One of the biggest stories of the 2023 high school football season
in Minnesota is the new coaching staff at Holy Family Catholic in Victoria. Dan
O’Brien, who coached at Benilde-St. Margaret’s, Bemidji and Lakeville before
becoming head coach at Concordia University in St. Paul and later an assistant
coach and director of football operations at the University of Minnesota, left
St. Thomas Academy to become head coach at Holy Family. His staff includes Dave
Nelson and Jeff Ferguson, who came out of Hall of Fame retirements after combining
for 10 state championships at Blaine, Minnetonka (Nelson) and Totino-Grace
(Ferguson).
O’Brien, Nelson and Ferguson are football warhorses, football lifers.
The most interesting and inspiring member of the Fire’s football staff, however,
is a 24-year-old rookie coach … also named O’Brien.
Casey O’Brien is well-known in Minnesota for reasons that have everything
to do with courage and resiliency. He was a freshman at Cretin-Derham Hall in
St. Paul in 2013 when he was diagnosed with cancer after complaining of pain in
his left knee. The 13-year-old underwent tests that revealed osteosarcoma, a
rare form of bone cancer.
Surgeries (including a knee replacement), chemotherapy and other
treatments continued as cancer returned, time and again, through Casey’s time
as a walk-on kick holder at the University of Minnesota and beyond.
All told, Casey is a six-time cancer survivor. He has endured 27
surgeries, countless rounds of chemotherapy and radiation, and he has spent
nearly a full calendar year in the hospital. He undergoes scans every three months
and his most recent tests, in August, marked him as cancer-free for nine
months.
Dan O’Brien led a very successful program at St. Thomas Academy in
Mendota Heights, taking the Cadets to a 49-5 record in five years, including
two Prep Bowl appearances. But there was one glitch: Casey refused to join the
coaching staff. Because of his strong ties to Cretin-Derham Hall, a big rival
of St. Thomas Academy, Casey wouldn’t take a job alongside his dad.
Casey said, “At the start of every
season he was like, ‘Hey, you're going to come coach, right?’ And you know, Cretin
has been a fantastic school to myself and the community that supported me
through my journey, and it just didn't feel right to me to do that to the
school that I care so much about. So I had a little school pride in saying, ‘I'm
not going to do it.’ ”
One of the benefits of Dan O’Brien’s job change was opening the
door for Casey to work alongside his dad. He’s the quarterback coach at Holy
Family and it’s a dream come true … even if the dream includes nightmare-like times
of uncertainty in the hospital, which also had a football theme.
“It was something that we had talked
about for a long time,” Casey said. “You know, we spent 350 nights in the
hospital together talking football and watching film, watching games on TV. I've
always wanted to be a part of trying to go win games with him. This has really
been a fun experience for me.”
Holy Family had lost 20 consecutive
games over three seasons before the Fire opened this season with a 45-0 win over Academy Force. “That broke the streak,” Dan O’Brien said. “That
was a monkey off our back.”
The Fire are now 2-2 on the season after losing to unbeaten St.
Agnes 33-14 last Friday. Casey O’Brien viewed the action from the press box, wearing
a baseball cap backwards over a headset with which he spoke to Nelson, who
calls the offensive plays.
“That was Vegas or Bama,” the young coach said into his headset. “We’re
seeing Man Three coverage.” When a fake punt resulted in what initially appeared
to be a first down, Casey’s voice rose as he said, “We have it! We have it!”
“I'm helping watch what the defense
is doing and trying to think of plays we can run,” he said. “Coach Nelson will
say, ‘Hey, give me some help on a third-down call.’ And I'll tell him what their
defensive backs are doing, and where I think we can get them.”
Dan O’Brien beams when talking about coaching with his son.
“When I took this job, a small piece of it was knowing he would
come along. We talk about being around the best and treating kids right. We’re
laughing every day.”
Casey said, “When he was talking
about taking the job I said, ‘If you take it, I want to be the first hire on
the staff. I want to be a part of it.’ ”
The younger O’Brien, who works as an investment associate at RBC Wealth
Management in downtown Minneapolis, admits that it can be hard to not think
about football during the workday, after which he drives to Victoria for
practice.
“On Fridays I’ve got to snap myself
back in and concentrate on finance a little bit because I’m just so excited to
get out here and be a part of it,” he said. “Win or lose, this is the highlight
of my week.”
Fire senior quarterback Gavin Frye said
that because of Casey’s youth, “He really kind of relates to us a lot.”
The announcement earlier this year
that the new coaching staff would include Dan O’Brien, Nelson and Ferguson remains
memorable for Frye.
“It was surreal. It felt like a
daydream,” he said. “I remember the day I came home from school and my dad was
telling me who we got. So then we started looking it all up, making sure it was
actually true. That was really exciting.”
Casey’s coaching jobs means time at
practices and games, of course, but he works just as much and just as hard as
the rest of the staff.
“Case works with the quarterbacks and a little bit with the receivers,”
Dan O’Brien said. “He does a good job. He sends out film every single night
from practice.
“I’m really proud of him. He sees things that kids his age don’t
always see. He’s at staff meetings, Saturday meetings, Sunday meetings. He does
a good job, he’s working hard.”
Nelson has known Casey for a few years, but mainly as Dan’s son. Working
alongside the young, inspirational coach has been remarkable.
“I’ve known
him for a while, but when you're coaching with somebody you really get to know them
much better,” said Nelson, who is also a cancer survivor. “He's never had a bad
day out here. He's just an inspiration. It's fun to coach with Casey. He's
knowledgeable and obviously he’s got a great perspective on things. He’s really
good with the players.
“He has a great outlook on life and
how can you have a bad day when you're around him?”
The Fire will host Byron on Friday for their annual Tackle Cancer
fundraising event. The goal is to raise $15,000 for the Randy Shaver Cancer
Research and Community Fund.
After the loss to St. Agnes, the Fire players took a knee and
gathered around their head coach. O’Brien talked about the disappointing loss, about
continuing to work hard, about using the pain of losing to get better as a
team.
When he asked the assistant coaches if they had anything to add,
Ferguson said, “Some of you didn’t play your best game. We didn’t coach our
best game. We need to coach better.”
And then Dan O’Brien, with his son standing a few feet away, looked
past that night’s game. He smiled at all the young faces and said, “Tomorrow’s
a whole other day.”
It sure is.
--Click here to watch Casey O’Brien’s inspirational speech at the
2019 Big Ten Kickoff Luncheon: https://shorturl.at/crDJ7
--MSHSL senior content creator 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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