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Thomas was content to stay in Parkersburg and wasn't much for vacations, but earlier this month he took off for Hawaii with his two sons and their wives in tow. Pruisner later heard Thomas was eager to get back. "His vacation was out here on the football field," Pruisner said. The coach also seemed content with his playbook. He stuck to about five plays and ran an old-fashioned Wing-T, an offensive formation that generally fell out of favor when Dick Clark first hosted American Bandstand. They worked for years. "Some people want to call him old-fashioned," said local barber Tom Teeple, who called Thomas his best friend. "But this is what it was all about to him. Consistency." If not for a shattered leg in an accident early in his career at William Penn, Thomas may have found himself on the playing field rather than the sidelines. But friends said once he turned to coaching, he never looked back.
Teeple can still rattle off Thomas' slowly improving records as a young coach at a Northeast Hamilton Community School in Blairsburg, Iowa: 0-9, 3-6, 6-3. Thomas didn't ask his players to be great athletes, but he did require them to buy into his system: stay in shape, stay out of trouble and the rest would work itself out. "He was the epitome of what I would have liked to have been, salt of the earth" Teeple said. "I am a better person for having known Ed."
[Associated
Press;
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