This post originally appeared on the Blotch page at the Fort Worth Weekly. To read it on that site : http://www.fwweekly.com/2015/11/25/a-west-texas-comeback/
A small-town Texas quarterback has two minutes to
drive his team 58 yards for a touchdown. If he doesn’t do it, the
playoff loss will end the season and his high school football career.
For many kids, it would represent the most stressful situation of their
lives. Friday night in Huntsville, however, a schoolboy QB and his
teammates knew they had faced challenges far greater than those posed by
onrushing defensive linemen.
Two and a half years earlier, senior signal-caller Mason Tobola had
seen his town put through stress that dwarfs that of even the most
high-pressure football game. He witnessed a fertilizer plant explosion
that killed fifteen people, injured scores of others, and damaged
surrounding buildings beyond repair. That night, students had to help
the injured, and in the intervening years, they’ve watched their
hometown of West, Texas rebuild damaged structures and psyches. The
experience has left those who made it through with valuable perspective.
“I think it opened up everyone’s eyes on the team. It made everybody
realize how hard they had to work to accomplish the simplest tasks in
life,” Tobola said.
Some three minutes of clock time before the West Trojans found
themselves needing a touchdown to extend their season, the players had
had a lot of work to do. They had just gone down by two scores. Their
opponents, the Kirbyville Wildcats, had shown resolve of their own in
overcoming a nine-point halftime deficit to post 20 unanswered points
and forge a 32-21 lead with just over five minutes to go in the 4th
quarter.
A coach could have found it a challenge to stay positive when his
tired players missed tackles and lost control of their biggest game of
the year. As his players trudged off the field following Kirbyville’s
PAT, however, West Head Coach David Woodard remained relentlessly
upbeat.
Coach Woodard also serves as the district’s athletic director and has
kids of his own attending schools in the West ISD system. Since the
April, 2013 tragedy, he has had to constantly find ways to keep himself
and his charges looking forward, even as he dealt with the added
challenge of rebuilding his own destroyed house.
“Kids feed off of you and they know how you feel and what you’re
doing and what you’re thinking,” Woodard said. “You can’t let those
negative thoughts get in your head.” He was talking about the football
game, but he could have easily been referring to his responsibilities as
an administrator, husband, and father.
The district has actually found a good bit of success recently on its
fields and floors, many of which sustained damage in the explosion.
West High School has fielded several playoff teams, including this
fall’s girls volleyball squad, and the baseball team won the 3A state
title this past spring. The football team, however, had not won a
playoff game since 2007.
West has historically been known for strong baseball and softball
teams, but football on Friday nights still matters a lot in a small
Texas town. That medical personnel had to use the football stadium for
triage in the explosion’s aftermath only heightened the sport’s symbolic
importance. When the team won only one game in the fall of 2013, it
created yet another obstacle to overcome. The way the team handled it
set an example for more than just their peers.
“We all learn a lot from kids,” said Woodard. “What they’ve
accomplished in these couple of years since the blast and going 1-9, it
showed us adults that if you decide you want to do something and you
want to work hard to get it done, then it can get done.”
A handful of today’s seniors played as sophomores on that one-win
2013 team, with underclassmen having watched it as JV, freshman, or
eighth-grade players. Tobola, who started under center that year as a
tenth-grader, explained that he and his teammates had turned things
around “through experience and hard work, through 7-on-7, and lifting
weights, just getting down and dirty and making it happen.”
The 2014 season saw the team go 7-3. They missed the playoffs after a
final weekend loss to Comanche. The near-miss gave them added resolve
headed into 2015.
“Everybody thought it was about time to step up and time to make playoffs and go into the postseason,” said Tobola.
They did it, too, losing only one regular season game en route to the
program’s first 10-win season since 1992. In the opening round of the
playoffs, Tobola kicked a PAT to defeat Troy by a point in overtime.
Playing on a neutral field at Sam Houston State’s Bowers Stadium in
the area round, the Trojans found themselves down 12-0 early. It could
have been worse save for a Kirbyville encroachment infraction that
nullified a first-quarter pick six. Both teams, in fact, seemed a touch
ragged in a penalty-filled first half. West overcame any jitters,
however, to score three second-quarter touchdowns and take a 21-12
halftime lead.
Kirbyville, who had gone 10-1 on the season themselves, looked like
the stronger team for most of the game’s final two quarters. When the
Wildcats scored their third second-half TD with 5:38 left in the fourth
quarter, the raucously supportive West fans quieted. Perhaps they
thought about the season, that even it were to end there in Huntsville,
they would fondly remember it as a marvelous experience for the school,
the town, and the players.
But the season didn’t end there. The Trojans quickly drove 69 yards,
with Tobola running the last four to cut the deficit to 32-27. The
defense produced a three-and-out, and that’s when the Trojans found
themselves with the ball and one chance to extend their season. Tobola
threw to Bailey Horn in the left flat and Horn somehow eluded a horde of
Wildcats to turn the short pass into a long touchdown. Kirbyville still
had time for their own rally, and three quick first downs moved the
ball into West territory. However, senior Trevon Harold, who had played
on the 2013 varsity as a sophomore, tipped a second-down pass and junior
Dawson Sulak intercepted it. The Trojans’ amazing season would
continue. They will play Teague in Midlothian on Friday.
Tobola, who plays offense and defense, and kicks and punts, had
fought through a fourth-quarter injury. His teammates overcame fatigue,
nerves, pain, and everything else with which an athlete must deal to win
a pressure-filled contest.
In the minutes following the game, as the players slapped hands with
the students, parents, and neighbors who had driven more than two hours
each way to support them, Coach Woodard explained what made the
difference for his team. “To be able to battle back twice tonight, early
in the first half and then the last five minutes, it just shows so much
of what we’ve always been talking about – a kind of a never-give-up,
that resiliency attitude. (I’m) so proud of them.”
Kirbyville could take pride in their players as well. The Wildcats
deserved to win the game. They played their hearts out, showing skill
and sportsmanship. They, too, had faced tragedy, as their coach had buried his brother
earlier in the week. On the field after the game, one boy cursed his
missed chances. Another wept. The loss will pain them for a long time,
even as they proceed on through high school and into life, One hopes
that the Wildcats will react to strife the way the West students have,
and let the lessons of a setback set them up to succeed.
David Woodard understands the long-term importance of the lessons his athletes learned the hard way.
“They’re just a great group of kids that have their head on straight
and that are successful in football and athletics right now. In three or
four or five, ten years, you’re going to hear about them being really
successful in life as well.”
Rush Olson has spent two decades directing creative efforts for
sports teams and broadcasters. He currently creates ad campaigns and
related creative projects for sports entities through his company, Rush
Olson Creative & Sports.
RushOlson.com
Linkedin.com/company/rush-olson-creative-&-sports
Facebook.com/RushOlsonCreativeandSports
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