Sunday, September 10, 2023

John’s Journal: Thinking Back To 22 Years Ago This Week


 I’ll always remember where I was on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001. I had an appointment to speak to a class at Bloomington Jefferson High School, and I turned on the radio at home as I was getting dressed for the day.

There was talk of something bad happening in New York City. I turned on the TV in the kitchen and saw a big black smoldering hole in the side of one of the twin towers of the World Trade Center. A plane had apparently struck the building, but nobody knew anything more than that. Before long another aircraft blasted into the other twin tower.

I drove to Bloomington Jefferson, arriving a few minutes early. I listened to the radio in the car for as long as I could and then walked into the school and was escorted to the room where the Sports Literature class was meeting. There were televisions in the classrooms, but because of construction work in the school none of the TVs were working. I told the class everything I had learned from listening to the radio, and then we were all in blackout mode.

After the class period ended, I drove to the Star Tribune building in downtown Minneapolis. Like everyone else in the newsroom, I watched the scenes on television. The Pentagon was on fire … a plane had apparently gone down in Pennsylvania.

Fast-forward a few years and I was back at Jefferson, writing about a memorial stone that had been installed at the school in honor of former Jaguars quarterback Tom Burnett, who died when Flight 93 crashed in Pennsylvania. I also wrote about former Blake linebacker Gordy Aamoth, who died in one of the twin towers on Sept. 11. The stadium at Blake now bears his name and a twisted beam from the World Trade Center is on display at the stadium.

In the Sept. 14, 2001, edition of the Star Tribune, I wrote a column under the headline “High school sports can help the healing.” I had spoken with people at Colorado’s Columbine High School as well as Osceola High School in Wisconsin, where a traffic accident had claimed twin brothers a few weeks before Sept. 11. That column seemed to resonate with readers at the time, and to this day people occasionally will mention it to me. I have heard from a few people who say they saved that column, and they read it every day as Sept. 11 comes around. That is equally touching and humbling.

Here is that column as it appeared in the Minneapolis Star Tribune 21 years ago, on Sept. 14, 2001…

High School Sports Can Help The Healing

In the horrible wake of terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, all after-school activities were canceled Tuesday in the Jefferson County (Colo.) School District. This didn't surprise Ed Woytek, the athletic director at Columbine High School.

The day's events hit Columbine hard, especially the senior class. They were freshmen on April 20, 1999, when two students shot and killed 12 students and a teacher before taking their own lives.

"Our coaches and all of us are on kind of a fine line, especially with what happened here previously," Woytek said.

Columbine still is recovering from that day. Recovery also is an ongoing process in Osceola, Wis., where twin brothers Eric and Aaron Kipp, 18, died in a car accident on the way to football practice 30 days ago.

With thousands of innocent people presumed to have perished this week, what do you say? How do you heal? Maybe it's best to listen to the kids. That's among the lessons learned at Columbine and Osceola.

"Pretty much all of them are saying to us, 'We need to be a family,'" Woytek said. "Because that's what happened a few years ago; they got with family. And that's where we need to be, that's where our American people need to be, is with family."

After the Kipp brothers died, football practices were stopped for a short period. But soon, everyone wanted to return -- or try to return -- to some sense of normalcy.

"Very soon, the kids were ready to go back," said Osceola coach/principal Mike McMartin. "They said, 'Coach, I need to keep busy.' And they were right. When we jumped back into it, although they weren't the best practices in the world, there was almost a big sigh of relief that they could start moving forward and take with us all the good things that the boys had shared with us for so many years, instead of thinking about the bad."

Activities went on as scheduled Tuesday in Osceola, the day of the attacks.

"We just really felt during that time it was massively important that we show to the kids, 'Hey, we're going on. We're not going to let these people defeat us or take us off our feet here. We're going to move forward and be proud,'" McMartin said.

At Columbine and Osceola, tragedy struck a specific community of people. This week, tragedy struck us all.

The Columbine Rebels take a 1-1 record into tonight's game at Dakota Ridge. Osceola is 3-0 and the homecoming opponent for rival St. Croix Falls. The games go on, as do our lives.

"Everybody keeps saying we'll never get back to normal, just like our nation will never get back to normal," Woytek said. "But hopefully we're going to get as close to normal as we can."

So if sporting events are part of your normal routine, stick with it. If you haven't been to a high school game in years, tonight would be a wonderful time to go. Get away from the television, escape the headlines. Find a seat in the bleachers and take a break, however temporary, from all that's gone so wretchedly wrong in this world.

Watch the team captains shake hands before the coin flip. Hold your hand over your heart during the national anthem as the flag flutters at half-staff. Bow your head during the moment of silence to honor this week's victims. Get on your feet for the opening kickoff. Watch our young people -- players, cheerleaders, fans -- as they smile, holler and laugh together during this evening that is tradition both athletic and social. Buy popcorn, listen to the band, cheer first downs, simply celebrate.

Maybe administrators at every school can find a recording of God Bless America, and across our states -- Minnesota, Wisconsin, Colorado and beyond -- we'll sing together when the game ends. Just like a family.

--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 

Thursday, September 7, 2023

John’s Journal: Home Field Can Be Truly Home Or Somewhere Down The Road

 

Home is where the heart is. In high school football, that can mean different things to different teams.

--Owatonna, a Class 5A power, unveiled its new stadium – alongside a new high school on the southern edge of town – last week, and Owatonna Stadium/Federated Field is an absolute showplace. The Huskies will enjoy the stadium for years to come and everyone in Owatonna is rightfully proud.

--Hancock, which has competed in two of the past three nine-player state tournaments, is on the other end of the spectrum, playing its entire 2023 season on the road. The Owls’ home field is being rebuilt with drainage tile and a new irrigation system and will be ready for next season, but this year they are playing two “home” games at the University of Minnesota Morris Big Cat Stadium (nine miles from Hancock) and two at Minnewaska Area High School in Glenwood (24 miles away).

Hancock’s season on the road includes practices as well as games, because the Owls’ practice field also is being rebuilt. That means the football team car-pools to Morris for workouts, either at Big Cat Stadium or neighboring Morris Area High School. The Owls are used to being mobile, having moved at least one home game in each of the last five seasons to Big Cat because of standing water on their field after rainfall.

Traveling for every practice and every game is not the easiest thing, but the Owls make it work. And they are grateful.

“We want our kids to be respectful for what we're given,” said Hancock coach Chad Christianson after the Owls opened the season Friday with a 50-14 win over Norman County East/Ulen-Hitterdal at Big Cat. “We tell them, ‘We're given this opportunity to come play on this field so let's take care of it. Let's make sure we're picking up after ourselves and thanking people for letting us be here.’

Hancock will play another home game on the road this Friday, facing Border West at Minnewaska.

Owatonna defeated Hastings 42-7 last week in its first game at the new stadium, and the Huskies will travel to Chanhassen this Friday. Last week’s win was the 200th career victory for Jeff Williams, who has been Owatonna’s head coach since 1996. The Huskies have been to the state playoffs 10 times and have played in five Prep Bowls, winning state titles in 2013, 2017 and 2018.

The first game at their new home was a community celebration, with a large crowd on hand for a pregame meal on a roomy plaza next to the stadium. With artificial turf, a digital scoreboard, top-notch sound system and lights, the facility is a distinct upgrade from the classic old grass field next to the classic old high school in the middle of town.

“It's a lot different,” said Williams. “I was out there picking pebbles (at the old field). Tonight felt a little bit like a state playoff game, it reminded me of the state playoffs at Lakeville North, so it seemed like a bigger game. It felt a lot bigger than a season-opener against a nonconference opponent.

“The plaza was rocking before the game and by 6:30 there really wasn't a place to sit over on this (home) side (of the stadium). The music, the tunnel, everything was really cool.”

Both teams cruised to their season-opening victories. Hancock, which has a record of 38-4 since the start of the 2019 season, held a 26-6 lead at halftime in its first game since falling to Spring Grove in last season’s state quarterfinals. Chase Evink, a 6-foot-5, 235-pound junior, ran for four touchdowns, including bursts of 55 and 80 yards against Norman County East/Ulen-Hitterdal.

Hudson Ver Steeg, a 6-6, 245 Hancock senior, two-way lineman and punter, said playing no true home games “kind of stinks. I'm a senior and we don't have a home game, but we'll push through it. Road games are fun as long as we get the job done.”

In Owatonna’s win over Hastings, Huskies quarterback Jacob Ginskey completed 14 of 26 passes for 250 yards and four touchdowns. Caleb Hullopeter caught scoring passes of 20 and 10 yards.

“Our mentality going into the game was ‘We're not losing the game,’ and so we came out here flying around, made some plays and got the job done,” said Ginskey.

Williams said being ready to play is important, no matter the venue.

“We've played at U.S. Bank Stadium, we played in the Metrodome, we've never been distracted,” he said. “There's a way to do it. You soak it in, you enjoy the experience. And then as soon as you get to the sideline, it's focus up and I thought our kids did that right from the outset.

I’ll relax for a bit tonight and I’ll try to soak in some of it. And that’s something I told the kids, ‘Make sure you do that. Soak everything in.’ ”

At Hancock, an important game-day tradition is having the team walk several blocks from the school to the football field (which also serves as the outfield in baseball).

It's a nice march to the field and we’re losing some of that,” Christianson. “But you know, when we had that state run back in 2019 (when the Owls fell to Mountain Lake in the state championship game), I think we played on something like six different fields. And it's kind of nice to get kids acclimated to playing at different places.

“There's something special about being at home, though, so it’s kind of tough not having that this year, but it seems like the kids have bought into it and are really enjoying it.”

Winning certainly adds a lot of enjoyment, whether at home, on the road or somewhere in between.

“It's been a kind of a struggle,” said Hancock junior Levi Kellenberger. “But we all got it, we're all family.

“I’m really excited for next year. Our field is going to be really fun.”

--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  

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

John’s Journal: Young Coaches Join Storied Volleyball Programs

 

Chaska head volleyball coach Sue Murphy (left) with assistants Kenzie Bachmann (rear) and Makayla Wenzel.

Volleyball is a sport steeped in tradition, as well as often family ties, and that is a ready theme during the current high school season.

The biggest offseason coaching change in years took place at Eagan High School, where Kathy Gillen – the only head coach the Wildcats have had since the school opened in 1989 – became an assistant when her daughter, McKenna Melville, was named head coach shortly after graduating from college.

And at Chaska High School, head coach Sue Murphy promoted two of her former players to varsity assistants following the retirement of Chuck Zemek after 26 years. Makayla Wenzel (Murphy’s niece), the setter on Eagan’s 2014 state championship team, and 2017 graduate Makenzie Bachmann are new members of the Hawks’ varsity coaching staff. Bachmann was part of an NCAA Division III national championship team at Wisconsin-Eau Claire in 2021.

Gillen, who was inducted into the Minnesota Volleyball Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2014, and Murphy, who became a member of the Hall of Fame in 2015, are thrilled to have young coaches take on big responsibilities.

“They know my game style, my purpose of why I’m a coach, and just the style of my coaching and what I expect,” said Murphy, who has been part of the Chaska volleyball program for 42 years. “We like to keep it in the community. After Chuck resigned, I took a couple weeks and thought hard about who should be my assistants.”

Wenzel has been a Chaska B squad coach and Bachmann coached at the 9A level  prior to this season.

Melville’s rise to head coach followed an all-state high school career at Eagan and an All-American career as an outside hitter at Central Florida. Because the Covid pandemic allowed college athletes to compete for an extra year, Melville, 23, was in school for five years and came home to Eagan with a Master’s degree. She was hired as a teacher at Eagan, joining her mom on the math faculty.

“I always tell people that she sees the game in slow motion, so if she can get the team to understand some of that volleyball IQ, that's going to help us a lot,” Gillen said.

Eagan and Chaska are two of Minnesota’s marquee volleyball schools. Both have been to state 16 times and own seven state titles; Eagan won it all in 1997, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2013, 2015 and 2016, and Chaska did so in 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 2005, 2006 and 2014.

Wenzel said she is excited about the challenge and the future.

“I think it brings a new aspect with us being younger,” she said. “Chuck was the assistant coach for a long time, those are impossible shoes to fill and he has been one of my favorite coaches ever. He's just a great person and really will leave a legacy forever. So I don't think we'll ever replace Chuck, but I do think that we bring a different look, being fresh out of college and just having a perspective that's more similar to the players in terms of our age. But also, we've been through this, we've walked in their shoes. We know what this looks like.”

Melville began her college days as a finance major before switching to education during the pandemic.

“I knew I wanted to coach and teach,” she said. “I just knew that my bucket was being filled by helping other people and being around the sport that I love more than anything.”

Eagan athletic director Sandra Setter Larsen said the mother-daughter similarities are clear.

McKenna’s got lot of energy and great personality. In many ways she’s so much like her mom in her competitiveness and ability to see the court and know the game and understand the game. One of Kathy’s great gifts is to succinctly say what the athlete or the student needs to hear. In some ways they are two peas in a pod with a lot of the same gifts.”

Gillen said discussions about coaching positions began last spring when McKenna was applying for a teaching position at Eagan.

“One thought was, ‘Should she be an assistant for a year or something like that?’ And I was like, ‘No, I'll be there.’ She's brought in a lot of new stuff that should make us a little bit better. It was just kind of a natural slide into that position for her.”

All three of the young coaches are thrilled to be in their new positions, realizing the importance of the sport and their school’s programs. And that includes the two longtime head coaches.

“She's just inspiring,” Bachmann said of Murphy. “She really kick-started Chaska volleyball years and years ago and that legacy is important. Playing for her, there is a serious weight to that, with hundreds of girls that will forever wish they could put on a jersey again and play for Sue.

“She's a leader, she's one of the most committed people I've ever gotten to know. She just is someone who really puts her entire heart into the program, and that will never go away. She is the reason why Chaska volleyball became what it is. It’s been an honor to play for her and now coach with her.”

I just hope more kids would do this,” said Murphy. “Giving back is huge.”

--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  

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

John’s Journal: A Special Day At The Brave Like Gabe Invitational

 

PERHAM – Behind his sunglasses, tears came to Kim Anderson’s eyes. This had been a special morning as dozens of high school cross-country teams and hundreds of runners had competed in honor of the daughters of Kim and his wife Laura.

Arvig Park in Perham was the site on Saturday of the fourth Brave Like Gabe Invitational, an event like no other. Competition was certainly part of it, but there was camaraderie, there was support, there was fundraising, there was remembrance, there was love, so much love.

Gabriele (Anderson) Grunewald, a 2004 Perham graduate, was a high school state track champion at 800 meters. She became an All-American runner at the University of Minnesota who went on to become a national champion as a professional runner. She continued her running career after being diagnosed with cancer in 2009 and was 32 when she died in June 2019. Her sister, Abby Anderson, was 29 when she was killed in 2021. She was walking in St. Paul when a vehicle driven by a drunk driver left the road and struck her.

“There’s a flood of emotions and it's gone by so quick, but it's absolutely wonderful to see how this has grown and the participation and everybody involved,” Kim said. “It’s just a wonderful, wonderful thing. We love it and we support it. We can't feel any better or more grateful.”

Kim wore a button with Abby’s photo, a memento from her high school running career.

The first Brave Like Gabe Invitational was held a few months after Gabe died. This year, nearly $2,500 in proceeds from concessions, t-shirt sales and donations from competing teams was given to the Brave Like Gabe Foundation. In the four years that the event has been held, approximately $10,000 has been donated to the foundation.

 

Another Brave Like Gabe fundraising event will be held Sept. 9, a 5K open to anyone anywhere. An in-person run will be held that morning at Como Regional Park in St. Paul, with others encouraged to run on their own. (Details here: https://runsignup.com/Race/MN/SaintPaul/BraveLikeGabe5K)

“This year we just had a lot of teams say, ‘We really want to be part of this event,’ ” said Jeff Morris, head coach of the Perham girls and boys cross-country teams and meet organizer.

“After Gabe passed away, I wanted to start a meet in her memory, having coached her in Perham ad having a strong relationship with her, and we stayed close to the family as she went through her cancer bouts.”

Signs in the park showed a silhouette of Gabe, arms outstretched. T-shirts reading Brave Like Gabe were worn by runners, coaches and fans. On the course, about 50 yards away from the start line on a slight grassy rise, “Brave Like Gabe” had been painted in giant letters. Every runner crossed that threshold as they began their race.

Gabe and Abby and their family were on everyone’s mind.

“I think it’s pretty cool for (Perham runners) to know that somebody like Gabe had such an impact, even globally, and not just in running, for something much greater than running and sports,” Morris said. “For our kids to see that, they can relate. She wore the same uniform, she ran the same trails.

“She didn’t let that small-town feel limit her dreams and her reach. I think it’s important for the kids to know that.”

Perham senior runner Mia Lung said Gabe’s impact remains strong in her hometown.

I think it gives us a lot of purpose on the team, to be running for something so big and knowing how hard she fought every single time. I always know whenever we go out on a run we all have that motivation of, ‘If she can do it, we can be brave like she was and pursue our own struggles.’ ”

Saturday’s events included races for elementary kids, junior high runners, as well as combined junior varsity/varsity races for high school teams.

Perham won the girls and boys team titles. The Yellowjackets boys had a team score of 72, followed by Hopkins (96) and Moorhead (97). On the girls side, Perham’s 40 points led the field, followed by Hopkins (70) and Moorhead (91).

Hopkins junior Sydney Drevlow was the girls individual winner in 17 minutes, 35.8 seconds. Runner-up Mia Hoffman of Bemidji finished in 17:52.0. Bjorn Anderson of Perham was the boys champion with a narrow win over Eli Hall of Pequot Lakes. The winning time was 5:19.9.

The Hopkins runners left at 5:30 a.m. for the three-hour drive trip to Perham, showing the devotion that was evident everywhere among the 24 teams.

After the racing was complete and before the awards ceremony, teams were invited to take part in a cool-down Mile Memory Run in honor of Gabe and Abby.

Morris introduced Kim and Laura Anderson during the awards ceremony, and Kim spoke to the large crowd.

“I see a few parents from way back in the day,” he said with a smile. “It's unbelievable. It's awesome. I don't know where the time goes but we really do appreciate everybody's participation. … It’s so wonderful to see everybody here.”

--To learn more about the Brave Like Gabe Foundation and donate: click here: https://www.bravelikegabe.org/

--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  

Sunday, August 27, 2023

John’s Journal: The Game’s The Same, No Matter The Location

 

Game night in Alden, Minnesota.

A few minutes before kickoff, Mike Mahlen was concerned. Not so much about his football team or the opponent, but about the grass. The surface at Mahlen Field in Verndale, 41 miles west of Brainerd, was in thick, lush, spectacular shape for the 2023 season opener. The coach, however, wasn’t exactly thrilled with the length of the grass as the first game of his 55th season was about to start.

You don’t coach at the same place for that long and win more games than any football coach in Minnesota without worrying about the little things. The Verndale Pirates were about to meet the Sebeka Knights; Mahlen knew speed was a strength of his team and he wished the grass had been cut a little shorter. Such concerns quickly vanished once the game started and the Pirates began sprinting and scoring.

Twenty-four hours earlier and 254 miles south of Verndale, music from Kanye West, Fall Out Boy and Yeat filled the pregame air in the town of Alden, 12 miles west of Albert Lea and not far from the Iowa border. The Knights of Alden-Conger/Glenville-Emmons and the Houston Hurricanes were about to start their football season, too.

Both games were special, because the first game of any season in any sport is special. In Alden and Verndale, these games kicked off the high school football season in Minnesota; they were Zero Week contests in nine-player football, two of eight such games Thursday and Friday. The rest of the state’s 340 teams will open their seasons this week.

Alden-Conger/Glenville Emmons coach Brady Neel, a 2015 Alden-Conger grad, offered a pregame recommendation to a visitor: Buy a corn dog. “They’re big at the (Freeborn) county fair,” the coach said.

At both sites – Alden and Verndale – the crowds included coaches from other teams, given the rare chance to watch and scout on a night when their teams were idle. The coaches mingled, joked and enjoyed fine carefree August evenings.

The first great play of the season came in Alden after the Knights’ first touchdown. On the extra-point kick by Landon Mattson, the ball sailed high through the goal posts and was caught 40 feet above the ground. That oddity was made possible because a few hometown folks were watching (and videotaping) the game from a scissor lift positioned on the fence line. As the kick flew, one of them made a perfect two-handed catch as the fans watching from planet Earth cheered.

In the second quarter Landon kicked an extra point on the other end of field, with the ball flying through the posts and over a chain-link fence onto a grassy area. As a young kid jumped the fence to retrieve the ball, referee Jake Kloeckner needled a visiting scribe who had been leaning against the fence, asking why he hadn’t lumbered over it to get the football. The answer: “Fifteen years and a thousand pretzels ago, maybe.”

In Verndale, the hometown Pirates started strong. After Tyler Amerud sacked the Sebaka quarterback on fourth down at the Verndale 40, the Pirates struck for touchdowns … twice in a row. A 22-yard scoring pass from Shawn Schmitz to Jaden Schulke was brought back by penalty, but on fourth-and-27 from near midfield, a screen pass from Shawn to Jaden got Verndale on the board.

The Pirates did plenty of scoring in their 40-6 win, and after each one the hometown fans broke into the school song. There was no band, no cheerleaders, no piped-in music, but no matter; the faithful performed a perfect a capella version, with hand claps throughout and hurrahs at the end.

Down in Alden, AC/GE cheerleaders Ava Avelar, Melany Gaytan Diaz, Ruby Page, Kaylee Slater and Kaci Wallin worked hard throughout the game. They kept up the spirit for their team (with students from two school districts) by yelling in unison, “Let’s go AC!” (clap clap clapclapclap) and “Let’s go GE!” (clap clap clapclapclap).

The corn dogs in Alden were as outstanding as advertised. For much of the evening, a steady line of people happily paid six dollars for one of the beauties from the Bruno’s Corn Dogs food truck. Some squeezed mustard and/or ketchup onto their dogs and some left them unadorned. By the end of the night, 164 had been sold.

Verndale’s Zero Week win was the 427th of Mahlen’s career (with 128 losses and three ties). He credits all his assistant coaches over the many years, including current staff members Greg Johnson, Matt Jones, Jeff Moore, Lance Edin, Mack Jones and Austin Ludovissie.

At places like Alden and Verndale, crowd control is not much of an issue. Both football fields are encircled by the hallmark of small-town games: a single strand of rope attached to metal posts. No one violates the boundary. Both fields are situated on the edge of town, with farm fields and silos framing the horizon. In Alden, a neighbor watched the game through a window in his house.

While the Verndale-Sebeka game lacked much drama, the ballgame in Alden had more than enough as the teams traded the lead back and forth. After Alden-Conger/Glenville-Emmons scored on a long pass play to tie the score 28-28 with 8:22 left in the fourth quarter, the Knights forced a Houston punt. That gave the home team the ball with six minutes to go when during a water break -- one of several called by the officials on a hot evening -- a Knights assistant coach told the team, “Here we go! Drive down the field and break their hearts!”

With five seconds on the clock, Mattson lined up a 32-yard field goal attempt for the win. This one sailed wide of the left goalpost and nowhere within reach of the sure-handed crew high up on the scissor lift.

Houston had the ball first in overtime, scored on fourth down and got the two-point conversion and lead 36-28. The Knights found the end zone on first down, went for two and were stopped. Houston 36, AC-GE 34. The heartbreak was on the home side of the field, yet lessons were learned.

We’ve got a lot of heart. We’ve got a lot of fight,” said Neel, the Knights young coach. “We were down at halftime and really kind of confused at what we were going to do. But we sat down with our seniors, they kind of stepped up and our second half was a lot better than that first half. We made a lot less mistakes and we have something to improve on for next week.”

In Verndale the next night, the length of the grass was not much of a factor after all. But Mahlen, the 75-year-old head coach and always the perfectionist, talked to his players about the importance of better tackling as the season moves on.

After the postgame team huddle disbanded, players posed for photos and chatted with family and friends on the sacred field that has seen the Pirates win two state championships and finish as state runner-up three times in 17 trips to state.

“He really pushes us to be our best,” said Jaden Schulke. “He expects 100 percent on every play and he expects us to win. He expects a lot out of us.”

Shawn Schmitz said it was an honor to play for Mahlen. “He’s one of the greatest coaches to ever coach football.”

Neel is in his third year as a head football coach, Mahlen is in his 55th. That’s a big difference, but there are many similarities. Preparation is key, of course, as is execution. That’s what the first game of the season, any season in any sport, is all about. Learn from your mistakes, tighten up the loose ends, get better.

And maybe, just maybe, cut the grass a little bit shorter.

--To read previous coverage of Alden-Conger/Glenville Emmons and Verndale, click here https://www.mshsl.org/about/news/johns-journal/johns-journal-alden-congerglenville-emmons-aims-high and here https://www.mshsl.org/about/news/johns-journal/johns-journal-55-football-seasons-coach-who-loves-game

--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  

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

John’s Journal: Pequot Lakes Volleyball Hoping For An Even Better Finish

 

The Pequot Lakes High School volleyball team has taken quite the crazy ride in recent years. In 2019 the Patriots ended a 25-year state tournament drought by qualifying in the Class 2A field, where they were defeated in the quarterfinals. With lots of experience and talent returning, the stage was set for a big run in 2020.

That’s when the pandemic hammer dropped. There was no state tournament in 2020 due to Covid, which was a difficult pill to swallow.

“Everyone felt sorry for us because they knew we had a great team,” said Christine Ganley, who is in her seventh year as the coach at Pequot Lakes.

In 2021 the Patriots came oh so close to another state appearance, losing a five-set heartbreaker in the Section 6AA championship match to Sauk Centre, which went on to capture the state title. But finally, last season, Pequot Lakes made it back to state and advanced to its first state championship match before falling to Cannon Falls at Xcel Energy Center.

With a record of 91-20 since the beginning of the 2019 season, and again with plenty of talented players back, the 2023 season could be another season to remember for the Patriots.

At the conclusion of last year’s state tournament, then-juniors Ella Kratochvil and Grace Hoffard were named to the all-tournament team. Ganley said that helped light a fire as thoughts turned to 2023.

“There is a lot of optimism,” she said. “The nice thing is we’ve always talked about how every team has to grow every season and they have to make the team their own. … We talked a lot to this year’s seniors, that it’s their job to work on a positive work ethic and what it takes to make a great season.”

The Patriots know all about great seasons, in volleyball and beyond. Most of the volleyball players are involved in one or two other sports, and Pequot Lakes has been on a strong postseason run in multiple sports.

Ganley said, “I asked the seniors this summer, ‘How many of you have been in a game to go to state?’ All of them raised their hand. They’ve gone to state in volleyball, basketball, softball, track and golf. You take all those moments with you into this season. Not many teams can say that, but we have athletes who have been in high-pressure situations in two or three sports.”

As the regular season nears, Pequot Lakes is ranked second in Class 2A by the Minnesota Volleyball Coaches Association, with Cannon Falls No. 1. The Patriots will open the season at Wadena-Deer Creek on Aug. 29, with high hopes for the conclusion of the campaign, buoyed by memories of a year ago.

“Most of us had just been to the state tournament to watch, and seeing that as a kid, you're like, ‘Oh my gosh, I want to do that someday,’ ” said senior libero Kelsi Martini. “So knowing that was something we can work for, I think last year we all just competed in practice. And we were like, ‘OK, we want to do this.’ And then our goals just kept becoming bigger.”

None of the returning players have any problems finding motivation for 2023 after coming within one match of a state title.

“The feeling we had after our last game last season in the state championship, I think that brings a lot more motivation this year for all of us,” Kratochvil said. “We have a lot of returning players that were included in all of that.”

Going to state is rare for any team in any sport, and advancing all the way to a state championship game is very rare. The Patriots treasure their memories from the 2022 season.

“It was fun and so full of joy. I was happy for these girls,” Ganley said. “The year before we lost by two points in the third set to Sauk Centre (in the section final), and they won it all.

Taking that into last fall, the kids were on a mission; ‘We aren’t going to let that happen again, we’re not going to lose by two points to go to state.’ They were determined. And when we were at state they were on another mission, with so much joy and happiness for the kids. They just had so much fun.”

--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  

Wednesday, August 16, 2023

John’s Journal: Another Crack At State Title Motivates MIB Rangers

 

MOUNTAIN IRON -- A new banner hangs in a prominent spot on the wall inside the weight room at Mountain Iron-Buhl High School. Two team photos are prominent reminders of what the Rangers football and girls basketball teams accomplished last season: Minnesota State High School League state champions.

There is a strong family angle to this story. The football team was led by senior quarterback Asher Zubich, now playing at St. Olaf College. The star of the girls basketball team was his kid sister Jordan Zubich, who will soon begin her senior year and has committed to the University of North Carolina.

Their dad, Dan Zubich, is the Rangers head football coach and about as proud a parent as you will find.

Ask Dan about his favorite memories from 2022-23 and he thinks back to the first weekend in December. That Saturday, the Rangers rallied to defeat Spring Grove 28-25 in the Nine-Player state championship game at U.S. Bank Stadium. The girls basketball players cheered from the stands, then rode a bus to Hopkins High School, where they defeated Hayfield in a matchup of two of the state’s best small-school teams.

We were watching that game on the bus on the way home,” Dan Zubich said. “And the next day, Jordan got her offer from North Carolina.”

A new year began at MIB on Monday evening when the football team held its first practice of the season. If things go well for the Rangers, they will make another lengthy postseason run. While last season’s state title was their first appearance in the Prep Bowl, boys from MIB have made regular trips to the state playoffs. Mountain Iron was the Class B state champion in 1972 and returned to state in 1973 and 1982; Mountain Iron-Buhl went to state in 1983 as well as 2003, 2004, 2006, 2010, 2018, 2019 and 2021.

The Rangers football team hasn’t lost a district game since 2019 and is unbeaten in postseason section tournament action since 2017.

The obvious question as the 2023 season begins: What are the expectations?

“As far as I know, there might be a dark horse out there but I think we’re as good as anybody,” said Dan Zubich, the head coach since 2012. “You know how kids are. I’ve been getting after them, saying ‘You don’t have to do anything now, you won the state title, huh?’ ”

Zubich likes to needle the players about working hard, while reminding them what last year’s team did to make their dream come true.

“I think we have confidence but it’s like smart confidence,” said junior Micaden Clines, who will take over at quarterback this fall. “It’s like, ‘Don't think too highly of yourself. You’ve still got to put in the work. You’ve still got to perform.’ ”

The year’s first practice was workmanlike, with few whistles and not one raised voice. The stadium at MIB is one of the finest in the state, with artificial turf and comfortable seating set between the school and a wooded area. During Monday evening’s practice, the sounds of football were bookmarked between vehicles on nearby U.S. Highway 169 and crickets beginning their evening choir performance.

There were 44 players on the field – from seventh grade to seniors – wearing helmets, t-shirts, shorts and cleats. They stretched, they did 20-yard bear crawls, they carried teammates on their backs for 20 yards, they were timed in the 40-yard dash, two players at a time. They did drills on blocking, tackling, footwork, throwing and catching, they ran plays in a nine-on-nine format (aka 18 Wide).

The Rangers attended a football camp for Nine-Player teams at the University of Minnesota Morris in July, giving those who attended a head start on working together.

There are holes to fill, beyond the spot vacated by Asher Zubich. Dan Zubich said five starters are back on defense, along with two offensive linemen and running back Damien Tapio.

“We’ve got a lot of experience on defense,” Tapio said. “We'll see but I think our defense might be better than last year. On offense it's going to be a different team.”

Tapio carried the ball 18 times for 80 yards and two touchdowns in the Prep Bowl win over Spring Grove, and also caught four passes for 29 yards. After Spring Grove led 19-0, Tapio’s 11-yard scoring run late in the first half put the Rangers on the board. He scored again from 10 yards with 25 seconds remaining in regulation to cap the Rangers' rally and the memorable three-point victory.

“It was a lot of fun,” said Clines. “You know, we started off down and we kept our composure. It was a lot of fun out there, sticking through it as a team.”

Those kinds of lessons can pay off a season later, and that’s what the Rangers are hoping for in 2023. They will open the season with a road game at Cook County in Grand Marais, a 275-mile round trip that will set the tone for MIB’s regular-season road schedule. They also will play at Lake of the Woods (332-mile round trip), North Central (234) and Blackduck (242).

Home games will be much anticipated at the Rangers’ state-of-the-art stadium that was built in 2018. When Mountain Iron-Buhl’s junior high team lost a home game last fall, it was the first home defeat for any MIB football team since the facility opened.

We like to tease those guys about that,” Zubich said.

The state championship poster is in its place, and this year’s football team will try to hang another one.

“Last year’s seniors, when they were younger, were so good in lots of sports,” Zubich said. “We tell the kids they have to be mentally tough. It’s helped them, because they have been through so many games.”

--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  

Saturday, August 12, 2023

John’s Journal: Alden-Conger/Glenville-Emmons Aims High

 

ALDEN – The football gods haven’t exactly bestowed a steady diet of feast or famine in recent years on the football team from Alden-Conger/Glenville-Emmons. But the results have veered closer to the latter.

From a record of 5-4 in 2018 to 0-9 in 2019, then 1-6 in the Covid-shortened 2020 campaign, followed by another 0-9 mark in 2019 and back to 5-4 one year ago, the team has seen some mild highs and some major lows.  

That 5-4 finish in 2022 opened some eyes, however, because coming back from an ofer season to win more than half your games is not an easy lift in football. The Knights bring back lots of experience in the 2023 season, which will begin with a Zero Week home game against Houston on Aug. 24.

But there’s another new wrinkle to the new season: The Knights have gone from Class 1A to Nine-Player football, which is a big -- and welcome -- change.

“We needed it,” said third-year head coach Brady Neel, an alum who grew up on a farm outside of Alden and graduated from high school here in 2015.

On the morning after Alden-Conger/Glenville Emmons’ 2022 season ended with a playoff loss to United South Central, Neel was on the air with Aaron Worm of KATE radio in nearby Albert Lea. Aaron began the interview with this statement: “The future is so bright for Alden-Conger/Glenville-Emmons football.”

There was and is no doubt about that. Sophomores and juniors dominated the roster last year, and that kind of experience can be key in a new season.

“There’s not a ton of drop-off,” the coach told Worm that morning. “We’ve got younger guys who are ready to step up. We’re going to have a good future.”

The future is now, and the team has a weeks’ worth of practice in the books under the Zero Week format. With a pair of 2023 grads now playing college football in Iowa (Lucas Hensche at Waldorf and Caleb Songstad at Luther), the Knights are looking forward to a new season, new opponents and new challenges.

“We’re trying to play our hearts out and we’ll go into every game knowing that we can win,” said senior receiver and linebacker Tyler Erickson. “It'll be different going down to nine-man. We've haven't been here, playing smaller schools, and we should match up pretty well. So we'll see how it goes.”

Five years ago there often weren’t enough players to have a full scrimmage. This year there are 30-some kids on the roster, with 30 or so signed up for middle school football and 50 to 60 on the elementary level.

“Lot of kids here want to play football,” said Neel, who teaches third grade in Albert Lea. He played football, basketball and baseball in high school, along with being a member of the FFA and “a bunch of other little clubs and things to stay involved.”

That’s the model for small-town kids. Erickson also plays basketball and golf and fellow senior captain Tyler Linn has participated in basketball and baseball.

Another constant in small schools are cooperative agreements. That’s what the slash designates in “Alden-Conger/Glenville-Emmons” … two school districts that come together to have teams in football, girls basketball and softball. Alden-Conger is in another coop with United South Central in cross-country and track and field, and with Albert Lea in wrestling.

The football season with have some twists this fall, because after looking east and facing the Section 1 juggernaut of teams in the regular season, AC/GE will play in Section 3 during the postseason, with most of those teams to the west.

The regular season should be a good test for the Knights. Section 1 has produced seven state champions in the last decade (Grand Meadow in 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016, Spring Grove in 2017 and 2018 -- and a state runner-up finish last year -- and LeRoy-Ostrander in 2021). In addition, Mabel-Canton won a state title in 2001, Kingsland did so in 2002 and Houston won it all in 2008.

The Knights’ state tournament history is a bit sparse. Alden-Conger won a Class C state title in 1978, returning to state in 1979, 1986, 1998 and 2008.

Alden-Conger/Glenville Emmons played Nine-Man football before moving to Class 1A seven years ago.

“Thankfully we came back down to where I think we belong,” said Neel, who can lean on a coaching staff with vast amounts of experience.

Neel was an assistant coach for two years before becoming head coach. On his staff are former head coaches Gary Nelson and Chad Mattson, and along with assistant Joe Brooks they have more than 40 years of football coaching experience and 80 years when other sports are factored in.

Linn and Erickson have already seen a lot as they begin their senior season. Jaden called their 0-9 sophomore campaign “a struggle.”

“Just learning to cope and learn from everything like that was pretty much what the year was,” he said. “It was just a learning year to get into all of our positions and learning how we're going to work into things, and then that helped to improve the next year. Seeing all that improvement, all that came from lear"ing from the 0-9 season and how that kind of really brought everything together.’

Erickson said their sophomore season “was a learning curve for all of us, trying to learn the plays, and the game speeds up from middle school to high school.”

Last year’s turnaround set the tone for 2023, Jaden said.

“Just based on what practices were like, we expected improvement and we liked learning from the experiences from the past,” he said. “That helped a ton. We wanted to set a goal of being .500 and we exceeded that. I think what went into that was all the hard work and effort we put into practices and everybody coming together, working as kind of a family.”

--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  

Friday, August 4, 2023

John’s Journal: 55 Football Seasons For A Coach Who Loves The Game

 

At 9 o’clock Monday morning in Verndale, a village of 500 or so residents where everyone is a football fan, Mike Mahlen will direct the Verndale Pirates in their first practice of the 2023 season. The head coach knows the drill, because this is his 55th year at the helm.

Mahlen was 20 years old and fresh out of Mayville (N.D.) State when he was hired as a healthy/physical education teacher and head football coach in Verndale the same year that Neil Armstrong put a foot on the moon’s surface, the Woodstock music festival was held in upstate New York and Sesame Street made its television debut.

That was 1969, and what Mahlen has accomplished since is incredible.

Coaching 11-man football for his first 16 years at Verndale and the nine-player version since, he owns more football victories than any coach in Minnesota history. He begins the 2023 season with a career record of 426-128-3. Second on the list is Becker’s Dwight Lundeen, who is beginning his 54th season there with a record of 390-166-3.

Mahlen and Lundeen are two of three active head coaches among the top 15 in career wins. Retired Brainerd coach Ron Stolski ranks third at 389-182-5 in 58 years and Eden Prairie's Mike Grant, the third active coach on the list, is fourth at 377-79 over 40 seasons.

Mahlen averages more than 10 victories per season, which is astounding when teams play only eight regular-season games.

Football seasons, whether in 1969 or 2023, have similarities. Mahlen will welcome 30-some players to the first practice as preparations begin for the Pirates’ season opener against Sebeka at Mahlen Field on Aug. 25.

Mahlen, who will be 76 years old before the season ends, also has served as the Pirates head baseball coach and assistant boys basketball coach. He was the school’s athletic director from 1977 to 2018; he retired from teaching in 2004 and loves spending time with his wife Sallie, their two kids and five grandkids, and devoting time to football. He has no plans to retire from coaching.

“When I get sick of going to practice, then I’ll retire,” he said. “I’d like to keep coaching forever but that’s not going to happen.”

Mike and Sallie grew up in Erskine, both attended Mayville State, and they have been married for 55 years. Mike jokes that it’s easy to remember how long he has been coaching because it’s the same number of years he has been married. Their wedding took place shortly before his first football season in Verndale.

Mike was a three-sport athlete in high school and played football in college, although the prospect of going to college at all was not a certainty until one of his high school coaches literally showed him the way.

The young man was doing yard work one day when Erskine basketball coach Lowell “Marty” Martinson drove up and told Mahlen, “Get in.” Mahlen remembers that day well.

“After 30 or 40 miles (of a 77-mile one-way trip) I said, ‘Where we are going?’ He said, ‘We’re going to Mayville State and you’re going to register for college today.’ When I got home my mom said, ‘Where have you been?’ Marty was a pretty big influence on my life, all around.”

Mahlen led the Pirates to the state football playoffs for the first time in 1981. Since then, Verndale has made 15 more appearances, winning state championships in 1997 and 2002 and finishing as state runner-up in 1987, 1994 and 1996.

He has coached three generations of several families. He hasn’t coached any fourth-generation players … at least not yet.

“I hope I live long enough to do that,” he said. “Who knows?”

Mahlen still gets excited about the future when he watches kids in Verndale’s youth football program. He likes to look a few years ahead as he evaluates young talent.

“I’ll be thinking, ‘Who’s my quarterback down here, who’s going to be a running back,’ ” he said. “I still enjoy practice and going to practice. Games? Anybody can do that because that’s the fun part of it. But you’ve got to enjoy practice.”

He has seen a lot of changes over the decades, going back to when football playoffs began in Minnesota in his fourth season at Verndale. When enrollment fell and the Pirates made the switch from 11-player to nine-player football, the field for nine-player was only 80 feet long, with cones often used to mark the goal lines.

“That got to be a little bit of a sideshow,” he said. The nine-player rules now stipulate a field that is 100 yards long and 40 yards wide (it’s 53.3 yards wide in 11-player football). “Nobody even notices that it’s 40,” Mahlen said.

Last season the Pirates had another strong year, finishing 9-2 with both losses to Wheaton/Herman-Norcross; in Week 7 and again in the Section 4 title game. Verndale lost a large, talented senior class of 12 players from last year, with five seniors on the roster this season.

Away from football, Mike and Sallie enjoy time at a lake place near Perham. Before Covid interrupted everything, they made regular trips to Arizona or Florida to relax in the sun and watch spring training baseball games. Their children both work in education: son Jason teaches business and is an assistant football coach at Chisago Lakes, and daughter Gena Sperling is a kindergarten teacher in Elk River.

The Mahlen family, and everyone in Verndale and beyond, will be watching the Pirates during Mike’s 55th year at the helm. When kickoff arrives for the season opener, it will mark Mahlen’s 558th game as the Verndale head coach.

“Football’s more fun than ever,” he said.

--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  

John’s Journal: Shot Clocks Are Here, With Mostly Minimal Impact So Far

  After watching a mix of early-season girls and boys basketball games, seven or eight contests in all, I can file this report about the big...