Brockton Enterprise: 'Pires realizes the end is at hand
[Stonehill Football]'
By Jim Fenton, Enterprise staff writer
EASTON — After four seasons at Taunton High School and four
more at Stonehill College, Tony Pires will play his final football
game Saturday afternoon.
“I might have to take the uniform home with me,'' joked the
Skyhawks co-captain and defensive lineman. 'I'm a softie. It'll
probably be emotional.''
When Pires walks off the field at American International College in
Springfield following Stonehill's last game, it will mark the end
of a solid college football career.
Undersized at 6-foot-2 and 215 pounds, Pires has been one of the
program's top defenders as a four-year starter. He earned
All-Northeast-10 Conference second team honors as a junior and has
led the Skyhawks in sacks the past two seasons.
“From my junior year on, with the good coaching I've received
here, I've played better than I would have expected,'' said the
Taunton resident. “I was so undersized that I thought it
would kick in at some point and be a weakness.
“But I'm happy where I'm at right now, having played Div. 2
football, being a captain, getting a good education. I've got no
regrets at all.''
Pires, who spent his sophomore year at outside linebacker and the
other three seasons as a lineman, has used his speed to overcome
the size disadvantage.
Beginning with his freshman season, Pires showed the ability to get
to the quarterback, becoming a top pass rusher in the NE-10, and he
has 20 1/2 career sacks.
Pires was third in the conference with seven sacks in his first
season, and 11 of his 67 tackles were for a loss of 70 yards.
After playing linebacker as a sophomore in 2004, Pires returned to
the line as a junior and was third in the NE-10 with 7 1/2 sacks
(finishing second on the team with 56 tackles, including 15 for a
loss of 55 yards).
Bothered by a back ailment this season, Pires has made 35 tackles
in eight games but has 4 1/2 sacks for 35 yards and 10 1/2 tackles
for a loss of 51 yards.
“He's got an unbelievable first step,'' said Stonehill head
coach Chris Woods. “He's really explosive off the ball. He's
difficult to handle one-on-one. When he's healthy, he attracts a
lot of attention. He's earned quite a bit of respect from other
coaches.''
Pires was a defensive end at Taunton High, but he was switched to
linebacker to fill a void in '04.
Though he tied for the team lead with 67 tackles and had six for a
loss of 18 yards, Pires was more comfortable on the line, and
returned there last fall.
“I gave it a whirl at linebacker,'' he said. “The pass
coverage was different. I usually pin my ears back at defensive
line and go after the quarterback. At linebacker, it was
challenging to read routes, know blitz schemes.''
Once he returned to the line in 2005, Pires became one of the best
in the NE-10, getting voted to the all-conference second team after
helping Stonehill have one of its better seasons in recent
years.
“As you get older, you know what you need to work on,'' said
Pires. “By my junior year, I was able to pinpoint what
problems I needed to work on.
“To make the all-conference team, that was something I never
put any thought into. I just went out and played. Something like
that is not all individual. When you get something like that, you
thank everyone else in the scheme who got me freed up.
“I think a lot of it comes down to how you're coached, and
we've had some good ones. You take a strength — mine is speed
— and work a scheme around that.''
Pires, an accounting major who has a job lined up after graduation,
has been bothered by the back ailment since training camp in August
and had to miss last weekend's loss to Southern Connecticut
State.
That has added to the frustration of a 1-8 season by the Skyhawks
in a year where hopes were high for progress.
“It's more of a nagging injury,'' he said. “I get to
the third quarter and I feel it.''
Despite the first injury of his career, Pires has been able to
display leadership in the role of co-captain.
Woods noticed last week when Pires was unable to play, he was
working with the younger players.
“He's been great helping young guys out,'' said Woods.
“When gets get injured, sometimes you'll find out those guys
are not seen or heard, but he's been the complete opposite.
“He was taking young guys from the offense under his wing,
trying to help them and telling them what he sees from the
perspective of a defensive end.''
After his football career ends this weekend, Pires will return to
another athletic endeavor that he left behind in high school.
Pires became involved with karate at the age of six and did
full-contact kick boxing for more than a year.
“I'm planning to go right back to it once football is done,''
said Pires. “I've got to get my flexibility back. It's one of
my first loves, karate.
“I love the competitive nature of it. I like sports where you
train your body and the competition goes to who trains the best.
It's probably an acquired taste, but I love it. I want to get right
back to where I was before.
“I fought for a belt in Providence my senior year of high
school and I'd like to fight for a belt again.''



























