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Saturday, May 8, 2021

Zimmer: Finally, Jacks send longtime football coach John Stiegelmeier to Frisco - Argus Leader

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BROOKINGS – When John Stiegelmeier took over as the football coach at his alma mater, in 1997, he was 40 years old, South Dakota State was a slightly-above average Division II program, and the Jackrabbits played in rickety old Coughlin-Alumni Stadium.

A quarter of a century later, “Stig” and his crew are Texas-bound, as the Jackrabbits punched their ticket to the Division I Football Championship Subdivision national championship game with a 33-3 rout of Delaware at Dana J. Dykhouse Stadium.

They’ll face the winner of Sam Houston State and James Madison next Sunday at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Tex.

Steigelmeier coached seven seasons at the Division II level and never made the playoffs. Only twice in that time did his North Central Conference teams win more than six games.

But there he was, on a Saturday in the middle of May, getting doused with Powerade live on ESPN while Alabama’s ‘If You’re Gonna Play in Texas’ blared over the loudspeakers, having finally directed his team to a destination that feels at once like it’s been forever in coming and like it happened faster than anyone might have expected.

More: Frisco bound: South Dakota State routs Delaware in FCS semifinals

“I don’t think I thought back in 1977 that the student coach that had a desk in my office when I was defensive coordinator would lead the Jacks 44 years later to the national championship game,” said Mike Daly, who was the head coach at State prior to Stiegelmeier and groomed him to serve as his defensive coordinator and later his replacement. “A moment like this makes me feel like a proud grandpa. I couldn’t be more proud of the coach and man he has become. One of the great coaches and men in college football.”

The Championship Subdivision – known as Division I-AA when the Jacks first made the move – has been far kinder to them than a century of Division II football ever was. SDSU is appearing in the playoffs for the ninth straight season, they’ve won three conference titles, sent a handful of players onto the NFL, played admirably against major conference foes (including beating the Kansas Jayhawks) and advanced deep into the playoffs on multiple occasions.

But the semifinals have been where the best Jackrabbit teams have seen their seasons die.

That hasn’t been for a lack of talent, coaching or effort.

Starting around the middle of the previous decade, SDSU began to move into the upper echelon of the country. Zach Zenner gave the Jacks their first Division I superstar, and when Austin Sumner, Jake Wieneke and others joined him, playing for Frisco seemed realistic.

The next wave of stars accompanied the arrival of Dana J. Dykhouse Stadium, the $65 million, 19,340 seat facility that debuted in 2015 and established the Jacks as fully-engaged high-rollers in the FCS.

Wieneke, Dallas Goedert, Taryn Christion, Christian Rozeboom, Jordan Brown, Cade Johnson – it almost seems unfair that those men came through Brookings without getting this opportunity, not to mention Division II stars like Doug Miller, Josh Ranek, Adam Timmerman and Adam Vinatieri, among others.

“When we went (Division I) in 2004, I knew it and our players knew it, that it was a chance to change the face of South Dakota State football,” said Stiegelmeier, who improved to 174-106 with Saturday’s win. “I would credit those first four classes that went through the reclassification. This is a really special moment for me. Having been here as long as I have, for every person who’s wore a Jackrabbit uniform…I love our players. Thank God for our players. It means a lot.”

When you share not just a classification but a conference with North Dakota State, arguably the most dominant dynasty in college football history with eight national championships in the last nine years, having a great team is quite often not enough.

Yes, the Jacks have beaten NDSU before, like they did this year. But never did they win enough of the other games, too. Never did they get home field advantage throughout the playoffs. Never did they earn the top seed.

This year, after dropping a game they should’ve won in Week 2 at North Dakota, the Jacks recognized their margin for error had dissolved. They’re 7-0 since. Though Southern Illinois gave them a scare last week, the Jacks looked absolutely determined to make sure they did not squander this opportunity on Saturday. Top-seed, at home, one win from the ‘ship with a non-Missouri Valley foe in their way? No way the Jacks weren’t going to get it done, ghosts of NDSU, James Madison and others be damned.

“I was very confident,” said senior linebacker Logan Backhaus, who had 12 tackles in yet another command performance. “I’ve been to two semifinals and heard that Texas song play – I have bad memories with that. Coach Stig, I’m just happy for him. The work he puts in, the stuff he does to motivate us and keep us on the right track as players and men – he’s very deserving of this.”

Indeed, Stiegelmeier, a 64-year-old Selby native who did not play college football himself, has something of a patriarchal role over the program. He lets his assistant coaches do much of the recruiting, game-planning and play-calling, but he remains the face of Jackrabbit football, if not its heartbeat. He’s stayed on the job for this long specifically because one goal remained unchecked on his career resume – a national championship.

It’s not a coincidence that the year the formula finally came together was in a pandemic-delayed spring season, as Stiegelmeier’s Jacks went the entire spring without a single positive test for COVID-19, a commendable team effort that started largely with his leadership. When they lost to UND, he told his team that the script for the rest of their season had been written. It was up to them to execute it.

“SDSU has been lucky to have John as coach all these years,” said Daly, who made a point to emphasize what Stiegelmeier has added to those in the program as a friend and confidant, including the support he lent the Dalys when Mike’s son, Derek, battled a deadly illness several years ago. “He has an uncanny ability of evaluating and recruiting great players who are also great people and great students. He also has had the ability to attract great assistant coaches who treat people the same way.”

There’s still one more left. Make no mistake, just getting to Frisco is a big deal. It’s a step the Jacks had not previously taken, a glaring omission from their otherwise strong resume as an FCS heavyweight.

But there’s room in the Dykhouse Center trophy case for a national championship trophy, and while Stiegelmeier’s legacy as the father of Division I football at SDSU is secure, that trophy is all that’s missing from it.

“When you say you want to win a national championship you need to get to Frisco,” Stiegelmeier said. “So to me (this is) a step. What I hope, what I expect, and what I’m going to demand, is that we’re not giddy about getting there, but excited about the opportunity to win a national championship.”

The Link Lonk


May 09, 2021 at 04:07AM
https://www.argusleader.com/story/sports/college/south-dakota-state-university/2021/05/08/zimmer-finally-jacks-send-longtime-coach-john-stiegelmeier-frisco/4988449001/

Zimmer: Finally, Jacks send longtime football coach John Stiegelmeier to Frisco - Argus Leader

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