An
interview with Jeff Mayfield
Tomczak
next to tackle
Lincoln High School football challenge
Part
6 of 6
[JULY 17, 2000]
A
new football coach has hit town. Ron Tomczak faces many challenges
coming into his first season with the Lincoln Railers. With this in
mind Coach Tomczak has come here with a plan...with a strategy to
turn things around. Part 6 today is the conclusion of a
series of questions and answers from an interview conducted by LDN
Sports Talk writer Jeff Mayfield with Coach Tomczak. Get the inside
scoop on how Coach Tomczak sizes up our team in the CS8, his
strategy, philosophy and training plans to manage our team.
|
["I like to see two-
and three-sport athletes and I think it carries over from one sport
to the next" –
Coach Tomczak]
A call for high athletic and academic
standards, and community support
Coach Tomczak shares his plans and
hopes
Q:
Coach, let me ask you about your goals and dreams for this team and
program?
A:
You’ve got to make sure that they’re doing the little things
well. In my 100-play playbook, I want them to master pages one
through 10 before we ever get to page 11. Maybe in the past the kids
have jumped from page two to page 12...but how many kids were lost
along the way. Sometimes I’ll be taking things kind of slow and
the older kids may get antsy, but, I want them to master the
basics.
I
want some quotes and mottos posted in the weight room. I want the
pride to be built from the ground up. Accountability in the weight
room will determine our success. I’ve set a 70 percent attendance
minimum on our off-season conditioning, although 90 percent is what
most programs are shooting for. I’m not going to make it too
sophisticated for the kids. I like the K.I.S.S. (Keep it simple,
stupid) method. I think the kids will grasp the basics better than
if I tried to run a real sophisticated system. Granted, in the long
run you do have to get sophisticated in your offense and in your
defense sometime, but for right now it’s going to have to be baby
steps. If I had to look at a dream down the road, it would be to
win a state title. That has to be your goal if you’re a football
coach. If you go undefeated you’re getting over to Bloomington or
over to Champaign. I’d like to build a powerhouse here in Lincoln.
I know that it will take a lot of hard work.
(To
top of second column)
|
I’d
also like to study what some of the successful programs did to get
to that level, like Chatham for example. The feeder programs will be
the key. I’d like to sit down with the youth coaches and see what
they’ve got going on. I’d like to find out what offenses and
defenses they are running. I’d like to ask them to start running
our offenses and defenses. When Chatham won the state title, it was
said that they run the same stuff from sixth grade on. They mastered
it and went 14-0. That’s probably a good indication of what you
should do with your young program. There’s got to be
continuity...they have to feel a part of the program and vice versa.
I also want to get the
alumni involved. I’d like to mention them in a program or
something, especially the kids that went on to play college football
somewhere. History brings tradition and pride back.
Q:
What would you like to see from the community?
A:
Just to keep their support would be the main thing. The parents may
even need to let the kids know that they can focus not on just one
sport but on many sports. It’s a touchy issue and I don’t want
to rub anybody the wrong way, but I just don’t like to see kids
putting all their eggs in one basket. I like to see two- and
three-sport athletes, and I think it carries over from one sport to
the next. Your success on the football field can carry over to the
basketball court. I know a lot of this stuff goes in cycles, but the
unity developed in one sport can carry over to another sport. I
would just like to see more three-sport athletes in the program. I
don’t know what the community can do about that, but some of that
influence coming from the parents and their peers might be a start.
One of my strong suits is
in the strength and conditioning area. I’ve told Coach Alexander
and Coach Hobbs that if they need any help in that area, that I am
available.
Coach
Tomczak, on behalf of the LDN and the community I wish you all the
success in the world.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
|
An
interview with Jeff Mayfield
Tomczak
next to tackle
Lincoln High School football challenge
Part
5 of 6
[JULY 15, 2000]
A
new football coach has hit town. Ron Tomczak faces many challenges
coming into his first season with the Lincoln Railers. With this in
mind Coach Tomczak has come here with a plan...with a strategy to
turn things around. Through July 17, you can read a
series of questions and answers from an interview conducted by LDN
Sports Talk writer Jeff Mayfield with Coach Tomczak. Get the inside
scoop on how Coach Tomczak sizes up our team in the CS8, his
strategy, philosophy and training plans to manage our team.
|
["I want the players
to step out on a limb and become leaders." –
Coach Tomczak]
The
welcoming committees
Q:
Some of your assistant coaches have been here for a while. Tell us
how they have received you and your thoughts on them at this point.
A:
We’re in a grace period. I’m figuring out who they are and what
they’re doing. I have seven assistant coaches, and six of the seven
were here last year. The newest one is Kurt Roberts, who is the girls
soccer coach. I’ve had good feedback from them, and most of them
have taken the bull by the horns already, especially some of the older
or more experienced ones. I’m sure it’s still a feeling-out
process for them with me.
Maybe
I need to delegate more and say to one: Take the defensive backs over
there and do this with them. Some coaches, like Coach Spears, may
already have 12 drills in his head to use during the allotted time.
Other coaches I may sit down with and say: This is what to...here are
four drills that will take five minutes each; keep ’em moving and
keep the practice flowing.
I
don’t know where I’m going to put everyone at level-wise. You have
to have a taskmaster at each level – someone that is willing
to crack the whip and make sure that [players are] working and
improving. He’s going to have to be organized, and the kids are
going to have to respect him. Other assistant coaches include Joe
Ryan, Brad Gardner, Chris Hammer, Mike Spears, Joe Vasquez and Steve
Parrot. These are the kinds of guys you need. It’s hard for one guy
to handle 40 kids. If you’ve got one guy giving directions and
another guy making sure that we’re lined up right, that’s what I’m
looking for. I’m hoping to decide where I’m going to put these
coaches by the end of the month, and they know that I want them to be
able to work together.
So
far, it looks like we should be able to work together well. I told
them that they are free to come to me at any time to give me input on
what I should do. I told them to feel free to call me. I had a meeting
with them on Wednesday and asked them to air out any concerns, even
though it’s hard to air things out in a group setting. I told them
that they could write out any complaints and stick it in my mailbox,
and that they didn’t even have to sign it if they didn’t want to.
I don’t want things going on behind closed doors or behind people’s
backs; I want them taken care of. With a bigger staff there will be
some minor disagreements, but I’m only as good as my coaching staff
is. They’ve got to relay my message – whatever I’m trying
to get across to the players. All the coaches that helped out with the
mini-camp did a nice job for us.
In
addition to my staff that’s in place, I’d like to add some grad
assistants from Illinois State and from Illinois Wesleyan. They're
fresh out of the system, and many of them want to be coaches anyway. I’m
still trying to see if I can swing something like this. Graduate
assistants can bring in some fresh ideas. I think the kids also see
them as only a few years older, and it gives them some hope and
motivation on what they can become.
I want the players to step
out on a limb and become leaders. If they see something wrong going
on, I want them to take care of it. I want to build their respect and
their pride for what they are doing. Everybody doesn’t have the same
attitude as everyone else. If they see a guy or a group taking these
principles wholeheartedly, then they respond to it.
(To
top of second column in Part 5)
|
Q:
How has the booster club welcomed you?
A:
They held a special meeting to introduce me as the new coach. I told
them that that was fantastic. There’s not many high schools around
that have a separate booster club for a sport. They’re out there
raising money for the football program. They will be monumental in
terms of measuring our success. They get the kids T-shirts and other
stuff.
One
thing I’d like to see us do is to upgrade the weight room. That
would benefit the whole student body here in Lincoln. When you put
together a state-of-the-art weight room, it gives the kids more
hope. It’s no longer a weight room but a fitness center. I hope
the boosters will be in one accord with me if I think we should buy
three new machines a year but allow the student body access as well.
I
don’t want to neglect the hats and jackets and stuff, especially
since the players like to wear those things. I think we will all
work well together. We will host another spaghetti dinner and a host
of other events and activities. They’ve already sold 500 Beanie
Babies and ordered another thousand. Those things are selling like
hot cakes.
There’s
great support for all the programs here and I want continuity with
them all. We’re all in this together. We want to become a
powerhouse in the CS8. That only raises the standards academically
as well. I guarantee you when the basketball team gets into the
play-offs, I’ll bet this whole place goes up for grabs.
I’d like it to be the
same way for football. I want our kids to be able to look back on it
and say, "That was a good time!"
Monday,
the last of Coach Tomczak plans for this season’s Lincoln football
will be revealed. If you have missed one of these insightful
articles, be sure to catch Sports Talk on Monday next week. We’ll
follow up the last article with all five other articles.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
|
An
interview with Jeff Mayfield
Tomczak
next to tackle
Lincoln High School football challenge
Part
4 of 6
[JULY 14, 2000]
A
new football coach has hit town. Ron Tomczak faces many challenges
coming into his first season with the Lincoln Railers. With this in
mind Coach Tomczak has come here with a plan...with a strategy to
turn things around. Through July 17, you can read a
series of questions and answers from an interview conducted by LDN
Sports Talk writer Jeff Mayfield with Coach Tomczak. Get the inside
scoop on how Coach Tomczak sizes up our team in the CS8, his
strategy, philosophy and training plans to manage our team.
|
["In
the sport of football, you have to have a sense of urgency. It has
to be done now, because you never know when…" – Coach
Tomczak]
Let’s talk philosophy and styles!
Q:
Since you’re still evaluating personnel, I won’t ask you if you’re
going to run pro sets or out of the wishbone or what type of defensive
fronts will you go with. But, how would you characterize your coaching
philosophy?
A:
As far as position players, I’m more skilled in coaching receivers,
running backs and quarterbacks, and defensive backs. Fortunately, my
father was a football coach and I played a lot of different positions
for him. I played quarterback, tight end, linebacker, defensive end,
and in college I played defensive back.
One
of my strengths is in coaching special teams. My coach at Western
Illinois was Pete Rodriguez, who is now the special teams coach for
the Seattle Seahawks in the NFL. I was on special teams from my
sophomore through my senior year. I also was a pretty good punter.
If
I had to characterize my coaching philosophy as a whole, I’d like to
say that I’m a little bit more defensive oriented. I believe in
defense...that offense sells tickets, but that defense wins games. My
specialty is defense. I still have a lot to learn on offense.
Hopefully, I will be learning the rest of my career...that’s what
makes a great teacher and a great coach. I will be the one with the
headset on, and I will be calling the plays. I won’t call all the
plays solely, because I want input from all of my coaches. If they see
something going on and say, coach, the slant’s there or the safety’s
way over on the other side, I’m going to use their knowledge. We all
know that two heads are better than one.
We’re not going to be
primarily a running team, but we do have to establish the rush. That’s
especially true in this conference. They may be a little stronger than
us and a little quicker. They all will have established running games.
The worst thing for an offense is to go three and out. It puts too
much pressure on the defense. We need to have long, sustained drives.
I want to have 10- to 15-play drives. The first time we get the ball,
we have to establish ourselves. We need to drive it down the field and
put some points up on the board. That’s a key to staying in a ball
game and winning a ball game. That first series we want to come away
with a field goal or better yet, a touchdown. Or at least take the
ball deep in their territory and pin them back. Those are some key
areas that are going to win football games.
(To
top of second column in Part 4)
|
Q:
I loved the way the San Francisco 49ers used to script their first
25 plays for the very reasons that you just mentioned. How do you
feel about scripting those first few drives?
A:
I believe in scripting the first 15 plays. We will have a script
every time we go out. Not only does that say we know what we’re
doing, it instills confidence in the kids that we are going to run
15 or 20 plays. I think 12 to 15 plays is what you want to script
for a high school team. We did that in high school...where we
scripted the first 15 plays, and it was very successful for us. We
also ran the two-minute drill a lot. If you’re down 21-0 you might
be in the two-minute drill for a quarter and a half. One thing these
kids have to realize is that nowadays there is no longer a sense of
urgency about anything. In the sport of football, you have to have a
sense of urgency. It has to be done now because you never know when
you’re going to be in that hurry-hurry situation.
I
love to hear great coaches talk about these concepts. I’ve been
listening to a tape called power talk, with Tony Robbins and Coach
John Wooden talking. It’s an unbelievable tape. Some of the
philosophies that Coach Wooden had can never be matched. He never
spoke to his teams about winning the game; it was about the whole
team concept and that you’re out here to improve yourself. Your
goal is to play a better game than you did before and make all of
your teammates better players. You need to listen to tapes and watch
videos to improve your coaching...or maybe a youth football coach
will have a good insight that needs to be implemented...they can
come from anywhere.
The
kids have to feel that there’s pressure on them in practice. We’re
not just going through the motions. I want it to be fresh every day.
They’re going to know that we’ve got team here, 7-on-7 there,
special team breakdowns, our individual period and offense-defense,
but they’ve got to know that we only have so much time. Once the
season starts we only have four practices a week. That’s only 36
to 40 practices once the season gets here. That’s not a lot of
time.
Monday
may just be a scouting day, and the day before game is usually a
light day as well. That means you only have 25 hard practices where
the kids are going all out in scrimmages. You don’t always look
forward to those long, hard, full-contact scrimmages, but you have
to do it well to be successful.
Just like in basketball, I
know Coach Alexander is going to run his 5-on-5 full court press for
a half an hour. And his kids will be going all out the whole time.
With my dad as my football coach, I look back and see it was his
forte: putting the pressure on us during the week to get us fully
prepared. That’s what I learned from him. He was one of the better
coaches...I might be a little biased towards him. He was skilled at
taking us from point A to point B. I went farther with him than any
other coach.
Sports fans, make LDN your
start page for the next two days to get all of the plans Coach
Tomczak has in store for the Lincoln Railer football season. If you
miss one, worry for naught; on Monday next week we’ll follow up
the last article with all five other articles.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
|
An
interview with Jeff Mayfield
Tomczak
next to tackle
Lincoln High School football challenge
Part
3 of 6
[JULY 13, 2000]
A
new football coach has hit town. Ron Tomczak faces many challenges
coming into his first season with the Lincoln Railers. With this in
mind Coach Tomczak has come here with a plan...with a strategy to
turn things around. From now through July 17, you can read a
series of questions and answers from an interview conducted by LDN
Sports Talk writer Jeff Mayfield with Coach Tomczak. Get the inside
scoop on how Coach Tomczak sizes up our team in the CS8, his
strategy, philosophy and training plans to manage our team.
|
["The team that
controls the ball will control the game."
– Coach Tomczak]
How do we stack up?
Q:
There are some awfully strong teams in the CS8 conference. We may
need to work on ball control, time management and things of that
nature to offset the strength and speed of our opponents. How will
you go about implementing those things in order to be successful?
A:
I’ve got to evaluate my personnel and figure out if my kids are
smaller, are they faster, or slower or what. Then I will devise an
offense that will maximize their abilities. We might not be able to
take a guy’s head off and push him back off the ball, but can we
run an offense that has some good angle blocking where our kid might
have the advantage blocking from the side instead of head-on. It’s
going to be up to me to implement an offense and a defense to our
best advantage.
I’ve
got something in mind – without getting into the x’s and o’s
here – that’s going to work to our advantage. It’s not always
the biggest team that wins, it’s probably the team that makes the
fewest mistakes. The team that controls the ball will control the
game. I’m a firm believer in defense, and I want people to know
that Lincoln is a defensive-oriented team.
That’s
not to say that I’m going to slack on the offense. The offense has
got to put points on the board in order to win, but defense really
wins games in the long run. I’d like to have a platoon system
where I’m playing 33 guys: 11 on offense, 11 on defense and 11 on
special teams. Whether we can do that, is highly doubtful during the
first two years. But down the road my goal is to have 50 kids on the
varsity, with 30 to 40 of them participating and playing quite a
bit.
The numbers have been up
and down here over the years. I look up on the walls here, and one
team here went 8-1 or 9-0 with only 25 guys. It doesn’t take 50
guys, it only takes 11 guys to be successful; but then again, I
think the competition really comes in, out on the practice field.
The more competitive you are on the practice field, the higher the
stakes are going to be during the week, the easier that game is
going to be on Friday or Saturday. Hopefully our practices will be a
lot more intense and competitive.
(To
top of second column in Part 3)
|
Q:
Not only do we not have the size of most CS8 opponents, we don’t
always seem to have as much overall team speed as they do either,
especially at the skill positions. I’ve kind of thought that
sometimes we might need a little more razzle-dazzle, more trickery,
more ball fakes, bootlegs, etc. to offset the strengths of our
opponents. How will you interject those things into the system here?
A:
That all starts out with basic fundamentals. If they’re doing it
right from the beginning, they’re only going to get better as time
goes on. I need a quarterback that's going to be a great ball faker.
He’s going to have a lot of steps to take, a lot of little moves
before he hands off that ball. He has to be savvy and be the
decoy-type guy in the long run.
Running
backs have to be just as convincing. If they take a fake and dive
over the middle, we hope that two guys tackle them and take
themselves right out of the play, and then we’ve got another back
with the ball running around the outside.
I
haven’t seen all of our skilled position players on the field at
one time, but watching them on film, I know we have a lot of them
coming back. I’ve got to put them in the best possible position on
the field. I’ve got to get the ball in my fastest players’ hands
whether it be in the receiving corps or through the running backs.
We had a sophomore who ran for 1300 yards last year and broke the
school record. How many times is he going to touch the ball this
year? I’ve just got to give them as many opportunities as I can.
As
far as our run-pass percentages, I really don’t know what kind of
balance we will have. We may need to start throwing the ball a
little bit more. Your running game can set up your passing game, but
then again in the year 2000 it’s vice versa now. Some teams throw
the ball 70 times and only run it five. I do want to emphasize the
idea with the kids that we do have to run the ball in order to
maintain and stay in the ball game.
It’s going to be a new
challenge for me. I know very little about the CS8. I basically
followed it through the papers and I did see a couple of Lincoln
games last year, but it will be new to me.
Sports
fans, make LDN your start page for the next three days to get all of
the plans Coach Tomczak has in store for the Lincoln Railer football
season. If you miss one, worry for naught; on Monday next week we’ll
follow up the last article with all five other articles.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
|
An
interview with Jeff Mayfield
Tomczak
next to tackle
Lincoln High School football challenge
Part
2 of 6
[JULY 12, 2000]
A
new football coach has hit town. Ron Tomczak faces many challenges
coming into his first season with the Lincoln Railers. With this in
mind Coach Tomczak has come here with a plan...with a strategy to
turn things around. From July 11 through 17 you can read through a
series of questions and answers from an interview conducted by LDN
Sports Talk writer Jeff Mayfield with Coach Tomczak. Get the inside
scoop on how Coach Tomczak sizes up our team in the CS8, his
strategy, philosophy and training plans to manage our team.
|
[“My
wife is from Lincoln and I know it’s a huge sports town.
It’s got a lot of pride and tradition.” – Coach
Tomczak]
Why choose here and what will you be
doing?
Q:
Coach, I don’t know this for sure, but I don’t think that there
was a long list of coaching hopefuls for this position. Through all
of the hard work, the program just hasn’t been as successful as
all of us wish it could be. What compelled you to take this
challenge?
A: Well, I just built a
house nearby, and I needed a job. You’re right...it will be a
challenge. There also were not that many other coaching positions
open in the area. I wasn’t as concerned with becoming a head coach
or an assistant coach...my first concern was getting a teaching
position because, as you know, that’s going to pay the salary
there. Not that the coaching position was secondary, but if I would’ve
been offered just the coaching job, I probably wouldn’t have taken
it. Late in the school year they were sort of up in the air about
what Mike Benton was going to do. In late April or early
May, he
informed them that he was going to take another position, so it may
be that they did not have a huge choice of candidates. But what
compelled me to take it is that my wife [Betsy, daughter of the late
Dr. Edward Ulrich] is from Lincoln and I know
it’s a huge sports town. It’s got a lot of pride and tradition.
I know that the football program can be as successful as several of
the other sports programs are here...in time. It will take a lot of
hard work.
The kids will have to develop the
confidence in what they’re
doing. They will need to believe in themselves and the coach and
that he’s going to be around here longevity-wise; and that there
will be consistency year in and year out. The young kids need to see
that. I want the junior high kids to know that Coach Tomczak is
going to teach them a lot of stuff and create in them a willingness
to do it – not a have-to. That’s when kids start progressing in
the classroom or in a sport – when they have the will to do it.
That’s what I want to try to instill in the kids.
(To
top of second column in Part 2)
|
Q:
The skeptics and the cynics are going to say, if they haven’t
already flagged you down, we’re heard this all before. What are
you going to bring to the table to turn Lincoln football fortunes
around?
A: Well, I bring a
different style of coaching. I think the enthusiasm really needs to
be picked up around here. The kids need to learn that enthusiasm is
contagious. It needs to start right out on the field. I’m going to
start pushing the kids – not putting pressure on them, but making
them step up. I’m going to challenge them and give them the
expectations. I’m not sure that their expectations are high
enough. They are going to have to be accountable for those
expectations. You know that every coach sets goals. We’re going to
try to look at our goals and measure ourselves every week, every two
weeks and every month and see where we’re at. Have we attained
these goals? The bottom line is, they’ve got to believe in
themselves. I want it to be all one unit. I don’t want them
working for me, I want them working for themselves. I want them to
work to make their teammates better. Football is a game of emotion
and momentum. If you can get the kids to get their emotion involved
and learn how to turn that momentum around – whether it be in the
summer conditioning program, whether it be in the middle of the
season, whether it be a turnover – they’ve got to learn that
things are going to happen. They will have to face adversity. This
program has faced a lot of adversity in the last 15 years, but I
want the kids to start believing in themselves. My forte right now
is in the area of strength and conditioning. If I can get these kids
in the weight room and start putting some weight on them...I mean
people have told me that the Lincoln kids are a lot smaller than the
other kids in the conference – maybe it’s due to the water,
maybe it’s due to their weight program – but I want them to
develop some consistency. Yes, we are taking baby steps right
now...I told the freshman today, if you can’t do a pull-up, your
goal when you’re a senior is to do 12 of them or more. Then you
can tell the incoming freshmen where you started at. I want them to
measure themselves. I want them to be adamant and consistent with
things, and that will develop into progress.
Sports
fans, make LDN your start page for the next four days to get all of
the plans Coach Tomczak has in store for the Lincoln Railer football
season. If you miss one, worry for naught; on Monday next week we’ll
follow up the last article with all five other articles.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
|
|
An
interview with Jeff Mayfield
Tomczak
next to tackle
Lincoln football challenge
Part
1 of 6
[JULY
11, 2000] Whenever
a coaching opening is announced, you can usually see the would-be
coaches circling above that position for miles. A possible exception
to that might be the Lincoln High School football job. As hard as
the kids and coaching staffs have worked, mustering a little success
has been hard to come by. Sometimes a step forward has been followed
by two steps back. Personally, I admire all of these coaches and
players that have persevered through thick and thin...mostly thin. I
can relate to their pain. As a freshman, I quarterbacked my team to
a perfect record...0-9! However, my junior year we advanced to the
state championship game. It’s a long and tough road. Changing
mind-sets
and attitudes is one of the hardest things to do in
sports. Playing a brutal schedule against teams with outstanding
athletes will not make it any easier. Ron Tomczak knew all that when
he accepted the job. He’s not coming in on a whim with blinders
on. In fact, he saw two Railer games last season. He’s come here
with a plan...with a strategy to turn things around. This week the
LDN sports talk editor sat down with the new coach in his office to
try to uncover the plan at hand...
|
[“I’m impressed with the
kids and their work ethic right now and what I want to do is try to
build off of it.” – Coach Tomczak]
Off to a right start
Q: Coach Tomczak, first of all on
behalf of the LDN and the area residents, welcome to Lincoln.
A: Thank you.
Q: Ron, I know you’ve been here for
several days now. What are your first impressions?
A: Some of my first impressions...the kids are great. So far,
they have been hard workers. Of course, with somebody new, everybody’s
always easily good to them. I’m impressed with the kids and their
work ethic right now and what I want to do is try to build off of
it. So far, we really haven’t had any problems. There have been a
few kids that haven’t been showing up...that I’m checking into
to find out where they’re at. They are going to find out that this
is what makes up the team...the off-season workouts.
Q: Tell us a little bit about what has
already transpired this summer and what plans you have for the next
few weeks leading into the season.
A: Well, I was offered the position approximately a week after
school got out. The first thing I tried to do was to have a team
meeting for all freshmen through seniors interested in football. We
had that meeting the following Monday and had about 95 kids there.
That’s a good showing for a football program. Football is a game
of numbers right out of the chute in order to be successful. I told
them what we’re going to have strength and conditioning-wise for
the summer. I told them that we would be lifting weights every
Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 7 to 8:45 a.m. and from 3:30 to
5:30 p.m. I asked the kids to come to one of these sessions each
day. If they have to work in the afternoon, then they’re supposed
to be there in the morning and vice versa. So that’s how we
started initially.
(To
top of second column in Part 1)
|
Then I tried to put
together a little mini-camp. My brother, former Bears QB Mike
Tomczak, and current Lions (and former Railer) offensive lineman
Tony Semple came in to help me with the camp on July 5 and 6.
Putting together all this stuff on such short notice only gave me a
week to publicize it, but it turned out pretty well. We had 50 high
school kids in attendance and 35 fifth through eighth graders, with
two of those coming down from Normal. The turnout was good from the
Lincoln kids. Of course, every coach would like to have every single
kid available there.
I’ve also made phone calls to about
half of the males in the student body here trying to persuade them
to come out for football. Along with that, I’ve just sent out a
letter this week to all 500 males in the school here telling them
what’s going on this summer...about our camp next week and also
when our pre-season double sessions are going to start. So, that’s
another little tool that I tried to incorporate to maybe reach those
kids who may be on the fence and just need a push to come out. They
might be a little leery of the contact or of the competitive aspect
of the sport.
Sports fans, make LDN
your start page for the next five days to get all of the plans Coach
Tomczak has in store for the Lincoln Railer football season. If you
miss one, worry for naught; on Monday next week we’ll follow up
the last article with all five other articles.
[Jeff
Mayfield]
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