High-flying Huskies

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Photo by Shawn Bowles.

Photo by Shawn Bowles.

Photo by Shawn Bowles.

Photo by Shawn Bowles.

Most Trussvilians should be familiar with Floyd-Bradford Road, a winding stretch of blacktop connecting Roper Road to U.S. Highway 78 in Irondale. What you may not know is there is an effort to rename the road Floyd-Jadon Road in honor of Hewitt-Trussville High School quarterback Peyton Floyd and his favorite wide receiver Jadon Loving. 

Not really. But there should be. 

Thus far this fall, the dynamic duo of Floyd and Loving are competing on another level. The 2023 edition of the Huskies is looking solid defensively and has a cache of weapons on offense, with the Floyd-Loving connection proving to be especially deadly to opposing defenses. Their propensity for big plays and quick strikes also makes them loads of fun to watch, including Hewitt-Trussville public address announcer Chad Summers. 

“Jadon is an explosive playmaker with good hands, burst, and speed. Peyton knows his dad's offense like the back of his hand, able to get the ball where it needs to go,” Summers said. “Put those two together and the result is fun to watch. There's a big play coming, you just don't know when. But it's only a matter of time.”

After stumbling out of the gate to start the season with a loss to No. 2 Central-Phenix City, the Huskies have reeled off three wins in a row, scoring 42 points in each of those contests.

Floyd has thrown 10 touchdowns through four games, six of them to Loving, already eclipsing their total of five scores in 2022. They connected for three touchdowns in the second game of the year, a 42-27 victory over Gadsden City, including a 48-yarder, their longest of the season. 

They hooked up for a 42-yard score during their 42-7 win over Oak Mountain on, and twice more in their 42-7 thumping of Tuscaloosa County last Friday on consecutive plays. Floyd hit Loving with a dart for a 10-yard score midway through the first quarter. The next time the Huskies touched the football, Floyd and Loving took advantage of a mismatch for a 32-yard touchdown less than two minutes later. 

"The defense set us up well and we saw Jadon one-on-one and I know he's pretty fast, so I gave him the chance and he made a great play," said Floyd. 

The touchdown is symbolic of the sense of trust and near-telepathic connection the duo have forged since they began playing football together in elementary school. These days, Loving says he and Floyd “know what’s going to happen before it happens.” 

"Peyton and Jadon have been playing ball since youth league and I've been seeing them throw touchdowns since they were in fourth and fifth grade," Huskies head coach Josh Floyd said. "It pays off in the long run."

Loving and Peyton Floyd became fast friends once the Floyds moved to Trussville in 2014. Loving and Floyd say they began developing their sixth sense for football in Trussville’s youth football league shortly thereafter. Over the years, they have developed as friends and teammates, and have worked tirelessly motivating each other and building a sense of trust that is leading the Huskies to new heights.

"Me and Peyton go way, way back,” Loving said. “We've been playing together since he first got here. He's accurate, he's a great quarterback, and we have a great connection. It takes work, and just hanging out and getting to know each other, and getting to know each other on and off the field.”

“Ever since I moved to Trussville in third grade, we were in the same class, so he was one of my first friends," Floyd added. "We always played football growing up together and I feel like our friendship just grows each and every year. “We love each other, and we've got a lot of confidence in each other."

Hewitt-Trussville (3-1, 2-0 in Class 7A, Region 3) will take on Hoover (1-3, 1-1) at the Hoover Met this Friday.

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