Silkowski looks to end season and Railer football tenure with program in better shape than when he began

[October 17, 2025]  NOTE: This is the third of three installments in a three-part feature looking at Railer football coach Matt Silkowski’s 10-year tenure as head coach. Part 1 of this series (published October 15) looked at some of the events leading up to him being hired for the position. Part 2 (published October 16) looked back at some of the biggest wins Railer football had during his tenure. Today’s installment looks at the close of his time as LCHS football coach and the future of Railer football.

The 2025 Railer football season does not conclude until the team plays its final game on October 24 in Jacksonville. However, the October 18 contest against Quincy Notre Dame will be Silkowski’s final home game coaching LCHS. While the season has not produced as many wins as some of the recent campaigns, Silkowski is proud of the body of work in terms of the overall progress of the football program.

“This is the first year post-Covid where we won’t be playing for something Week 9.” he said. “That’s obviously disappointing; you want to be playing for something this late in the year. Unfortunately, we’re not in that situation right now, but that’s quite a run of four years there where Week 9 mattered.

“Ten years ago, if you would’ve said, ‘You’re going to go on this run where Week 9 mattered,’ we’d take that. That’s pretty good progress.”

And now, after nearly a decade at the helm of the program, Silkowski can look in his rearview mirror--at everything from player equipment, to coaching resources, to game strategies and scheme--and see how the program has evolved and taken shape during his time as head coach.

“We have changed everything about this program except the color of the facemasks,” he said. “Everything else is different; some of it by design, some of it has just kind of happened along the way. But everything but the color of the facemask has changed.”

Hindsight is 20/20, so the saying goes. And today, with the added wisdom and benefits of having been a head coach for 10 years, Silkowski said there are some situations he would have handled differently.

“I think a lot of it just comes with maturity and on my end and the experience,” he said. “I wish I would’ve handled some discipline issues differently and some relationships with players differently. In 2018, we maybe let some things go, and I think maybe I was trying to prioritize winning too much at that time. I think maybe if we would’ve nipped some of the stuff earlier on it maybe wouldn’t have been an issue.”

Another evolution has been a more consistent student section of fans supporting the team.
 


“That’s one thing that I think has definitely changed,” Silkowski said. “The student section is always very supportive. We had some at MacArthur, and we had some that came to Eisenhower. That’s awesome that they’re coming out and supporting their classmates.”

Success breeds success, and as the Railer football program began winning games, Silkowski said the mindset of onlookers also shifted.

“When I first started, it was pretty much just kids in class asking, ‘Hey, are you going to win the game tonight,’” he said. “But the last four years, it was kind of like…I wouldn’t say that we were expected to win, but it’s been more like, ‘You’re going to win tonight, right?’ And it was not just in our locker room, but outside in the hallways, the student body was kind of expecting us to win.”

And now, two games from the end of his final season at Lincoln, Silkowski said he can begin to look at some of the experiences and accomplishments during his tenure as head coach with a better perspective.

“Obviously the most rewarding thing was getting in the playoffs,” he said. “That was huge. I can’t tell you how many times…we practiced at 6:30 in the morning in the summer, I was getting up at 5 and making that drive. I just wanted to coach a playoff game here. I drove into town so many times just thinking about that, that’s it’s all going to be worth it if that happens.”

Even before the team’s playoff appearance in 2023, Silkowski said there were things taking place that gave him an indication that things were moving in the right direction overall for the program.

“Sometimes we would do something and hear, ‘That’s the first time that’s happened in ten years,’ or ‘We don’t even know the last time that happened was.’ That was cool; that lets you know we’re going in the right direction. There’s been roadblocks, there’s been times we’ve taken steps backwards. But, for the most part, we’ve been able to take that next step and get over the hump. And that’s the most rewarding part, really, and just knowing we’ve done good.”

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Railer head football coach Matt Silkowski lifts his wife Lauren off the ground while embracing her after Lincoln won its first game in 3-plus years by beating Lanphier 21-20 on October 7, 2016. The victory was also Silkowski's first win as Railer head football coach. Photo courtesy of Loyd Kirby.

And while not all players Silkowski has coached got to experience playing in the playoffs, he said players, alumni and members of the community all enjoyed the team’s run of success.

“I know that playoff run meant a lot to the coaches and to that team,” he said. “I’m glad we were able to make a lot of other people happy, because I know that meant a lot to a lot of people.”

On a personal level, as the end of his time as Railer head football coach approaches, Silkowski said he is grateful for all the experiences that he had as a result of being in the position.

“This opportunity that was given to me here opened up so many other the doors for me,” he said. “I went to the Ohio State coaches’ clinic back in 2017; if I wasn’t a head coach here, I probably wouldn’t have ever gone to that. And that was just really cool meeting Lou Holtz and hearing Urban Meyer speak knowing that my wife was back home pregnant with our son we were going to name Urban.”

As the end of the road approaches as head coach approaches, Silkowski said he will do what he can to help make the transition for the new coach go as smoothly as possible.

“I have the third most wins here (27), but it’s really not a lot for a program that’s been playing football since 1899,” he said. “So, I just hope that the next guy becomes Number 3 and has more success than I do.

Much like a camper who is supposed to leave the forest in better shape than they found it, Silkowski plans on leaving things in a state so that the next coach can hit the ground running.

“He’s going to walk into a clean equipment room and he’s going to walk into film on Hudl,” Silkowski said of the next Railer head football coach. “I want to make sure that his experience is better than mine when I first started. That is something I’m taking a lot of pride in so that he can just walk in and just start coaching football.

“I’m going to leave the coach note along with a bunch of other stuff that I think he needs to have so he doesn’t waste a bunch of time doing stuff. I want him to be able to reach out to me. Or he may not contact me or want any part of me, and that’s fine too; I won’t take it personally.”

And what will Silkowski miss the most about being the head football coach and a teacher at LCHS?

“What I think I’ll miss the most is celebrating with the kids and embracing my family after a win,” he said. “I respect and embrace the tradition of our program. I know it’s hard to win football games here, so I appreciate every single one of them. Even the ones that we’ve come to expect to win. I never lost track of how hard those early wins were to get so I’ve made sure to enjoy and appreciate every single one.”

[Loyd Kirby]


 

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