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Coach Doug
Cox |
Publisher’s note: In 1969, the same year I first
passed through Bonners Ferry as a ten year old
with my parents and my three-week old sister in
a red Ford
LTD,
bound from
Fort
Riley,
Kansas,
to
Fort
Richardson,
Alaska,
and dad’s new duty station, Doug Cox was hired
to coach Badger football.
That was
a lot of years ago, but it seems memories of
Boundary
County
live long.
Doug
moved from Bonners Ferry a long time ago, but
his love of the game is strong as ever, and his
memories of his early days coaching and
befriending young Badger athletes remains
strong.
To this
day, Coach Knox is still on the sidelines, still
coaching his son, Mike, a four-year linebacker
at the University of Idaho, where he played for
coach Dennis Erickson, and who is now in his
third year as linebacker coach for the
Washington Huskies, having build a strong resume
coaching at Michigan State, Utah State,
Louisville, Idaho State and the St. Louis Rams.
Until
now, they were memories he shared only with his
family. He thought often about sharing them with
others, but he wasn’t sure. His wife, Sandi,
often encouraged him, but she had reservations,
too, and so the stories stayed in the family.
On December
10, 2010,
Sandi lost her battle with cancer and Doug lost
the love of his life. Before her passing, one of
the things they talked about, he said, were the
memories they shared, particularly those they
shared of their halcyon days in Bonners Ferry.
“One of
the things we talked about before she passed was
she wanted me to share my stories,” he said. “So
it really because of her I started putting them
on Facebook.”
Unfortunately, only his friends can see what
he’s written since he began writing in
mid-February, so not many people are privileged
to some rich and varied insights into that part
of this county’s history he was part of.
One of
the people who did notice, however, was Linda
Alt, who earlier this week brought in to the
courthouse a rollicking excerpt about how one of
Doug’s young star quarterbacks, exquisitely
trained and prepared for the rarely called
special play, executed it perfectly … and later
admitted to Doug that he’d totally forgotten the
calls.
When
Boundary
County
Commissioner Dan Dinning read it, his roar of
laughter echoed through all three floors of the
courthouse.
Afterward, I became one of Doug’s Facebook
friends, and asked his permission to reprint his
words to a wider audience, and he graciously
accepted. Evoking Linda’s name, I introduced
myself and my journalistic credentials by
saying, “I came here to build a clip file and
move on to bigger and better things, but this
place grabbed and held me, and despite offers,
I’ve found that I can never leave.”
“Mike, I
completely understand what you mean by not
wanting to leave Bonners Ferry,” he wrote back.
“We had to make a big decision ourselves when we
moved. One of the first people that I met in
Bonners Ferry was Linda’s husband, John. We go
back a long time. They are good people.”
What
follows is the first part of what will be an
on-going series of Doug’s Facebook series,
“Coaching in
North
Idaho.”
You can find it by
clicking here.
Coaching in
North Idaho
By Doug Cox
In 1969, I was hired as
head football coach at
Bonners
Ferry High School
in Bonners Ferry, Idaho.
The administration asked me
to try and do something about the problem with
alcohol consumption by the football players
especially during the season. I was more
concerned with winning games, but I promised to
look into the problem.
In the spring before school
was out for the summer, I called a meeting for
all returning football players and anyone else
who wanted to turn out. We met and I covered the
goals for the summer workouts, and the offensive
and defensive systems that we would be using.
Then I got into the drinking problem.
To make a point, I asked
all of the players who had consumed some form of
alcohol beverage during the past season to stand
up. I promised that this information would stay
in the room.
Of the 38 returning players
in the room, 36 stood up.
Wow, I could not believe
it.
The two players who
remained seated were brothers.
Well, I told everyone to
look around. I said that we definitely had a
problem. I told them that next fall, I would
enforce the athletic policy. Get caught drinking
and you will be dropped from the team. We
finished the meeting and everyone left except
the two brothers who had not stood up. The
oldest brother tells me that they both had taken
part in drinking alcoholic drinks but he said
that they belonged to the Mormon church and they
just couldn't admit to breaking the rules in
public.
Well that made a perfect
100%. The administrators were right. I told the
brothers not to worry about it, that I
understood and I would tell no one. I did not
tell anyone until now.
For some reason, the next
season, we did not have to drop any players from
the team for drinking. Not to say they didn't
drink, we just did not catch them!
The second year that I was
head football coach in Bonners Ferry, the new
high school had been built, but we had to
practice downtown at the fairgrounds. The field
at the new high school was not ready so we had
to bus the kid's downtown.
It was the Monday before
our first game of the season with Sandpoint
High. We had started practice and one of the
football managers came up and told me that he
thought he could see someone up on the hill in
the bushes, looking at us with binoculars.
I gave the manager the keys
to my car, and told him to drive up and check it
out. About 20 minutes later, he came back. He
had a distributor cap in his hand. He said that
when he got to the top of the hill, he saw a car
parked where cars usually did not park, and it
had a Sandpoint license plate, 7B. So he opened
the hood and took off the distributor cap.
Practice ended, and we
headed to school. When I got to the top of the
hill, I recognized a Sandpoint coach standing by
his car. I held the distributor cap up, and
drove past him and smiled. I stopped about a
block away, making sure he could see me, and
threw the cap onto the sidewalk. Every time I
saw that coach after that, I just grinned at
him.
The same year that we had
the "spy" problem, my second year as head coach
at Bonners, I experienced a very strange
football practice. Dick, an assistant coach,
drove the bus that took the players to and from
practice. I had driven down to practice as
usual, and Pete, another coach, rode with me.
When we got out of the car, the team was running
a warm-lap around the football field, and Coach
Dick was standing at the other end, watching the
team run. Coach Pete had a football in his hand.
We were walking towards Dick. Pete tells me to
watch, he was going to wake Dick up.
He threw the ball towards
Dick. I thought that Dick was looking at us but
as we found out he wasn't. The ball hit Dick in
his face, broke his glasses, and knocked him to
the ground.
We ran over.
He wasn't knocked out but
he was plenty woozy! We helped him up. I told
him that we were going to take him to the
hospital. Dick said that he was okay and ready
to start practice. So we took a towel, cleaned
the blood off of his face, taped his glasses,
and he was ready. So we started practice.
About 30 minutes later, I
heard a commotion at the other end of the field.
Dick and some other guy were arguing with each
other, and the players were standing around
whooping it up. I ran down and got between the
two of them. They were starting to push and
shove each other. I recognized
Warren
as the other guy.
Warren
was an insurance agent in town and his company
carried the insurance that players needed to
have in order to play football. With the help of
another coach, I grabbed
Warren and started him
towards his car. I asked him what was the
problem and he just got into his car and left.
We finally finish practice. When we got back to
the high school, I sat down with Dick.
Evidently, that day before
practice, Dick had called
Warren
and told him that an Indian kid would be needing
football insurance. Warren
asked Dick who would be paying for the insurance
and Dick told him that it was none of his
business. I suspected that Dick, who had a big
heart was the one that was going to pay for the
insurance so that the kid could play football.
Anyway, that is why Warren
showed up at practice to confront Dick.
Wow what a day!
During the first couple of
years that I coached at Bonners Ferry, we had a
big, good natured player named Brad. When he was
a sophomore, and since he was so big, we decided
to start him on the varsity team at tackle.
One day during practice, we
were running a scrimmage and Brad missed a
blocking assignment. Our running back got
clobbered by the guy that Brad was supposed to
block.
I got into Brad's face. I
really chewed him out. When I finished, I told
him to get out of the drill and go stand off to
the side. Brad walked over to one of the
assistant coaches and said something. After
practice, I asked the coach what Brad had said.
He said that Brad wanted to know if it was okay
to chew gum at practice.
A couple of days later, we
were starting to begin practice. I was walking
out of the locker room and as I approached the
football field, Brad was running around
screaming "I found one!”
He came up to me and told
me, with a big grin on his face, "Coach, I just
found a four leaf clover!” I patted him on the
helmet, congratulated him and we started
practice.
One final story about Brad.
It was Brad's junior year and I had an assistant
coach suggest that we put Brad deep on kickoff
returns. I was very dubious about this. We were
talking about a young man who was 6 foot 3
inches tall and weighed north of 220 pounds.
He had worked on his speed
during the summer, and was getting faster.
Finally, about the middle of the season, the
assistant coach convinced me to at least give
him a try at returning kick offs in practice. We
lined the kick off teams up, put Brad deep and
kicked the ball to Brad. He took the kickoff at
the 10 yard line, ran up the middle. He must
have ran over eight guys. He goes down and
scores.
He was so excited that he
took a victory lap around the track.
Our next game is at
Lakeland
High school. We win the toss and
elect to receive. We put Brad deep. The kicker
kicks the ball and Brad catches it about the 20
yard line. He did not move.
He was frozen in place.
About three or four
Lakeland
players hit him and he went down. I thought he
was probably hurt, so after the whistle, I ran
on the field. He was still down.
He looked up at me when I
got to him and he asked me what time we would be
getting home. He said that he was really hungry.
We got him up and that was his last test at
returning kickoffs.
In the early 1970's there
were no state football championships in the
state of Idaho.
We did have state rankings that were determined
by sportswriters in the various towns.
In 1974 we were chosen
state champions by this method. We had
established a playoff game in North
Idaho between the winner of the
Intermountain League and the Central Idaho
League.
The Intermountain League
was made up of Bonners Ferry, Wallace, St.
Maries, Post
Falls,
Lakeland,
Priest
River and Kellogg. The Central Idaho
League was made up of Orofino, Lapwai,
Grangeville, Kamiah, Timberline, etc.
The winner of each league
played each other at the end of the regular
season. In 1972 we lost to Orofino, and in 1973
we beat Lapwai, and then in 1974 we beat
Grangeville.
The Lapwai game in 1973 was
a game that I will never forget.
Lapwai had a great team.
Their coach, Coach Wilson, had been there for
quite a while, and they had a reputation of
being a tough football program. They ran the
single wing offense. One thing that helped us
was that we had played there once before and we
got out butts kicked.
Well, the playoff game was
also there at their home field. There are many
stories about this game, but my favorite was the
play that decided the outcome of the game in our
favor. It happened at the end of the first half.
After the play was over, a
fight broke out between Chris, our junior
defensive tackle, and Lapwai's star running
back. The referees kicked both players out of
the game. Chris was a good defensive lineman but
we made some adjustments and replaced him. Their
running back was not replaceable. We went on to
win the game 21- 20. I gave the game ball to
Chris.
One of my favorite stories
of coaching in Bonners Ferry concerned our
oldest son, Mike.
When he was 9 or 10 years
old, he started going to football practice with
me. Mom and I talked it over, and we decided
that he could probably handle being a manager or
ball boy.
He was a very good helper.
He did whatever we needed done. Chase footballs
around the field, haul equipment to where we
needed it, all that kind of thing. I thought the
team was okay with him being there.
We had reached the Monday
of our last week of the season. After practice,
as usual, I was in the coach's office in the
locker room with the rest of the coaches. We
heard a commotion in the locker room.
Most of the team was back
at the toilet area of the locker room. When I
got back there, I saw that tjree seniors had
Mike by feet upside down. They were sticking his
head into the toilet, but keeping his head out
of the water. They saw me and put him down. I
took Mike into the office. After he calmed down,
I told him to go out into the gym and wait for
me. I called the seniors in that had grabbed
Mike.
They were all team
co-captains. I asked them what was going on?
They said that Mike had been getting pretty
cocky with them and had been mouthing off. I
told them that I understood, but next time,
bring him to me and not the toilet.
I then asked if there was a
name for what they were doing to him. They said
it was called a "swirly.” I told them that we
would just forget it. The seniors left, and the
other coaches in the room had held it in too
long, and we all had a good laugh. Everything
was fine until I got home.
Mom was upset at me.
Especially when I told her that it had taught
Mike a valuable lesson. She did not agree. The
next day, after we had got to practice, the
three senior co-captains discovered that someone
had loaded their jocks up with red hot balm.
Hum, I have no idea who
could have done that!
Tim Mercer was one of the
best high school football players that I have
ever had a chance to coach or to be around.
Tim was a starting running
back at BFHS in his sophmore and junior years.
Unfortunately, Tim was killed in a car wreck the
summer before his senior year (1974).
In my opinion, he was the
best running back in the state of
Idaho
at the time.
He wasn't very big. 5 feet
nine or ten inches and 160-65 pounds. But,
without a doubt, he was the most fearless
football player that I have ever seen. He went
100% all of the time.
When he was a junior, he
won the state 100 yard dash by diving across the
finish line.
One of my favorite stories
of Tim happened during his junior year. He had
developed a habit of trying to jump over
tacklers. I warned him to stop doing it before
he broke his neck. I told him that he was bound
to get hurt. He just smiled at me. Well, we are
playing Wallace at home, and I called an option
play towards our sidelines. The ball was at
midfield.
The quarterback pitched the
ball to Tim and he started to turn the corner
and three tacklers were there ready to tackle
him. He tried to jump over all three but they
all hit him in mid air. He ends up on the
ground, underneath all three players.
This all happens in front
of our bench. The whistle blows and I ran onto
the field. I knew that he had to be hurt.
Finally they unpiled and I
got down to Tim. He looked up at me smiled, held
up two fingers, and said "Coach, Peace Brother,
I am okay!"
Tim Mercer was not only a
great athlete, he was a great kid and a good
friend. I will never forget the last time that I
saw him. I was playing golf in Bonners Ferry. We
were on hole five, which runs next to the old
highway. I was in the middle of the fairway,
(which was unusual for me) and I heard a loud
muffler on a car on the highway.
I looked up and saw that it
was Tim. He saw me and pulled the car over to
the side of the road. He got out and jumped the
fence and came over. He had a big grin on his
face. He asked me how I liked his new car. It
was a 1955 Chevy. I told him that I really like
it. I said that my first car had been a 1951
Chevy. He said that he was really ready to start
football in a couple of weeks.
We talked for a little
while and I told him that I was leaving for
Boise the next day for
the state coaches clinic and I would see him
when I got back. I added that he should be
careful driving his "new" car and to get the
muffler fixed.
He just smiled and left.
The next day we left for
Boise. The next night my
brother in law, Bill Mackey, called and said
that Tim had been killed in a single car wreck
in Paradise
Valley.
We went home the next
morning. I went over and visited with Tim's
parents. They were having a tough time. I tried
to comfort them. I tried to comfort a lot of
people who were upset with Tim's death. Tim's
funeral was attended by almost everybody in
town. I didn't recognize until later what an
affect Tim's death had on me.
At some point, I made a
decision that I would never get as close to the
players that I coached, as I had been with Tim.
I have had to alter that decision at times, but
for the most part, I changed as a coach. I still
think about Tim.
One of the most
embarrassing thing to happen to me as a coach
concerned my nephew Don.
Don was a good high school
basketball player. I thought that I could make
him a quarterback in football.
It was Don's senior year
and we were just finishing two a day practices.
It was a Friday night before our first game and
we were having a game scrimmage between the
first and second units. Don was the quarterback
on the second unit. We had just started the
scrimmage and Don was running an option play. He
kept the ball and got hit and tackled.
After everybody unpiled,
Don stayed on the ground. I walked over and told
him to get up. He said that he was hurt and
couldn't get up. I told him that he wasn't hurt
and that I thought he was faking it. He stayed
on the ground. Finally, they got him up and took
him to the sidelines. After the scrimmage, his
Dad took him to the hospital. He had a broken
ankle.
It was a might cool around
my sister's house for a while.
One of my favorite stories
about preparing and planning to win high school
football games came from a situation that
happened in a League championship game against
Lakeland High
School.
It was one of the last
games of the regular season. I coached the
offense and I thought we were prepared for
anything. We had practiced the two-minute drill
all season but had not had to use it.
We had the "check with me"
call from the quarterback that let the offense
know that we would not huddle but go to the line
of scrimmage immediately after the play was
over.
The qb would then make a
series of color calls and number calls. Red was
run, blue was pass. The numbers indicated who
handled the ball and which hole to run into. The
numbers also indicated designated receivers and
pass routes.
Well, in the
Lakeland
game, we were losing by four points. We had the
ball at their eight yard line with less than 20
seconds to play.
We had no times outs. Dan,
our quarterback, called "check with me.” The
offense lined up at the line of scrimmage, and
Dan made his calls.
I couldn't hear what he was
saying.
The clock was down to five
seconds when the center snapped the ball. Dan
took one step back and threw a perfect slant
pass to Tim Foust, our split end, for the game
winning, league winning touchdown. I was so
excited. I was telling anyone who wanted to hear
that our preparation for the "check with me"
call had worked beautifully.
Later in the locker room, I
was talking with Dan Dinning, our quarterback.
He told me that when they lined up for the
"check with me call,” he panicked and couldn't
think of any numbers or colors. So he called out
"Pass to Foust on Down!”
Oh Well.
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