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Mr. Buddy Garrity
02-21-2006, 11:44 AM
Wide-open offenses follow PA coach
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By Dave Rogers - The News staff writer Posted: 02/19/06 - 12:12:56 am CST

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There are nearly 56,000 students in the Garland school district, east of Dallas, and about 16,000 of them are high schoolers. They attend seven different Class 5A high schools and it seems like all the good football players wind up at Garland High.

"You can live anywhere in Garland and go to school any place," veteran GISD athletic director Homer Johnson says of the district's open admission policy.

"That makes it kind of hard on people who don't coach at Garland High."

Ronnie Thompson, Port Arthur Memorial's newly named head coach and athletic director, coached at South Garland High School for 14 years, nine as head coach.

Thompson, 83-72-3 in 16 seasons as a high school head coach, was 41-50-1 at South Garland from 1993 to 2001. That included two 2-8 seasons, two 4-6 seasons and three that ended 5-5. In 1996 and 1997, South Garland made the playoffs, going 6-4-1 and 8-3.


Johnson, who was Garland High football coach 50 years ago when that was the city's only high school, thinks Thompson did a good job at South Garland.

"Ronnie was really a good coach, a great offensive coach. I know the other coaches around here hated to play him, because he used entirely a different type of offense than anybody they played," Johnson said.

"You've really got yourself a good coach. No question, you've hired a good guy."

Thompson's whiz-bang offense first took the Golden Triangle, then the state of Texas by storm in TJ's 1980-81 heyday. It had the same effect in Northeast Texas in the 1990s.

"People in Port Arthur don't understand that when he came to the Dallas area to coach, his influence on the passing game in the Dallas-Fort Worth area was just unbelievable," said Todd Dodge, the Thompson protege who has racked of a record of 63-1 and three state championships the past four years at Southlake Carroll.

"You can't turn three degrees and not find someone who hasn't been affected by him. I can go on and on about people who are running an offense derived from what Ronnie was doing.

"He's been very influential to what's going on today in the Dallas area. And, somewhat, all over the state of Texas."

Garland's open admission policy allows students going into their ninth-grade year to choose their high school, so there's no such thing as a feeder system prepping the players for high schools programs there.

"At South Garland, most of kids didn't even play football in junior high, but they picked the offense right up," Thompson said. "It was a lot of fun to prepare."

Dodge knows the thrill.

"I've put my own wrinkle on things with the no-huddle and all that kind of stuff," he says. "But still, in the way we do things, there's a lot of Port Arthur, a lot of Ronnie Thompson fingerprints on the things we do today."





Former QBs hail Thompson
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By Dave Rogers - The News staff writer Posted: 02/19/06 - 12:16:21 am CST

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Todd Dodge, coach of the No. 1-ranked high school football team in the country, Southlake Carroll, says his old high school coach in Port Arthur had a special way of communicating with his quarterbacks and receivers.

So he wasn't surprised Friday when he got the news that Ronnie Thompson had been hired again by Port Arthur -- this time to be head football coach and athletic director for Memorial High.

"I got a little wind of it last week," Dodge said from Chicago, where he was speaking at a football clinic. He explained he and Thompson regularly visit via phone.

"I just think it's tremendous. I think it's great for the town of Port Arthur. I just think it's great for Ronnie. If anybody had a love for that town, it's Ronnie. It reminds me of 25 years ago when he coached all of us. He loves the town of Port Arthur."

Dodge, national coach of the year in 2004, was just one of two Parade All-American quarterbacks Thompson coached at Thomas Jefferson from 1978 to 1981.


Both went on to play major college football -- Dodge at the University of Texas and Craig Stump at Texas A&M -- and become high school head coaches who share in Thompson's love for wide-open offensive attacks.

Both hailed Thompson's return to coach in Port Arthur as a great bit of news for their old stomping ground.

Dodge thinks Port Arthur can recapture the excitement it had in 1980 and 1981, when the Yellow Jackets went 24-1-1.

"There's no doubt," he said. "I think the talent level at Port Arthur Memorial is greater than it was at TJ back when he took the job with all of us. I think he's still one of the great offensive minds and organizers of a program in the state of Texas."

It's easy for Dodge to get excited for Thompson. He says he wouldn't be a coach today if not for the influence of his former coach. Thompson was an assistant at UT when Dodge was there and the two have remained close, both coaching in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex most of the past two decades.

Stump finished up at A&M and went into college coaching for 15 years. His father, Ron Stump, was his coaching inspiration.

"I'm happy for him," Craig Stump said of Thompson. "I think he's a good coach and I think he's going to do a good job there. I know the kids that want to play for their school are going to want to play for him and the kids that are in it for themselves won't be around too long.

"I think kids that want to play will respond to the way that he's coaching. They should be glad to have him."

As much as for his innovative offense, Stump remembers Thompson for stressing discipline and teamwork, two values he credits for much of his team's success last fall as Stump led his first-year West Brook team to a six-game turnaround (from 2-8 to 8-2) and the third round of the playoffs.

"The team comes first," he says. "That's why all our guys have "TEAM" on their shirt. No one person's bigger than the team. All you've got to do is watch the Super Bowl. What did the Steelers say? 'We're a team.' "

Dodge, Stump and Thompson all have featured wide-open, four- and five-wide receiver "spread" offenses as head coaches, a natural extension of Thompson's approach back in his TJ days.

"Back at TJ, most of the time, we had two or three wide receivers, but we used our running backs as receivers, too," Stump said. "Back then, not many people threw the ball, period, and we threw more than other people.

"We sprinted out a lot. We probably threw on first down more than most people did. We were more willing to move the football with the pass. Back then, more people were trying to do it with the option and the run."

Dodge, the first Texas high schooler to pass for 3,000 yards in a season, liked the way Thompson spread out his attack.

"One of the best things Ronnie ever did," Dodge said, "was he put together an offense that was very hard to defend by personnel. He had a lot of different people involved when it came to moving the football.

"A lot of people remember Dodge and (wide receiver Brent) Duhon. But there was (wide receiver) Rick Wyble, there was (wide receiver) Shea Walker, there was (running back) Bruce Miller, there was (fullback) Don Holloway, there was (flanker) Robert Smothers.

"There were a lot of people he trained to be a factor within his offenses. That's one of the things I've tried to model my offenses on, wherever I've been: to make sure we were very hard to defend by stopping one person, that there was not just one guy getting it done."

Thompson calls his offense "multiple," and a "Star Wars kind of thing" he developed over the years.

He says that after leaving TJ, he spent a good deal of time with and incorporated many ideas from former Houston Gamblers offensive coordinator Mouse Davis, inventor of the "run-and-shoot" offense that helped Andre Ware of win the Heisman Trophy for the University of Houston.

But wide-open offenses are nothing new these days. Every team Memorial played last season ran some kind of a spread offense.

Still, Stump expects Thompson's return to Southeast Texas football stadiums to create sleepless nights for defensive coaches just like he did a quarter of a century ago.

"He's stayed up with the game," the Bruin coach says of the four years Thompson spent away from the sidelines after retiring in 2001. "He knows the concepts very well."

"I don't think that's a factor at all," Dodge says. "Ronnie was so far ahead of his time offensively, I don't think it's going to affect him at all.

"Ronnie's always had a great way of communicating with a lot of different athletes. I think those kids are going to love him."

And it will make for one interesting Friday night when Thompson's Memorial team faces off with Stump's West Brook Bruins in next fall's District 21-5A.

"I know he's going to try to win and so am I," Stump says. "He's going to compete just like I will.

"It'll be a little bit different, just like this past year when we played Nederland."

Nederland head coach Larry Neumann and Bulldog assistant Phil Pate were assistant coaches under Thompson at TJ.

"Those guys coached me," Stump said. "It was like competing against your brother, it was fun. I think it makes it more interesting when it's somebody you know well."

sgfantoo
02-21-2006, 02:16 PM
It is clear that Ronnie Thompson has had a major impact on Dodge and Stump. I am sure that what Dodge learned under Thompson plays a major roll in what Dodge accomplishes these days and it is clear that not many in nation are as good as Dodge.

Now after the preamble, I find several interesting statements and facts. I had two sons go through South when RT was coach there. Many in Garland complain about the competitive advantage that GHS has in the district. In the past, administrators have denied this. I find it very interesting that the AD, Homer GHS Johnson, admits that the system is slanted to the benefit of GHS. Any coach at any school in Garland is at a disadvantage.

The article states that there is not a feeder system. This statement is not entirely accurate. Each high school has two middle schools designated as feeder schools and the coaches of those middle schools help out the coaches at a particular high school.

Currently, Obanion MS and Sam Houston MS are feeder schools for South. The interesting point about the "choice of school" plan is that there are a number of conditions concerning space and ethnic quotas as well as the district's transportation plans. About half of the Obanion MS attendance zone is transported to Lakeview HS and about one half of the Sam Houston MS attendance zone is transported to Garland HS. One of Lakeview's feeder schools is Brandenburg. A large portion of the Brandenburg attendance zone is within two miles of SG and therefore Lakeview does not get those players and then they do not run South's offense at the middle school level. GHS gets 100% of Bussey MS and Sellars as well as Austin Academy. To say there is not feeder system is not entirely true. There is a feeder system and it feeds GHS.

I do know that at South a number of freshman play that did not play in middle school. But most of those are getting their PE and health credit and do not intend to continue. By the time they become sophomores most have played middle school ball. However the fact that so many come out should be a benefit to the program.

The biggest problem RT had at SG is it came at a time when GISD made a strong effort to bring respect back to GHS football, hired Joe Martin, and GHS returned.

When RT arrived at SG, SG had a winning percentage of 51.85%. When he left, SG's winning percentage was 50%. While at SG RT winning percentage was 44%, 40-51-1, and he was 0-2 in the playoffs.

When Mickey Moss came, SG had a winning percentage of 50%. After four years SG's winning percentage is 51.84% with a winning percentage of 67%, 31-15 and 3-3 in the playoffs.

I hope the best for RT and PAM. However, what RT did in the early 80's is not the best indication of what will happen now.

I hope RT has learned a few things since he left SG.

Mr. Buddy Garrity
02-21-2006, 03:05 PM
I hope he brings in the old OC from Nederland and we should be str8.


The defense will be ready, its the O thats gonna take some time to grasp. I'm glad Davon (the player that stormed out that meeting) got his senses str8. He didn't understand in a spread O the QB position is the best one besides the WR.

LoneRocket
02-21-2006, 11:07 PM
I hope he brings in the old OC from Nederland and we should be str8.


The defense will be ready, its the O thats gonna take some time to grasp. I'm glad Davon (the player that stormed out that meeting) got his senses str8. He didn't understand in a spread O the QB position is the best one besides the WR.
Do you think if he turns it around the kids in PA will stay and not transfer to a neighboring isd as they are doing right now?

Mr. Buddy Garrity
02-23-2006, 11:45 AM
Do you think if he turns it around the kids in PA will stay and not transfer to a neighboring isd as they are doing right now?Yes. I understand why they leaving, hell I would leave to if my school district was in shambles. But they just wanna chance to win.

ACM Dad
02-23-2006, 03:33 PM
You guys should have read the local paper here in Bryan College Station when it was announced that the Bryan coach, Sedberry, was applying for that gig.

His quotes were epic... they are no longer on-line, but it went something like this... "I'm really happy here at Bryan. I don't know why anyone would think I'm not."

What a *******. If you're out putting your name in for coaching/AD jobs, you must not be too happy and definitely not too loyal. Expect him to get the boot this year if Bryan misses the playoffs. Maybe get the boot on any season short a state title. I know a bunch of Bryan folks that are none too happy! :cool: