-grader. Though the Knights ran a wide-open offense, he went to Kahaluu, a team that had won a state title and earned a trip to Florida. It was there where he first played with Kong.

Beyond switching to a more conservative offense, Lee also passed up a chance to play intermediate or JV football at his school, Kamehameha.

As a sophomore, he rotated at quarterback with Christian Akana, now the varsity team’s starter, on the JV squad. But it didn’t take long for Lee to visualize the future — and it was on the other side of the mountain.

"Since I was a little kid, we went to Castle games. I used to dream of wearing the gold helmets," he said. "I tried my hardest (at Kamehameha). It was a hard decision to make. I was getting a pretty good education."

That spring of 2008 was a turning point.

"I prayed over it for two weeks straight. I waited for a sign or a signal. My parents said it’s up to me. I’ll be the one to live with my decision. A lot of my friends from Kamehameha told me not to go, but I had to be selfish about my future. Everybody should know it was my decision."

His best buddy, Kamehameha student Justice Kim-Hew Len, knew the burden was great for Lee.

"He asked me to pray for him. As a friend, I wanted to graduate with him. To see my best friend leave was hard, but I’m happy for him," Kim-Hew Len said.

For Lee, who has a 3.0 grade-point average, Castle felt like his destiny.

"It was very welcoming. Shaydon (Kehano) was the first one to come up to me. Coach (Nelson) Maeda said he’d give me a fair shot," Lee said. "No, I don’t regret anything. I’m glad I transferred to Castle."

In his first season, Lee passed for 2,293 yards and 29 touchdowns. He had only 11 picks in 313 attempts.

"He’s a student of the game, very competitive and athletic," Maeda said. "He won the starting job and slowly learned our system. We made a concerted effort with him, but we have a small playbook. It’s about adjustments and reads."

After being at nearly every offseason workout, Lee was voted co-captain by his teammates. In four games, he’s passed for 946 yards, including 372 yards and three touchdown strikes in the win over Farrington.

In the offseason, he spent Sundays training with quarterback guru Vinnie Passas. Now, Lee spends part of his Sundays, from noon to 3 p.m., at Kaneohe library. In Lee’s vocabulary, homework is simply "work." It’s a discipline that comes from a childhood of playing sports, but it’s also in the lifeblood of Maeda’s program.

"Coach is always there to get work done. He’s always telling everybody about the (team) T-shirts we’re assigned to wear every day," Lee said. "If one person’s not wearing it, we have to do bear crawls. That’s what’s special about our team. We’re disciplined as a team, not as individuals."

Maeda sees that mastery in his quarterback.

"It’s about believing what you see and not trying to force things. Just take what they give you," he said. "We’ve had some very good quarterbacks, but Jaymason has the potential to be the best one of all if he can free himself of distractions and stay focused."

 

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