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Athlete ID: A-1130

Janasia Wilson

Irvington High School


Sport(s): FLAG FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL

Birthday: January 2006

Graduation Year: 2025

Hometown: Irvington, New Jersey

Birthday

January 2006

Graduation Year

2025

Hometown

Irvington, New Jersey

Biography:

Janasia Wilson, Class 2024, a standout athlete from Irvington High School in Irvington, New Jersey, distinguished herself in both flag football and basketball with exceptional talent and leadership.

In flag football, Wilson became a pioneer and one of the sport's brightest young stars. As a versatile 5-foot-8 quarterback and safety, she dominated her senior season (2023-2024), completing 51 of 85 passes for 606 yards, 12 touchdowns, and just two interceptions. She also excelled on the ground with 329 rushing yards, four touchdowns, and a remarkable 96-yard run. Her outstanding achievements led to her recognition as New Jersey's inaugural Flag Football Player of the Year. Wilson further showcased her prowess by earning MVP honors at the first-ever U.S. Army All-American girls flag football game and leading the North team to victory at the Phil Simms North vs. South All-Star Game. Her skills and charisma led Nike to sign Wilson as the first girl flag football athlete to a name, image, and likeness (NIL) deal in early 2025. Wilson will continue her flag football career at Keiser University in Florida as a wide receiver and cornerback.

On the basketball court, Wilson was equally impressive as a prolific scorer and tenacious defender. Over four varsity seasons, she amassed 1,664 points, averaging 22.2 points per game. In her senior season alone, she recorded 421 points, averaging 23.4 points per game, highlighted by a 33-point performance against Science Park. Her defensive tenacity was evident with a career total of 354 steals and 180 assists, solidifying her legacy as one of Irvington's finest basketball talents.

Wilson's dual-sport excellence not only highlights her versatility and dedication but also positions her as an inspiring role model for aspiring female athletes.

Latest Articles

Janasia Wilson shines flag football showcase

Aug 25, 2023

New Jersey quarterback shines in girls’ flag football showcaseIt didn’t take long for Janasia Wilson to steal the spotlight at the Nike Football Kickoff Classic on Thursday, after she predicted that her team would “win all these games” in a mic’d-up segment during warm-ups.The quarterback from Irvington High School (New Jersey) led her team down the field in the first quarter of their 14-0 win over Willowbrook High School (Illinois). From the 2-yard line, Wilson snapped the ball, avoided an incoming pass rusher and scampered out to the right and into the endzone for her team’s first touchdown.Wilson helped Irvington build their lead on another run in the first half. Rolling out to the right again, she cut inside past two diving defenders and crossed the endline to give her team a commanding two-touchdown lead.The Blue Knights would not relinquish the lead from there. With their defense holding Willowbrook scoreless, Willowbrook’s two touchdowns were more than enough to seal the victory.Just Women’s Sports mic’d Wilson up during warm-ups, and the jokes she made with her teammates reflected the moves she displayed later on the field.“I would’ve juked you,” she said. “You would have got crossed. You would’ve been eating turf.”The game was part of the second-annual Nike Football Kickoff Classic in partnership with the NFL, a round-robin showcase for some of the top girls’ and boys’ high school flag football programs in the country.

Janasia Wilson named Flag Football Player of the Year

Jun 25, 2024

Janasia Wilson.Remember the name.Hers will be the one all future New Jersey flag football Players of the Year will be measured against.The improvisational, electric, playmaking phenom from Irvington has set the bar fabulously high for the rapidly evolving sport.A good thrower and an exceptional and elusive runner, Wilson’s finest quality is her ability to make those around her better.Unselfish but ready and willing to take control of a game when it matters most, Wilson has been named Most Valuable Player in both a national and statewide all-star game. There is no more fitting player to be name the first Flag Football Player of the Year by NJ.com.“Janasia is the ultimate playmaker,” said Mickey McDermott, the head coach at rival Ridgewood. “She is the symbol of just how good New Jersey flag football is.“If flag football had national recruiting rankings like the boys do, Janasia would be a top-three-in-the-nation recruit on both offense and defense.”McDermott was on the East coaching staff with Irvington head coach Kyle Steele in the U.S. Army All-American All-Star Game last December.“The West coaches came up after the game as asked ‘you have to play against her every year?’” McDermott said recanting the story. “How do you stop her?”The answer, for anyone who has seen her play is, you don’t.“Her athleticism is out of this world,” McDermott said.“Here’s the thing,” Steele explained, “she is still in her kid body. When she matures into her grown-up body, she is going to do amazing things.“She has already played against the best players in the world,” Steele added. “Last summer, she intercepted a pass thrown by Diana Flores (the quarterback for the Mexican national team). "Wilson’s team lost to the Flores-led team, 21-20, but in what has become her trademark, Wilson rose to the occasion on a big stage. She will take her talents to Keiser University in Fort Lauderdale. Kaiser was a runner-up in the NAIA National Championship game, losing to Ottawa University of Kansas.After she threw four TDs and ran for another in the Phil Simms North-South All-Star game earlier this month, the South head coach, John Tierney from Pinelands, called Wilson “a character is a Madden (video) game.”“She is as gifted an dynamic as any boy I’ve ever seen,” Tierney added.Wilson’s statistics aren’t mind-blowing by any stretch. In 2024, she completed 51 of 85 passes for 606 yards. She threw 12 TD passes and was intercepted only twice. She ran for 329 yards and four scores.Wilson could easily have run for more rushing yardage simply by sending her receivers deep and fleeing the pocket, leaving defenders grasping at air. Instead she chose to involve her teammates showing little regard for her own statistics.“Part of the reason we’ve been so successful is because other girls want to play with her,” Steele said. “A big draw is being her teammate. Her humbleness is refreshing.”Steele remembered a game early on in her career when Irvington was trying to run out the clock.“I told Janasia not to put the ball in the air,” Steele said.But on third down, Wilson dumped a ball off to a teammate who wasn’t know for making plays in big spots.“My heart dropped,” Steele said. “I asked Janasia later if she knew what would have happened if that player dropped the pass. She said ‘I knew she was going to catch it.’“When a star trusts her teammates, that’s what makes a team,” Steele added. “She has zero percent ego.”Wilson is also a stellar, but underrated defender. When Irvington defeated Ridgewood, 21-20, in a game Irvington later forfeited for use of an ineligible player, Wilson single-handedly stopped a Ridgewood drive on the doorstop of the end zone.“She broke 15 yards and made one of the greatest plays I’ve ever seen,” said McDermott a boys football defensive coordinator. “I’ve never seen a boy break like that in my life.”Wilson pulled the flag in the open field in a one-on-one situation.“When it happened in real time I couldn’t image how we didn’t score,” McDermott added. “Most high school cornerbacks never break like that. It was remarkable.”Steele said he isn’t sure Wilson will even be a quarterback at the collegiate level. Keiser has another New Jersey quarterback on its roster — Middletown North grad Valentina Fanetti, a lefty-throwing, rising sophomore.“I don’t think she wants to be a quarterback,” Steele said. “She played quarterback for us because that is where we needed her. At the next level, I can see her playing all over the place.”

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