MULES DIRTY THE
EAGLES’ NEST
Alamo Heights bumped the season record to 2-1 with a handy
37-12 victory over the Eagle Pass Eagles on a lucky Friday September 13 at
Harry B. Orem Stadium. The Mules
got off to a very quick start stacking up five scores before Eagle Pass got on
the board. AH scored on all 5 of
its first full possessions. Robert
Schuler took a four-yard pass from Dalton Banks early. Then less than four minutes later, QB
Scotty Uhl scampered for 30 yards and six more. With the clock winking down the seconds in the first
quarter, QB Dalton Banks took care of a 24-yard keeper and hit the end zone. Kicker Robert Carter helped the Mules
cause with a 32-yard field goal in the front half of the second quarter and
then running back Byron Proctor got his first of two scores with a nine yard
run. He followed that up early in
the fourth with an 11-yard touchdown.
Proctor totaled 154 yards on 14 carries to go along with his two TD’s.
Eagles’ QB Ty Chisum showed his athletic ability and
challenged the Mules all night. He
gave equal time to wriggling out of the grasp of several Mules defenders and
also being swallowed up by the defensive pressure. He did however run for one touchdown and pass for
another. But credit the Mules
withering defense with keeping pressure on the quarterback and not allowing the
run which played a key role in tucking away the Mules’ second straight
win. The defense held Eagle Pass
to eight first downs and forced seven punts.
“His Inside Voice”
A weekly discussion with
Coach Mike Norment
Mule Fan: Alamo
Heights was impressive in getting its second straight win and popped out
quickly to put Eagle Pass in a hole. The defense also did a great job of
pressuring and taking away the run.
What were your general thoughts about the victory?
Coach Norment:
We talked about wanting to jump on them early. So the defense did a great job of forcing three and out and
gave the offense great field position and the offense was able to turn that
into points on the scoreboard.
Overall we did a great job and did exactly what we talked about. We were able to get a big lead and so
then we were able to coast and get a lot of players into the game.
Mule Fan: Just
on that point Coach, all these kids work hard during the week and hard in the
off-season and you get a game like this where you can basically empty the
bench. How gratifying is that as a
coach to see these kids get some snaps in a varsity game?
Coach Norment:
As a coach you really fret because all these kids have put in the time
and you want all of them to be able to play. You really do.
Unfortunately you can’t play everybody because of how competitive a lot
of our games are. So it is always
great when you can put kids into the game and watch them do a great job and
excel. I was real excited to watch
some of these guys actually get in and have great games.
Mule Fan: In
these first three games you’ve had a number of different circumstances, which
have caused you to have to put a lot of different lineups and combinations on
the field particularly offensively.
Are you comfortable enough with the combinations you’ve seen to know
what you’ve got going into district?
Coach Norment:
One good thing is that it has given us some added depth having to make
these combinations and get some people some playing time that probably wouldn’t
have gotten this much. So that’s
the positive. The negative is that
we really haven’t played as a unit with who I think (all) the starters
are. But the added depth will come
in handy. And like I said in an
earlier interview, what I like is getting put into adverse situations and
seeing how we respond. We’ve
responded very well to making lineup changes and sometimes it has been the day
of the game where we’ve made these changes. The way they’re responded has been a huge positive and that
tells me about the type of kids we have. If in a game something negative happens
they’re going to be able to respond and come back and do a good job.
Mule Fan: How
does the routine change during the off week?
Coach Norment:
We’ll still practice but we’ll cut it back a bit. This is also a great time for the
seniors to take college visits.
We’re telling them that if they need to go this is a perfect time
because we’re giving them Friday, Saturday, and Sunday off. The practices will be shorter while
we’re here. Since we don’t yet
know a lot about our next opponent we’re being really general to start working
on things that we saw we needed to work on from the Eagle Pass game. Then we’ll start getting some film and
breaking it down and start working the game plan working against offenses and
defenses that we’re going to see against Boerne Champion. If they’re banged up or bruised they
might be asked to come out and practice a little if this were a regular week. But we’ll probably give the ones who
are banged up a few days off to get healthy and recuperate.
Mule Fan: The
kids are off on Friday but we know the coaches will not be. How will scouting work this week for
you and the staff?
Coach Norment:
Boerne had last week off so they were at our game against Eagle Pass and
we’ll be in Marble Falls this week for their game. That’s the only game from our district this week so we’ll be
there.
Mule Fan:
Technology has changed and made it easier to scout with all that is
available to you now. Does it
still make a difference to go see a game live and what would you learn seeing a
game live that you cannot pick up on game film?
Coach Norment: Just
the feel of the game. On film you
can’t tell if a player gets hurt.
If there is an injury, is it serious or will the player be back the next
week? You get a feel for how the team is responding because you can see the
sidelines. Maybe you can pick up
something on the sideline that you might not pick up on film. I still think it is important. We send our junior high coaches out. They always scout the team that we’re
going to play throughout the year.
They do a great job of getting us the information even though we get the
film. They give us great insight
that we can’t always get from film.
And we get film on every team we play in our district. When we play (Buda) Hays we’ll get nine
films. There is always something
you can learn by going and watching though.
Mule Fan: So
describe what will happen this Friday.
How many will you take to see Boerne? How do you divide assignments?
Coach Norment: We’ll
take quite a few. For example
defense will watch their offense but we’ll help each other out. If Boerne has the ball then our
offensive coaches help the defensive coaches by calling out the different
routes they run while they are watching the play develop in general. More eyes are better. We’ll get a sense of the size of their
players too, which is harder on film.
Mule Fan: As we
record this you have not yet seen Boerne on film. This is a rivalry game and they have not been here in a
while. They have a new head coach
and are 2-0. Generally speaking
what are your views on what they have done and might do differently under a new
coach?
Coach Norment:
Keith Kaiser is the new head coach. He actually coached here in
2001. I know him very well. He is
a great coach and the Boerne players are going to be well coached. They always have been. As you said it is a rivalry game and
we’ll both be up for each other.
We’ll know more specifics soon but they’ll come here wanting to beat us
especially because we did a pretty good job on them last year on their
Homecoming game. I’m sure the
revenge factor will be talked about.
And of course having a new coach coming in and trying to build a program
it helps to beat your big rival and coach Kaiser knows the rivalry because as I
said he was here. So I expect a
really good game.
AH Football Film Night Completes You
The Mule Fan editorial staff will occasionally jump upon the
soapbox. We must climb up to
express our opinion and/or seek input about a little privilege we call “AH Football
Film Night” held weekly on Monday nights at 7:00pm in the Oaks building on the
AHHS campus. For the uninitiated,
this is not a scholarly film review
session of the classics. It is a
weekly gathering (or rather it is supposed to be) of player parents, friends
and any AH fan to sit down with Coach Mike Norment and get a down-by-down
review of each play of the previous Friday night game with his narrative of why
things happened the way they did.
It is really fun and you learn a ton! So far, not many takers. This is a change from when your humble scribe last foamed at
the mouth about varsity football.
These little sessions used to take place in the visitors
locker room with Coach Byrd and were very well attended (not hundreds but
enough to make it worth everyone’s time).
We’d put out folding chairs and sit for an hour and get a review of the
game from inside the head of the head coach. Well now the players all have this app called HUDL. So one who has access to HUDL can have
another look even before Monday. That has possibly dented attendance. Or maybe the ironing is muscling its
way into our Monday night agendas.
Monday Night Football is not really a valid excuse. But it is tough to expect Coach Norment
to want to give up time with his family to show film to eight guys every
week. He’s already seen the
footage.
In December of 1980, NBC tried an experiment and aired a
game between the New York Jets and the Miami Dolphins without announcers of any
kind; just video and crowd noise.
Obviously it didn’t catch on.
It is really good to have the play-by-play and the analysis. Having the coach there to teach us
about what is going on is really a neat deal. And by the way, watching in the classroom in the Oaks
building (just west of the natatorium) is to the visitor’s locker room what
first class is to coach. Let’s get some turnout and keep it going.
For this coming session only, film night will be on Tuesday,
October 1 at 7pm. Then it returns
to the regularly scheduled time slot of Mondays at 7pm. Obviously no film night during the week
of 23 September.
Eating for the
Mules at Order Up and EZ’s
You have to eat so why not help the Mules while you do? Two community restaurants have stepped up to support Mules
Dine Out Days and there are a few dates remaining in this generous program. Mules
Football earns cash on meals ordered at Order Up in Lincoln Heights and EZ’s at
Sunset Ridge. Go by Order Up
specifically on September 24th (all day) and EZ’s on
September 19th and 26th (from 5pm-closing). Write AHHS Football on the back of the
receipt and put the receipt in the fundraiser box next to the bulletin board. We are told that AH Football collects 15-20% of sales that are "dropped in the bucket."
Cliché Corner –
Cuz learnin’ is gud!
Impress your friends;
baffle your enemies with all this nawlidge.
Choose the football cliché.
A. “The white zone is for the loading and unloading of passengers”
B. “We had them schemed right”
Answer: B. To have selected the right game plan for the opponent
A Mule Fan Staff
Airs Dirty Laundry Regarding Off Week
Tug of War with Management to Blame
The suits and board of directors who sit atop this
once-heralded publication are at it again. Understand that your reporter has been through quite a slog
with these dopes. We thought we’d
straightened out everything but apparently there are a few loose ends. Without involving our Mule Fan readers
too deeply in the controversy we feel an obligation to give at least a topical
view.
As you know, each season the Mules have an off week and we
are there now. For as long as we
can remember our reporting staff has been locked in debate with management
about our writing obligations during this time. Do the readers want the last game recap and coach’s views as
soon as possible or do we wait and let the coaches get a more thorough scouting
report on the opening district opponent and see pictures about how they spent
their “time off?” Will memories of
details from the last game fade and fans really want to move on? All difficult questions to answer to be
sure and the cause of many sleepless nights buy your Mule Fan editor.
But here is how the bozos in our carpeted offices see
it. They demanded that one
week’s content is all football and the following week leading up to district,
feature our boys lounging at home with their “wives and kids!” Seriously. That’s just how disconnected they are from what happens in
the field. We only have a handful
of players who are married and they’re already empty nesters.
This publication is a labor of love. We write in horrid conditions such as
candle-lit rooms with no windows with walls covered with soot, slime, coal dust
and under a stable-like noxious stench that can makes one’s eyes bleed. And
that is just when we are writing at home! We will spare you readers the blistering description of our
Mule Fan offices and what management considers “palatial digs.” We continue to wait for the people that
rake in the change for our toiling to just say a simple thank you or at least
give us a free library card.
So in compromise, we will certainly use our best judgment to
time content to your needs and desires during this two-week break between
games. And since our contract
requires that we manufacture a certain number of words, we have elected to
reprise a feature written before many of you were born back in 2008 about the
inimitable Rick Shaw, the Mules public address announcer for 1,036 dog years, Alamo Heights Pool proprietor and former King of the Sunset Ridge La
Fonda Beandom. Management fought
us on this saying all content had to be original. Our insistence was that most of you readers weren’t aware of
a Mule Fan in those days or cared so it would be “new”. And that many more of you in those days
spent Friday nights at Chuck E. Cheese or blowing up balloon animals with Daisy
B. We lost that argument. They said it could not be the
same. We caved and yours truly
went through and found two typos that were corrected and here we are with a
story that is NOT THE SAME (hee
hee).
Shaw Ready to Belt Out Another
Season of Public Address Calls Amid Controversy
By Bob Cohen
Radio and TV sportscasters who
stay in the business a while will inevitably develop a signature phrase to
describe something on the field or court. It’s their trademark. “Holy Cow,”
“HOOOLLLLEEE TOOOOLEEDO,” “Oh Doctor,” “He breezed him one more time,” “Turn
out the lights, the party’s over,” “That ball is history,” and many others
which get burned into our memory.
Public address announcers also
chip in a few of their own from time to time. And so it is with Rick Shaw, the
long time PA voice of the Alamo Heights Mules. How many Mules is it when a
“host of Mules” join in on a tackle? We all know it’s somewhere between two and
11 but that doesn’t matter so much. It’s just good to know Rick’s up there in
the press box and it’s a fall evening at Harry Orem Stadium. It’s all good.
But there is one particular piece
of announcing which is just this side of crucial to a home Alamo Heights
football crowd. It is to a home Alamo Heights football game what free refills
are to iced tea, what wax teeth are to Halloween, what the curl is to a Dairy
Queen cone. When the chains move for the Mules, what must follow next is Shaw’s
trademark. Do I even have to write it? “THAT’S ENOUGH FOR ANOTHER ALAMO HEIGHTS
(then the required pause timed precisely long enough for dozens of Mule fans to
fill their lungs and complete the statement)….. FIRST DOWN!” Ahhh, just writing
it makes me happy. Simple, comforting, reassuring and OURS.
Did he plan it? Nope. The best
ones are never planned. They appear like a freckle. Soon they are part of you.
The origin is much more ordinary. Shaw, the ’09 restaurateur, AH Pool Czar and
one-time sword-toting, plumed-hat wearing emperor of the city for 10 days, is a
take charge guy whose voice can rattle windows without a microphone. And in the
early days of his proprietorship of La Fonda, it was only every 10 minutes that
the kitchen and wait staff heard, “That’s another…ENCHILADA PLATE.”
“We were all this close (holding
thumb and forefinger two centimeters from one another) to walking if it went on
much longer,” said one employee who wished to remain anonymous. “I’m not
joking. It was too much. We’d alternate placing prank calls to Rick just to
occupy him on the phone and give us relief. The call from Alamo Heights couldn’t
have come a moment too soon.”
As beloved as it is by the
majority of Mule fans, talking up first down has not been without its
controversies or detractors. As recently as last season, an increasingly vocal
group which calls itself “Friends of Second Down” has started to make things a
little uncomfortable for Mr. Shaw.
“It takes no chops at all to be a
fan of first down. The risk factor is nada,” commented Eddie Huddles, the
group’s spokesperson. “With first down, you’ve got four downs to work with and
virtually the entire playbook available to you. Third down? Come on, we all
know that in this day and age, the last thing quarterbacks and receivers need
is their own down but they got one ‘cause they said they needed it.”
What about fourth down? On this
subject one could conclude that Mr. Huddles is borderline mean-spirited. “You
gonna try and argue fourth down is the most important down? The only people
that care about it are punters, deep snappers, return men, their parents and
grandparents, people who don’t punctuate text messages and the scoreboard
operator who likes to punch the reset button. We don’t like to talk about this
too much but we have some sketchy dudes in our organization who have considered
setting fire to a stadium all because of fourth down. All the upside is in
second down and its high time people came to grips with this.”
“These people are a nuisance,”
commented an agitated Shaw, having to be calmed by John Thomas, his trusty
spotter of many years. “They’re loonies. It’s as simple as that. I’m hesitant
to even talk about them because I don’t want to give them credibility. When
they come into La Fonda, the only thing they ever order is hot water. I spent
10 minutes one night trying to convince one that there was no such thing as a
coffee cup for people who are left handed! And they always ask if we have
square tortillas. They got in Alamo Heights pool once last summer and, well I’m
not gonna say what they did but we had to drain the dang pool after it.”
While First Down is clearly
something the home fans favor, it occurred to this reporter that the topic
might be sensitive to one other group not normally considered irrational or
anything approaching the more vocal malcontents. That group is the Defense and
parents thereof. Nobody was really comfortable speaking on the record at first
but I found one person who insisted on anonymity and couldn’t resist revealing
a crackling cauldron of emotions bubbling under the surface.
“Well if you want to know the
truth, it’s hard.” said our source. “We suffer in silence. Lookit, I don’t want
to take anything away from the offense but our boys work their tails off too.
Why should they be made to feel guilty to take the field?”
“Wasn’t Rick a quarterback in his
playing days?” the person asked rhetorically. “And his brother Stan was a
receiver at Heights wasn’t he? I’m not usually a conspiracy theorist but if you
ask me it smells fishy. Why is he so quick to rub it in – every stinkin’ time?”
So sit back fans and know that
there is a whole lot more to this PA gig than just down and distance and who
made the tackle. Years of being perched high above Harry Orem Stadium have
helped Shaw hone his craft. The atmosphere of a Mules home game wouldn’t be the
same without him. You can tell he loves it too.
“Shoot I’d do this for free,”
proclaimed Shaw when asked how he keeps it up year after year with all his
other responsibilities. When reminded that he does do it for free, Shaw
simply smiled and said, “It’s all for the blue and gold, long may it wave.”
All Alamo Heights fans appreciate
it and hopefully that’s quite enough for a bunch more Alamo Heights first
downs!
Mules Open
District at Home in Rivalry Game with Boerne Champion
It has been several years since Boerne fans showed their
mugs around here. It was the night
of the official celebration of the AH Centennial Year in early October 2009 and
one of the biggest crowds in Harry B. Orem Stadium history which witnessed an
impressive Mules hammering of Boerne Champion 58-14. We are expecting another big crowd so arrive early for a
7:30 kickoff on September 27th. Those folks from Boerne tend to take a lot of our parking
spaces around the neighborhood.
While we are happy to host as many as want to come (after all, we are
capitalists), we think they ought to have to walk further than we do-just sayin'. This ain’t no convenience store or one
of them strip malls.
As of this writing, Boerne prepares for a game on Friday the
20th against Marble Falls and goes into that game with a 2-0 record
after wins over New Braunfels and Dripping Springs. We’ll write some pregame words about Champion in the “Extra”
edition next week.
WARNING: “Ask
your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for District.”
Thank You!!!!
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