THEEE_GAME wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:59 pm
If some of you get upset about Ironton transfers, wait til I tell you about the frequency of transfers in the MSAC conference between spring val, huntington and cabell midland, and between Capital, south charleston and Gw.
Weird detail though.
Nobody there ever cries about it.
I lived in Huntington until 3 years ago when I moved to Proctorville. I went to Huntington High. SV and Huntington High aren't particularly heavy beneficiaries for transfers. The Kanawha Valley is quite bad with transfers, you are right about that. Midland somehow seems to end up with high impact transfers nearly every year. However, those transfers aren't usually coming from SV or Huntington, they are coming from the edges of the Kanawha Valley.
I'm not saying SV or Huntington have never had a high impact transfer, most S Tier schools will be the beneficiary of a transfer due to their status of being great.
It wasn't that long ago that Midland, SV, Huntington all sucked. I remember SV going 0-10 before Brad took over the program. I think that was the year before he took over from Coach Money. I remember Huntington High's best athletes walking the hallways every fall. Billy Seals had his work cut out to get those athletes to put on a helmet. His first few years weren't easy.
What changed was Luke, Billy and Brad taking over the programs and making these schools power houses. Hard work pays off and dedicated coaches will turn a floundering program around.
Hurricane High School, which is close to Midland, just got a new head coach. You're going to see him turn Hurricane High around and you're going to see 4 schools all in close proximity to each other being state championship contenders in the same class, in the same conference. Good coaching matters!
Here's some proof that good coaching matters. Luke Salmons (current Midland coach) took Lawrence County Kentucky from 0-11 to 13-1 in 1 year. That was THE biggest turnaround in Kentucky state history. He was named coach of the year in all 6 football classes in Kentucky. He completely turned around a struggling Midland program.