William Clayton
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Bryce Alderton
William Clayton saw the banner and imagined sprinting onto the field
alongside his teammates before kickoff.
The only thing different was the scene played out at John Wayne
Airport last Monday and instead of cheerleaders holding the sign, it
was Clayton’s family, whom he hadn’t seen in two years.
The former Newport Harbor High standout in both volleyball and
football who earned Sea View League Male Athlete of the Year honors
in 2000 returned from Maryland, where he spent two years as a
volunteer missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints.
“My immediate family, extended family and some friends from the
church congregation were there, 30 to 40 in all,” Clayton said. “When
they saw me they were yelling and cheering and I ran through the
banner like I was a champion. We turned some heads. I was just glad
to see them.”
Championship form is something Clayton, who will begin his
sophomore year at Stanford this fall, has grown accustomed to.
Despite missing four games with a thigh bruise as a Newport Harbor
senior, Clayton still caught 19 balls for 232 yards and scored seven
touchdowns as a receiver for a team that went undefeated to win the
CIF Southern Section Division VI championship. He also had a
team-leading six interceptions, two of which came in the fourth
quarter of the CIF title game against Irvine to help preserve a 19-18
victory.
In the spring, Clayton’s focus shifted to volleyball, where he
helped lead the Sailors to the CIF Division I title game against
Corona del Mar. Newport shared the league title with Irvine in 2000
and was the only team to take eventual CIF champion CdM to five games
that year. Clayton also spent one season on the Tars’ varsity
basketball team, when he averaged 3.5 points a game as a junior.
Clayton played middle blocker as a junior for Coach Dan Glenn’s
Sailors, when they finished 22-1 and claimed a CIF Division I crown.
The next year, Clayton, who stands 6-foot-4, shifted to outside
hitter and will enter his sophomore season on the Cardinal men’s
volleyball team at opposite after playing his freshman year at middle
blocker.
“I went up there thinking I would play opposite, but when I got
[to Stanford] I found out they needed a middle blocker,” Clayton
said. “I got a lot of good playing time.”
To prepare for next season, Clayton will begin hitting the weight
room.
He didn’t do any training while in Maryland, where for six days a
week for 10 hours a day, he and 160 other missionaries visited with
families in their homes. Some days Clayton would serve meals at soup
kitchens.
“The No. 1 purpose was to visit with people and share with them,”
Clayton said. “I found that when I serve others before my own needs,
I am a lot happier.”
This spring Clayton, 21, will do another type of serving -- with a
volleyball. He is already thinking about training.
“I didn’t touch a volleyball [the past two years] and I lost about
40 pounds because I wasn’t lifting any weights,” he said. “I was
walking and riding my bike for two years. I have two months of
training before I hit it hard again.
“I know it will be a rocky first few days, but the most important
thing is to get the athleticism back in time,” Clayton said. “If I
spend time in the weight room, the skills will come later.”
Kevin Hansen, a setter on the CdM team which defeated Newport in
2000, will enter his junior season with the Cardinal alongside
Clayton.
“I got to play with him a lot when we were on the Balboa Bay
Volleyball Club and know his playing style really well,” Clayton
said. The club won the 2000 junior national championship and Hansen
was named the tournament’s Most Valuable Player.
Clayton is the only boy in a family of four sisters (his younger
sibling Elizabeth will be a senior in the fall at Newport), but he
continues a trend of athletic prowess.
Elizabeth holds the school record in the triple jump (38-feet, 4
1/2 inches), breaking the mark of 37-8 1/2 set by her older sister
Mandy in 1994. M.E. Clayton, the second oldest of Lisa and
Weatherford’s five children, holds the Harbor record in the 100-meter
hurdles (15.54). The youngest sister, Laura, will begin Newport in
the fall.
William, who earned a 4.23 grade point average in high school and
was an Eagle Scout, either wants to major in English or sociology.
For the next two months he will work at a Newport Beach law firm and
lift weights.
He learned much from his two years in Maryland, some of which he
hopes to transfer to the Cardinal.
“I think I’ll be in a better position to support the team and be a
better leader,” Clayton said. “The best leaders are those who can see
the needs of the team and help cater those things. I have a lot more
leadership strength and ability.”
Judging by his past, Clayton is on the right track in that regard.
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