Sports
Built for the Long Run
St. Anthony's junior Jordan Gowins ran through obstacles on path to football stardom.

Near-death survivors and spitfire preachers may tell you to run towardĀ the light, that illumination leads to redemption.
But when Jordan Gowins was at the bottom of a pool, there was only darkness. It was June 28, 2007 and the 10-year-old boy lay unconscious in the depths a friendās pool for nearly five minutes before being saved.
āI was deep, as deep as you could get,ā Gowins recalled.
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Gowins spent weeks in ICU and many doubted he would ever walk, let alone follow in the footsteps of his more famous sibling. One day after his baby brother nearly died, BellportāsĀ Edwin Gowins Jr.Ā wrapped up one of the more memorable high school careers in Long Island football history with a pair of touchdowns in theĀ Empire Challenge.Ā
Young Jordan Gowins had no illusions of grandeur after his accident. He grew up watching his older brother fly past defenders on the football field in superhuman fashion. Now Jordan merely wanted to stand on his own two feet.
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āI was in a hospital bed for a long, long time,ā Jordan Gowins said. āDoctors realized I couldnāt even walk anymore. I had to learn how to walk. I should have been paralyzed from the waist down. I learned how to walk all over again.ā
That seems so long ago.Ā Jordan GowinsĀ can run and leap like a track star. Just ask the rest of the Catholic league. Gowins, a 5-foot-11, 206-pound junior running back atĀ St. Anthonyās High SchoolĀ in South Huntington, has rushed for 999 yards and 13 touchdowns to help theĀ Friars to a 5-1 start. Ā
āHis talent is off the charts,ā St. Anthonyās CoachĀ Rich ReichertĀ said. āBut I like the 6- and 7-yard runs when heās just pounding guys. Those to me are the runs that change the defense. The kids canāt stop him.āĀ
Heās got a rare combination of power and speed, a bulldozer with legs one minute and the ability to chase daylight the next. Reichert compared Gowins to a pair of former All-Long Island St. Anthonyās running backs: Tony Williams (Wisconsin) and Matt Hahn (Penn State).
But what Gowins sees is Gowins.
āWhen I see him run he looks exactly like me,ā said Edwin Gowins Jr., now 24 and still training and hoping for a pro tryout.
Gowins rushed for 1,996 yards and 34 TDs en route to being named Suffolk player of the year in 2006. At Stony Brook University from 2008-10, the Bellport star had the two best single-game rushing performances in the schoolās Division I history and finished with career rushing average of 7.5 yards per carry.
Today the elder Gowins sits in the bleachers at every St. Anthonyās football game and evaluates his protĆ©gĆ©. He instructs his brother to hold the ball more securelyĀ and to be his own man.Ā
āWhen I was playing ball, I had a lot of people in my ear telling me things,ā Edwin Gowins said. āIt pulled me in different directions. It made me confused. One of the things I tell him is āFollow your heart. Do what you think is right. Donāt listen to what anyone tells you.āā
Jordan Gowins followed his momās heart when he spurned Bellport High School for St. Anthonyās. It was a controversial decision in a town where football is life.Ā
Gowins didnāt see the light then either. He was merely running away from the darkness.
āI go running in my town. I go jogging almost every day,ā said Gowins, whose path through North Bellport takes him past memorials to fallen teens. āI see kids playing sports. They are playing basketball. They are throwing the football around. These are kids I know have a lot of potential because I went to school with them at one point. They have talent. But itās hard for them to get through what they are living through. Either their parents arenāt as supportive as mine or they donāt see a way out."Ā
BellportāsĀ grade-fixing scandalĀ was the clincher for mom Patrina Cousin. Iconic football coach turned superintendent Joe Cipp Jr. eventually resigned after it was found he tried to get a star athleteās grades changed so the lineman could play at Syracuse.
āMy mom ā before she even talks about football ā is about school. Itās about school,ā Gowins said. āShe saw those things going on. She wanted to make sure I was focused and that my grades couldnāt be altered. She wanted me to earn what I have.āĀ
So Gowins makes the trek to St. Anthonyās each day, far from his comfort zone and childhood friends. But the journey is bringing him closer to realizing his college ambitions.
Clemson and FSU recently expressed interest in his football talents.Ā Heās beginning to see the light.
āI think it took him a while to get used to us,ā Reichert said. āWe werenāt going to baby him. I told him from Day 1, āWe know you are a good football player. Now weāre going to make sure youāre a good person.ā
āHeās starting to see the big picture. Colleges are looking at character too. Itās not just talent.āĀ
Jordan Gowins has a supportive family and a healthy outlook. Heās in a good place. Now heās coming into his own on the field too.Ā
āWhen Iām on the field, Iām as comfortable as Iāve ever been,ā Gowins said. āItās like Iām home in my bed sleeping. Itās something Iām doing without thinking now. Iām just playing football without any second thoughts.ā
His immediate goal is to restore the Friars to gridiron glory. Chaminade upended St. Anthony's in theĀ CHSFL Class AAA title gameĀ a year ago. Homecoming is againstĀ Chaminade Oct. 25.Ā Ā
Gowinsā ultimate destination has yet to be written. The path is still shrouded in mystery.Ā Just know this: Heāll get there on his own two feet.
Editor's Note: This is Regional EditorĀ Jason Molinet'sĀ final story. He is leaving after three years at Patch.
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