Kansas State University

Kansas State may have found hidden gem in Horton’s Trey Dishon


Kansas State commit Trey Dishon was a standout defensive tackle at Horton, but he did a little bit of everything on the football field.
Kansas State commit Trey Dishon was a standout defensive tackle at Horton, but he did a little bit of everything on the football field. Trey Dishon

MANHATTAN – When Trey Dishon says he can do it all on the football field, he isn’t exaggerating by much.

The Horton senior, who will sign with Kansas State on Wednesday, lined up everywhere during his high school career, playing everything from defensive tackle and defensive end to fullback and tight end. He was the team’s kicker.

“I try to do as much as possible with my athletic ability,” Dishon said. “Coaches say I am a big man that can move. You see that if you watch me on film. On my highlight video, I have got a pick-six on there, I’m hurdling a defensive back when I catch a ball, I’m blocking punts. I’m not just firing out on the defensive line every time. I am showing that I can catch the ball on offense, that I can kickoff and that I can get sacks. I can jump, I can move, I can run. That is what you have to do if you want to make it from a small town.”

Dishon’s on-field responsibilities will be much more specific – just defensive tackle – when the two-star prospect arrives at K-State for summer workouts, but he plans on using the same mentality throughout his college career.

If that mantra sounds familiar, it should. Every year, K-State coach Bill Snyder signs a recruiting class that is low on touted prospects and poorly rated by recruiting experts. Yet, as those unkown recruits age and develop within the K-State football family they become productive Big 12 players.

Last season, K-State was led by seniors such as Ryan Mueller, B.J. Finney, Jonathan Truman, Jake Waters and Tyler Lockett. Three arrived at K-State as walk-ons, one didn’t receive a single scholarship offer above the junior-college level in high school, and the other was overlooked by the football teams within his home state.

Perhaps Dishon, who was committed to Northwest Missouri State and hadn’t received any Division I interest before K-State got involved earlier this month, can follow in their footsteps.

“That is definitely what I want to do,” Dishon said. “The ceiling is high. I’m excited about it. But you have got to keep the mindset that nothing is going to be easy. It is definitely going to be a change going from a town of 1,700 people to K-State and the best players in nation. Horton is so small that we don’t even have a McDonald’s. When we eat out, we go to the station. It’s going to be a big change, but that’s what motivates me.”

It isn’t hard to realize how much playing at K-State means to Horton. You can sense excitement in his voice. Growing up north of Topeka, he has long been a fan of K-State football and Kansas basketball. He says he likes every successful team in the Sunflower State. Playing college football close to home has long been a goal.

But it didn’t seem like that was going to happen until K-State recruiting coordinator Taylor Braet surprisingly began following Dishon on Twitter two weeks ago. Out of curiosity, Dishon followed him back and they struck up a conversation through direct messages. Braet told Dishon he had seen his highlights on YouTube and that two K-State assistants Mo Latimore and Mike Cox wanted to drive to Horton and meet him.

They wanted to confirm he could bench 365 pounds, squat 550 pounds and dunk a basketball like his high school coaches claimed he could.

Next thing Dishon knew, they were offering a scholarship and inviting him to campus for an official visit.

Then Dishon met Snyder and committed. He saw a bright future at K-State.

“The whole process was amazing and eye-opening,” Dishon said. “I love to play for my state, but it’s not just that. Bill Snyder is one the best coaches around. Getting a full-ride scholarship to play football at Kansas State is all I wanted growing up. You can’t turn that down.”

Reach Kellis Robinett at krobinett@wichitaeagle.com. Follow him on Twitter: @kellisrobinett.

K-State’s top five recruits

Name

Pos.

Rank*

Ht.

Wt.

School

1. Alex Delton

QB

22

6-0

195

Hays

The first commitment of K-State’s 2015 recruiting class could end up being the quarterback of the future. Delton, a dual-threat talent, put up quality numbers throughout his career at Hays and graduated early so he could enroll for the spring semester and get a head start in college. He may factor into the quarterback competition quickly.

2. Duke Shelley

DB

22

5-9

155

Tucker (Ga.)

Shelley is the highest-rated incoming recruit in this class, according to Rivals. The 230th-rated player in the nation chose K-State early. Though freshmen rarely play immediately under Bill Snyder, Shelley will be given the opportunity.

3. Scott Frantz

OL

48

6-5

285

Lawrence (Free State)

Frantz spurned the hometown Jayhawks to play for the Wildcats, and K-State is glad he did. The fourth-rated player in Kansas, per Rivals, may turn out to be a strong tackle on the offensive line.

4. Reggie Walker

LB

35

6-2

230

Ponchatoula (La.)

The 35th-rated linebacker has the look of a player that might contribute sooner rather than later in K-State’s defensive scheme.

5. Denzel Goolsby

Ath

NR

5-11

190

Wichita (Carroll)

Though Goolsby flew under the recruting radar for most schools and has a two-star rating from Rivals, he enters K-State with a high ceiling. Goolsby was a productive player for many years at Carroll and could become a diference-maker at running back or receiver.

*Rivals.com national position rankings

One who got away …

Mohamed Barry, a three-star linebacker from Georgia, was one of K-State’s earliest commitments, but he switched to Nebraska in the final week. Snyder sent two assistants to Barry’s home to try and close the door on him last week, but new Cornhuskers coach Mike Riley sealed the deal with an in-home visit of his own.

Still fishing for …

The best talent available. K-State got off to a nice start with this recruiting class, so adding players at this stage is not essential. But if the Wildcats find the right recruit they won’t hesitate to try and bring him in.

Position answered for ...

The Wildcats need to add depth on their offensive line before their current veteran blockers run out of eligibility. They did that and more with this class, bringing in four offensive linemen.

Position unanswered for …

K-State was average, at best, at running back last season. No one in this class appears capable of helping the Wildcats next season at that position. Adding a junior-college running back would have been nice.

Signed (3)

Name

Pos.

Ht.

Wt.

School

Alex Barnes

RB

6-0

210

Pittsburg

Alex Delton

QB

6-0

195

Hays

Joshua Little

DE

6-3

230

Jacksonville (Fla.) Trinity Christian

Commitments (17)

Name

Pos.

Ht.

Wt.

School

Evan Applegate

OL

6-6

270

Mill Valley

Kyle Ball

DE

6-2

231

SM East

Brett Bell

TE

6-6

195

Carroll

Evan Curl

OL

6-4

280

Flower Mound (Texas)

Trey Dishon

DT

6-3

305

Horton

Johnathan Durham

DB

6-0

185

Aledo (Texas)

Scott Frantz

OL

6-5

285

Free State

Denzel Goolsby

ATH

5-11

190

Bishop Carroll

Kalin Heath

ATH

6-3

190

Cartersville (Ga.)

Adam Holtorf

OL

6-4

271

Seward (Neb.)

Chase Johnston

LB

6-4

226

Carl Junction (Mo.)

Tyler Mitchell

OL

6-5

280

Montgomery (Ala.)Academy

Aulelio Olomua

DE

6-5

240

Mesa (Ariz.) CC

Darreyl Patterson

DB

6-0

165

Lawton (Okla.)

Duke Shelley

DB

5-9

155

Tucker (Ga.)

Reggie Walker

LB

6-2

230

Ponchatoula (La.)

Isaiah Zuber

WR

6-0

171

Stone Mountain (Ga.) Stephenson

This story was originally published February 3, 2015 at 12:57 PM with the headline "Kansas State may have found hidden gem in Horton’s Trey Dishon."

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