Wednesday, January 20, 2016

End of an Era

Just before last week’s blog post came out, the San Diego Surge announced that it was going to take a year off to regroup and get back to a competitive state. For the Surge, that means either Elite 8 or Final Four status – levels that we reached every year since 2011. In five seasons, the Surge made three national championship appearances (2011, 2012, 2014) and winning one (2012). In 2015 we made the Final Four, and only in 2013 did we end up at the Elite 8 level. That’s a pretty good run, and I’d put only Boston’s two national titles up over our record in that same time period.

In my opinion, women’s football is way too costly of a sport to do at a recreational level, so I applaud the Surge ownership for being willing to take a step back.

So, in the spirit of nostalgia, I thought I’d count down my Top Six Favorite Surge games:

2013 Season Opener: We played the Pacific Warriors on the road in Week One. We were breaking in a new, inexperienced QB along with a lot of rookie WR. But we had a very solid OL and an outstanding WR/RB. It was my year as the offensive coordinator, and we learned quickly that we weren’t going to be able to run our typical Surge offense. So we settled on a Fly Sweep-based attack that played to our strengths. Calling plays in that offense required a lot of patience…you had to be able to accept consistent 4-6 yard gains. That may not be a problem for some people, but we were used to a lot more lightning-strike types of plays. But we did have our fun that game: First play was a play-action pass for a nice gain, we hit them with a hook-n-lateral for a key first down, and then scored the clenching TD on a “fake WR screen and go” the play after they jumped on a WR screen that was nullified by a penalty. Final score 28-14 Surge.

2011 American Conference Championship: 2011 was the first year of the Surge, breaking away from the SoCal Scorpions. We were pretty loaded with talent, but we weren’t sure exactly how much. The season was rife with blow-out wins so we weren’t really tested. The Dallas Diamonds came into town full of optimism – they were very talented and had a great legacy themselves. In addition to winning a few national titles in the early-to-mid 2000’s (the Scorpions put an end to that in 2007), they went and won another one in 2008. The Diamonds were itching for redemption and completely believed they could pull it off. Unfortunately for them, they had absolutely no answer for our overall team speed. We probably had the four or five fastest people on the field. I honestly forget the exact final score, but I want to say it was in the 41-14 range.

2011 National Championship: This game was far from my favorite, but it was valuable. Going up against the Boston Militia was an eye-opening experience. Remember that we were coming off a big win against a team that we thought was pretty good. Our confidence was high. Boston was big, fast and athletic and on top of that, extremely well-coached. They basically ran a version of the “walkaround” defense where maybe only one or two players have their hand in the dirt and the others just sort of wander around presnap, never giving you a good read on who was coming and who wasn’t. The final score was 34-19 for the Militia. The reason the game was so valuable to us is that it gave us a laser-like focus going into 2012. We decided as a staff that if all else was equal, we were going to implement a play, or drill or scheme that would help us beat Boston – that was the only thing that mattered to us.

2014 National Championship: Again, we faced Boston. The reason this makes it into my Top Six is solely because it was a National Championship. How many players or coaches can say they’ve even been in one, let alone three in four years? We were OK on offense, except for one thing: fumbles, early and often. We definitely had depth issues though, and ran out of gas on defense. Although we put up 35 points, it wasn’t nearly enough. Final score Boston, 64-35.

2012 American Conference Championship: This game was, to us, simply a repeat of the previous year’s American Conference Championship versus Dallas. To Dallas though, it was something much, much bigger. They were flying high once again, having averaged well over 60 points a game. Their head coach did a remarkable job of hyping his team and players. And they definitely had some horses on offense. But in 2012 we were absolutely stacked – 48 players, no one playing both ways (well, one exception for this game), and just real, real good up front on both sides of the ball. Yes, they scored more than anyone else did on us up to that point, but it was only 20 points…..we scored more on them then they’d given up all year – 48. And yes, we enjoyed that victory very much.

2012 National Championship: This was a no-brainer, and really for any fan of women’s football, this should at least be in their own Top 3 (even for a Chicago fan) because it was just that good of a game. Playing in Pittsburgh’s Heinz Field was an event in itself. That year, in addition to being the OL coach, I was also the ST Coordinator. We ran back the opening kickoff for a TD, then scored twice more to take a 20-0 lead. However, the Force was very, very good as well. They stormed back to take a 26-20 lead. Eventually they pushed their lead out to 9, 36-27 with about 3:00 minutes left in the game. We converted a 4th and 12 by about 6”, and then the next play was about a 60-yard TD catch and run. With the extra point, we were down 36-34. Chicago got the ball, and our defense stiffened and we were helped by a dropped pass on 3rd down. Chicago had to punt and once again special teams came up huge – we returned it for a TD. We missed the 2 point conversion, so were up 40-36 with about 1:30 left. Yet again, ST came to the fore, as we pinned the Force on their own five yard line. As it would turn out, we needed every yard we could get, as Chicago started methodically marching down the field, completing four straight passes to get down to about our 20 with :17 on the clock. They tried one more, and we picked it off to seal the victory. What a game.


But beyond the scores, and other games, the best part of this whole thing is, as always, the relationships you develop. That’s what I’ll miss and be looking forward to when the Surge comes back. 

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