A couple changes to the site that I need to share:

All-state teams: Two changes were made to the all-state listings. First, the 1975 team has been updated and changed. Formerly, the 1975 team I had listed was the UPI team, not the team from the Wyoming Coaches Association. I choose to list WCA teams when I have both available. I finally got my hands on the WCA list from 1975, thanks to Cheyenne East all-stater Kevin Lepore, and now the 1975 teams listed are the WCA teams. Thaks Kevin!

I also corrected a name on the 1998 Class 4A all-state team. John Rounds’ name has been fixed. Thanks to John for letting me know!

Coaches Project: Updates for Buffalo. Click here to see what I still need for the Coaches Project. Thanks to Buffalo AD Shad Spilski for the help!

–patrick

No matter our profession, we have people we chase — the people we respect because of their work in our shared field, the people whose successes we wish to emulate. That goes for high school football coaches as much as it does bankers, doctors or engineers.

When victories are used as the measuring stick of success, we know that we have the most successful football coach in state history currently working in Cokeville. We know the coach whose mark he had to beat in order to earn the title he now has.

But who did he have to overtake? And who did he have to overtake? And who did he have to overtake?

Here is a look at the coaches with the most victories in state history — and who they had to chase down in order to be known as such:

The current leader is Todd Dayton, the coach at Cokeville, who entered the 2011 season with 253 career victories. Dayton, who took over as the Panthers’ head coach in 1980, has averaged more than eight victories per season — a heck of a feat when you consider that, for a lot of Dayton’s career, the regular season in Wyoming was only seven or eight games.

The game he took over as Wyoming’s coaching victories leader: Cokeville defeated Mountain View 30-26 on Sept. 23, 2005, to give Dayton his 206th career victory.

Dayton had to overtake John E. Deti, who piled up 205 victories in 35 years as a head coach, 33 with Laramie. Deti also spent a year in both Meeteetse and Shoshoni. He retired in 1976 with a 205-94-8 career record. His tenure at Laramie included seven undefeated seasons (the Plainsmen have only had two other undefeated seasons in school history) and 14 state championships.

The game he took over as Wyoming’s coaching victories leader: Laramie defeated Sheridan 20-7 on Nov. 1, 1968, to give Deti his 150th career victory.

Deti had to overtake Okie Blanchard, who had 149 victories at five different schools. Blanchard, the first coach in the state to crack the 100-victory mark (and he obviously went well beyond that), spent 11 years at Cheyenne Central, eight years at Rock Springs, three years at Natrona and one year each at Glenrock and Cokeville. He was also head coach at the University of Wyoming for the 1941 season. He started his career with the Herders in 1925; he stepped away from coaching in 1952 with an all-time high school record of 149-55-7.

The game he took over as Wyoming’s coaching victories leader: Cheyenne Central defeated Alliance, Neb., 26-7 on Oct. 15, 1943, to give Blanchard his 95th career victory.

Blanchard had to overtake John Powell, the longtime coach at Cheyenne Central who notched 94 victories with the Indians before retiring in 1939. Powell led the Indian squad for 16 years, compiling a 94-50-7 record. His run with the red and black included one unofficial state championship, which came in 1929, and only two losing seasons.

The game he took over as Wyoming’s coaching victories leader: Cheyenne Central defeated Laramie 12-0 on Nov. 12, 1929, to give Powell his 41st career victory.

Powell had to overtake Wilbur “Web” Wright, who coached Sheridan for eight seasons and finished with 40 victories. Wright led the Broncs from 1919 to 1926, finishing with a record of 40-15-2; Wright’s run included three consecutive state championships from 1921-23 and undefeated seasons in 1921 (7-0) and 1923 (8-0).

The game he took over as Wyoming’s coaching victories leader: Sheridan defeated Buffalo 58-0 on Oct. 29, 1921, to give Wright his 12th career victory.

Wright had to overtake C.A. Jones, the first high school coach in Wyoming to win more than 10 games in his career. Jones finished his brief coaching career, which spanned three seasons (1912-14) with Cheyenne Central, with 11 victories; his overall record with the Indians was 11-8-2.

Coaching records prior to this time are spotty at best. I doubt anyone was even thinking about career records when Jones, Wright or Powell took the reins at their respective schools. They may not have even known at the time they were the most successful coaches in state history when they decided to step down.

We know differently now. We know that, even for a while, they were the coaches everyone was trying to chase down.

–patrick

Hulett native Ryan Neiman has been named the new head football coach at his alma mater.

Neiman, a Hulett High School graduate, will help lead the Red Devils as they transition from 11-man to six-man football. The Red Devils played a sub-varsity six-man schedule last fall and will play as part of the Wyoming six-man league this fall.

Neiman replaces Steve Colling, who had led the Red Devils for the past 19 seasons. Colling had the third-longest tenure among active coaches in Wyoming, eclipsed only by Cokeville’s Todd Dayton and Natrona’s Steve Harshman.

Colling went 72-87 in his tenure with the Red Devils.

–patrick

Chris Link will be the new football coach at Guernsey-Sunrise this fall.

Link is also the coach of Guernsey’s girls basketball team and has been an assistant on the Vikings’ football squad.

He takes over for Casey Moats, who coached the Vikings for the past two years and led the team to the 2009 Class 1A six-man championship.

The Vikings went 1-8 last season, losing in the first round of the six-man playoffs.

–patrick

A couple of really cool additions this week. I added two games, including the first game in state history:

Added Cheyenne Central’s 14-0 loss to the University of Wyoming on Feb. 22, 1894 (also UW’s first official game)

Added University Prep’s 0-0 tie with the Cheyenne Central JV on Oct. 30, 1920 (added to missing games list because I couldn’t find the location)

Also, I added a Coaches Project update for Laramie.

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

I also added state championships from 1921 to 1930 to the champions listings. I also added mythical and unofficial state championships to the team listings on the relevant individual team pages. I figured the champions from 1921-30 were just as relevant as the ones in the “dead era” from 1939-47. Even though there probably aren’t many players left from the teams in those eras, I figured they should get their due on that page. Agree? Disagree? Don’t care? Comment below.

–patrick

Here is a quick glance at which coaches are taking over programs in the fall of 2011 and which coaches are stepping down:

Burns: Out, Bill Fullmer. In, Marv Mirich.
Cheyenne South: Out, Scott Noble. In, Tracy Pugh.
Green River: Out, Darren Howard. In, Don Maggi.
Greybull: Out, John Cundall. In, Josh Heinemeyer.
Kelly Walsh: Out, Jim Horne. In, Jon Vance.
Pine Bluffs: Out, Dale Gilbert. In, Will Gray.
Pinedale: Out, Michael Gregory. In, Allen Johnson.
Rock Springs: Out, Tony Yerkovich. In, Tom Jassman.
Torrington: Out, Brian Harms. In, Mark Lenhardt.

If you know of any other changes to head coaches statewide, let me know by emailing me at pschmiedt@yahoo.com or by posting a comment below….

–patrick

Pinedale assistant coach Allen Johnson will take over as head coach for the Wranglers this fall.

Johnson, a math teacher at Pinedale and an assistant with the Wranglers last year, takes over for Michael Gregory. Gregory went 13-21 in four years as head coach, including Pinedale’s only trip to the playoffs since 2000 — a run to the Class 3A semifinals in 2008.

The Sublette Examiner reported the hiring Monday.

If you are aware of any other coaching changes in Wyoming, please comment below or email me directly at pschmiedt@yahoo.com.

–patrick

Marv Mirich will be Burns’ head football coach this fall.

Mirich was previously an assistant coach with the Broncs and has also coached basketball teams at Burns and Albin.

Mirich takes over for longtime coach Bill Fullmer, who retired from coaching this spring after leading Burns’ football team for the past 17 years.

Burns won four of its final five games of the regular season to qualify for the playoffs in 2010, but lost in the first round to Lovell. The Broncs won the Class 2A state championship in 2008.

An NAIA all-America wide receiver in 1990 at Black Hills State, Mirich was inducted into the school’s athletic hall of fame in 2002.

This was the last known open head football coaching position in the state. If you know of any other coaching changes, comment below or email me at pschmiedt@yahoo.com.

–patrick

Former assistant coach Will Gray has been named the new head football coach at Pine Bluffs.

Gray was an assistant coach with the Hornets for four years, working with the backfield, and he called Pine Bluffs’ plays last season. A 2003 graduate of Glenrock High School, Gray played quarterback at Black Hills State.

Gray confirmed his hiring in an email Monday.

Few schemes will change with Gray leading the team, he said.

“If we can progress on the defensive side of the ball we should be able to find success,” he wrote.

The hiring was approved by the Pine Bluffs school board last month. Gray also teaches social studies at Pine Bluffs.

Gray replaces Dale Gilbert, who had led the Hornets for the past four years. Gilbert compiled a 13-20 record as head coach.

The Hornets have made the playoffs each of the past two years but lost to Cokeville in the first round both times.

Pine Bluffs is the third school in Laramie County that will have a new head coach next fall. Cheyenne South hired Terry Pugh last week, while Burns is looking to replace longtime coach Bill Fullmer, who announced his resignation last month.

KGWN-TV had previously reported the hiring.

–patrick

The last major historical update I think I will ever make — the span of seasons from 1894 to 1919 — has been made. In all, 189 additional games have been added to the database. All the updates have been made on all the relevant pages.

Finding these 189 games was some of the toughest research I have ever done, especially when you consider the format of late 19th and early 20th century newspapers. Locating games was at times like hunting for a tiny needle in a huge haystack. I make no claim that the 189 games I have uploaded are a complete list of the games played from 1894 to 1919; it’s just the best I can do right now with what I have available.

What now? Well, now I continue to fill in the holes where I have information missing. The missing games list and the Coaches Project are good places to start. I’m also attempting to verify all bye weeks listed here and have got a nice jump on that research, as well.

In short, this is not the “end.”

In addition to the years 1894 to 1919, I also fixed a mistake I noticed for St. Stephens — I corrected the Eagles’ record in 1964 to 6-2, not 5-2 as I had listed — and took some names off the Coaches Project list for Cowley and University Prep.

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

–patrick