Game number 749 in Howe school history. The Bulldogs overall record is 381-343-24 since the program began in 1935. The Bulldogs didn’t field a team from 1949-1957 (nine seasons).
This is the sixth meeting between Howe and Caddo Mills. Howe is 2-3 versus the Foxes and 0-2 at Bulldogs Stadium.
Game number 748 in Howe history. Howe’s overall record is 381-322-24. This is the sixth meeting between Howe and Quinlan Ford with Howe owning a 4-1 record.
The Bulldogs might be 0-3 for the first time since 2005, but no Howe team has ever faced an early-season schedule as this 2017 team has. The Dogs led off the season with Class 3A-2 number one ranked Gunter and most recently were chewed up by Class 2A’s number one ranked Muenster. Sandwiched in between was a game against what appears to be a three or four deep playoff team in Bowie that Howe gift wrapped with four turnovers.
Did graduation hit Howe hard? Yes, but there are still lots of tools in the toolbox for Howe to regain momentum and confidence headed into district play. A big test will take place tonight versus Class 4A-1 Quinlan (3-0) who is no pushover. The Panthers return their quarterback, Linus Beierschmmitt, from a year ago and plenty of size and speed to go along with him.
Student Body Advantage
Quinlan has 775 students in high school compared to Howe’s 329. In a number’s game, Howe has 82 junior and senior boys to choose from, whereas Quinlan allows for 194. That’s 112 more kids available to play football than in Howe. Despite the alarming student body advantage, Howe won a year ago, 44-13 in Quinlan. But Quinlan is better and Howe is rebuilding.
Game 747 in season 74 for the Howe Bulldogs. Howe has an overall record of 381-341-24.
This is the second ever match up between Muenster and Howe. The Bulldogs won a year ago, 37-31, which was the Hornets only regular season loss. Muenster lost to Munday, 40-34 in the third round of the Class 2A playoffs.
The 2017 Hornets are currently ranked #1 in Class 2A, Division II. They have a perfect 2-0 record and have scored 100 points in their first two games and allowed 14. (Valley View, 58-14 and at Pilot Point, 42-0).
Muenster Head Coach Brady Carney has a record of 79-14 since taking the Muenster job in 2010.
Howe is 0-2 for the first time since 2005. The Bulldogs are coming off a 37-14 loss to Bowie in which they fumbled and flagged their way from hopes of victory. Howe has scored 26 points on the season and has allowed 87. Head Coach Zack Hudson is now 29-21 in Howe.
It is the first time since 2014 that the ‘Dogs have gone consecutive games under 200 yards rushing (vs. Gunter 165 yards, vs. Pottsboro 189 yards). It is the first time since the beginning of 2015 and the opening game of 2016 that Howe has had back-to-back games of under 300 yards (West Rusk, 295 yards; Gunter 221 yards).
Howe’s freshman quarterback Cirby Coheley has attempted 31 passes in the first two games which are two less than the entire 13-game season a year ago. His 11 completions are only three behind the 2016 season total. Howe threw one touchdown pass in 2016; Coheley threw his first of the season on the first drive versus Bowie.
Howe will play Bowie for the second time in school history and the Bulldogs’ first ever game in Bowie. Last year’s 38-13 win over Bowie at home was the first matchup between the two schools.
The Jackrabbits are 0-1 after losing at Aubrey, 45-0 last Friday night. Tonight will be their first home game of the season.
Howe is 0-1 after losing to defending state champion Gunter on Friday night. The ‘dogs have started 0-1 in each of the last two seasons vs. Gunter. Prior to that, it had been since 2012 for Howe to lose the opener, a 49-13 loss at home to Lindsay.
Gunter’s 50 points were the most any Howe team has allowed on an opening night since 1992 when Van Alstyne beat Howe 71-20 at Bulldog Stadium to open the season.
Howe’s 12 points scored was the least amount scored in a season opener since 2013 when Howe scored eight at Lindsay.
Freshman quarterback Cirby Coheley attempted 13 passes last Friday night. Howe attempted 12 passes in the entire non-district schedule (five games) of 2016.
The game will start at 7:30 pm at Jackrabbit Stadium located at 341 US Hwy 287, Bowie, Texas 76230. The game will be broadcast live on howeenterprise.com Friday starting at 7 pm with a pre-game show. Spectators at the game can listen to the broadcast on 90.3 FM. The radio frequency is only available inside the stadium.
With a win tonight, Howe Head Coach Zack Hudson would capture his 30th win with the program and move in front of John “Buck” Smith for fourth on the all-time win list for head coaches for the Bulldogs. The list:
This is game number 745 in Howe Bulldogs history and Howe has an overall record of 381-339-24 since the initial UIL game in 1935.
THE BULLDOGS ENORMOUS SUCCESS
The Bulldogs are 24-8 in their last 32 games. The teams that have beaten Howe in those last eight losses had a combined record of 95-15 and three state championships and 30 playoff games.
2014: 27-21 loss to Leonard (9-2, lost to eventual state champ Waskom in the second round). 2014: 71-21 loss to Waskom (15-1, eventual state champions). 2015: 49-7 loss at Pottsboro (11-1, two-round playoff team). 2015: 31-14 loss to New London West Rusk (12-2, lost to eventual state champ Waskom in the third round). 2016: 42-14 loss at Gunter (16-0, eventual state champion). 2016: 35-7 loss to Pottsboro (11-3, lost in the fourth round to eventual state champion Mineola). 2016: 39-36 loss at Van Alstyne (7-4 record, lost in the first round of the playoffs to Sunnyvale). 2016: 21-7 loss to Mineola (14-2, eventual state champion).
HOWE’S INCREDIBLE RECORD-SETTING OFFENSE
In 2016, Howe averaged 385.31 total yards per game, which is the most in school history. The Dogs rushed for 4,473 of the total 5,009 yards which was also most in school history. They broke the previous high record of 4,535 (377.92 yards per game) which was set in 2015.
Howe’s offense ranked fourth all-time in school history with 30.92 points per game. The most ever is 34.17 set in 2015.
Since 2013, Howe has averaged over 28.69 points per game. That has never before happened in a three-year period in Howe’s 73 seasons.
Since 2013, Howe has 26 wins. That also has never happened in a three-year period in Howe’s 73 seasons.
HOWE’S DEFENSE SINCE HUDSON’S ARRIVAL
Prior to the arrival of Head Coach Zack Hudson, Howe gave up 38.10 points per game on defense which was worst in school history. In Hudson’s first year, the Bulldogs improved by 139 points allowed, giving up 24.2 points per game. In 2015, in his third year of implementing his defense, the ‘Dogs gave up 14.42 points per game which was the least amount since 2000 and ranked 29 of the 72 Howe defenses. In 2016, Howe gave up 21.77 points per game in arguably the toughest district in any district in the state.
HOWE VS. GUNTER HISTORY
The is matchup #32 with Gunter. Howe leads the overall series with Gunter, 18-13-0 and have outscored the Tigers, 604-579.
Howe’s last win at Bulldog Stadium vs. Gunter happened in 2015, a 21-19 barn-burner. Prior to Howe’s home win in 2015, the last home win vs. Gunter was a 21-7 victory on 10/18/1996.
Abby’s Restaurant in Downtown Howe will be closed for a week starting Aug. 26 through Sept. 4. The restaurant will reopen on Sept. 5 with regular business hours. The closure is due to the restaurant owner acclimating her youngest daughter to first-time college life in California.
“I need four days to get her settled in and three days to cry,” Abby’s owner Lillian Avila told the Enterprise.
In Small Town, Texas, rumors can sometimes do great damage to small businesses and Avila wants to let Howe and surrounding communities know why they will be closed so that wrong information does not spread.
Local small businesses are the backbone of America. Shopping local renews and strengthens your home town and helps neighbors pay for things such as college.
On Monday, August 21, viewers in the continental United States will be witness to a rare, spectacular event: the total eclipse of the Sun by the Moon. This will be the first total eclipse of the Sun seen in the United States since 1979. And Texas will be able to enjoy most of the event in spectacular fashion.
Though the Moon orbits the Earth every 28 days, the alignment of the Earth, the Moon, and the Sun to produce an eclipse only happens rarely. A wide arc of the US will fall into total darkness on August 21 as the eclipse crosses the nation, from Salem, Oregon, curving across to Casper, Wyoming, to Missouri through Kansas City and St. Louis, then to Nashville, Tennessee, and down to Charleston, South Carolina. The path of the totality, or area of total eclipse, will be about 70 miles wide and viewers in the zone of the totality will be under a total eclipse for roughly two minutes as the Moon’s shadow crosses the Earth at a speed of 2000 miles per hour.
Eclipses have been sighted for centuries. Among the earliest recorded eclipses occurred in ancient Mesopotamia in 1375 BC. Ancient Egyptians, who worshipped the Sun, were reportedly so disturbed by the bad omens associated with eclipses that they would never mention or write about them, fearing bad luck. Some scholars have pointed to eclipses in AD 29 and AD 33 as possibly being the eclipses observed during the crucifixion of Christ.
The corona. Wikipedia / Luc Viatour / www.Lucnix.be
Historically, eclipses have been met with both fascination and dread. The Chinese believed that dragons were eating the Sun, causing an eclipse. An old Choctaw legend held that a black squirrel caused solar eclipses when it tried to eat the Sun and that the people needed to make noises to scare it off. Similarly, the Cherokees believed that a giant frog jumped onto the sun to cause the eclipse and that the people must beat drums and make loud noises to scare it away. For generations, Navajos believed that they should not eat during an eclipse or they would experience digestive problems. Navajo traditions also warned against looking at the Sun during an eclipse, or they would go blind. The ancient Mayans were able to carefully calculate when eclipses would occur.
Eclipses have also been an important tool for scientific discovery. Astronomers discovered a new comet during an eclipse in AD 418. The Sun’s corona was first noticed in an eclipse in 968. In the eighteenth century, solar prominences, eruptions on the Sun’s surface, were observed. These all helped give important information on how the Sun worked. The first eclipse photographed was in 1860. Eclipses in 1919 and 1929 helped confirm Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity by confirming that the light of stars traveling near the Sun was bent by the Sun’s intense gravity.
The maximum eclipse for August 21 for West Texas and the Panhandle will occur around 12:55 PM. For eastern Texas, this will occur at about 1:15. The beginnings of the eclipse will occur around 11:30 AM in West Texas and at 11:45 AM in East Texas. In Grayson County and northern Collin County, viewers will see 83% coverage, peaking at 1:09 PM. Viewers in Northeast Texas will get the best view, with 85% of the Sun eclipsed in Texarkana. The eclipse will end around 2:30 PM.
Viewers must remember that they should never look at the Sun directly. Even with most of the Sun obscured, the glare is too intense for the human eye to tolerate. Looking directly at the Sun is dangerous and could cause permanent eye damage. Not even regular sunglasses or binoculars are safe. Darkened Welder’s glass is the only safe glass dark enough to view an eclipse through. The classic pinhole projector will offer safe viewing: simply poke a small hole through one sheet of paper (poster board or cardboard can also work) and allow the fading sunlight to project onto another piece of paper.
NASA has unveiled a website for the eclipse, including tips on viewing the event safely at https://eclipse2017.nasa.gov/safety. Some community organizations in different areas will host eclipse viewings to allow residents to safely enjoy the event.
An even more exciting eclipse for Texans will occur on April 8, 2024, as a total eclipse will be observed crossing the heart of the state, with a totality of more then 100 miles wide. The totality in 2024 will cross Eagle Pass, San Antonio, Austin, Waco, Dallas, Fort Worth, and Texarkana.. Nature offers incredible wonders when we are willing to observe.
Dr. Bridges is a Texas native, writer, and history professor. He can be reached at drkenbridges@gmail.com.
On Monday night, August 14, the Howe ISD Board of Trustees approved a motion to call for a bond election on November 7 of this year for a new Pre-K through second-grade campus to be located on a proposed location at Hall Cemetery Road near Western Hills. The bond amount will be $17 million. The campus will have a student area of 750 students with a classroom area of 400 students which is roughly the size of the current elementary school.
In previous meetings, the community facilities committee, after hearing all options from consultants, gave the recommendation to the board of razing the 1938 WPA former school structure located at the administration office. On that small four-acre lot, the only viable option was for a two-story intermediate school that would house grades third through fifth. However, recently a land developer has approached Howe ISD with a proposed land transaction from west of Western Hills to a now proposed 12-acre area just east of Western Hills on Hall Cemetery Road. The swap of allocated property was crucial due to utilities, such as water and sewer which are available on the new allocated property.
If Howe ISD voters approve the $17 million bond in November, work will proceed towards construction in the spring of 2018 and the new school would be scheduled to open in August of 2019. Should the bond fail, the elementary and middle school campuses will have to add multiple portable buildings on the site, presumably on Highway 75, in order to accommodate the overgrowth of the campus. A new full-scale elementary school was not an option due to the approximate $25 million cost being more than the current ISD’s bond capacity.
Conceptual drawing of the proposed Pre-K through second-grade campus, however, the ISD says that the community and the school will partner to build the school that Howe wants.