Today we’re kicking off the countdown of my personal favorite Top 10 John’s Journal stories from the 2022-23 school year. We’ll start with No. 10 and work our way to the No. 1 story.
The No. 10 story, which was originally posted on Oct. 6, focuses
on the hometown atmosphere and tradition for the football team from Moose
Lake-Willow River. I had seen the Rebels play on the big stage in playoff games
as well as state championship games, but this was my first visit to one of
their home games. It was an unforgettable evening.
WILLOW RIVER
-- When a new school in Moose Lake was being planned a few years back, a
question was raised: Should we also build a new football field next to the new
school, a shiny and modern place to play?
The answer was
resounding: No flippin’ way.
That’s because
for about as long as anyone can remember, the Moose Lake-Willow River Rebels
have been playing football on a spectacular throwback field tucked into a
neighborhood on the edge of Willow River, surrounded by pine trees and bathed
in tradition and success.
The team
practices in Moose Lake but game nights are the big draw 11 miles away in
Willow River. The two small communities south of Duluth, just off Interstate
35, have their own schools, which have come together to form cooperative sports
teams since 1984.
The Rebels
football team has been one of the state’s best for a long time. They have
played in 15 state tournaments since 2000, including Class 2A state runner-up
finishes in 2009, 2011 and 2012.
A 43-14
Homecoming win over Mesabi East last week pushed the Rebels’ record to 4-1. The
loss came in the season opener against Class 4A Hermantown. Moose Lake-Willow
River plays at Braham this Friday.
Dave Louzek, who
is in his 24th year as head coach of the Rebels,
said success was not a sure thing in the early days.
“We really
struggled to get numbers out for football, especially from Willow River,” he
said. “Our numbers were way down and morale was a little bit low. We were able
to build up numbers to having 65 or 70 kids come out for football and from
there it’s built a lot of fun into the program. And it's just taken off since
then. The kids are having fun out here and that's kind of the key to playing
well.”
During halftime
of the Homecoming game, previous Rebels football players were recognized as they
stood on the field, representing the program’s tradition. Another tradition
takes place before home games, when the Rebels silently walk the one block
between the Willow River school and the football field. It’s quite a scene: the
Rebels, in single file, cleats clacking on the edge of a narrow asphalt street,
with red and blue banners hanging from telephone poles and bearing the Rebels’
“R.”
Louzek loves his
team’s home field and said it can be even more spectacular on foggy nights.
“Every once in a
while you'll get a night where the fog comes rolling in. And with the pine
trees, the lights and the stands are full, it’s great.”
The field is
special in other ways, too. All the fans who want to sit in bleachers do so on
the home side of the field; lots of folks stand around the perimeter of the
field (with the option of stepping back into the pines to take important phone
calls). There are press boxes on each side of the field. And there is no track,
which allows everybody to be extremely close to the action.
“That's the best
part of this field, there's no track separating the fans from the game,” said
Louzek. “The fans are literally right on top of you, right on top of the field
and they see everything that we're doing coaching-wise, and I love having them right
there. They see how we treat the kids, and we treat them well and get them to
work hard for us. I love that everybody is part of the experience.”
Indeed, during
the second half of the Homecoming game, with reserves on the field, a mom
leaned over the front of the metal bleachers and asked several first-string
players to gather together on the sideline as she snapped a photo.
The Rebels of
2022 are a talented group, led by a rough-and-tumble ground game and a
quick-to-the-ball defense. They average 313 rushing yards per game, led by
Jaxsyn Schmidt’s 150-yards-per-game average and eight total touchdowns in five
games. The Rebels have scored 19 rushing touchdowns and the defense has yielded
only four grounds TDs.
“It's definitely
a work in progress,” Louzek said of this season. “But we always expect to
compete for a section championship. We expect to get into the state tournament.
We graduated a great group of seniors last year, just like we do every year.
But we never talk about rebuilding, we always talk about reloading.
“And now it's this group's turn, and you saw the
former Rebel players out there (at halftime). They played in Prep Bowls, they
played in state semifinals, they played in state quarterfinals. And these kids
know it because we talk about it. And so they have to live up to that legacy.
And most of all, now, it's their turn. This year is their turn to leave their
part of the legacy.”
--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