Gary Sloan wasn’t going to let Covid-19
run the show. After nearly three decades as the head football coach at Grand Meadow,
Sloan wanted to step away on his own terms, not the pandemic’s.
He had considered leaving after the 2020
season, which was batted around by Covid and ended without a state tournament. That
was no way to end his illustrious career.
“I almost did this last year,” Sloan said
Monday. “I didn’t because of Covid. I didn’t want to go out like that.”
He knew before the 2021 season that it
would be his last; he told the players of his plans over the summer and the
boys kept the secret. The news came out Sunday when two of his sisters and his daughter
Allie posted notes on Facebook after the Superlarks lost to LeRoy-Ostrander in Saturday’s
Nine-Man Section 1 semifinals.
Historically speaking, a season ending in
the section semifinals has been a rarity. Sloan and his assistant coaches, many
of them former Superlarks players, built Grand Meadow into one of Minnesota’s Nine-Man
football powerhouses.
He was an assistant coach at Grand Meadow
for seven years before becoming head coach. Under head coach Jerry Reker, Grand
Meadow went to state for the first time in 1986 and was the Class C state
runner-up in 1987. With Sloan at the helm, the Superlarks went to state in 1997
and 2009, finished as the Nine-Man state runner-up in 2012 and won four consecutive
state titles from 2013 through 2016. They also went to state in 2019.
Asked about his memories, however, Sloan didn’t
mention state championships or big wins. He talked about the important people in
his life: the players.
“The games are fun but I’ve built so many
relationships with kids,” he said, “and a lot of those kids now are 35 or 40
years old. A handful of them still call me coach.”
Grand Meadow had a record of 230-84 in Sloan’s
29 seasons as head coach. At 59 years old, he will continue to serve as the
school’s athletic director and transportation director. He will retire as a
special education teacher at the end of the school year.
The small town of Grand Meadow – 25 miles
south of Rochester – gathers together when the Superlarks play. Residents whose
homes back up to the football field watch the action from their decks. Coveted “luxury
boxes” in the multi-level press box are claimed via raffle, and a couch behind
one end zone has been another coveted spot to view the action.
Sloan, a native of Ellendale, Minnesota,
and graduate of Winona State University, was named coach of the
year by the Minnesota Football Coaches Association in 2015. His sons Trevor and Tyler played football for their dad and
Tyler has worked as one of Gary’s assistant coaches.
Earning two degrees – in special education
and physical education – required two extra quarters of college, so he graduated
from Winona State on a Friday in 1985 and began working as a long-term
substitute teacher in Grand Meadow the following Monday.
This season, Grand Meadow lost to
Lanesboro (top ranked in Nine-Man) in the season opener and ran off eight wins
before the season-ending 39-34 loss at home to LeRoy-Ostrander. The Superlarks
had defeated LeRoy-Ostrander 20-17 in Week 4 of the regular season. Lanesboro
and LeRoy-Ostrander will meet in the Section 1 championship game on Friday in
Dodge Center.
“Gary’s teams were always prepared,” said
LeRoy-Ostrander’s Trevor Carrier, the last coach to face one of Sloan’s teams. “They
were sound defensively, they were disciplined, they tackle, they block. They do
those things well all the time and they seldom beat themselves. They’ve been in
the section title game a billion times. This isn’t Eden Prairie; to do it year
in and year out in small-town America is phenomenal.
“We have nothing but respect for what he’s
done and the great things he’s brought to Section 1 Nine-Man football. If you
can get through Section 1 you have a shot (at a state championship).”
Sloan certainly remembers the state
championship seasons, along with the experiences that were part of the ride.
“We got to travel and play in so many
locations, at different colleges, practices in bubbles at Minnetonka and
Wayzata and Rosemount and Hamline. Just the traveling, going out to eat and all
that stuff. Grand Meadow is very much a football town, and the support the community
has always given us was really something. It’s pretty cool when the road team
brings more fans than the home team does, and that’s happened over the years.”
One of the best rivalries in all levels of
Minnesota high school football has been between Grand Meadow and Spring Grove. The
Superlarks defeated the Lions in section play en route to their four consecutive
state titles, and Spring Grove was the Nine-Man state champ the following two
years.
Sloan remembers playoff games at Spring Grove,
with charter buses of Grand Meadow fans making the 60-mile drive, when the
crowd noise was so loud that it was difficult for him to yell a play call directly
into his quarterback’s ear.
“We had so many good games with Spring Grove,
and we won some and lost some,” Sloan said. “We played each other two times a year
for something like six years in a row. Those games really stand out to me. And
we played Underwood (at state) for three years in a row. They really stand out.
I think the biggest games, the ones that mean the most to me, were when we were
the underdogs but we were able to win. I guess I don’t like people telling us
what you can’t do.”
Sloan’s phone was buzzing and ringing with
abandon after news of his retirement broke. He heard from former players as
well as opposing coaches, “which was pretty cool.”
He doesn’t hunt or fish and is a
self-proclaimed so-so golfer. He’s never played much golf in the fall but that
will change. He has a bus driver’s license, so folks around Grand Meadow may
see him behind the wheel in that role.
“I’m gonna miss it, I know that,” Sloan
said of coaching. “It’s just time.”
--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
No comments:
Post a Comment