SplitBackVeer
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I've been a reader here since December 2010, first time poster. I'm a little bit unique in that Jerry Kill came to my Webb City (MO) High School as our head coach in 1988, and I've followed his career pretty closely since then. He's been a friend of my family all these many years. He was 25-1 in only two seasons in 1988-89. He led our high school to its first ever undefeated regular season, 10-0, in an 11-1 season in 1988. He followed it up with an unbelievable 14-0 undefeated state championship season in 1989. Frankly, Kill could have been elected town mayor from that point on. In fact, he's still well remembered and could easily be elected today! He was the most driven person I'd ever met - - probably the most driven person I've met to this very day.
As a high school coach, he would watch ever film on a team, watch all of last year's films, call other coaches to learn everything he could. That effort in rural Missouri high school football was mostly unheard of back in those days. Mostly though, his players just loved him. He always had the uncanny ability to press all the right buttons on all the kids. Some kids need to handled with kid gloves, others need tough love, and Kill always had just the right touch. He still does, from what I can tell. Funny enough, to a kid like me, he looked the same now as he did in his late 20s - - balding. From my perspective, he was forty! In reality, he wasn't all THAT much older than me. High school kids would run through a wall for him.
Anyway, the board is a little slow so though I could add my perspective on Kill. Also, below is a link to a long summary of Kill's speech at a high school coaching clinic where he spoke shortly after taking the Minnesota job. Interesting insight into some of the things he does and some of what they teach.
http://buyersguide.coachesdirectory...als--jerry-kill--university-of-minnesota.html
As a high school coach, he would watch ever film on a team, watch all of last year's films, call other coaches to learn everything he could. That effort in rural Missouri high school football was mostly unheard of back in those days. Mostly though, his players just loved him. He always had the uncanny ability to press all the right buttons on all the kids. Some kids need to handled with kid gloves, others need tough love, and Kill always had just the right touch. He still does, from what I can tell. Funny enough, to a kid like me, he looked the same now as he did in his late 20s - - balding. From my perspective, he was forty! In reality, he wasn't all THAT much older than me. High school kids would run through a wall for him.
Anyway, the board is a little slow so though I could add my perspective on Kill. Also, below is a link to a long summary of Kill's speech at a high school coaching clinic where he spoke shortly after taking the Minnesota job. Interesting insight into some of the things he does and some of what they teach.
http://buyersguide.coachesdirectory...als--jerry-kill--university-of-minnesota.html