
Judge Memorial Bulldogs
On Aug. 9, the Deseret News published a preview of the Judge Memorial football team. Here is what was
written by reporter Dan Rasmussen.
The way Judge star running back Bruce Garlinghouse sees things, the Bulldogs' championship-game loss
to Logan a season ago wasn't a finishing point.
OK, maybe it was for the seniors that ended their prep football careers that night. But for the guys that are
coming back, it's a different story.
Judge returns several players like Garlinghouse - underclassman that contributed heavily a year ago - that
collectively hope to accomplish even more this fall than they did last fall.
And they hope it all starts in Week 1.
"We're ready to get going where we left off," said Garlinghouse, who is drawing recruiting interest from the
University of Washington and Columbia University, among others. "We got some unfinished business."
By all accounts, the glory days of Judge have returned under sixth-year coach James Cordova. In his first
season, a number of schools lined up Judge for their homecoming game in hopes of racking up an easy win.
These days, however, that's hardly the case anymore.
"It's fantastic," Cordova said of the direction the program has taken. "It's a great change. We played in five
homecoming games my first year, and it was demoralizing. Every week we had a 20-minute halftime. I didn't
know you had short halftimes."
One of the reasons those extra homecomings have gone away, Garlinghouse believes, has been because
Judge players have had a willingness to share the ball on offense.
Rather than rely one just one single player to get the job done, the Bulldogs have relied on several, and that
should continue in 2008.
"I think that's why our offense was so prolific last year, because they couldn't key on one person,"
Garlinghouse said. "If they came in the game keying on Lewis (Walker), then I'd have a good game. If they
starting keying on me because I had a good game, Lewis would take it."
Cordova said the nature of Judge's offense has made it easier to breed unselfish guys.
"Our option game is dependent on what the defense does. As far as being a coach of that, it makes things
real easy and it makes kids unselfish," Cordova said. "Unselfish kids are successful kids. You don't have kids
yellin' and complaining, 'I want the ball more.' All kids want the ball more.
"Who might be the next superstar? Who knows. Give 'em the ball. That's how we do it."
