Saturday, December 31, 2011

With Owens gone, where do we go from here?

 
Published in the December issue of the Madison County Journal. To subscribe to the Journal visit http://www.mainstreetnews.com/

By Dallas Bordon

For those who added to their Christmas list for a coaching change in the Madison County football program, their wish was granted a little over three weeks early. In the meantime, those who stood behind Coach Randall Owens and his efforts didn’t wish for the same outcome, but figured it was time for a change. The resignation of Owens now leaves the BOE with the task of filling another football head coaching job at Madison County.


Owens steps down after eight seasons that saw the Raiders post a 36-46 record and make appearances in the playoffs in 2005 and 2006 during that time. After starting his Raider career with a record of 26-16 in his first four seasons, his teams managed only 10 wins in his next four seasons and had the Raider faithful voicing concerns for a changing of the guard. Owens, who will temporarily remain the athletic director at Madison County, leaves the sidelines prior to the Raiders moving into a new classification system that will have them listed as one of the largest 4A schools compared to being one of the smallest. The change of classifications should favor Madison County in the upcoming seasons but the changes will have to take place under a new head coach.

I am not one nor will I ever be one to write anything bad about any coach in our school system. I have always tried to respect our coaches and I know their jobs are tough. That does not mean that I always agree with what they do or how they do it. I am right there with most when it comes to second guessing a coach at times. But admitting that point, I do know that there isn’t a coach around who is perfect or makes the right choices all the time. If that were true, there wouldn’t be so many coaching changes around us today. I can imagine that a coach’s job is very tough. The job can be difficult and the demands are not easy for any coach to fulfill. It could be simple on the other hand; win all your games or at least over half for a few years, get into the playoffs or win a state title and your job is safe. On the other hand, post a 10-30 record in four years, which included a 3-17 record in the past two years and you become one of the latest casualties of football coaching. In such a demanding sport as football is to us in the South and the need to be a winner, there is little room for error. We demand perfection and we demand wins. So now where do we go from here? What will our demands be for the person that fills the vacancy of Owens who becomes Madison County’s fifth coach to exit since the departure of Brady Sigler in 1989.

There are many questions to be answered in the next few weeks or months. What will our expectations be of the new football coach? How much support to the MCYA, a program which many feel Owens failed at supporting, will the next coach be willing to give? Will this next coach install the right personnel on the field? Will he produce wins, make the right play calls? The list goes on and on.

To date (according to the Georgia High School Football Historians Association) Madison County has no region titles or state championship trophies to put in the trophy case. Other coaches prior to Owens, dating back to Ralph “Red” Simmons in 1961, have all made attempts to bring home the hardware. During those years Madison County has posted an overall record of 152-167 that includes just nine winning seasons and seasons finishing at .500. So needless to say, we’re well overdue.

Dallas Bordon is the former sports editor for The Danielsville Monitor/Comer News and a regular columnist for The Madison County Journal.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

College Bowl Season

Little Caesars Bowl: Purdue 37 Western Michigan 32
Gildan New Mexico Bowl: Temple 37 Wyoming 15
Famous Idaho Potato Bowl: Ohio 24 Utah State 23
New Orleans Bowl: Louisiana-Lafayette 32 San Diego State 30
Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl: Marshall 20 Florida International 10
Poinsetta Bowl: TCU 31 Louisiana Tech 24
Las Vegas Bowl: Boise State 56 Arizona State 24
Hawaii Bowl: Southern Miss. 24 Nevada 17
Independence Bowl: Missouri 41 North Carolina 24
Belk Bowl: NC State 31 Louisville 24
Military Bowl: Toledo 42 Air Force 41
Holiday Bowl: Texas 21 California 10
Champs Sports Bowl: Florida State 18 Notre Dame 14
Alamo Bowl: Baylor 67 Washington 56
Armed Forces Bowl: Brigham Young 24 Tulsa 21
Pinstripe Bowl: Rutgers 27 Iowa State 13
Music City Bowl: Miss State vs Wake Forest Dec. 30
Insight Bowl: Oklahoma 31 Iowa 14
Car Care Bowl: Texas A&M 33 Northwestern 22
Sun Bowl: Utah 30 Georgia Tech 27
Hunger Bowl: Illinois 20 UCLA 14
Liberty Bowl: Cincinnati 31 Vanderbilt 24
Chick-Fil-A-Bowl: Auburn 43 Virginia 24
Ticketcity Bowl: Houston 30 Penn State 14
Gator Bowl: Florida 24 Ohio State 17
Outback Bowl: Michigan State 33 Georgia 30
Capital One Bowl: South Carolina 30 Nebraska 13
Rose Bowl: Oregon 45 Wisconsin 38
Fiesta Bowl: Oklahoma State 41 Stanford 38
Sugar Bowl: Michigan 23 Virginia Tech 20
Orange Bowl: West Virginia 70 Clemson 33
Cotton Bowl: Kansas State vs Arkansas Jan. 6
Compass Bowl: Southern Methodist vs Pittsburgh Jan. 7
Godaddy.com Bowl: Arkansas State vs Northern Illinois Jan. 8
BCS National Championship: Alabama vs LSU Jan. 9