Kayden Luke is not a typical football player. He is not a typical teenager.

Luke plays both ways for Canyon del Oro High School. That in itself isn’t unusual. The fact that the senior plays running back and middle linebacker β€” constantly seeking contact in both endeavors β€” cranks up the degree of difficulty several notches.

Michael LevΒ is a senior writer/columnist for theΒ Arizona Daily Star,Β Tucson.comΒ andΒ The Wildcaster.

But Luke’s two-way play for the Dorados, who visit Marana on Friday night, is just part of the story. How he prepares for that role is mind-blowing.

Several times a week, Luke wakes up at 2:30 a.m. for pre-practice weightlifting with his godfather, Beto De La Riva. They meet and lift at Shark Sports Fitness and Training, where De La Riva knows the owner, Art Cordova.

β€œThen he’ll go to practice,” says Chris Luke, Kayden’s dad. β€œThen he’ll go to school.”

Canyon del Oro’s Kayden Luke (30) dives into the end zone after rumbling untouched through the Marana defense in the fourth quarter of the Dorados’ 49-21 win at Marana High School Friday night.

I have a teenaged son. He lifts with the Tucson High baseball team at 6:30 a.m. three times a week. He’s out the door before I wake up.

Canyon del Oro’s Kayden Luke (30) (pictured dragging Casa Grande tackles with him on a carry during an October 2021 game at CDO) sure can run, but looks like a linebacker masquerading as a running back. He concedes: β€œI’m more of a fullback.”

But getting up at 2:30? That’s 47 minutes earlier than Jon Gruden famously rose when he was coaching in the NFL. That’s next-level dedication. What just-turned-18-year-old does that?

β€œI think he has something to prove ... and he’s willing to put in the work,” says De La Riva, who grew up across the street from Chris Luke in Catalina and owns Platinum Air Heating and Cooling, a job that occupies most of his day. β€œThat’s why he does what he does.”

Luke is a bowling ball of a football player. He is built like his father, one of four Luke brothers who excelled at wrestling. (Kayden is also a standout wrestler. We’ll get to that in a bit.)

Listed at 5-11, 220 pounds, Kayden has tree-trunk legs, a barrel chest and broad shoulders. He even sports a neck roll, a la Arizona linebacker Justin Flowe.

Canyon del Oro's Kayden Luke (30) can’t high-step out of the hands of Marana's Dezmen Roebuck (1) in the third quarter of their game at Marana High School, Tucson, Ariz., September 22, 2023.

Canyon del Oro’s Kayden Luke (pictured as a sophomore bulldozing through would-be Casa Grande defenders during an October 2021 game) β€œhas something to prove ... and he’s willing to put in the work,” says his godfather and trainer, Beto De La Riva.

Luke looks like a linebacker masquerading as a running back. He even concedes: β€œI’m more of a fullback.” But the kid can run.

Entering Thursday, Luke ranked 12th in the state with 625 rushing yards in four games. He’d have been higher if last week’s game at Amphitheater had been more competitive. Luke carried the ball only eight times for 83 yards and one touchdown. He’s averaging 12.0 yards per attempt for the season. He also leads the undefeated Dorados with 18 tackles.

Luke finished every one of those eight runs with intent. He repeatedly lowered his shoulder into smaller Amphi defenders trying desperately to slow him down.

Luke seems like a good kid β€” focused, hardworking, selfless. On the field, he’s a bad man.

β€œHe’s just bulldozing people,” De La Riva says. Luke has been playing those two positions that are at the heart of it all, running back and middle linebacker, since he started playing tackle football with the 8U Oro Valley Dolphins. His off-field work began before that.

Now a senior, Canyon del Oro’s Kayden Luke (pictured reaching for the goal line for a touchdown while he was a sophomore in an October 2021 game against Casa Grande) is also a state champion wrestler, going 52-0 as a junior last season to win the 215-pound title.

β€œI can remember way back when he was 5 years old, we’d go into his room and he’d be doing push-ups and sit-ups,” says Maggie Luke, Kayden’s mom. β€œHe’s just always trying to do better.”

Maggie says Kayden is β€œin a constant competition with himself.” That helps explain those insanely early wakeup calls. And his visits to US Cryotherapy, where he willingly subjects himself to three-minute, 30-second plunges into an β€œan ice box that gets to negative-180 degrees” to help his body heal and recover.

β€œYou go in there and you’re like, β€˜Oh, man, this is gonna suck,’ ” Luke says. β€œWhen you come out you feel like a whole new person. It’s crazy.”

Luke is partway through what he hopes will be a complete and satisfying final season at CDO β€” the type of season he expected to have last year before it all went sideways.

Six CDO players were suspended for most of last season after it was discovered that they attended a party where alcohol was being consumed. Luke was one of them.

Marana's Jaelen Collins (4), left, gets a handful of Canyon del Oro’s Kayden Luke’s (30) face mask while he tries to fend off Dermain Linen Jr (2) on a punishing run up the middle in the fourth quarter of their game at Marana High School, Tucson, Ariz., September 22, 2023.

β€œIt was hard,” his mother says. β€œIt was taking all of his dreams and just shattering them. It was disheartening to watch as a mother, but one of those lessons that’s also so valuable. And the way Kayden came back from that was amazing.”

I asked CDO coach Dustin Peace whether that situation was a motivational factor this year. He said the Dorados were β€œleaving that way in the past.” He did acknowledge that it has made everyone β€œhungrier” β€” including and especially Luke.

I asked Kayden the same question.

β€œOne hundred percent,” he says. β€œI felt I had something to prove, not to myself (but) because I felt that I let my community β€” especially my little brother and my mom and my dad, my whole family β€” down. So I had to prove more to them than me, because I know what I can do. I know how I can perform. But I really had to explain to them what I can do on the mat and out here on the field.”

Kayden Luke (pictured running past Casa Grande for Canyon del Oro as a sophomore during an October 2021 game) is now a senior, and is β€œjust bulldozing people,” says his godfather, Beto De La Riva. β€œI see a man-child out there.”

Luke devoted himself to being the best wrestler he could be. He went 52-0 and won the state title at 215 pounds.

Luke’s dominance on the mat, his physicality on the football field and his prowess in the weight room β€” Kayden holds the CDO record in the power clean at 325 pounds β€” prompted Peace to dub him β€œthe toughest young man in this city.”

β€œTo be a 52-0 wrestler, to do what he’s been doing on the field on Friday nights, I don’t think we’ve seen it in a long time,” Peace says. β€œAnd doing it all the right way β€” humbly.”

Luke isn’t sure where he’ll play college ball just yet. He attended several camps over the summer, including Southern Utah, South Dakota State, UNLV, NAU, ASU and the U of A. He’s willing to play linebacker, running back, fullback β€” or all of the above.

Beyond football, per his father, Kayden has two potential careers in mind: Becoming a firefighter or running his own construction company.

Don’t bet against CDO’s two-way star doing both.

VIDEO:Β Canyon del Oro coach Dustin Peace says RB-LB Kayden Luke is unlike any other football player in Tucson (video by Michael Lev / Arizona Daily Star)


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Contact sports reporter/columnist Michael Lev at mlev@tucson.com. On X(Twitter): @michaeljlev