A big, new player will be on the field Friday night when Stillwater and Cretin-Derham Hall kick off their Suburban East Conference football game in St. Paul.
Sports giant ESPN is broadcasting the game live, breaking new ground for the network in the state as it seeks to whet the appetite of college football viewers increasingly interested in top high school recruits.
It's one of 26 high school games that ESPN2 plans to air this fall but the only one in Minnesota. The player most responsible for attracting the network's interest is junior Jashon Cornell, a 16-year-old defensive end for Cretin-Derham Hall who is rated by ESPN as the nation's top high school football recruit in his class.
"With recruiting and the Internet, people know who these kids are, and this is a chance to show them," said Dan Margulis, ESPN senior director of programming and acquisitions. "Having [Cornell] definitely is a hook for doing the broadcast."
In addition to each school receiving $1,000 for participating, dozens of teenagers on both teams will get their first and perhaps only chance to play football on national TV. ESPN2 is widely available with most Twin Cities cable television packages.
The prospect of playing before a national audience has clearly found its way into players' heads at practice this week.
"Get your work in," bellowed Ray Hitchcock, Cretin-Derham Hall offensive line coach and an NFL veteran. "You don't want to be the guy bending over tired on national television."
ESPN chatter at Stillwater is more subdued by design, Ponies coach Beau LaBore said. While his players are pumped, "they know the only way that they are really going to enjoy it or remember it is if they come out and play their best game," he said.