Howe at Lindsay





Photos by Michelle Carney

Pregame Notes

Howe is 4-2 vs. Lindsay dating back to the first game in 1960; and 1-0 at Lindsay

11/3/1960, Howe won 26-6 at Bulldog Stadium

10/24/1980, Howe won 20-8 at Bulldog Stadium

10/23/1981, Howe won 46-20 at Bulldog Stadium

8/31/2012, Howe lost 49-13 at Bulldog Stadium

8/30/2013, Howe won 9-5 at Lindsay

9/12/2014, Howe lost 21-10 at Bulldog Stadium

The last time Howe played in Cooke County was last week vs. Muenster Sacred Heart.  Prior to that was  9-5 win at Lindsay.  Before that was a 43-40 win at Callisburg in 2010.  The last loss in Cooke County for the Bulldogs came at Valley View in 2008, a 32-29 loss in the Stony Coffman era.

Bulldogs are 4-4 on games played on 9/11

1958 – Beat Sadler 32-0

1964 – Lost to Celina 6-0

1970 – Beat Anna 22-0

1982 – Beat Royce City 28-7

1987 – Beat Van Alstyne 21-6

1992 – Lost to Royce City 21-13

1998 – Lost to Pilot Point 43-0

2009 – Lost to Van Alstyne 35-6

Lindsay in 2015

8/28/2015 – Beat Tom Bean, 22-19

9/4/2015 – Beat Valley View, 20-7

Wins by a Howe head coach

51, Norman Dickey (1964-75)

41, Jim Fryar (1985-89)

34, Davey DuBose (1996-2000)

29, John “Buck” Smith (1980-84)

18, Leslie Walden (1938-39)

16, Jack Osborn (1946-47)

16, James “Blackie” Wade (1976-79)

16, Joey McQueen (1990-92)

13, L.B. Morris (1936-37)

12, Stony Coffman (2006-09)

12, Zack Hudson (2013-15)

District 5-3A Schedule

Fri Sep 11 @ 07:30RecordW-L Streak
 Leonard (TX)(1 – 1 – 0)1 W
 Alvord (TX)(0 – 2 – 0)2 L

Pregame

Fri Sep 11 @ 07:30RecordW-L Streak
 Tom Bean (TX)(1 – 1 – 0)1 W
 Cooper (TX)(0 – 2 – 0)2 L

Pregame

Fri Sep 11 @ 07:30RecordW-L Streak
 Gunter (TX)(1 – 1 – 0)1 L
 Whitesboro (TX)(1 – 1 – 0)1 L

Pregame

Fri Sep 11 @ 07:30RecordW-L Streak
 Howe (TX)(2 – 0 – 0)2 W
 Lindsay (TX)(2 – 0 – 0)2 W

Pregame

Fri Sep 11 @ 07:30RecordW-L Streak
 Whitewright (TX)(2 – 0 – 0)2 W
 Collinsville (TX)(0 – 2 – 0)2 L

Pregame

Fri Sep 11 @ 07:30RecordW-L Streak
 S & S Consolidated (Sadler, TX)(1 – 1 – 0)1 W
 North Lamar (Paris, TX)(3 – 0 – 0)3 W

Pregame

2014 0623 Baker Heating and Air

Monte Walker, Sports Broadcaster archives

 

In 1989, 90, and 91 with the Howe Bulldogs, he was a two-time All-District offensive player (Running Back ’89), (Tight End ’91), two-time All-District and All-Area Linebacker, Punter, and Kicker (’90, ’91).  He was named All-Texomaland Punter, (’90), Kicker (’91), and Linebacker (’90, ’91).  Walker was also awarded pre-season All-American Punter (’91).  Howe won the District Championship twice (’89, ’91), Bi-District Championship twice (’89, ’90), and Area Championship twice (’89, ’90) during his time at Howe.  He, along with Jon Norwood, held Howe school record for most career playoff games started (7) until 2014. He still holds the longest field goal record with a 42-yarder in 1991.  In 2000, Monte was selected to Howe’s All-Century football team.

Howe vs. Muenster Sacred Heart Game Notes





Photos by Michelle Carney

Howe vs. Sacred Heart

PREGAME NOTES

Howe’s overall record 363-333-24. This is game number 721 in season number 72.

Howe is 5-1 in games played on September 4:

1981:  Won at Sanger, 8-7

1982:  Beat Coppell, 26-20

1987:  Beat Princeton, 35-7

1992:  Lost to Van Alstyne, 71-20

1998:  Beat Lone Oak, 41-7

2010:  Beat Chico, 49-0

Howe vs. Muenster Sacred Heart

2014:  Howe won 44-16

Howe rushed for 446 yards vs. Bonham last week which ranks 3rd since Dale West brought his Slot-T formation here last season.

1.  589 vs. Tom Bean, 2014

2.  472 vs. Hughes Springs, 2014

3.  446 vs. Bonham, 2015

The 41 points scored vs. Bonham is tied for 2nd all-time in points on opening night.

1.  49 points vs. Blue Ridge, 2008

2.  41 points vs. Lone Oak, 1998

3.  41 points vs. Bonham, 2015 

The last time Howe played in Cooke County was in 2013 when they defeated Lindsay, 9-5.  Prior to that was a 43-40 win at Callisburg in 2010.  The last loss in Cooke County for the Bulldogs came at Valley View in 2008, a 32-29 loss in the Stony Coffman era.

2014 Recap

In 2014, Howe’s offense ranked 5th of 71 Bulldog teams with 28.7 points per game.  The previous year was ranked 54 with 11.8 points per game.  That was an improvement by 16.9 points per game which was the biggest turnaround in school history from one year to the next.  The previous high was 13.7 from 2009 to 2010.

The 2014 Howe Bulldogs were the 14th team in school history to make the playoffs.  They set a record for the most points scored in a single playoff run with 101 and a record for the most points scored in a playoff game (50 vs. Hughes Springs).

The 2014 Howe Bulldogs also gave up a school record tying 71 points to eventual state champion Waskom in the regional championship and gave up 123 points in the playoff run, which also was the most by any team.

While the offense was in the top five in school history, the defense, with four freshman starters ranked 64th of 71 by giving up 26.8 points per game.  Those numbers were heavily skewed in the final game vs. Waskom.  Coach Zack Hudson’s defense was actually statistically a little better in his first year of 2013 by allowing 24.2 points per game.  Hudson arrived in Howe and inherited the worst ranked defense in school history that gave up an astonishing 38.1 points per game in 2012.  The 13.9 point improvement from ’12 to ’13 was the biggest turnaround in school history from one year to the next.

When the defense improves by nearly two touchdowns and the offense improves by nearly 17 points, wins start to total up and a 2-8 team in 2012 became a quick three-round playoff team in 2014.

2014 0623 Baker Heating and Air

Howe vs. Bonham, 2015





Photos by Michelle Carney

PREGAME NOTES

Howe’s overall record 362-333-24. This is game number 720 in season number 72.

In 2014, Howe’s offense ranked 5th of 71 Bulldog teams with 28.7 points per game.  The previous year was ranked 54 with 11.8 points per game.  That was an improvement by 16.9 points per game which was the biggest turnaround in school history from one year to the next.  The previous high was 13.7 from 2009 to 2010.

The 2014 Howe Bulldogs were the 14th team in school history to make the playoffs.  They set a record for the most points scored in a single playoff run with 101 and a record for the most points scored in a playoff game (50 vs. Hughes Springs).

The 2014 Howe Bulldogs also gave up a school record tying 71 points to Waskom in the regional championship.  The 1992 team gave up 71 to Van Alstyne on opening night. Last year Howe gave up 123 points in the playoff run, which also was the most by any team.

While the offense was in the top five in school history, the defense, with four freshman starters ranked 64th of 71 by giving up 26.8 points per game.  Those numbers were heavily skewed in the final game vs. Waskom.  Coach Zack Hudson’s defense was actually statistically a little better in his first year of 2013 by allowing 24.2 points per game.  Hudson arrived in Howe and inherited the worst ranked defense in school history that gave up an astonishing 38.1 points per game in 2012.  The 13.9 point improvement from ’12 to ’13 was the biggest turnaround in school history from one year to the next.

When the defense improves by nearly two touchdowns and the offense improves by nearly 17 points, wins start to total up and a 2-8 team in 2012 became a quick three-round playoff team in 2014.

Howe games on August 28:

2009:  Howe won at Blue Ridge 27-9

Howe is 7-5 in games played in August

Since 2000, the Bulldogs are 8-7 on opening night, but have won 7 of the last 8.

This will be Zack Hudson’s first season opener at Bulldog Stadium.  His first game as head coach to open the 2013 season was at Lindsay.

Coach Hudson has a 10-13 record at Howe.  His next win will tie Terry Davis, who went 11-18 from 1993-95.  If Howe were to win 9 games this year, Hudson would only trail Norman Dickey (51), Jim Fryar (41), Davey DuBose (34) and John (Buck) Smith (29) in career wins.

Overall record vs. Bonham, 1-0; Howe won the first ever matchup last year 14-0

Rhoten finds happiness for “me and my three”

Wes RhotenFor the past two seasons, Wes Rhoten has been the head coach and athletic director at Whitewright. But the move to Howe, he says, has found himself in a comfortable situation for his family and surrounded by leaders.

A native of Arlington, Texas and a graduate of Arlington High School in 1991, Rhoten ended up playing football for Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas.

“When I was playing up there it was NAIA, but now they’re in the Lone Star Conference.” said Rhoten. “I was red-shirted and played there four years.” He met his wife, Kristi, during that time who is originally from Canton, Texas. Upon graduation, he and Kristi went to Nashville because a friend of his had offered him a coordinator position.

“I had no idea what I was doing.” said Rhoten. “When I got Nashville, there were three coaches. I learned pretty quickly that it was a lot of hard work. We did it all, from painting the field and everything. It was a real culture shock to me.”

After being in Tennessee for nine months and both he and his wife (who is also a teacher) missing Texas, an opportunity came open for him to get a coaching position at Flower Mound Marcus in 1996. That first year, Marcus went 10-4 and followed that up with a 14-2 state championship in 1997.

“That was pretty cool. I was more of a scout guy and helping out with the grunt work.” said Rhoten.

He left Marcus and started coaching in Belton as offensive coordinator, where they went 9-2 the first year, but followed that with an 0-10 season. That put the head coach on the chopping block and he told the assistants to start looking elsewhere. Rhoten went to Paris Chisum

“That was my first taste of small school Texas football.” said Rhoten. “My oldest girl Landry was in third grade and I thought that a school that size was where I wanted my child to grow up in. I like the feel of a small school.”

While at Chisum, he developed a friendship with with Lance Angel, the former coach at Cooper. Angel had tried to get him to come to Canton where he had just taken the head coaching position. After initially refusing, when the offensive coordinator position opened up, he jumped all over it. With his wife Kristi being from Canton, it was an easy sell.

“It was a good move.” said Rhoten. “It was my dream place to be because she’s from there and where we always called home.”

2015 0722 Football Camp elementary day one (20)While at Canton, he coached future NFL player Keavon Milton and was surrounded by really talented players. They started running the “Tony Franklin spread offense system” which is a fastpaced no-huddle offense that feels like you’re watching a NASCAR race. After Angel left after a 5-5 season, Rhoten became a lead man for the first time in his career as the athletic director and head coach at Canton in 2010.

“We went 10-2 and got beat by Lindale and Carthage. It was a stellar year.” said Rhoten. “Our quarterback threw for about 4,000 yards that year. We were lighting it up.”

During that time, Kristi’s mom was diagnosed with cancer and underwent hospice in their house and she passed away in their daughter’s bed.

Rhoten said that even though he had the coaching position he had dreamed of, his family wasn’t happy. “It was a real turbulent time with the family there and God was telling me to step back and prioritize. So I went to Waco Robinson to become the offensive coordinator. Me and my three have to be happy. That’s what it’s about.”

“It was just unbelievable.” said Rhoten. “Where we left off in year four in Canton, the kids in Robinson picked it right up in year one.”

After being happy at Robinson for a couple of years, he decided to put in a resume at Whitewright in 2013 for the athletic director and head coaching position. That year, Zack Hudson was also a finalist for the Whitewright job.

“I kind of felt like I was being called to continue the AD side of things.” said Rhoten. “God was telling me to get back in to what I was supposed to be doing.”

While at Whitewright, he soon felt that it wasn’t the right fit. After sending his resume out for several athletic director positions, he was offered one, but turned it down.

“Through the last four or five years, I’ve just been led to believe that it’s not really where you’re at, but who you’re with.” said Rhoten. “And (Zack) Hudson and (Kevin) Wilson and the leadership here is outstanding. They are just good people and I just kept getting a pull to be here. Logic just kept telling me to create some normalcy by staying put. Give your family a home and everything here just felt right to us.”

Rhoten will take on the role of defensive coordinator in football and middle school assistant principal. The administration side is new for him but he feels like it could be a great opportunity for him and his family. Kristi was also hired by the district and will teach third grade.

So how does a spread offensive coach who’s had 4,000 yard passing quarterbacks on multiple occasions feel about the slot-T and a team that threw the ball a total of 23 times last year?

“Scouting Howe this time last year, I was impressed with how efficient they were and I admired how the coaches were able to install something so quickly and look so sharp so early.” said Rhoten. “Coach Hudson putting his trust in somebody in turn it all over to them is special. These kids here have latched on to this stuff. As far as philosophies, you do what you have to do for the kids to understand to make it work and win. Howe is living proof that if the kids buy in and do it right, within a year’s time it can turn around. Do I think we need to be throwing the ball? Absolutely not. That’s not my job anymore anyway.”

Rhoten says that playing against Howe’s slot-T offense was tough but transitioning and meshing with the coaching staff has been easy. He was quick to point out that it all starts out at the top with Zack Hudson and says that he’s a coaches coach.

“He wants to do the profession right.” said Rhoten. “These guys here know what’s going on. You want to try to maintain respect within the profession and these guys are great. We’ve developed our own camaraderie.”

Rhoten said that as good as Hudson is at coaching football, he’s equally knowledgeable of the maintenance side to the athletic facilities and has to have saved the district a lot of money.

“I learn something new everyday from him; from killing ants to whatever. He’s got a plan.” said Rhoten.

As unhappy as Rhoten and his family were at the end of the Canton stay, he says all is well now.  “Me and my three are happy. I’ve got one chance to be a daddy. It needs to be God first, but as it filters down, my family has got to be what I’m doing everything for.” said Rhoten.

Oldest daughter Landry will be a junior and a major contributor to an already highly touted Lady Bulldogs basketball team. Emory is the youngest daughter and will be in sixth grade and out from under mom’s elementary nest for the first time. Although, her daddy will be the assistant principal.

But getting back to Landry and the Lady Bulldogs. She received all-district honorable mention last year as a sophomore basketball player as well as academic first team. She’s a 5’9 point and has already started working with the team in the off-season.

“Kind of like myself, anywhere she can contribute is what she wants to do.” said Rhoten. “She’s not coming in here and expecting to start or anything like that. She just wants to contribute and be a part of this thing and help out where she can. The way I see it, it’s going to be a really deep bench.”

This summer, Coach Lands took them to a basketball camp where they went undefeated. They also went undefeated in a Pottsboro camp. Rhoten feels like this year’s Lady Bulldogs have a great chance to claim their first state championship.

“These girls have just been phenomenal in embracing my girls and making them feel comfortable here.” said Rhoten. “A lot of times the proximity and being opponents can play a factor, but they are athletes and they’re already a family.”

Landry has always played volleyball also, but decided that she would run cross country instead and help the football team as a water girl. Just as Landry is being taught to be unselfish to better the team, her father is practicing what he preaches. As a former athletic director and head coach, he could still be holding those positions, but he’s being a team player for his family, for his new coaching colleagues and for his players.

Next year, the Howe Bulldogs will be re-aligned and move up to play the likes of Pottsboro, Van Alstyne and larger schools regularly. But for Bulldogs fans, right now, this very fall is the time to enjoy the best overall coaching staff this town has ever seen.

2014 0623 Baker Heating and Air