buckcraze wrote:
The point you are missing is to continue to schedule three to five losses before you get into the league is not the way to improve a program that has a loser, blame the coaches mentality. If you read the previuos posts you will see that all this "scheduling up" has brought Chilli is a whole bunch of losses, a mentality that keeps some athletes from playing football because the mental and physical commitment is deemed not worth it, and a loser mentality amongst the players, parents, and fans. And what has this "scheduling up" gained?- five playoff appearences in school history?- one playoff win in school history? The kids, the coaches, the community, the program as a whole need to be able to build some confidence and momentum if they are ever going to build anything substantial as far as a football program is concerned. Your assessment of the schedule is a little skewed as well- HT-average?- we have lost three out of the last four against them-P-West will probably be a playoff team this year-Looking in the mirror-we are not a school of 1200 kids anymore! The high school has just a over 800 kids in it now! Stop thinking that Chilli has all this DI talent spilling out everywhere! We do not! Chilli has to learn how to win before it can move on with program building. This schedule is not conducive to learning how to win. That is what the big deal is.
I agree with you that scheduling up has not produced the results many are looking for. To an extent I also agree that there need to be some "easier" games on the schedule to get the kids used to winning. That is not what I am arguing however. I am not in charge and it is not my job to decide who Chilli plays. I simply am arguing that by recent historical perspectives, this schedule is not out of the ordinary. What is the right and wrong way to schedule is not what I am arguing.
Hamilton Township IS average. AT BEST. In 2008 they went 5-5. In 2009 they went 0-10. They went 8-2 in 2010 and played exactly 2 teams with a winning record, beating one, a D4 team, and they failed to make the playoffs. They went 5-5 last year.
As far as kids and parents with a blame the coaches attitude when they lose... That is a cultural problem that has LONG hampered every Chillicothe sports program. I noticed it for myself at a very young age(probably as young as Pee-Wee) and it disgusts me. If you as a parent blame the coaches for your child's and his peers's failures, then shame on you. That is the root cause of most of the problems in America today...A blame someone else attitude. Anyway, what I am trying to get at is that if the kids, parents, coaches, and program as a whole, cannot stand up mentally to a few losses, then we do not deserve to win. Maybe we should look in the mirror and instead of being fearful of competition because our enrollment is down like some people suggest, we should pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and put the work in to beat the teams we SHOULD beat. Our talent level has been WAY down for 3 years now. Our enrollment was dropping WAY before that. I attribute the dropoof in talent partially to the ebs and flows of that sort of thing but mostly to a generation of parents who have taught their kids tat if they are not the best and do not win when they start playing in Pee-Wee that they can quit before they get to high school because it's the easier thing to do than to work hard and get better.
I know what a tough schedule can do. I played on the last OCC team and the first SEOAL team. We played our fair share of very good teams. Our enrollment, and numbers were not much larger than they are now. We took some lumps and we had some big wins. One thing I will remember though, despite a couple of losses to lesser caliber teams that can be attributed to any number of things, is the fact that when we began playing teams from smaller southern Ohio schools it was almost easy from a physical talent standpoint because we had been playing such stiffer competition. We played a hard schedule and were BETTER because of it.