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LH Panther Mom
07-31-2008, 06:55 PM
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

Summer break for high school athletes? Hardly.
Offseason programs keep players active, focused for fall season
By Bill Oram

AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF


Thursday, July 31, 2008

LIBERTY HILL — Rock music blared out of the speakers into the weight room, but didn't quite drown out the sound of steel clashing against steel as weights and barbells were dropped, then lifted again and again.

Members of various Liberty Hill High School sports teams hollered across the purple and yellow room, their voices barely able to cut through the heavy din. Nearly 60 of them — mostly football, but also basketball and volleyball — were there at 7 a.m. four days a week, preparing for their upcoming seasons, working for some kind of competitive edge.

"For the most part, if they're in town they're here lifting," said Robert Draper, an assistant football coach who is in charge of the school's strength and conditioning program.

Four days each week throughout the summer, student-athletes crowded the weight room. Football, as well as other sports, has morphed from seasonal endeavors to year-round lifestyle. Showing up for practices and working hard and memorizing playbooks are no longer enough.

Liberty Hill football coach Jerry Vance, who has led the Panthers to two straight Class 3A state championships, knows as well as anyone the importance of summer workouts.

"It's become very vital," Vance said. "Kids don't bale hay anymore. They don't spend the summer throwing 80-pound bales of hay 15 rows up. They grill hamburgers."

In 2002, the University Interscholastic League started sanctioning supervised summer strength and conditioning programs, allowing coaches the opportunity to oversee summer workouts.

"When I played 25, 30 years ago, we didn't have it and at two-a-days we were dragging," Draper said.

Thomas Seites, a senior defensive tackle who has been part of both Panthers title teams, said summer conditioning can be rough, but that it pays off in the playoffs.

"It does get challenging, but you just gotta think, 'Let's get that third ring,' " Seites said. "It felt so good to win a state championship. You do all this and it's worth it."

The workouts prove particularly helpful for the football team, which doesn't participate in 7-on-7 passing games throughout the summer, except once a week against Leander. The exercise does little for the Panthers and their smashmouth, run-first, run-second mentality, Vance said.

"For us, it really has no bearing other than working a little bit on defense," he said.

But it's not just football players who are there. Athletes from virtually every other sport participate.

Charice Hankins, the Liberty Hill softball coach, said the summer program isn't sport-specific or tailored more toward football players than other athletes. In addition to lifting weights, student-athletes jump rope, run sprints and do crunches.

Ashley Orange, a junior who throws the shot and is a competitive weight lifter, said that in past years some girls discouraged others from participating in the summer conditioning because it was "just for the boys." But she said that in her experience, that hasn't been the case.

"They try to work on stuff that the girls can do and the boys can, too," Orange said.

Hankins said rather than a detriment, the football team's presence gives incentive to players from different sports.

"When you're at a school that has two state championships back to back, that's contagious," she said.

woram@statesman.com;445-3677

AAS link (http://www.statesman.com/sports/content/sports/stories/highschool/07/31//0731willco.html)

Daddy D 11
07-31-2008, 07:00 PM
Thats what im talking bout:clap:

LHexPlayer
07-31-2008, 07:02 PM
Just saw that online. It's getting really close now.

LH Panther Mom
07-31-2008, 07:12 PM
Originally posted by Daddy D 11
Thats what im talking bout:clap:
Did you see Thomas's picture? Bets on whether the facial hair is gone Monday? :D

LHexPlayer
07-31-2008, 07:14 PM
I bet if the facial hair is not gone, he will be shaving with a cheap razor at the field house. Vance will go old school on him.

Rabid Cougar
07-31-2008, 07:43 PM
Cut an paste your local High School's name into the article.

LHexPlayer
07-31-2008, 07:51 PM
Sure you could cut and paste any other schools name and put it into that article. That is the point of the article. The article is not trying to tell you what is going on just at Liberty Hill. It is informing its readers what is going on in high school athletics today. There are a lot of average Joes out there that don't realize how high school athletics has evolved. They just happened to pick Liberty Hill. They easily could have picked Lake Travis, Westlake, or Holland, Tx.

LH Panther Mom
07-31-2008, 08:57 PM
And from Waco.....



Summer no time to stop for high school coaches


Click-2-Listen

Buzz up!Sunday, July 27, 2008

By Brice Cherry

Tribune-Herald youth sports editor

Call up your local high school office or teacher’s lounge over the summer, and you’re likely to hear a recorded voice message.

Dial the coaches’ office or field house throughout June or July, on the other hand, and you’re bound to talk to a real-life coach.

If the average high school football coach were assigned the standard “What I Did Over My Summer Vacation” assignment, he could simply write, “More of the same thing I did during the school year” and it would ring true. Simply put, there is no summer vacation for most coaches.

Between 7-on-7 football tournaments, offseason strength and conditioning programs, football camps, coaching conventions or clinics and more than a handful of preseason staff meetings, the coach’s day planner does not lack for activity.

“You’ll run into people who say, ‘Man, Coach, it must be nice to have summers off,’ ” said Axtell head coach Mike Cadell. “You think, ‘Buddy, if you only knew.’ Most of the time this summer I got home around 7:30 p.m. I mean, I didn’t get there until about noon or 1, but that’s still a pretty good day.

“But that’s what we do. Any coach worth his salt is working (over the summer).”

Coaches admit that the pace isn’t as hectic during the summer months, but the notion that it completely comes to a stall is laughable.

“The difference is not having to go to class, the school-day regimen,” Robinson’s Brian Lewis said. “But it’s still pretty busy. For us, we started our strength-and-conditioning program once school let out. That went on for seven weeks, and we ended that up last week. This past week we had a football camp for the little kids, those fourth- through ninth-graders, and then this weekend we leave for coaching school. We’ll come back to school at the end of next week for some preparation, and then that next Monday we start two-a-days.

“Unless you take a couple of days here and there, there’s not much of a vacation.”

When the UIL began loosening restrictions around summer workouts and started allowing its coaches to conduct voluntary summer strength and conditioning programs in 2002, most football coaches jumped at the chance.

Now, nearly every school in Central Texas holds summer workouts of varying degrees, deeming them a crucial precursor to two-a-days.

“When we started at Robinson, we had about 20 to 25 kids participate in our summer workouts,” Lewis said. “This summer we’ve averaged about 90. I think the kids understand that to stay in shape and not lose the strength they’ve built up during the school year, those workouts help them stay prepared.”

Workouts a ‘warm-up’

These additional workouts also serve as a “warm-up” for August’s preseason drills in another way.

“The one thing about today that’s different from when I was growing up is that kids aren’t out in the heat of the day anymore,” Crawford’s Delbert Kelm said. “It’s a different world, and you use those (workouts) to get kids acclimated to the heat. You’ve definitely got to worry about that.”

Coaches also worry about burnout. At most smaller schools, the average football player also plays one or more additional sports, and may even compete for a select or AAU team during the summer. The coaches don’t want their athletes spending so much time around a sport that they’re sick of it before the season even kicks off.

“That’s one reason the summer is not as intense,” said Axtell’s Cadell. “If we have a kid come tell one of the coaches that he has a family vacation or that he wants to go to a Rangers game, we’re like, ‘Go! Just go! It’s summer, go be a kid, have some fun. That’s fine.’ I mean, you’re going to have some kids get fatigued. Burnout, or whatever you want to call it, is the nature of the beast, especially on the 1A and 2A level.”

But what about the coaches? Don’t they get tired of the six-hour staff meetings, the sunny summer afternoons spent visiting with an artificial-turf salesman that could seemingly be better spent in the back of a fishing boat or behind the wheel of a golf cart?

Balance the key

Sure, it gets old, the coaches say. Doing it well requires a certain amount of juggling talent, balancing the responsibiliies of the job with time for fun and family.

“There’s an old saying, ‘You give some, you spend some and you save some,’ ” Waco High coach Johnny Tusa said. “That, to me, is the essence of living. You give some time, you take some time, and so on and so forth, but you’ve certainly got to have some balance, otherwise you won’t be long for this profession.”

Cadell said coaching is a job and a lifestyle that can be “a grind” at times. But he also knows that if he doesn’t keep his nose to the grindstone, his team may end up getting rocked.

“You work because you know everybody else is working, and you’ve got to keep up with the Joneses,” Cadell said. “If you don’t, you’ll get left behind.”

bcherry@wacotrib.com

757-5714



Tribune link (http://www.wacotrib.com/sports/content/sports/highschools/stories/2008/07/27/07272008waccoaches.html)

LH Panther Mom
08-01-2008, 07:41 AM
Originally posted by Ernest T Bass
We finished our summer workout program today with 110 athletes running 50 forty yard dashes. Start our freshman camp next week, upperclassmen show up on the 11th.
We finished ours last week, along with camp for JH/fish.

The hard work all kids in the state put in over the summer will pay off for them. And for the ones who weren't able to work out - :eek: :eek: :( .