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Patriots provide perfect example to local teams
By Marc Thaler
Staff Writer
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Pembroke senior Jim Lacasse screams for a teammate during a regular-season victory for the Spartans. (File Photo)
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In an age when the spotlight
shines brightest on individual
accomplishment, especially at
the professional level, the New
England Patriots have proven
time and again that teamwork
and selflessness translate into
success and, sometimes, titles.
The manner in which New
England has earned three Super
Bowl titles in four years is nothing
short of remarkable, not to
mention fascinating.
Players, coaches and front
office personnel who meet the
organization’s criteria for
employment aren't brash, flamboyant,
troublesome, egotistical
or undisciplined. Instead, they
are humble, hardworking and
unselfish, confident but not
cocky.
The Patriots are fully aware
the best effort of every team
member is needed to become a
champion. And the foundation
of their winning ways is based
on a core concept.
The team is the star.
Proving their theory works
has made the Patriots authors of
the textbook on how to build a
title contender in the 21st-century
National Football League.
It would be foolish to compare
professional football to the
high school version for a host of
reasons, including the differences
in speed, strength and
complexity.
That said, several high school
football coaches throughout
New Hampshire offered interesting
insight into the effect, if
any, the Patriots have had on
young athletes striving for, or
working to sustain, a standard of
excellence.
Rob Cathcart, head coach at
Goffstown High School, is in
the process of building the
Grizzlies into a Division III title
contender. He's also one of
many coaches trying to capitalize
on the Patriots' message.
"I appreciate the Patriots' way
of winning more because the
guys are just normal," Cathcart
said. "The football players
decided as a team that they were
gonna do it and win things."
Cathcart won something, too,
back in his playing days: A
national title at UMass-Lowell
in 1979.
Twenty-six years ago,
Cathcart's club was king of the
Independent Colleges, a conference
for football teams not
funded by their respective universities.
"At UMass-Lowell, we were
just lucky that everyone bought
into the idea that we were gonna
be champions. That's the tough
part, getting all the players to
buy into (your philosophy) to
win.
"The big key is communication,
helping them see (what
makes the Patriots successful),"
Cathcart added. "As a coach,
you try to pick your moments to
do that."
The GHS coach labels those
instances "learning and coaching
moments," when the players'
collective potential for comprehension
is at its peak.
"They'll tune you out if you
beat it to death day in and day
out," he said.
Before the Bow Falcons won
the 2004 Division V state championship,
head coach Paul
Cohen was in a similar situation
to Cathcart – and Pats' head
coach Bill Belichick prior to the
championship run.
Without that title at the top of
his coaching resume, Cohen
found it challenging to show his
players he knew how to breed
success.
"One of the things I thought
about in the summer of 2001
when I was hired was that things
had to be done my way; I had to
be in charge," Cohen said.
"Players had to train the way I
saw fit, and I expected them to
rise to a certain level.
"That first season there wasn't
a lot of success (in the winloss
record)," he added. "But
(everything we did in '01) set
the stage for the three seasons
that followed."
Just like a Patriots' practice,
the time Cohen's players spent
on the field had a purpose.
Everything was done for a reason,
not for punishment.
"All that wrapped around the
team concept, which was, ‘Be
proud that you're out here doing
this,'" Cohen said.
Manchester Central is one
local high school where pride in
its football program is at an alltime
high.
Head coach Jim Schubert has
guided the Little Green to four
straight Division I titles and five
in the last six years. Schubert
can also attest to the challenge
he once had in getting his group
on the same page.
Central hadn't won consistently
since the early 1970s,
Schubert said. And that trend
continued in his first few years
at the helm.
But back then, just like now,
Schubert never used the Patriots
or any other pro team as an
example.
"We don't equate high school
football with professional football
at all," Schubert said. "High
school football is something
special and we like to keep it
that way. We don't even speak
about winning; we just go game
to game.
"In professional football,
you're talking about people who
get paid and are trained to do
specific things," he added.
However, Schubert – like
many other football minds –
marvels at the tremendous significance
the Patriots place on
teamwork.
"The way they've developed
the attitude on that team – to
win as a team versus getting
paid as individuals – is a philosophy
that should transcend all
teams," he said.
Schubert said Central wanted
to model itself after Pinkerton
Academy of Derry, winners of
four consecutive crowns from
1991 to 1994. The initial objective,
he added, was getting athletes
to come out for a team that
historically struggled.
"Kids want to play for winners,
whether it's hockey, basketball,
baseball or football,
because they get so much from
their peers at school," the
Central coach said. "We had to
change that mindset. We ended
up winning three games, then
six games. And in ‘94, we got
into the playoffs. Success has a
lot to do with the kids you get
into the program."
The beauty about the Patriots,
Schubert continued, is they're
the consummate champs. They
do things right. And that attitude,
if nothing else, is something
Schubert's players try to
mirror.
"When our kids get in the end
zone, we say, ‘Act like you've
been there before. And remember
it took 10 other guys to get
you there.' The team worked too
hard to get there to have anyone
act like a jerk," he said.
Schubert said he believes kids
are more influenced by the
Patriots – and how they conduct
themselves on and off the field –
than any of the pampered,
spoiled professional athletes
who often steal front-page headlines.
Wide receiver Randy Moss,
the Minnesota Vikings' tremendous
talent, is a prime example.
Moss owns a reputation as a
selfish player, more interested in
excessive touchdown celebrations
than helping his team win.
"Kids might think the things
he does are cool at first,"
Schubert said. "But after a
while, they realize he looks like
a jerk. Randy Moss is a great
player, but he presents too many
distractions. He wouldn't play
for me. He takes away from the
word ‘teamwork.'"
Under a pair of second-year
coaches, Manchester West and
Pembroke Academy are taking
the necessary steps to climb the
ladders in their respective divisions.
West's Travis Cote and PA's
Rick Doell said their squads
face the same challenges as
most of the competition. The
Blue Knights of D-I and
Spartans of D-III have some
quality athletes, but no football
phenoms who can carry a team.
The admission wasn't a knock
on their clubs; it's just the reality
of the sport at the high school
level.
Like the Pats, Cote and Doell
must find and develop players
who complement each other. It's
essential to establishing and
maintaining a winning culture.
"Just having a couple of allstars
doesn't mean you're going
to win," Cote said. "Besides,
most (athletes) who graduate
around here, they may do all
right, but few and far between
play Division I college football
or at the pro level, if you look at
the statistics."
"The team concept, especially
in high school, it's so important
because everybody needs to
contribute (to be successful),"
Doell said. "With Matty Allen
(graduating), he was our all-star.
We're gonna have to use that
team concept (to win next season)."
When a group of players
gives each other their best
efforts, confidence builds, the
coaches said.
"When you show you care
about the team, and the program
in general, other guys get excited
about what they have to do,"
Cote said.
Enthusiasm is also brewing at
John Stark of Weare, where the
boys won their first D-III game
on Thanksgiving Day.
According to JS head coach
Bill Raycraft, the triumph did
more than get his guys into the
win column. It taught them the
importance of focusing on the
task at hand.
"They don't go (into a game)
looking at the Super Bowl,"
Raycraft said of the Pats. "And
we know the (high school) season
is too long to start planning
what we want to do in late
October versus what we want to
do on Sept. 4."
That mindset – made popular
by Belichick and adopted by JS
– also applies to games already
played.
Win or lose, Raycraft said it's
most important for his team to
learn from past mistakes to
improve for future contests.
Other than that, dwelling on a
loss or getting crazy after a win
serves no real significance.
Raycraft also stressed having
his players compete with respect
for a foe, just like New England
does. Disrespecting the competition,
or taking any team lightly,
doesn't sit well with the JS
coaching staff.
"We like the fact the Patriots
don't get a lot of respect from
week to week, even though
they're the top team in the
NFL," said Raycraft, whose
team's theme for '05 is to continue
building respect for the
Stark program. "We're fortunate
to have a team like the Patriots
in our region to emulate."
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