Jahshua Frost from Trinity High set for a huge year at corner @TrinityHSFB, @trinitysports, @bigassfans, @khsaafootball, @KyHighFootball

Jahshua Frost at Trinity High is one of ’28’s premier corners and a “Frost.” At Trinity, it means something to carry the surname “Frost.” Big brother (Jahbarri) made our Big Ass Fans, Large School All-State Football Team and is now on a full ride at FBS, mid-major, Eastern Michigan. Little brother can play the game too. Frost played corner in ’25 and saw 12-games of run playing for a program which just won its third (3rd) straight, 6A football title and the program’s 30th overall. No team in Kentucky produces talent like the Shamrocks.

HB Lyon, Scouting Director, “KPGFootball”

Frost’s Hudl/X-Account

All-State Reveal Show

Louisville, KY: There is a reason the Trinity High Schools of the world are who they are. They have tradition, talent, pedigree, funding, support, facilities, and freaks all over the field.

Looks the part!

Sometimes they even boast brothers. The Brohm brothers played at Trinity. So did the Frost boys (Jahshua and Jahbarri), last season, during another 6A title run.

Jahbarri (signed to Eastern Michigan) made our Big Ass Fans, Large School All-State Football Team a year ago. Jahshua Frost looks poised to make the edition which we will debut after the KHSAA Football Championships in December of 2026.

Frost is a ’28 corner. Frost has a long, tall frame for a kid deployed on an island.

Frost is 5’11,” 170 pounds. How explosive is he? Well he is a sprinter on Trinity’s track & field team running both the 60-meter and the 200-meter. Sixty-meter guys are explosive, twitchy, or that is our experience anyway.

Frost locked down his side of the field in the 12-games of run he enjoyed as a sophomore. While Frost only registered a pair of tackles, he did pick a pair of passes for 28 IRNYs.

Frost is 5’11,” 170 and runs the 60 and 200 in track

Friday Night Fletch

First of all, Trinity plays the best defense in the KHSAA. You are talking about a team which played all comers short of the collegiate game and surrendered less than 150 points all season long. That is surrendering approximately 9.8 points per night.

Like we said, Trinity plays all comers. They will schedule Alabama’s Crimson Tide if they want to play. Not really; but, you get the point.

Trinity, in ’25, played Male (Lou.), St. Xavier (Lou.), St. Xavier (Cincinnati), Frederick Douglass (Lexington), Moeller High (Cincinnati), South Warren (Bowling Green), and Carmel High (Indiana). Those are among the finer, more talented, and most pedigreed high school football programs in the Midwestern United States.

Imagine what they would have done against a “normal” schedule. It is mind-boggling.

Still, these guys were 13-2 in ’25, 6A KHSAA football champions, and Frost was right in the thick of it. There isn’t a better, more physical corner anywhere in the KHSAA’s ’28 graduating class.

What is upcoming this next season. Well, Trinity returns a ton of talent from off last year’s team, particularly at QB (Zane Johnson). With players like Frost up and down the roster, it is hard to imagine anyone else upending the Shamrocks in the commonwealth of Kentucky this (or really any) year.

One thing is for certain. You will be hearing much, much more from this “other” Frost.

This is Friday Night Fletch, reporting for KPGFootball, reminding you to PLAY THROUGH THE WHISTLE!

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About Fletcher Long 2157 Articles
Two-time winner of Kentucky Press Association awards for excellence in writing and reporting news stories while Managing Editor of the Jackson (KY) Times-Voice

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