Lyle Valdez, a former assistant coach and trainer at Wyoming Indian, will be the new head coach at St. Stephens.

Valdez confirmed his hiring via telephone Sunday to wyoming-football.com.

Valdez takes over for Melvin Blackburn, who led the Eagles during their first two years of varsity football since 1965. The Eagles went a combined 0-16 the past two years.

Valdez spent about five years, off and on, helping with the football and basketball programs at Wyoming Indian as both a coach and trainer. He said his primary coaching focus areas at St. Stephens will be tied to technique and to building the players’ confidence.

“I just hope we can get these kids to win, and (learn) how it feels to win,” Valdez said Sunday. “Once that happens, maybe we’ll get more kids to come out to enjoy the game of football.”

Valdez, who works as a substitute teacher and teacher’s aide in Fremont County, will be joined by assistant coach Keenan Groesbeck.

Valdez is one of two new head coaches in Wyoming’s six-man ranks, joining Lee Kremers in Kaycee. Other new head coaches in Wyoming this fall are Todd Weber in Worland, Jason Ferrarini in Kemmerer, Ryan Nelson in Lusk, Mykah Trujillo in Wind River and Aaron Papich in Burlington.

–patrick

A couple small recent updates:

Updated the date and location for Pine Bluffs’ game against Kimball, Neb., on Sept. 10, 1954. (It was in Kimball.)

Updated Meeteetse’s coach for 1958; it was Don Trueblood, not Robert Menardi.

I also made the following updates to the Shrine Bowl player and year tallies: Buffalo has 75 players, not 74; Cheyenne Central has 110 players, not 111; Cheyenne East has 100 players, not 99; Gillette has 41 years of player selections, not 40; Tongue River has 23 years, not 24; Worland has 29 years, not 28.

–patrick

When the Worland Warriors take the field this fall, they’ll do so with their sixth head coach in five seasons.

With Wade Sanford in 2011, Curt Mayer in 2012, Josh Garcia and Bryan Bailey co-coaching in 2013, Thor Ware in 2014 and Todd Weber in 2015, the Warriors’ head coaching post has seen more than its fair share of change.

Worland is the first Wyoming high school football program to face this problem in more than a quarter century. However, the Warriors certainly aren’t the first team to face this conundrum, and Worland has actually been through this already.

And other programs have had it worse.

The last program to go through what Worland is facing this season was Rocky Mountain, which went through a stretch of six coaches in its first six seasons as a program from 1983-88.

Two other programs — Sunrise in 1956-61 and Lander in 1922-27 — went through six head coaches in six years. And going through at least five coaches in five years has happened 13 other times.

Kemmerer was the only school to go through the five-coach carousel twice, once in 1942-46 and again in 1960-64. Worland will join that club this year; the Warrior program also went through five different head coaches between 1938 and 1942.

Most of the coaching changes listed here came early in programs’ existence. Lander’s six-in-six span came in its first six years as an established program, while Cody’s five-in-five span from 1921-25 was in the program’s first five years.

Of the situations listed below, University Prep’s is the least surprising: Prep used UW students as its head football coaches and changed those responsibilities annually. In fact, the six-in-five situation Prep faced came in the only five consecutive years in which Prep had an active football team.

An honorable mention goes to Meeteetse, which used five different men as head in a span of seven years from 1996-2002 in which the head coach was different each year: Steven Bailey in 1996, John Fernandez in 1997, Paul Blanford in 1998, Fernandez again in 1999, Curtis Cramp in 2000, Mark Hamilton in 2001, and Fernandez again in 2002.

Below, I’ve listed instances since 1920 where a Wyoming high school cycled through at least five head coaches in five consecutive years. The lists below do NOT include stretches like Meeteetse’s where the same person left and was hired back later, and it also does not include stretches where a coach was unknown.

Six years, six coaches
Rocky Mountain, 1983-88 (John Rogers, Mike Mees, Dave Beemer, Doug Higley, Mike Maughan, Ben Smith)
Sunrise, 1956-61 (Tony Balzan, Walter Koenig, Ted Nichols, Paul Muratore, Jim Mather, Jack Rafferty)
Lander, 1922-27 (Roy Larsen, Joe McDowell, Joseph McClure, George Armitage, Clyde Guschewsky, George Tucker)

Five years, six coaches
Worland
, 2011-15 (Wade Sanford, Curt Mayer, Josh Garcia and Bryan Bailey, Thor Ware, Todd Weber)
University Prep, 1926-30 (George Bright, Eldon Boyd, Burton Clammer, Don Harkins and John Engstrom, Ray Thompson)

Five years, five coaches
Riverton, 1977-81 (Brent Engleright, Neil Mellilo, Ken Boatwright, Bob Miller, Leland Smith)
Manderson, 1971-75 (Gary Sutherland, Rick Case, Ken Keil, William Diercks, John Tate)
Greybull, 1968-72 (Jim Crawford, Skip Anderson, Ed Rohloff, Tom Bernatis, Earl Jensen)
Kemmerer, 1960-64 (Duane Workman, Herb Taylor, Jim Martin, Bill Marsh, Bob Tatum)
Cowley, 1954-58 (Therrill Averett, Grant Smith, Willard Hirschi, C.R. Vannoy, Ed Bunch)
St. Mary’s, 1947-51 (Walter Estes, Bill Quinlan, Brad Erzinger, Bill Hoskovec, Austin Jordan)
Superior, 1944-48 (Norman Mikkelson, Grant Rhiner, Norman Kirby, Dean Jackson, Tony Katana)
Kemmerer, 1942-46 (Jim Jiacoletti, Dean Pomeroy, James Burke, Charles Scott, Roland Caranci)
Worland, 1938-42 (LaVern Jung, Kenneth Boles, Ralph Cottrell, Ralph Crowton, Carl Dir)
Sundance, 1933-37 (K.W. Noddings, M.L. Rickerd, Walter Tracy, Woody Sampson, Frank Supon)
Cody, 1921-25 (Phillips, E.V. Harlow, O.P. Roberts, H.F. Grossman, Paul Sweitzer)
Laramie, 1920-24 (Ed Hitchcock, O.A. Libby, Orion Neff, S.M. Clark, Les Crawford)

–patrick

Longtime assistant Lee Kremers will be the new head coach at Kaycee this fall.

Dustin Sipe, who has been the only coach Kaycee has ever had, recently resigned. Sipe coached the Buckaroos since their inception in six-man in 2009 and stepped down after compiling a record of 32-24.

The Buckaroos’ best finish under Sipe came in that first year when Kaycee finished as state runners-up.

Kremers, too, has been with the program since it started. He will take over a program that finished 6-3 last season but lost in the six-man quarterfinals to Meeteetse.

Sipe verified the change in an email to wyoming-football.com on Wednesday. Sipe said he will stay in Kaycee to teach and coach other sports.

Kremers will be the sixth new head coach in Wyoming this fall, joining Todd Weber in Worland, Jason Ferrarini in Kemmerer, Ryan Nelson in Lusk, Mykah Trujillo in Wind River and Aaron Papich in Burlington.

–patrick

For the first time in 2015, Wyoming may have a high school football coach reach 300 career victories.

Cokeville’s Todd Dayton, who has been the Panthers’ head coach since 1980, enters this season with 294 career victories, six short of the 300-victory milestone.

Only 27 active coaches nationwide enter 2015 with at least 300 victories, the NFHS Record Book says. Only 115 coaches nationwide have ever reached 300 victories, and only 60 have ever reached 300 at one school like Dayton is poised to do at Cokeville.

Dayton is one of only two coaches in the state to crack 200 victories; John E. Deti, the older of the two Detis and a longtime coach in Laramie, had 205 in his Wyoming career, records here show.

After Dayton, Wyoming’s other active members of the 100-victory club are Natrona’s Steve Harshman (166), Sheridan’s Don Julian (131), Southeast’s Mark Bullington (123) and Glenrock’s Ray Kumpula (101).

Kumpula, who has led Glenrock’s football team for 20 seasons, entered the 100-victory club last season, becoming the 24th coach in state history to do so.

This year, only one coach — Gillette’s Vic Wilkerson — has the chance to crack the in-state 100-victory barrier. Wilkerson, Gillette’s coach since 2004, has 90 victories entering the 2015 season. The next-highest active victory total in the state belongs to Douglas’ Jay Rhoades with 78, although Dubois’ David Trembly (76), Tongue River’s John Scott (75) and Wright’s Larry Yeradi (73) are close behind.

Here’s a look at Wyoming’s 100-victory club entering 2015:

Wyoming's all-time football coaching leaders

CoachWLTWin %Games
Todd Dayton, Cokeville294520.850346
John E. Deti, Meeteetse/Shoshoni/Laramie205948.681307
John R. Deti, Cody/Sheridan/Laramie1881022.647292
Jerry Fullmer, Lusk174820.680256
Steve Harshman, Natrona166700.703236
John McDougall, Dubois/Cody1561152.575273
Okie Blanchard, Glenrock/Cokeville/Rock Springs/Natrona/Cheyenne Central148568.717212
Joel Eskelsen, Big Piney148810.646229
Dallas Hoff, Superior/Midwest1461016.589253
Walter Gray, Tongue River140870.617227
Mike Moon, Buffalo136791.632216
Rick Scherry, Big Horn133841.612218
Art Hill, Glenrock/Riverton/Natrona132923.588227
Don Julian, Riverton/Sheridan131420.757173
Harold Bailey, Shoshoni128920.582220
Carl Mirich, Goshen Hole/Moorcroft1241011.551226
Mark Bullington, Southeast123380.764161
Bruce Keith, Sheridan/Kelly Walsh117820.588199
Pete Petronovich, Douglas1141025.527221
Kay Fackrell, Goshen Hole/Lyman/Evanston111790.584190
Don Dinnel, Mountain View/Rawlins/Evanston109650.626174
Doug Bartlett, Torrington102730.583175
Ben Smith, Rocky Mountain101330.754134
Ray Kumpula, Glenrock101790.561180

+++

Top winning percentages

With a winning percentage of .850 (294-52), Dayton is the only coach in state history with more than 100 games coached to have a winning percentage above .800. But Douglas’ Rhoades has a winning percentage of .813 in his 96 games in Wyoming and could join Dayton in the exclusive club this season.

Bullington (.764) and Julian (.762) are the active coaches with 100-plus games coached closest to Dayton; former Star Valley coach Robert Linford (.776) is the closest retired coach with 100-plus games coached to Dayton’s .850 mark.

++++++

The 100-loss club

No active coaches have the chance to enter the even somewhat more “exclusive” 100-loss club in 2015. While 24 Wyoming coaches have reached 100 victories in the Equality State, only seven coaches have ever reached triple-digit losses (John R. Deti (John Jr.), John McDougall, Dallas Hoff, Carl Mirich, Pete Petronovich, Rich Steege and Yeradi). Yeradi enters the season with exactly 100 losses in his career at Wright. Of course, to coach long enough to get 100 losses, you have to be a pretty dang good coach; the bad coaches are discovered long before they have the chance to reach 100.

++++++

Longevity milestones in 2015

Several coaches have the chance to reach longevity milestones in 2015. Only two active head coaches in Wyoming — Dayton and Harshman — have more than 200 total in-state games to their credit; Dayton is the state’s all-time leader with 346 and is one of only two past 300 games. Eight others (Kumpula, Julian, Yeradi, Bullington, Trembly, Wilkerson, Scott and Upton-Sundance’s Andy Garland) have cracked 100 games coached in Wyoming. Cheyenne East’s Chad Goff (98) and Rhoades (96) are on pace to top 100 Wyoming games coached in 2015.

++++++

The unbreakable coaching record

One record that’s guaranteed never to be broken is career ties. That honor rests with Wheatland’s Glenn Rogers, who coincidentally finished his Wyoming coaching career almost perfectly even — 35 victories, 34 losses and 10 ties. No other coach has double-digit ties to his credit, although three coaches (Fran Gillette, who coached at Jackson, Green River and Powell from 1960-73; Glenn Burgess, who was at Riverton from 1959-69; and Bert Melchar, who coached at Green River and Rock Springs off and on from 1930-47) have nine ties on their Wyoming records.

Rogers coached Wheatland from 1927 to 1937; he had tie games in eight of his 10 seasons with the Bulldogs (no team in 1933) and twice had two ties in a season.

No active Wyoming coach has a tie on his in-state record. The last coach to have a tie on his record was Big Horn’s Rick Scherry, who retired in 2000. His tie came from the infamous Big Horn-Riverside triple-overtime tie in 1987, the state’s only tie game since 1975.

–patrick

Using updated yearbook availability on classmates.com, I was able to make the following updates:

Big Horn’s 1943 season: Added the Rams’ 66-6 victory against Dayton on Oct. 8; added the Rams’ 40-12 victory against Lodge Grass, Mont., on Oct. 22; added the score for Big Horn’s 27-20 victory against Lodge Grass, Mont., on Nov. 5; added the Rams’ 27-24 victory against Ranchester on Nov. 18.

Big Horn’s 1948 season: Found the date (but not the location) for Big Horn’s game on Oct. 1 against Clearmont.

Big Horn’s 1950 season: Noted that the Nov. 10 game against Ranchester was not played.

Big Horn coaches: Updated the 1955 coach to be Al Flanigin, NOT Glen Blackburn. … Updated the 1961 coach to be F.R. Smith, NOT John and Mike Flanagan.

Clearmont’s 1946 season: Added the score for the Panther’s 26-0 victory against Dayton on Oct. 2; added the Panthers’ 24-7 loss to Lodge Grass, Mont., on Oct. 25.

Clearmont’s 1945 season: Noted that Ranchester beat Clearmont on Sept. 28 (score not available).

Clearmont’s 1940 season: Added the date and location for Clearmont’s victory against the Buffalo JV on Oct. 11 (the game was in Buffal0).

Clearmont’s 1938 season: Added results for the Panthers’ 32-6 loss to Dayton on Sept. 24 and their 38-6 loss to Dayton on Oct. 8 (and corrected location for this game to Clearmont); added the Panthers’ 6-0 victory against Dayton on Oct. 1 in Dayton.

Clearmont’s 1935 season: Added two games, a 14-6 victory against Ranchester on Oct. 19 in Sheridan and a 6-0 victory in Clearmont (added to missing games because I couldn’t locate a date).

Clearmont coaches: Updated the 1962 coach to be Frank Sannes. … Updated the 1952 coach to be William Opitz, NOT Bob Opitz. … Updated the coach for 1936, 1945 and 1948 to be Alfred Anderson. … Updated the spelling of the name of the coach in 1946-47 to be Frank Mathew, NOT Frank Mathews.

Upton’s 1938 season: Added the score for Upton’s 42-0 loss to Custer, S.D., on Oct. 14.

Newcastle’s 1944 season: Fixed the score for Newcastle’s 7-0 loss to Gillette on Oct. 6; I had Newcastle winning 9-7.

Newcastle’s 1943 season: Noted that the Oct. 19 game with Douglas was not played.

In all, I added seven games to the database and removed seven from the missing games list.

All the updates have been made on all the relevant pages.

–patrick

Aaron Papich will be the new head football coach in Burlington this fall.

He replaces Mike Aagard, who steps down with more victories (41) than any other coach in school history.

Aagard finished with a 41-42 record in his nine seasons as Burlington’s coach. The Huskies’ best season with Aagard at the helm was a Class 1A runner-up trophy in 2008.

Papich was an assistant coach with Burlington last year. He previously coached in Casper and in Bozeman and Great Falls, Mont.

Aagard notified wyoming-football.com of change via email Friday.

Papich will be the fifth new head coach in Wyoming this fall, joining Todd Weber in Worland, Jason Ferrarini in Kemmerer, Ryan Nelson in Lusk and Mykah Trujillo in Wind River.

–patrick

A short update to note that I’ve fixed the coach listing for Worland’s 1957 season. The Warriors’ coach that season was Joe Kienlen, not Carl Selmer. Coach Selmer was an assistant at the University of Wyoming by this time, and Kienlen was Worland’s head coach for two seasons (1957 and 1958), not just one. Thanks to Worland alumnus Denis O’Mahoney for his help with this!

–patrick

Wind River football coach Cullen Noffsinger will step down as the school’s head football coach after four seasons, Noffsinger said via email to wyoming-football.com last week.

The Cougars’ new coach will be Mykah Trujillo, Wind River AD Justin Walker said via email Tuesday.

Trujillo is an alumnus of Lander High School and was an all-state football player for the Tigers in 2003. He teaches elementary school in Lander and previously coached Lander’s middle school teams.

The Cougars finished 7-26 with Noffsinger as head coach. Wind River did not reach the playoffs but just missed last season after falling to Riverside in a triangular playoff qualifier. The Cougars’ 3-6 finish last season was the best for the Cougars in Noffsinger’s tenure.

–patrick

Kemmerer’s all-time winningest coach has stepped aside as the Rangers’ head coach.

After 12 seasons, Shawn Rogers resigned as the head football coach at Kemmerer. Jason Ferrarini, a Kemmerer native who was an assistant with the Rangers, has been named as Rogers’ replacement.

Rogers and Ferrarini verified the changes via emails to wyoming-football.com on Thursday.

Rogers finished his tenure as Kemmerer’s all-time winningest coach, going 63-51 in 12 seasons. He led the Rangers to state championships in 2005 and 2007 and also led the team to a school-record 14 consecutive victories in the 2007-08 seasons. However, Kemmerer has gone winless the past two seasons and enters 2015 on a state-worst 20-game losing streak.

Rogers’ 63 victories at Kemmerer is 20 better than any other coach in program history.

Rogers plans to stay at Kemmerer as the elementary principal, he said.

–patrick