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Ohio State Emeka Egbuka Parents And Family Background, Where Did He Go To High School?

By Ava Barnes

Emeka Egbuka mostly played on special teams as a freshman, and his parents were there for him every step of the way. But he has a number of good kickoff returns, and it looks like he could break an extended recovery at any time.

The best receiver in the class of 2021 didn’t do much for the offense in terms of receiving yards. He only had nine catches for 191 yards the whole season. In the Rose Bowl game against Utah, when neither Wilson nor Olave played, three catches were made.

Since they are both out of the picture this year, Egbuka has a great chance to make a name for himself. At wide receiver, Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Marvin Harrison Jr. will start without a doubt. Egbuka will be a key part of the offense no matter what happens this season.

Emeka Egbuka
Emeka Egbuka

Who Are Emeka Egbuka Parents?

Emeka Egbuka is the son of Henry Egbuka and Rhonda Ogilvie. The football player was raised by sports-loving parents who moved from Nigeria to the US.

The father works as a civil engineer and also plays tennis and soccer at a high level. His mother, on the other hand, is an American citizen and has lived in Steilacoom for a long time.

Emeka Egbuka joined the Ohio State Buckeyes on January 11, 2021, even though he had promised to do so on December 11, 2020.

The athlete was a five-star prospect and was also thought to be the best wide receiver in both baseball and football. He is an all-star and also the minor national winner from the 2011 game in Phoenix.

He has 18 catches for 163 yards and three touchdowns in the 2019 2A state championship game for Steilacoom. He has also made eight tackles and picked off a pass.

Emeka Egbuka went to Steilacoom High School, the same school his mother went to

Emeka Egbuka came into the world on October 18, 2002, in the town of Steilacoom, Washington. He was born to Henry and Rhonda Ogilvie. He went to Steilacoom High School, the same school as his mother.

Washington moved its high school football season from 2020 to the spring of 2021, so he couldn’t play in his senior year. He caught 49 passes for 1,141 yards and 16 touchdowns as a junior.

He was named the 2019 Gatorade Player of the Year in Washington. He started at Ohio State in January 2021, and in the Spring Game, he had seven catches for 123 yards.

He has completed 199 passes for almost 4,000 yards and 61 touchdowns over the course of his career. Besides that, he helped Steilacoom get to the 2A state final. In the championship game, he made eight tackles and had an interception. He also caught 18 passes for 163 yards and three touchdowns, which was a record.

More on Emeka Egbuka’s Height and Age

Emeka Egbuka will be 20 years old in 2022. On October 18, 2002, he was born. He is the oldest son in his family, so he has always had to compete with his younger brother.

The player really wants to win and puts everything he has into it. Emeka Egbuka is 6 feet and 1 inch tall and weighs 205 pounds, according to the ohiostatebuckyes.com wiki.

Because his father was an immigrant brought to the U.S. for his games, he has his father’s positive outlook. On Saturday, Egbuka started for the first time in his career. He took the place of Julian Fleming, who decided to play or not at the last minute.

On their first drive, the Fighting Irish ran a play that went for 54 yards to set up a field goal. This gave the Buckeyes a small early deficit. But when Egbuka scored with 5:32 left in the first quarter, Ohio State took the lead.

Well, your principal gets starstruck when Ohio State coach Ryan Day or UW coach Chris Petersen stop by the campus with less than 700 students near Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

You can spend part of your summer at Clemson, where you can talk about how nice Dabo Swinney’s house is. Then you can go to Alabama and meet Nick Saban before going to Baton Rouge to see LSU.

Egbuka says that all of his best friends, who are also his classmates, make up lots of jokes to tell him in the hallways.

Oh, and last month was his 17th birthday. So, he got 120 handwritten cards, one from each coach at Stanford. For example, he got a card from the volleyball coach, the golf coach, the water polo coach, and every other coach. Each coach wrote a personal message of about two to three paragraphs.

Emeka Egbuka
Emeka Egbuka

“Recently, the mail has been going crazy,” Egbuka said. “I have a big box full of letters, and the rest of my mail is all over the house.”

He is the talk of Class 2A football as Steilacoom gets ready to play Ridgefield in the first round of the state playoffs on Friday at 7 p.m. at Mount Tahoma Stadium. 247Sports ranks him as the No. 1 athlete and the No. 8 overall recruit in the country for the class of 2021.

Egbuka is looking at Alabama, Clemson, LSU, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Oregon, Stanford, USC, and UW. He said he’d like to narrow it down to about three after the season is over.

This is nothing like what Steilacoom coach Colby Davies remembers from when he went from the Sentinels to Western Washington University.

“I had to go out of my way to get schools to talk to me, and Mek is trying to figure out how to get some schools to stop talking to him,” Davies laughed.

But Davies has been most impressed by how grounded and humble Egbuka has stayed through all the messages, visits, letters, and articles.

His parents, who both have master’s degrees in their fields, probably helped him get a 4.0 grade point average. Rhonda Ogilvie works in the IT department at Kaiser Permanente, and Henry Egbuka is a civil engineer.

And both of his parents played sports. Henry was born in the city of Enugu, Nigeria. In 1996, he moved to the United States. He said he was invited to try out for the Nigerian junior national soccer team, but now he plays tennis all the time and has even played in some official USTA matches.

Rhonda was great at three sports at Steilacoom. She could have gone to Columbia University to study, but she chose to stay home and play volleyball with her sister at Saint Martin’s University.

Henry said, “Emeka is a mix of his genes and the way he works.” “No one works as hard as he does. Nobody.”

As the state football bracket comes out, Kennedy Catholic and O’Dea get the top spots.

Henry was in the U.S. military, and his job took him to Germany for six years. During the summers, Emeka took transatlantic flights to visit him. He remembers challenging his dad at everything, from Ping-Pong to daily sprints. However, Henry has avoided rematches ever since his son ran a 4.42 40-yard dash last year.

Most people thought that baseball was Emeka’s calling. After Egbuka won the MLB Pitch, Hit & Run 7-8 year old division at the 2011 All-Star Game in Phoenix, the Seattle Mariners asked him to throw out the ceremonial first pitch at one of their games in 2012. The picture he took with Felix Hernandez is still in his possession.

But around that time, he started to really like football. After a great first year at Steilacoom, he played in a 7-on-7 tournament in Las Vegas that spring and soon after, Florida State offered him a scholarship.

“When he got that offer, we all cried,” Henry said with a laugh.

He must have had a lot of other offers since then

But that first one showed that it was a good idea to let Egbuka play at Steilacoom with all of his friends. Henry said that his parents were thinking about sending him to a bigger school because they thought he would learn more that way.

But he loves Steilacoom a lot, a lot, a lot, Rhonda said. “High school coaches asked us if we wanted to go here, there, or anywhere else, which I’m not sure is legal, but he wasn’t interested in that.

All of these kids have played Little League and youth football with him, and he wants to finish the season with them all. I think it’s great that his boys are getting attention because of him, which they should.”

Egbuka and his mom went to Columbus, Ohio, a few weeks ago to watch Ohio State play Wisconsin. Rhonda asked her son what he thought of the experience, how he felt about the school, and how he felt about the atmosphere.

“As we talked about the different schools, he said, ‘One thing about leaving is that I’ll miss my younger brother Keanan and sister Eva,'” Rhonda said. “I just started crying.

“But I don’t want him to have to decide because of that. We’ll go to as many of his games as we can, no matter where he is. We’ll figure it out. We’ll set up FaceTime and fly him back. Whatever. He shouldn’t stay here just because of that. But he told me that if that’s the case, he wants to go somewhere that makes him feel like he’s at home.”

It might feel like Steilacoom somewhere

Even though there are always two defenders on him, he has caught 49 passes for 1,141 yards and 16 touchdowns as a junior. But he’s also been great at returning kicks and punts, and Davies said he has the best ball skills he’s ever seen. This has helped him get five interceptions.

Egbuka said, “I am nowhere near where I want to be.” “I have a dream, and that is to be the best football player ever. I’m not even close right now.

“Even if I make it to the league, I won’t feel like I’ve made it because I don’t want to just make it. I want to make a difference and leave something behind.”