You said itI see things differently. Massie is more physical than Wyoming is. Massie has played much tougher schools in ooc games that has prepared them.
I Massie winning by 21.
You said itI see things differently. Massie is more physical than Wyoming is. Massie has played much tougher schools in ooc games that has prepared them.
I Massie winning by 21.
You were sort of right. They won by 4 td, not 3.While Massie may be the favorite, there is simply no way they will beat Wyoming by 3 touchdowns. Their defense is too good for that. Keying on Hester is a good strategy. But he has seen 8 in the box all year designed specifically to stop him, and no one has! With the diverse nature of Wyomings offense, and a solid defense, I'll take Wyoming by 12 to win. IMHO.
It always cracks me up when someone says something like, "Massie doesn't have a diverse offense". Very very few offenses make you account for everyone the way that massie does. Just because they run it 98% of the time doesn't make it less diverse. You still had better be ready for every skill position player to get the ball on any given play.Hats off to both teams on a very well played game. Clinton massie just had a more diverse offense tonight. Wyoming could not focus on any of those backs. Massie has 3 guys over 100 yards tonight and the 4th back had over 50 and usually busts off a few big runs. Massie defense flat took Hester out of the game. Wyoming and CM are definitely two football powers in division 4 and there will be more matchups down the road. Wyoming’s staff and players acted very classy and Wyoming should be proud as a school as all of there programs are excellent. Congrats on a big win Massie.
Looks like its still 1 game short? That's only nine games right?Looks like Massie has filled the schedule for 22-23 Waynesville Edgewood St Francis DeSales and Harrison
Arbiter is not showing New Richmond , so not sure. Also not showing Fenwick ???Fenwick is their other non conference game
Those kids work in the offseason. Weight training at the Strength Lab for a 6 month program. They prepare for this. Have for at least the last 10 years.Its wild to me how consistent the program at Massie is. If I didn't know better id think they cloned kids and just changed names lol all their backs run the same, their line is always tall, fit, and nasty. Well coached and consistent. Congrats and keep rolling. Pretty awesome having 2 sbaac teams still alive.
How is this different than (at least) 200 other schools in the state?Those kids work in the offseason. Weight training at the Strength Lab for a 6 month program. They prepare for this. Have for at least the last 10 years.
Was no disrespect intended if you took it that way. Its just remarkable how similar the teams look from year to year. Its a testament to the staff. I've competed with massie for 20+ years as a player/coach i respect what they've done immensely.Those kids work in the offseason. Weight training at the Strength Lab for a 6 month program. They prepare for this. Have for at least the last 10 years.
Didn’t look more diverse to me.. ??I would agree with that assessment, if it were earlier in the season. However, Their quarterback had 227 yd and 2 touchdown passing in the last game. And he has been trending that way for the last 5 games. But I do see your point. Either way, still way more diverse than Clinton Masaie.
You'd have to see it to understandHow is this different than (at least) 200 other schools in the state?
I HAVE seen what kids do at schools that have won more state championships than Massie--and at schools with fewer-- it's not a lot different-- ALL HS kids who take football seriously these days work out with weights virtually ALL year round-- it is NOT a differentiator. And most of the bigger, better schools have a strength-training coach advising them-- whether they call it a "Strength Lab" or not-- so again, NOT a differentiator.You'd have to see it to understand
Strength Lab for the Massie Program is one part of the consistency you see with our teams. One of the things that I think is different than other programs in our league and area is the engagement and number of kids in the program that dedicate to preparing in the off-season. A lot of our boys have been participating in the Strength Lab from a very early age….(3rd/4th grade).I HAVE seen what kids do at schools that have won more state championships than Massie--and at schools with fewer-- it's not a lot different-- ALL HS kids who take football seriously these days work out with weights virtually ALL year round-- it is NOT a differentiator. And most of the bigger, better schools have a strength-training coach advising them-- whether they call it a "Strength Lab" or not-- so again, NOT a differentiator.
People constantly make remarks on Yappi about "players needing to get in the weight room" in the off-season to have (more) success the next year, as if that is some kind of novel concept-- it is NOT-- kids working out in the off-season is NOT the reason that the top teams are the top teams-- it is "necessary but NOT sufficient".
It does sound similar to what fans of MAC high school teams describe about their schools' teams. It is also similar to what goes on at Wyoming. Of course, those are the more successful teams-- as is Massie. I think the things you describe that are OTHER THAN the weight room work have more to do with the continued steady success of the team, than the weight room activities-- the "cultural" aspects-- those are commonly present at the top school teams-- that's where the winning mentality (and edge) is bred.Strength Lab for the Massie Program is one part of the consistency you see with our teams. One of the things that I think is different than other programs in our league and area is the engagement and number of kids in the program that dedicate to preparing in the off-season. A lot of our boys have been participating in the Strength Lab from a very early age….(3rd/4th grade).
Another huge factor is McSurely and his Staff. They have been with him for a very long time. Many of his assistants played for him and have been running the offensive scheme since Pee Wee Football.
Much of the High School Staff is involved and influences the youth program at Massie. The entire community is on board with McSurely and his philosophy’s. The Massie community is a tight knit family.
The Massie program reminds me of many of the MAC conference teams, Steubenville, Ironton, ext. You have generational continuity. Many of the kids coming up through the system have a Dad, Cousin, Brothers, or Uncle that also played for McSurley. Many of those Alumni are heavily involved in the Pee Wee program and are also heavily engaged in other aspects of the community/school system.
Prior to McSurely the Massie Community was not in a good place……very rarely contending for a league title in any sport. The transformation once McSurely showed up for not only the football team, but the entire school system is something that you would just have to be a part of to understand. I think the Alumni and Community are thankful and understand that….and have remained loyal to that by returning to the community and raising their families here. We want to keep it going.
When Massie started initially making it to the playoffs we would come up against teams like Versailles or Coldwater….and those teams left an impression on us.
Those teams and how they carried themselves and looked warming up, how tough and hard nosed they played, it opened up our eyes to what was needed in order to be a State Champ. They looked like robots.
All the kids were in shape and looked for the most part physically similar. The offensive line was athletic…..no fat slow guys.
We kinda are cloning kids if you think about it. Massie Football is instilled into these boys from a very early age. The youth program runs the same system. By the time they get to HS many things that other programs have to spend time teaching have already become second nature to our boys. Our HS staff fixes a few things, fine tunes them, and the result is a well oiled machine.
100% agree. Massie was a revolving door of coaches for years before McSurley. We had a few good years/teams right before he showed up that kind of set the standard for what Massie football would eventually become…..all we needed was a Coach.McSorley is THE key factor. Check any high school sport over the course of the last 50 years. Excellent coaching elevates good talent to great teams, average talent to good teams and below average talent to average teams. Average coaching yields better than average teams only in years where talent is above average. Bad coaching yields teams that are rarely above average, despite talent level. Happens every year in every sport at every school. There is a reason Versailles football was excellent for 30 years with Al Hetrick, Alter basketball was great with Joe Petrocelli, Glenville track was great with Ted Ginn Sr. Beavercreek girls hoops were great with Ed Zink and so on. Coaching is not the only thing that matters but it is buy a long measure the most important.
Agreed! If memory serves me right, Jay N. kinda got the ball rolling and DM developed the program you see today.100% agree. Massie was a revolving door of coaches for years before McSurley. We had a few good years/teams right before he showed up that kind of set the standard for what Massie football would eventually become…..all we needed was a Coach.
We got one.
Niswonger was there for a couple seasons in the early 80s. That was 15 years or so before McSurely arrived. Not sure that you can really say he got the ball rolling.Agreed! If memory serves me right, Jay N. kinda got the ball rolling and DM developed the program you see today.
Definitely some truth to this... my 6 yrs of football at CM, had a different coach every year (6 yrs 6 coaches), late 80s early 90s. And we were BAD, but had enough talent to be better than our record. Dan bringing a wrestling program to CM in the late 90s was also a factor in my opinion. Winning also brought the community back together, its cool to see Clarksville, Wilmington and Harveysburg yards and business's flooded with Go Falcons signs since 1998. Lots of Alumni, including me, moved back just to have my son play for CM.100% agree. Massie was a revolving door of coaches for years before McSurley. We had a few good years/teams right before he showed up that kind of set the standard for what Massie football would eventually become…..all we needed was a Coach.
We got one.
And Owensville lol kid was good though. Made a smart choice not playing at CNE lolDefinitely some truth to this... my 6 yrs of football at CM, had a different coach every year (6 yrs 6 coaches), late 80s early 90s. And we were BAD, but had enough talent to be better than our record. Dan bringing a wrestling program to CM in the late 90s was also a factor in my opinion. Winning also brought the community back together, its cool to see Clarksville, Wilmington and Harveysburg yards and business's flooded with Go Falcons signs since 1998. Lots of Alumni, including me, moved back just to have my son play for CM.
IMO,Niswonger was there for a couple seasons in the early 80s. That was 15 years or so before McSurely arrived. Not sure that you can really say he got the ball rolling.