By G. MICHAEL GRAHAM
Fort Thomas Matters Sports Reporter
The
opportunity came for Eddie Eviston and he simply could not pass it up.
So after
three impressive years as the head football coach of the Newport Central
Catholic Thoroughbreds, Eviston is leaving his high school alma mater to coach
at his college alma mater. The 33-year-old held a meeting with the players
Friday and told them he’d accepted the position of offensive coordinator for
the Georgetown College Tigers of the National Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics’ Mid-South Conference.
“Although I am leaving the place I call ‘home,’ I am
returning to a place that occupies a very special place in my heart,” Eviston said. “My
alma mater, Georgetown College, is the place where my love and deep appreciation
for the game of football began. My experience there as a student-athlete was
greater than I could have ever imagined and provided me vast opportunities for
life. My family and I look forward to this new opportunity and challenge, and I
sincerely hope the Lord blesses me with the tools I need to help provide a
similar experience to the one I had to the young men of the Georgetown College
football program.”
Eviston is
taking over for former Boone County standout quarterback Craig Mullins. Mullins
is taking over the same spot at Morehead State University after serving as
Georgetown’s offensive coordinator the previous 16 years under current head
coach Bill Cronin. Like NewCath, Georgetown also runs a spread offense with the
quarterback mostly lining up under center.
The former
Georgetown and Thoroughbred quarterback still owns a number of Tiger records.
That includes 9,282 passing yards, 12,703 total offensive yards, 83 passing
touchdowns and 132 touchdowns responsible for. Eviston completed 559-of-927
passes and just 40 interceptions in his career.
“We’d thought about bringing him back many times,” Cronin said. “The
opportunity never developed. It is the right thing for Eddie. He understands
our system and the type of athletes it takes for it to be successful.”
Eviston had
been on the NewCath staff since 2006. The school promoted him to the tough role
of filling in for the retiring legendary 44-year head coach Bob Schneider in
2010.
But Eviston
added to the tradition going 35-8 in those three years adding three more
district championships, three more appearances in the regional finals and two
state championships in 2010 and this year. The Thoroughbreds own an overall
record of 447-334-10 in school history with five state championships, six
runner-up finishes, 20 district championships and 12 regional championships.
NewCath
owns 13 straight winning seasons and 13 consecutive trips to the third round of
the playoffs. The Thoroughbreds have posted double-digit victories in all but
2009 during that time. They’ve won a school-record 13 games in a season five
times in that span including Eviston’s first year in 2010.
“It is with mixed emotions that I inform all that
Eddie Eviston is not returning as our head football coach next year,” said Carl Foster, NewCath Principal. “A part of me knows we are losing a great
coach and more importantly, an excellent role model for our young men. Another
part of me knows he has accepted a great offer to be Offensive Coordinator for
Georgetown College. I am happy Eddie can return to Georgetown, a school he
successfully quarterbacked to two National Championships (in 2000 and 2001).”
Eviston graduated
from NewCath in 1997. NewCath finished 34-16 in his four years of high schools
winning an undefeated district championship his freshman year. The
Thoroughbreds constantly battled Beechwood for district supremacy in those days
and could not get past the Tigers in the playoffs in Eviston’s freshman and
junior seasons.
Eviston
still ranks among the all-time passing leaders in school history. He completed
111-of-230 attempts for 1,574 yards and 17 touchdowns in his career.
“He’s been with us a lot longer than I think a lot of
people realize,” said Rob Detzel,
NewCath Director of Athletics. “He’s
part of the NewCath family. He walked into a tough role taking over for Coach
Schneider and handled it beautifully. It was a seamless transition. We’re
thankful for what he did not only as a coach but also a mentor to the young men
we have.”
The players
said they took the news with mixed emotions like Foster did. Graduating wide
receiver Pete Collopy said they didn’t know what to expect at the meeting.
“We were somewhat shocked,” Collopy said. “But
we want what’s best for Coach (Eviston). He had a heck of an opportunity in
front of him. You can’t fault him for that. We hope to get another coach in
here that can do what he’s been doing. That’s keep winning.”
The
Thoroughbreds finished 13-2 in 2010 losing to just Ryle and Beechwood in double
overtime in the regular season. They capped off the year with a 42-0 throttling
of Owensboro Catholic in the state championship.
Despite
graduating Chris Kelly and Jake Cain among others, NewCath came into 2011
hoping for a repeat like the 2006 squad did. But eventual champion and district
rival Covington Holy Cross shocked the Thoroughbreds, 24-21 in the regional
title game . NewCath’s lone other loss
in the 11-2 season came 29-20 to Beechwood to conclude the regular season.
This past
season did not start off well. The Thoroughbreds love playing bigger schools
and they started the year 2-4 losing close games to Cincinnati McNicholas
(27-24), Simon Kenton (28-20) and Covington Holmes (12-7). But that tough
schedule paid off as NewCath rolled through district action by a combined
219-24.
After
beating Holy Cross to move to 5-4, Eviston and staff made a huge challenge to
NewCath after a bad practice early the following week. The staff did not want
the Thoroughbreds to settle for mediocrity after rolling through the district.
NewCath responded with a 34-14 win over rival Beechwood for the first time
since 2009.
“It shows he had the foresight to play these tough
teams,” Detzel said. “It made our kids better forcing them to
work harder. He wasn’t panicking. It honestly wasn’t one of our better teams.
That’s a credit to Eddie and the staff for keeping those kids focused and
coming back to win the state championship.”
The
Thoroughbreds then rolled to another regional championship smashing Gallatin
County, Holy Cross and Walton-Verona by a combined 150-27. NewCath ventured to
a hostile environment for the state semifinals and came away with a 27-18
victory over a hungry Somerset squad.
NewCath
then concluded the season with a thrilling 30-26 win over Caldwell County in
the 2A title game at Western Kentucky University. Quarterback Josh Cain
completed the game-winning 4-yard pass to Tyler Lyon with 26 second left to
lift the Thoroughbreds to their fifth state championship.
“I want to thank the coaching staff and all the young men who I had the
honor of coaching at Newport Central Catholic the past 3 years,” Eviston said. “Their efforts are
a big reason I have been provided this opportunity, and I cannot be more
grateful for the tremendous experiences and memories we share. I know no matter where I am and what I am
doing, I will always be a Thoroughbred.”
Georgetown finished 10-1 winning another
MSC title last year. The Tigers finished the regular season undefeated but lost
45-44 to MSC rival Bethel University in the first round of the NAIA playoffs.
NewCath will have some question marks
for next season after graduating 15 seniors including Cain and leading rusher
Dylan Hayes. Leading receiver Mac Franzen returns. The new head coach and staff
will need to determine if Franzen will stay at wide receiver or move into the
quarterback role.
“A fortunate problem we’ve had is we lose good players every year,” Detzel said. “We’ve been pretty
much not had to rebuild, but reload. We have some good, young underclassmen.
We’re hoping to step up and be in the mix for a state championship next year.”
The Thoroughbreds do return a number of
key players from the state championship team. Aside from Franzen, junior
linebacker Jack Sutkamp returns after leading the team in tackles. Freshman
Jacob Smith is the leading candidate to step into the top running back role.
“We just have to continue to work hard no matter who the coaches are,” Smith said. “We hope to continue
in the footsteps of the (past players) and do well.”
Detzel said he and Foster will have
lunch next week to talk about the hiring process, but nothing will be done
about the hiring process until Jan. 7 when NewCath returns from holiday break.
Detzel also said plans have been made for current assistant coaches to oversee
offseason weight lifting and conditioning programs that being that day.
NewCath Defensive Coordinator Dan Wagner
is a leading candidate to take over the job. He’s held that role since 2000.
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