Edison football standout Julius Gillick runs for his late friend
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Julius Gillick was forced to sit out last week as Edison claimed a CIF Southern Section football championship, all over some dumb stuff, leaving it in teammatesā hands whether heād again pull on the green jersey.
They got him through, rolling to a 35-21 victory over Simi Valley in the Division 3 final. The senior running back, a generational talent for the Chargers (10-4), will be back on the field this weekend as the CIF Southern California Regional playoffs kick off. Another triumph, heāll be back again a week later in the state championship game.
This means everything to Gillick, but the rewards that winning brings are just a piece of that. Most important is the opportunity, at least one more time, to honor āone of the best dudes youād ever meet.ā
Gillick has barreled through or sprinted past foes for 2,112 yards ā just 156 off Kerwin Bellās 45-year-old single-season school record ā and 32 touchdowns this year wearing a No. 9 jersey with Amarr Murphy-Paineās name across the back, where Gillickās would go. āForeverā and āAmarrā are etched on the black strips under his eyes, and every play begins with a nod to the tattoo on his left arm.
It reminds him of home and how things used to be.
āHe was real special energy, him and [his father, Arron] ā I call him uncle ā they just bring this joy to every situation,ā said Gillick, who met Murphy-Paine when they were 12, bonded over music a couple of years later, and were more or less inseparable until Gillickās family, escaping rising violence in inner-city Seattle, moved last year to Huntington Beach. āHe was someone that was always there, and thereās not a lot of people like that. Unconditionally, just a really, really good dude.ā
The aspiring rapper and junior football player at Garfield High School was shot to death last June while trying to break up a fight in the campus parking lot. Gillick received the news from friends, while at school, almost in real time. It was, he said, āthe worst pain I ever felt in my life.ā
Gillick switched from No. 18, in which he rushed for 1,596 yards and 15 touchdowns as a junior, to Murphy-Paineās No. 9 and entered this season on a mission.
āAmarr always had this this phrase: āThey canāt mess with us. Theyāll never be able to be us,ā ā Gillick said. āIt wasnāt egotistical. It wasnāt cocky. It wasnāt anything other than just confidence, where every situation he would be in, he would know he was the best at it. And that confidence is something that I feel I lacked until he passed away. And then when he did, he kind of bestowed that onto me, somehow.
āI donāt think Iām a cocky person. Iām aware that there are people that can do things that I canāt. Iām grateful for what I have, but I feel that nobody can can mess with me. Iāve been given a confidence that I never had, that I always recognized in him. So every single time I run the ball, itās with him in my mind.ā
The charismatic Gillick, whom star linebacker Matt Lopez calls āliterally the heart of our team,ā has run it down opponentsā throats all season, topping 200 yards five times and 300 once, the attacking yin to Edisonās lockdown defenseās yang. He is the schoolās career rushing leader.
āHeās special,ā head coach Jeff Grady said. āHeās got a great combination of skills āgood feet, heās big, heās physical, heās got good burst, heās downhill ā and he uses them all.ā
Gillick, who this week decommitted from Montana, describes himself, as a back, as āsomeone that gets stuff done.ā
āIām not the fastest. Iām not the strongest. Iām not the toughest,ā he said. āIām really not anything. I just feel capable. And that I want it more than most people. ... I think unique is the best word, because you can go a lot of places and you can find someone maybe thatās better, but you canāt find anybody like me.ā
His teammates discovered that once he opened up to them.
āI got here and I didnāt really feel like talking or making any friends,ā he said. āI didnāt really want to leave Seattle. I was kind of forced out of my city. I was not safe ā if I had stayed, I probably wouldnāt be here telling this story ā and I was like, āIām here for football. Iām going to do my thing. Iām going to be a good teammate and Iām going to get out of here,ā you know? And I ended up meeting some some great people and found some friends that Iām sure Iāll keep the rest of my life.ā
Lopez said that Gillick is a character, one of of the funniest guys on the team.
āHe doesnāt really have a filter, and thatās kind of what makes him unique,ā Lopez said.
Said receiver and defensive back Jacob Martin: āHe lightens up the room every time he walks in, and he brings the team up with him. Anytime were at practice and we need someone to lean on, weāre going to go to Julius for that.ā
Gillick was suspended from the Division 3 final after his ejection from the semifinal win over Vista Murrieta for two unsportsmanlike-conduct penalties.
āIt hurt really bad, to be honest with you,ā said Gillick, who was flagged for spinning the ball in the end zone after one of his six touchdowns and entering the field, to celebrate with a teammate, without his helmet. āBut at the end of the day, we got a victory, so all that really matters is the ring I got.ā
Along with a few lessons.
ā[I learned that] my actions really do have consequences, and I need to pay more attention to stuff,ā he said. āIt was a humbling experience, knowing that because of what I do, who I am, people pay more attention to my actions, and I really need to be a better example. I need to follow the rules more, show a lot more class, because people watch, people see, people take note. And I need to be the best person I can be, both on and off the field.ā
Gillick returns Saturday night against San Diego Section Division I champion Granite Hills (11-2) at Huntington Beach High. Win that, and the Chargers head to the CIF State 1-AA Bowl, against Fresno Central (11-2) or San Franciscoās St. Ignatius (10-2), Dec. 14 at Saddleback College.
Murphy-Paine will be alongside him.
He always is.
āI still find ways to talk to Amarr,ā Gillick said. āYou could scope through my messages, Iāve got about 700, 800 unanswered texts on his phone right now. I still try to keep him updated, you know? Itās not going to get a response, but I message him every day. I tell him I love him all the time.ā
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