Small Town Missouri Rules Championship Play
Small towns like Webb City, Ste.Genevieve, Logan-Rogersville dominate play annual in the football Show-Me Bowl.
Taking in the Show-Me Bowl year after year, I’m starting to wonder if the bigger deal is winning the title, or simply being there and taking part.
Players who perform on the floor of the Edward Jones Dome have been programmed for years that “winning is everything.” They've heard that from family and coaches from their little league days and on.
Losing is a proposition young athletes rather not endure.
Maybe, that’s why I love football so much. Unlike some other sports, football is predominantly a team game. I can’t recall any game simply won by a single player. With 11 players on the field, there is a great dependence upon one-another. Quarterbacks get a lot of glory and can accomplish a lot statistically. But without great receivers and excellent blockers, most team’s aren’t going anywhere. The quarterback cannot catch his own throw.
MICDS’ Thomas Militello threw for 44 touchdowns and some 3,000 yards this season, yet Webb City won the Class 4 title game.
Ezekiel Elliott of John Burroughs rushed for a phenomenal 42 TDs this year and nearly 1,800 yards yet Logan-Rogersville sailed down I-44 with the first place Class 3 trophy.
Whether we are talking about the Mathews-Dickey Knights or the Green Bay Packers, offense entertains and defense wins titles. Case in point, The Rams had 415 yards passing and lost the game. In the end, both Logan-Rogersville and Webb City had tougher, grittier hard nosed defensive teams. Their strength was in their numbers both on both sides of the line.
Other local teams did no better. Staley of Kansas City, a relatively new school bounced Kirkwood 35-21 and CBC fell to Lee’s Summit West 44-21. The St. Louis area teams went 0-for-4 for the tournament.
Just a year ago, Hazelwood Central, Webster Groves, Burroughs and Maplewood all got smacked in the mouth with Show-Me Bowl loses.
I can come up with two theories. One, other parts of the state put much more of a premium on middle school football programs. Kids, those ages are learning techniques and skills as a team sport, long before most St. Louis teams are getting serious. Jeff City runs one system from pee wee to the 12th grade. Hundreds of kids are in the program. Everyone's on the same page.
In small town, rural Missouri, football programs are the centerpiece of the community. There are less diversions and less distractions. Go down to Farmington and you will see just about everyone at the game, the mayor, the city council members, the pastors and most of the town folks. Local players are heroes in small towns like Logan-Rogersville and Webb City and Ste. Genevieve. Kids grow up dreaming of suiting up with the varsity. There’s not a whole lot else to do in these small communities.
There was a time when virtually every student at Valle Ste. Genevieve was either on the team or in the band, and in some rare cases, both.
One such year, the Warriors of Valle brought some 14,000 fans to the Show-Me Bowl at Busch Stadium. They filled a whole side of the lower portion of the stands. More people came to watch their team play than lived in the entire county.
Many years ago, starting out, I covered a playoff game, Chaminade at Jackson, Mo. The entire community showed up. The stadium was a sea of red. You could have fired a gun on main street and no one would have gotten hurt. Virtually everyone in town was at the game. I thought, what a good time to commit a crime?
I admire the small town values and devotion to school and teams. I think that’s cool. At any state tournament, small towns turn up in big numbers. These little towns in southwest Missouri produce lots of champions but few college type players. Its all about the team game, and year in--year out, athletes from these communities simply are getting the job done.
Mark Wilson
8:48 pm on Sunday, November 27, 2011
CBC lost to Blue Springs South, 40-37, and Elliott had 42 touchdowns on the year. But that is correct. Even in larger Kansas City-area schools, there is much more of an emphasis made on learning the system and working out year-round. How many of these small town schools can boast a well-rounded athletic department? That's another question. In terms of football, the other side has got us beat, for now.
James Baer
9:10 pm on Sunday, November 27, 2011
Right, Ezekiel Elliott had 42 total TDs this year, 34 rushing and the rest on returns, catches and all. I stand corrected.
flyoverland
9:07 am on Monday, November 28, 2011
Mark is correct. Just look across the river at Collinsville. The late Virgil Fletcher used to have every grade school team in town, public or parochial running the same system so when they got to high school its second nature. My brother lives over there and he says the days of a kid deciding to take up football in the 9th grade like we did are over. Unless you play a competitive brand of pee wee football, you aren't going to play. That's impossible for teams like MICDS and JBS which are then further penalized by having to play larger schools. I don't understand the rationale of it, except perhaps they are not restricted by a school district's geography. They are, however, restricted by the high cost of tuition and the demanding academic requirements to get in. You have to wonder how many of the players on these small town teams could meet these accelerated academic criteria that see most students taking courses years before they normally would in a regular school. That's one advantage these prep school kids have when being recruited, coaches don't have to worry about the kid passing the ACT when the school average is 29-30.
Mark Wilson
8:52 pm on Wednesday, December 14, 2011
I'll be curious to see how the new Metro League shapes up next year with the new districts system and school enrollment figures. MICDS graduates virtually all starters save three or four, while JBS had only eight seniors graduate. Questions at quarterback and LB for both schools right now, though I think they'll both manage to find somebody (Frerrote made Holmes into one heck of a signal caller over only one season). Looks like JBS is the team to beat in Class 3 next year while MICDS (will they stay in Class 4?) certainly has more questions. They're a well-run program, it's just hard to replace guys like Militello and Scherer.
James Baer
5:52 am on Thursday, December 15, 2011
Mark,
Very good take on this. I am confident both coaches will figure it out. Webb City graduated 28 last year, and managed to win it again. They won this year's Show-Me Bowl title with mostly a junior team.