Numerous West Islanders have enjoyed successful university football
careers in the past, but few have been able to put together as
impressive a resume as Pierrefonds resident Sammy Okpro.
The 22-year-old defensive halfback, who learned his pigskin abilities
with Pierrefonds’ Alexander Park before going on to play for the
bantam AAA North Shore Lions, midget AAA North Shore Mustangs and CEGEP
AAA Vanier Cheetahs, has been nothing less than outstanding since
joining the Concordia Stingers three years ago. After putting together
a solid freshman year in 2004, the third-year finance major took off,
rising to the top of his position not only in the Quebec University
Football Conference (QUFC), but in Canada as well.
For the past two years, he was selected a first-team defensive
all-Canadian, the highest individual honour a player can attain outside
of a major Canadian Interuniversity Sport trophy. His 44 tackles and
three interceptions this past season, including one for a touchdown
against the Université de Montréal Carabins that turned
the game around in favour of the Stingers, were also good enough to
earn him his second consecutive QUFC all-star first-team selection.
“My success at this level would never have been possible without
the coaching and support I received while growing up in the West Island
and playing for local teams,�? said Okpro, who at 5-foot-10 and 197
pounds, is blessed with tremendous speed, something that has helped him
immensely,not only defending the pass, but returning punts and playing
on special teams. “The coaching that I received, particularly
with the Lions, was great. That’s where I started to develop my
footwork. They don’t teach you the techniques when you get older,
and to have a solid base when you reach the higher levels makes it so
much easier.�? Technique may be one thing you can learn, but a solid
work ethic is something you’re born with. It’s a trait
Stingers defensive co-ordinator Warren Craney said Okpro exhibits on a
daily basis.
“That includes his approach towards school,�? said Craney, a
Kirkland resident. “And not only towards football, but towards
getting prepared for football. He works out on a daily basis in the
weight room and runs track during the off-season. Everything Sammy
does, he puts 100-
per-cent effort into it.�?
If there has been one frustrating aspect to Okpro’s football
career so far, it lies in the fact he has never played on a
championship team, incredibly enough, even dating back to his day with
the Lions. This year was particularly hard to accept. The Stingers had
shown much promise during a fine regular season and a first-round
playoff victory over the Carabins before being eliminated on the road
by eventual Vanier Cup champion Laval Rouge et Or.
“I’d trade all my accolades just for a chance to get a
championship ring,�? said Okpro, who was part of two Team Canada
silver-medal winning efforts in 2002 and ‘03 at the NFL Global
Junior Football Championships. “It hurts so much to train so
hard, get there and just lose it.�?
Okpro, who Craney said barring any unforeseen circumstances, should
stand a very good chance of getting drafted by a Canadian Football
League club following next season, will get anther chance to win that
elusive title next year with the Stingers. It won’t be easy,
though. Outstanding middle linebacker Patrick Donovan, the
Stingers’ defensive leader who captured the Presidents Cup this
past season for best defensive player in the country has departed. As a
result, Okpro will be counted up to take over as one of the leaders.
“I believe Sammy can do that, and is a definite candidate to win
the Presidents Trophy next year,�? said Stingers head coach Gerry
McGrath, a Pierrefonds resident. “He’s that good. If he
keeps playing hard and driving himself to be better all the time, good
things will happen to him.�?
Hopefully for Okpro — and the rest of his Concordia Stingers
teammates — that will include winning a championship