Prep Sports
June 19, 2008
Trying to get a handle
All-star games serve as showcase for enigmatic Ponder

People have a hard time getting a proverbial handle on Ansel Ponder.

Even his name.

"Hansel?'' asked the cafeteria worker at West Virginia State. "Like Hansel and Gretel?''

Lawrence Pierce
Bluefield’s Ansel Ponder signed with Western Michigan but will play instead this fall at Hargrave Military Academy in Virginia.
Ponder just sighed and politely tried to correct the woman. He's used to being the center of confusion. The guys in Bluefield call him the "Moss Man" after Randy Moss. He's proven to be one of the state's best athletes, earning first-team Class AA football and basketball honors. He has good size and speed - he ran track - for a receiver at 6-foot-3 and 185 pounds.

Yet he received only one Division I offer.

Which he then turned down.

That's why it's tough to get a handle on Ponder, who is one of just two - Capital's Tyrone Goard is the other - set to play in both the North-South All-Star Football Classic Saturday and the basketball event Friday. ("It's not hard on me,'' Ponder said. "I work out two times a day anyway. I think it's fun.'')

Bluefield coach Fred Simon suggested Ponder didn't receive more D-I attention because he didn't become NCAA eligible until a week before the February signing date. But when he did make the grade, Western Michigan flew Ponder to Kalamazoo, offered a scholarship and received a signature on a letter of intent.

Ponder, however, then called the WMU coaches back and will now attend Hargrave Military Academy in Virginia.

"In the beginning, I wanted to go to Hargrave, but that didn't work out for me,'' Ponder said. "So I decided to go on a visit. I was flown up to Western Michigan. I checked out everything and liked it. I came back home and thought about it for a while.

"I hadn't really talked to the Hargrave coaches. So I signed and everything. Then, about a week or two later, I talked to the [Hargrave] coaches. Some things opened up for me. I called [the WMU] coaches and told them I wanted to go to Hargrave.

"It was a hard decision, but I got through it.''

Ponder is rolling the dice.

"I just want to try and get some more options, in particular my area - Virginia Tech, schools like that. The ACC maybe,'' he said.

"I'd get stronger and faster going to Hargrave. They have the No. 1 prep football and basketball programs in the nation there. So it wouldn't hurt to go there and take another year to mature.''

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