
Good or bad?
What can be done to help it?
eagles73 wrote:I explain it this way, I went to school in the early 90's at Ashland University on a scholarship to play football. I played high school ball at Piketon on a 500 team. I was 6'5" 250 lbs offensive tackle and middle backer. When I arrived on campus I was just as good as everybody else, I was redshirted my freshmen year, made travel team soph, started the next three years and earned all league honors my 5th senior year.
The differences were, I was the only player from my school to go to college to play, the only one close really and those that I played with in college werent always the star standout on their teams. They were sometimes the best player but rarely, I was one of only 3 SE ohio players on AU's roster. They would talk about a stud on their team going to Michigan, or Akron or someplace big time.
So I use that as an example, those of us in SE ohio are just as good athletically, but there just isnt enough for each school to compete always on the big stage. This isnt all of it, but it sure is a big part. IMO
someoverkill wrote:the game has evolved, but very few schools in SE Ohio have evolved with the game. I agree with previous posts, similar game plans for competitioon in SE Ohio. However, come playoff time, it is the spread offense and matching up all over the field. That is hard to simulate in just one week of practice. I see teams similar in size to SE Ohio over in Western Ohio. The MAC schools like Versailles, Coldwater, Maria Stein, St Henry, etc. They have a great mixture of run and pass.
Another big issue is scheduling. When schools are afraid to schedule teams of greater strength than them, they rarely get better. When programs advance and get better, instead of their peers wanting to get better with them, they simply drop them from their schedule for lesser opponents. I won't say that a school from SE Ohio won't ever win the football title again, but the days of programs like Wheelersburg and ironton advancing far into the playoffs, year in and year out, are over. Unless those programs are willing to change their mentality.
someoverkill wrote:the game has evolved, but very few schools in SE Ohio have evolved with the game. I agree with previous posts, similar game plans for competitioon in SE Ohio. However, come playoff time, it is the spread offense and matching up all over the field. That is hard to simulate in just one week of practice. I see teams similar in size to SE Ohio over in Western Ohio. The MAC schools like Versailles, Coldwater, Maria Stein, St Henry, etc. They have a great mixture of run and pass.
Another big issue is scheduling. When schools are afraid to schedule teams of greater strength than them, they rarely get better. When programs advance and get better, instead of their peers wanting to get better with them, they simply drop them from their schedule for lesser opponents. I won't say that a school from SE Ohio won't ever win the football title again, but the days of programs like Wheelersburg and ironton advancing far into the playoffs, year in and year out, are over. Unless those programs are willing to change their mentality.
That is true to. The Trimble game is the biggest game of the year and it doesn't help our points at all. But there is not on player coach, or fan that would want to see these 2 teams quit playing each other. me includedawesomepossum wrote:someoverkill wrote:the game has evolved, but very few schools in SE Ohio have evolved with the game. I agree with previous posts, similar game plans for competitioon in SE Ohio. However, come playoff time, it is the spread offense and matching up all over the field. That is hard to simulate in just one week of practice. I see teams similar in size to SE Ohio over in Western Ohio. The MAC schools like Versailles, Coldwater, Maria Stein, St Henry, etc. They have a great mixture of run and pass.
Another big issue is scheduling. When schools are afraid to schedule teams of greater strength than them, they rarely get better. When programs advance and get better, instead of their peers wanting to get better with them, they simply drop them from their schedule for lesser opponents. I won't say that a school from SE Ohio won't ever win the football title again, but the days of programs like Wheelersburg and ironton advancing far into the playoffs, year in and year out, are over. Unless those programs are willing to change their mentality.
Fear may be a factor, but I believe tradition is another factor, outside of conference play and traditional area rivalries, there isn't much room for teams to work with in scheduling.
eagles73 wrote:I explain it this way, I went to school in the early 90's at Ashland University on a scholarship to play football. I played high school ball at Piketon on a 500 team. I was 6'5" 250 lbs offensive tackle and middle backer. When I arrived on campus I was just as good as everybody else, I was redshirted my freshmen year, made travel team soph, started the next three years and earned all league honors my 5th senior year.
The differences were, I was the only player from my school to go to college to play, the only one close really and those that I played with in college werent always the star standout on their teams. They were sometimes the best player but rarely, I was one of only 3 SE ohio players on AU's roster. They would talk about a stud on their team going to Michigan, or Akron or someplace big time.
So I use that as an example, those of us in SE ohio are just as good athletically, but there just isnt enough for each school to compete always on the big stage. This isnt all of it, but it sure is a big part. IMO