Great Falls Tribune

Prosthesis doesn’t stop dream for college football

Florida player Blackard an ‘inspiratio­n to us all’

- Clayton Freeman

FERNANDINA BEACH, Fla. – Standing near the middle of a 12-strong line of high school athletes a mile from the Atlantic Ocean, the arm holding the pen was only part of the story for Nolan Blackard.

With right hand gripping that pen, left arm attached to a prosthetic hand, Blackard officially unlocked his doorway to college football, one of a dozen Fernandina Beach High School athletes from football to lacrosse to golf celebratin­g a college signing inside the school’s cafeteria.

Born without the lower portion of his left arm, he hasn’t let any obstacles keep him from his goals on the gridiron – even if this particular goal once seemed far longer than a football field’s distance away.

“I never thought I would be here [signing with a college],” he said.

He’s here now, a four-year varsity player for the high school now on course for the college gridiron.

Blackard wears a prosthetic hand much of the time, including during the recent ceremony, but football is an exception.

Even with no left hand to fend off pass rushers, he’s grown into an effective blocker on the Pirates’ front.

Standing on a stage, he waited his turn next to football teammate Joshua Modupe, a linebacker signing with Army West Point. Then, the moment came.

Destinatio­n college football, no matter the obstacles.

“He’s been such an inspiratio­n to us all,” said Mike Woodard, the high school’s athletic director.

Blackard’s road to college football began with attitude.

That’s the way his parents, Jeff and Melinda, saw it from the start.

“I think, for Nolan, he doesn’t view himself being different than anybody else,” Jeff Blackard said. “Everybody’s got challenges that they’ve got to overcome in life, and he’s never felt sorry for himself.”

Because of his father’s U.S. Navy background, Nolan experience­d multiple stops at different parts of the country before the family anchored in Nassau County, Florida.

Although he competed in soccer early on while growing up, he didn’t play his first snaps of football until seventh grade, a level when many players already have years of gridiron testing under their belts.

Steep learning curve or not, he didn’t lose heart.

“It was really tough at first,” he said. “But you just kind of stick with it and get better, and then kind of find your way.”

For Blackard, the road to the college gridiron in some ways looked much like the path for thousands of others around America: effort and motivation, countless hours in the weight room and plenty of encouragem­ent.

“He just had a lot of support from his coaches. They never told him he couldn’t do it,” Melinda Blackard said. “He just kept going and going.”

Back in 2020, Jude Swearingen couldn’t quite believe what he was seeing.

Then head coach at Fernandina Beach, he was setting up workouts during the offseason months ahead of the 2020 campaign when a newcomer arrived at the weight room. Swearingen noticed his height – already 6-4, he estimated, in middle school – and his weight, upward of 200 pounds. And his missing hand.

“He steps up, jumps in, I see him, and I’m like, ‘We’re going to have to figure out a new way to do things,’ ” Swearingen recalled.

Swearingen said the school implemente­d methods to ensure that Blackard could safely participat­e in weight training, and his strength grew quickly.

Once he entered high school, Blackard broke into the varsity roster quickly on his way to playing four years.

As a freshman in 2020, he was part of the team that beat county rival West Nassau 34-22 for the team’s first-ever Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n postseason victory.

For most of his four years with the football squad, he lined up as starting right tackle, learning his craft at the position.

“He had to learn how to utilize leverage with his [right] hand against blockers,” Swearingen said. “He learned to create a blow with that other hand, then being able to latch on and use his footwork.”

Standing 6 feet, 6 inches, Blackard has prototypic­al height for an offensive tackle.

And although his listed weight of 250 pounds is smaller than many linemen in the modern game, he’s learned how to compensate by winning the mental battle.

“You just kind of learn your opponent and figure out how to beat him,” he said.

Still, it wasn’t until the last year or so that he really started to weigh the possibilit­ies: Could he someday advance beyond high school to play college football?

“It was a dream of his to go play college football,” Jeff Blackard said. “It’s something that I don’t know that he thought that he would attain, but he did, and we’re just proud of him to go do it.”

During the fall, Nolan said he reached out to numerous colleges, including the Southeaste­rn University, which compiled a 5-5 record in the National Associatio­n of Intercolle­giate Athletics last season under head coach Adam Waugh. Pretty soon, his persistenc­e paid off.

“I was just constantly researchin­g and I found them, and it looked like a great campus,” he said.

“I emailed them and then we started talking. I went out for a tour, then they called me about a week later and they gave me an offer.”

He becomes the most recent Florida athlete of note to advance beyond high school sports with a limb difference.

A dozen years ago, Carson Pickett won the Florida Dairy Farmers Miss Soccer award and a Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n girls soccer championsh­ip at St. Johns Country Day on her way to an NCAA title at Florida State.

Now in her ninth year of profession­al soccer, she plays for Racing Louisville of the National Women’s Soccer League and owns two caps for the United States women’s national team.

While Blackard’s football future is just getting started, he’s already made an impact.

“That obstacle, on a daily basis, he does not even think he has,” Woodard said.

“It’s really just what we see, because he doesn’t feel that way [having a disability] inside. He’s an exceptiona­l young man and we can’t wait to hear about what he is doing at the next level.”

For Blackard, the recent ceremony brought a chance to join teammates from sports all around the school in an afternoon of celebratio­n.

“It’s just surreal,” he said. “I’m very grateful and thankful for all my family and everybody else that’s helped me to get here.”

 ?? COREY PERRINE/FLORIDA TIMES-UNION ?? Fernandina Beach (Fla.) offensive lineman Nolan Blackard (58) makes a block during a 2023 game. The senior, born with one hand, signed to play college football at Southeaste­rn University in Lakeland.
COREY PERRINE/FLORIDA TIMES-UNION Fernandina Beach (Fla.) offensive lineman Nolan Blackard (58) makes a block during a 2023 game. The senior, born with one hand, signed to play college football at Southeaste­rn University in Lakeland.

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