Since about fourth grade, Phillip Klaphake knew he wanted to be a coach. He comes from a family of coaches, and as the head football coach at Sauk Rapids-Rice put it, “I don’t know if I’m good at anything else. Coaching is in our blood, for sure.”
Klaphake’s grandfather,
Wayne Hasz, coached boys basketball at Lester Prairie from 1968 to 1996 and is
a member of the Minnesota Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame. His
father, Glenn, was a longtime coach and athletic director. Glen was the
athletic director at Princeton High School when his son was first a ball boy at
football games and then a four-sport athlete himself.
Phillip was on the football,
basketball, baseball and track and field teams in high school before becoming a
record-setting quarterback at St. Cloud State. He remained at St. Cloud State
for a year as a graduate assistant coach, then worked as an assistant
coach at Gustavus Adolphus College for one year before becoming head coach at Sauk
Rapids-Rice in 2016.
The Storm is having an outstanding 2021
season, with four wins in as many games going into Friday’s home game against Bemidji.
It’s the program’s first 4-0 start since 1994.
Like their coach, many of the current
Storm football players are well-versed in other sports. The Sauk Rapids-Rice basketball
team played for a section championship last winter and the baseball team went
to state in the spring.
“We have a lot of winners on our team,
some seniors who have played a lot of football and are really confident,” said Klaphake,
31. “I’ve watched them play a lot of other sports. They just kind of know how to
win.”
Success in other sports is not the only
reason for the football team’s strong showing at the halfway point of the
regular season. The Storm players, including 21 seniors, are a close group of
friends.
“I think
it's really special,” said senior wide receiver/defensive end Carter Loesch,
who has committed to play football at Minnesota Duluth. “The biggest thing is
that we're all really close friends, that's why I think we're so successful. We
all hang out. It's not just during football, it’s all the time.”
Klaphake said, “It’s a special group of
kids and they genuinely like each other. It’s a movie with how these kids like each
other. They hold each other accountable.”
A growing enrollment over the years has elevated
Sauk Rapids-Rice to where it is now, a Class 5A football team. The Storm, once
in the Rum River Conference, are now a member of the Central Lakes Conference
“It got tough,” Klaphake said. “We’ve had some
growing pains but we’ve always had talent. We started playing schools that were
bigger than us. I’m not going to take any credit. We’re growing into a 5A
school and learning what takes to be successful against the Bemidjis and Brainerds
and Moorheads of the world.
“We knew this group could be a very solid
5A team, and we were curious to see how good our opponents would be. We’re
pretty confident that we’ve got some players. We’re not so confident that we think
we’re going to just walk in and beat anybody, but we’re confident that we have
a chance.”
This year’s football success has hinged on
a fast, multi-faceted offense and an equally quick-footed, swarming defense. In last Friday’s
33-7 win at Cambridge-Isanti, quarterback Dominic Mathies completed 13 of 20 passes for 253 yards and
three touchdowns while also running for a pair of scores. Andrew Harren
caught six passes for 115 yards, including a 58-yard touchdown toss from
Mathies.
After Cambridge-Isanti drove
76 yards to score on its opening drive (a 27-yard pass from Ari Sullivan to Colton
Skoglund), the Bluejackets were held out of the end zone the rest of the night.
The Storm plays with plenty of energy, and
much of that begins with the coach.
“He definitely has the most energy on the team, even though
it should be one of us,” said senior Cole Ackerman, the team’s leading tackler.
“But he makes practice a lot of fun, he knows what he's doing, he has a really
good mind for football. He knows both sides of the ball, he's a really good
coach.”
If everything goes right, the Storm could
reach the state football playoffs for the first time since 2010 … a year after
their coach graduated from high school.
“A lot of my defensive coaches have been
on staff for a long time and it’s fun to listen to their stories,” Klaphake
said. “We’re starting to get this thing rolling and be a competitive program.”
--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of
Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn
and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts.
Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org
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