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How Mars WR Gabe Hein has caught the eyes of opposing defenses, Division I college scouts

ADAMS TWP — More often than not, Gabe Hein is going to be open.

He reminds Mars quarterback Luke Goodworth of that fact quite often.

“We’re probably on the same path with stuff,” said Hein, a junior wideout who’s already cemented as the Planets’ all-time leading receiver. “On the plays where I have an option of what I can run, we’re pretty (in sync) with what we’re going to do. I just tell him, ‘If you’re ever rolling out ... when you’re being pressured by the defensive line, just know I’m down there somewhere.”

The signal-caller has trust in Hein, with the pair having connected 43 times for 774 yards and eight scores last fall.

“I know he’s going to catch about every ball I throw to him,” Goodworth said.

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“He’s going to make a tough catch,” Mars offensive assistant coach Andrew Rossi said. “He’s going to go up for contested balls and come down with it. That’s who he is. ... I hope schools don’t overlook him because he can help out anybody when it’s his time to graduate here.”

With Butler Eagle Scoring Trophy winner Evan Wright graduated, Hein steps up as Mars football’s go-to guy in key moments.

“He always seems just to make big plays,” Planets head coach Eric Kasperowicz said. “When we need a play, he gets behind the defense somehow and we’re able to hit him with it. He’s a playmaker. ... Who knows where we would’ve ended up at the end (of last season) if he was healthy.”

Mars receiver Gabe Hein (30) enters his junior year with 79 receptions for 1,325 yards and 15 touchdowns already. Butler Eagle file photo

Kasperowicz was referring to an injury that ended Hein’s sophomore season in Mars’ Week 8 game in October, a 38-0 home win over Armstrong.

On a pass play, Hein split the two high safeties with a post route as Goodworth bought some time with his legs before floating the ball the receiver’s way.

“I jumped up and landed on my foot wrong and snapped (my leg),” Hein said. “I tried to get up and walk it off because I knew there was something wrong, but then I fell back down. I couldn’t walk.”

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Hein managed to hop to the sideline. He entered that contest among the entire WPIAL’s leaders in receiving but wasn’t able to return to action the rest of the campaign as the Planets marched to a 10-3 mark and the WPIAL Class 4A semifinals. The injury was initially ruled as a sprain, but a trip to the doctor revealed a spiral fracture in his tibia that tailed into his foot’s growth plate.

It was three months before Hein was able to walk without support. He was at physical therapy a month after that.

“Whenever I see crutches now, I get angry,” Hein said, jokingly.

It was a setback in an otherwise impressive varsity career to date. Hein has caught 79 passes for 1,325 yards and 15 scores in two seasons.

But he didn’t make the varsity roster out of camp as a freshman in 2022, instead starting out on JV. It was short-lived; he grabbed one pass, for negative-2 yards, in his first varsity game in Week 2.

“The first couple of games, he didn’t crack the varsity lineup,” Rossi said. “But all we heard about JV-wise was Gabe Hein, Gabe Hein, Gabe Hein.”

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He finished that season with 551 receiving yards and seven touchdowns on 36 grabs, including a breakout four-catch, 205-yard, three-TD game against Kiski in Week 6.

Hein doesn’t appear to be the quickest, but it seems he’s always taking the top off a secondary.

“He’s kind of sneaky fast,” Kasperowicz said. “If you time him, he’s probably a 4.6 (40-yard dash) kid. But he seems to run by most people on the field.”

Hein has heard from Akron and Miami (Ohio), the latter of which has invited him to see a game. He hopes his recruitment blossoms this season as the Planets seek to make their first WPIAL championship appearance since 2002 and claim their first title ever.

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