No Father's Son

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Soapy
Posts: 13693
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

No Father's Son

Post by Soapy » 08 Jan 2026, 07:22

redsox907 wrote:
04 Jan 2026, 21:16
As I contemplated what the move meant for my defense, Coach continued. “Brice just ain’t getting it done under center this year, and Caine ain’t ready to take the reins. If we move Mack to back, I think with his athleticism we can really run the dang ball and grind out some wins.”
foh!

finally caught up. i thought you might go coaching when this first came out due to the timeline but figured you'd eventually turn into a Brandon Weeden situation

I've tinkered with doing a narrative coaching story, should be interesting
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Caesar
Chise GOAT
Chise GOAT
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No Father's Son

Post by Caesar » 08 Jan 2026, 12:58

Mando might be able to coach em but can he recruit em :hmm:
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redsox907
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No Father's Son

Post by redsox907 » 09 Jan 2026, 00:49

Soapy wrote:
07 Jan 2026, 17:26
Caesar wrote:
02 Jan 2026, 09:08
Sox over here going for this refreshingly cute narrative (cartel, cancer and alcoholism aside) in contrast with Brice Colton's debauchery, I see.
Image

son pops got his head sawed off and he's about to be a 40 year old freshman with a bullet hole in him
Image

thats basically pops, but yeah refreshingly cute :smh:
djp73 wrote:
07 Jan 2026, 20:15
3-3-5 for life for Armando
if I'm running my own defense, fuck yeah I'm doing my favorite scheme
Soapy wrote:
08 Jan 2026, 07:22
redsox907 wrote:
04 Jan 2026, 21:16
As I contemplated what the move meant for my defense, Coach continued. “Brice just ain’t getting it done under center this year, and Caine ain’t ready to take the reins. If we move Mack to back, I think with his athleticism we can really run the dang ball and grind out some wins.”
foh!

finally caught up. i thought you might go coaching when this first came out due to the timeline but figured you'd eventually turn into a Brandon Weeden situation

I've tinkered with doing a narrative coaching story, should be interesting
at least Brice is starting? :shrug:

I'm still playing with how I'm going to do the updates once we get to RL - more on that below
Caesar wrote:
08 Jan 2026, 12:58
Mando might be able to coach em but can he recruit em :hmm:
he's got a simple pitch. You can sign with me, or you can sign when the Juarez boys show up with machetes. Your choice, cabron

Just so ya'll in the loop - this is going to start on CFB26 in the offseason following the 2025 Natty. Working on finishing up forcing all of the real life results in the game. Last year I did this for Savage as well and I was able to get the right teams into the playoff, not the right seeding tho. Once we have the two teams set for the Natty at the least I'll make sure they are in there. If we get to that point after the Natty, it'll be RL result. If not, then we'll see who the sim choses.

I already have a team picked out :curtain:
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redsox907
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No Father's Son

Post by redsox907 » 09 Jan 2026, 00:51

Chapter Fifteen: Family Matters

Armando James Leon Jr. was born May 7th, 2025, at a healthy 8 pounds and 11 ounces and exactly 21 inches long. It was the grounding point in the middle of a hectic summer between football and life.

On one end, after the defeat in the FCS Championship game, Coach Vigen and I had spent the entire offseason planning how we were going to integrate the new defensive philosophy, a blend of my own 3-3 front and Vigen’s 4-2-5. Rather than sitting in the 4-2-5 for most of the game and occasionally transitioning, we were doing the opposite. Aggressive from the onset, then falling back into the pass-oriented 4-2-5 to shut down the aerial assault. On top of that, we were targeting players in the portal and through the prep ranks that would fit the multiple scheme, making integration even more seamless.

Mom’s condition, however, was a different story. By the end of 2024, she’d decided to stop immunotherapy after nearly five years of treatment without results. “No progression is still results,” they tried to explain to her, and while technically true, the toll it was taking on Mom’s physical health couldn’t be ignored anymore. She was thin, frail, and barely had the energy to do more than a few hours without needing a rest.

Mom had a long conversation with Jessica and me before talking to her doctors, laying it all out for us. “I wanted to live long enough to see you grow into a man and a father—I’ve done that, Armando. At this point, I feel like more of a burden than anything.”

We quickly protested her being a burden, but she brushed us off with a wave of her hand. “I’m tired, Mando. I’m not giving up, just done fighting for scraps.” By the time AJ (Armando Junior) was born, Mom hadn’t gone more than a few weeks without a new bout of pneumonia, sometimes leaving her bedridden from exhaustion for days at a time.

But when AJ was born, she was the first one offering to get up and feed him when he awoke in the middle of the night, careful to hold him over the couch or bed so if she started to get weak, she had somewhere to comfortably rest him without disturbing his peace. For the first month or so after AJ’s birth, Mom appeared to be revitalized. It was short-lived, however, as her condition began deteriorating again by July. The bouts of pneumonia went from weeks apart to days apart, leaving Mom once again bedridden.

Sitting at home after the first week of fall camp, the beginning of August, Jessica decided we finally needed to address the situation.
“She’s getting worse, Armando, by the day. The signs are all there-“

I cut her off before she continued, “Jess. I know, but this is what she wants. She told us herself, she’s done fighting for extra time. We can just make her as comfortable as we can until then.”

“I know it’s a lot taking care of her and the kids. We can look into some extra help when I’m on the road this season, ease your burden a bit?”

She denied needing help, but I could see the bags under her eyes, the stress that you wear even when you feel your best. So, even though she’d denied the help, I still sought out a Personal Care Assistant, at least for the weekends I would be traveling.

Jessica wasn’t the only one concerned with Mom’s rapid deterioration, but as I’d told Jessica, it was what she wanted, even though it ate me up inside little by little seeing her condition. With the inevitable slowly bearing down on us, I did my best to maximize the time we had together, to make sure that we had enough memories with her and the kids that even when she inevitably passed, they had memories and photos to look back on.

I feel ashamed to admit it, but the summer camps and recruiting trips with Coach Vigen—who brought me along for any visits with defensive prospects to not only show me the ropes, but make sure our vision was being communicated clearly to potential future Bobcats—were a welcome relief. In retrospect, it is a natural human response to seeing someone you love suffering, without the ability to aid them, but in real time it felt like I was relishing the time away from my family. Like I was turning into my father, all over again. I knew deep down that wasn’t true, I relished the time with my children, Jessica, and Mom, but the nagging thoughts never went away. Here I was, traveling for work for days at a time, while my family was at home awaiting my return.

I finally shared my thoughts with Jessica, not about the relief—I kept that one to myself—but about the creeping feeling that I was slowly turning into my father.

“Flyboy, we chose this life. I knew full well what getting into coaching meant, even back in Havre. You’re too ambitious, even if you don’t realize it, to be content being a small-town Montana coach. You may not always be here, but when you are? You love the kids and me with everything you have.

“From talking with your Mom about your father, he didn’t do the same. You see the similarities, cause you’re still running from his shadow. I see the differences, because you aren’t in a shadow in our eyes, Armando, you create your own fire and warmth for us.”

During a mid-August recruiting trip Coach Vigen took advantage of a small break in the conversation to address the delicate subject of my mother’s condition.

“Armando, I don’t mean to be foreboding, but I just wanted to let you know. If you need to take some time during the season to care for your mother, or handle some final business, you can take all the time you need. We’re family first around here, just let me know and we’ll handle it as needed.”

I wasn’t prepared for the unexpected conversation shift to Mom and her health, catching me off-guard. The sudden realization that I may have to be handling her final wishes, funeral planning, and last rites soon hit me like an icicle piercing my heart. Coach Vigen must have caught the swift shift in my expression, simply placing his hand on my shoulder with a slight nod. When I regained my composure, I simply thanked Coach for his understanding, earning another nod in return.

I was thankful for the approaching 2025 season kickoff, despite our upcoming clash against the Goliath Oregon Ducks. Unlike last season’s opener against New Mexico, we were not favored against the Ducks. In fact, we were a massive 28.5-point underdogs. Despite that, I was optimistic with the team.

“They ain’t ready for us,” I barked at the defensive linemen during the sled drills. Every time a defensive back broke up a pass in 7-on-7 drills, I yelled at them to keep the same energy in Eugene. After our final practice before our trip to Autzen Stadium, I rallied the defense for one final pep talk.

“Listen, I’m not going to sugarcoat it. We ain’t traveling to New Mexico. Odds are we aren’t going to win, but we don’t need to win. We just need to make them sweat. They’re supposed to win, so we’re playing with house money. You guys want shots at the league, at maybe earning FBS offers in the future? Show out in this game and show them why you need a shot. I believe in under-promising and over-delivering, but I’m telling you guys. We. Can. Compete.

‘Bobcats on three. 1, 2, 3, BOBCATS!”

We couldn’t compete. The minute we ran out of the tunnel in front of the 57,000 roaring fans at Autzen, I could see some of the guys pissing down their legs. Men that I was going to lean on to calm the younger players down. “They just need to settle in,” I thought to myself.

The Oregon Ducks ran only 13 plays in the 1st quarter, but still had a 17-0 lead by the end of the 1st frame. The highlight of the opening quarter for our defense was forcing a field goal on their third drive, thanks to an overthrow by Dante Moore, not some herculean effort by the defense.

By the half, it was 35-3. 49-6 at the end of the 3rd before Oregon pulled their starters—we didn’t. 59-13 final. Not one turnover, sack, or even a tackle for loss. 500 yards by Oregon and 26 first downs. I thought for sure we could at least surprise the Ducks with our new scheme, even a little bit.

I stood on the sideline, clearly dejected, after the final whistle. Coach Vigen jogged past for the post-game handshake between coaches, patting me on the shoulder while whispering, “We knew what this was, don’t get too down.” I made myself walk out onto the field and shake hands with the Ducks players and coaches, priding myself on setting an example for the rest of the team, even if everything in me wanted to storm out of the stadium, back to Bozeman, and start dissecting film to brainstorm what went wrong. I didn’t even see Dan Lanning approach, simply reached out for the handshake out of habit. But when the grip didn’t loosen after a second, recognition set in.

“I’m not going to lie to you, Coach, you kept us on our toes,” Lanning said with a smile that was genuine.

“Could have fooled me with how y’all marched up and down the field,” I answered, not wanting to sound ungrateful for the compliment, but also showing my displeasure at the result.

“Sometimes it’s about the Jimmies and the Joes, Coach. But seriously, keep at it. Your boys played hard, disciplined, even when the score was lopsided. That shows strong leadership.” His attention was quickly pulled by reporters, but he made sure to make eye contact one more time before being pulled away.

“I expect to see you again, Coach.”

Coach Vigen and Jessica echoed the same sentiments, “We know you wanted to make a statement, but one game doesn’t change anything. You’ve got bigger goals this season, don’t lose sight of that.”

The next week against South Dakota State, a rematch of the FCS playoff semi-finals from last year, we only gave up 297 total yards, but still fell to the Jackrabbits 30-24 in double OT. Another ‘morale victory,’ those close to me said. “The defense played great, despite 30 total points, take pride in that Armando,” said Coach Vigen. But it wasn’t enough. I expected to get the reins and turn this defense into the 2000 Ravens, murdering people on the field.

I spent that Sunday in my office, poring over game film, despite promising to Jessica that no matter the result on Saturday, Sundays would be for the family. We got up and had breakfast together that morning, then after cleaning up while she fed the baby, I told her I’d be in my office for a bit. She raised her eyebrows, but didn’t question, just gave me a nod that said she wasn’t going to press the subject, this time.

About an hour later, Tara Lydia, now 18 months old, came tumbling into my office demanding “UP!” I pulled her into my lap, with the film from the Oregon game still playing quietly on the monitor. The film cut to me on the sideline barking orders to the defense, sometime in the 3rd quarter when we were already down 45-6. Little Tara pointed at her Dad on the monitor and simply stated, “Daddy mad.” Then she turned and pointed at me, holding her in our own home, and reiterated, “Daddy mad?” More questioning and confused, than a confident statement as before.

That finally cracked the wall. Even if we never won a game this season, the little girl in my arms and the babbling baby in the dining room didn’t care. They cared that their Dad was home, spending time with them, giving them unconditional love. I’ll never know if Jessica intentionally sent Tara Lydia into my office, or if it was as innocent of an interaction as it seemed, but it forever changed my perspective. That’s not to say I never sulked after a loss, never felt that I needed to put in more effort, more film time. But that could always wait until Monday. Sunday was for the family.

I turned off the Oregon tape replaying on the monitor, walked out of my office holding Tara Lydia, and quietly embraced Jessica from behind as she was folding laundry with AJ beside her. “Sunday is for the family,” I whispered into her ear, before planting a gentle kiss on her cheek. She never stopped folding, just looked up at me, returned the kiss, and gave me a look that said “you better not.”

After the frustrating 0-2 start, we finally put it all together. After allowing 89 points over our first two games of the season, we didn’t allow more than 17 points until the final game of the season as we rattled off 9 straight wins to secure the 2nd overall seed in the FCS playoffs.

I was in the middle of doing post-game interviews following our 38-17 win over #9 UC Davis, my cellphone on the table next to the mic flashed awake with a text from Jessica.

“Emergency” was all the message said. Jessica never messaged me during or after games until I called her on the way home or to the hotel. If she texted it was an emergency, she meant it. I quickly wrapped up my portion of the interview and let Coach Vigen know I had to head home for an emergency.

I called Jessica as soon as I left the media room and as I told her I was on my way, she quickly cut me off.

“Meet us at the hospital,” she huffed in between ushering the kids into the car, “I’m taking your Mom to the ER.”

Soapy
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No Father's Son

Post by Soapy » 09 Jan 2026, 07:04

impressed Oregon enough to be their next DC? Or follow one of those assistants to their new job?

RIP Ma Dukes
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djp73
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No Father's Son

Post by djp73 » 09 Jan 2026, 08:51

redsox907 wrote:
09 Jan 2026, 00:51
but I’m telling you guys. We. Can. Compete.

‘Bobcats on three. 1, 2, 3, BOBCATS!”

We couldn’t compete.
:kghah: snap back to reality quick
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redsox907
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No Father's Son

Post by redsox907 » 10 Jan 2026, 23:41

Soapy wrote:
09 Jan 2026, 07:04
impressed Oregon enough to be their next DC? Or follow one of those assistants to their new job?

RIP Ma Dukes
Montana State DC to Oregon DC would be brazy, but you see the vision

Image
djp73 wrote:
09 Jan 2026, 08:51
redsox907 wrote:
09 Jan 2026, 00:51
but I’m telling you guys. We. Can. Compete.

‘Bobcats on three. 1, 2, 3, BOBCATS!”

We couldn’t compete.
:kghah: snap back to reality quick
i watched the highlights hoping for something to build on, but it was shovel meet face from the word go :pgdead:
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redsox907
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No Father's Son

Post by redsox907 » 10 Jan 2026, 23:41

Chapter Sixteen: The Sum of Our Choices

The similarities were too hard to ignore. Just eight years ago I found myself in a similar situation. Different hospital, different city. But same predicament. Lying in a hospital bed barely breathing, hooked up to more machines than I could count, with a hole in my hand and a demon in my head. Only this time the demon didn’t live in the head, but in the lungs. Both of us, driven to the hospital bed by the same circumstance:

Choices.

It was too late in the recovery game to fully blame the sins of my father on how I ended up face first in rock bottom. And for Mom too, the same applied. Did the stress of running from a chaotic situation likely shave years off of her life? Sure. You could say the same about the final years with my father, fearing the unknown that was lurking around every corner.

But her chain smoking, that grew worse on the trek to Havre, slowed when we settled, then intensified again when I left for the Academy, played a starring role. A habit that even after her lung cancer diagnosis, she struggled to fully give up, despite the best efforts by Jessica and me. One was the star, but the other was on the marquee as well.

The signs had all been there. The multiple bouts of pneumonia, sometimes within days of each other, the labored breathing, lack of energy. Lately, she’d started having random bouts of confusion, usually after pushing herself too hard physically. Each time, we’d asked if we could take her in for a checkup, practically begged her. But she refused.

She’d made her choice and respiratory failure was her consequence.

After undergoing testing all night on Saturday and most of the day on Sunday, the doctors finally came to tell us the result. Dr. Adams explained that since Mom opted out of immunotherapy, the tumor had expanded, starting to obstruct her airways and causing fluid buildup (pleural effusion). They believed that this, along with a variety of other factors linked to her illness, contributed to the constant bouts of pneumonia as the fluid continued to build up in her lungs.

“If we had seen her earlier, when the pneumonia first started, we could have taken aggressive measures to slow the spread of the cancer,” continued Dr. Adams, clearly choosing his words carefully. “But at this point, there has been too much damage done to the airways. She simply can’t get enough oxygen on her own to sustain herself.”

As Dr. Adams continued to explain the diagnosis and options, Mom kept the same serene look on her face, nodding in the right spots, but never speaking up to add anything. Finally, after about thirty minutes, the doctor asked Mom what she wanted to do.

“I’m not spending the rest of my life attached to a tank of oxygen,” she stated, matter-of-factly. Jessica and I exchanged a glance that said we didn’t agree, but both knew arguing with her would be pointless, as the doctor immediately started to protest. Before he could even get started, Mom raised a hand to hush him before adding, “I know what it means, Doctor Adams. But it is my choice.”

She agreed to remain on oxygen through the rest of the weekend, so she could see the grandkids one more time, a final goodbye she insisted remain positive. “I doubt they’ll remember this moment, but I want the pictures of us for the final time to be joyous,” Mom declared. And she got exactly her wish. Tara Lydia and AJ came by, spent time cuddling with her as best they could, before sharing one final embrace.

On the morning of Monday, November 17th, 2025, they officially unplugged Mom’s oxygen. Jessica offered to spend the day in the hospital with Mom and me, but Mom insisted she continue the day like normal, opting to say her goodbyes Sunday night when the kids were ushered away.

The doctor warned there was no timetable for how long Mom would last without oxygen, but put the odds that she made it to Tuesday morning less than 5%. To his credit, Coach Vigen had reached out multiple times to check on me over the weekend, a gesture that extended beyond a mere employee-employee relationship. Despite my insistence that I would do my best to be on the sideline for the upcoming rivalry clash with undefeated Montana, Coach was having none of it.

“If I see you at the facility anytime this week, I’m dragging you home myself,” he growled, with more admiration than anger behind it.

So with nothing on the schedule and no timetable in front of us, Mom and I sat there in the hospital. We played cribbage for a time, talked about the past, and I watched a motivational speech from Eric Thomas—unironically about the weight of our decisions—while she napped. Every time her breath caught, or her breathing slowed further, I grasped her hand, worried it was the final moments.

She roused from her nap sometime that afternoon with a sigh as she gave me a once over.

“It never ceases to amaze me,” she nearly whispered between shallow breaths, “how much you look like your father, yet how different you are from him.

‘I don’t have much longer, Mando,” she continued as I leaned closer, “I can feel my energy slowly fading. Like a candle flame burning out the last of the wick. But before I take my last breath, I need you to know;

“You are more of a man than your father could ever hope to be. I know the weight you carry. The resolve to never be like him. I see it in how you approach everything. Your work, your family, your decisiveness. Your father would have taken the easy way out long ago. Looked for the shortcut. That’s just the person he was. Below all of the bravado, all of the smooth talking, he was simply a boy that never grew up, that always looked for the easiest solution. He only cared about himself and that is why he died, alone.

“I may not live to be an old woman. But I will die a grandmother, a Mom to an honorable man who has fought to create a family he can be proud of. No matter what I braved throughout my life, that is my greatest accomplishment, Armando.

“You just make sure that you show those beautiful babies that you can’t live life in fear. Chase your dreams. Show them that it is honorable to try something, regardless of the result. Don’t act in fear of making the same mistakes of your father, act in confidence that you are in a place he could never dream of.”

I don’t know when I had started crying, but by the end, I was openly sobbing. Up to that point, I’d prided myself on keeping my composure. If not for myself, then for the kids when they came to see Grandma Tara, not knowing it was their last time. But now, all of the emotion came rushing back. Throughout everything, Mom had always believed in me. Always been there, regardless of the mistakes I had made, the depths I’d fallen.

Her inspired speech had briefly reignited a fire behind her eyes, but with her statement delivered, the energy faded from her faster than it had returned. As I knelt beside her bed, still sobbing, she could only pull me close and whisper one final line:

“Just remember, no matter what. Your family loves you, Armando. And that is more than your father could ever say.”

She didn’t pass then, but we didn’t speak anymore, knowing the end was closer than ever. I just knelt beside her bed, her hand in mine, content to be in her presence for just a few moments longer. I don’t know how long I knelt on that floor, my knees certainly protested for days later, but at some point I finally heard it. The haggard, labored breathing, a final hitch, then nothing.

I stayed on the floor, kneeling, waiting for her breath to return. After a few minutes that felt like an eternity, I finally stood. I clasped her hands together on her chest, leaned down and placed one final kiss to her forehead, whispering my final goodbye in that small moment, before composing myself and fetching the nurse.

During our conversation that day, Mom had told me she didn’t want a funeral, or a celebration of life. All she wanted was to be cremated, so she could always be near us, and put in an urn with each of our handprints on it. That, and letting a few friends back in Havre know of her passing, were her last wishes.

By Friday that week, we’d finished consolidating the rest of Mom’s estate and notifying all the applicable parties. I’d expected her death to hit me suddenly, all at once. But it came in fleeting moments. Waking up and not seeing her in her usual spot by the window, in the rocking chair I’d bought her when we moved. Her seat at the table empty at dinner time. When the kids asked to say goodnight to nana one more time—we’d told them that she’d gone on a trip to far away, with them being far too young to understand life and death. But by that Friday, with everything but the raw ache in my heart settled, there was one thing left to do: get back on the football field.

“I know people grieve in different ways, sweetheart, but I don’t see how that is going to help you in any way,” Jessica sharply declared, although her concern was evident despite the tone.

“It’s what Mom would have wanted. Not to dwell on the past, but to continue forging forward. Continuing to be the man my father could never be.”

The protest sat in her expression, strong and unwavering, but her words showed none of it. “I understand. Just remember, if it gets to be too much, there’s no shame in stepping back, even for a moment.”

Coach Vigen was less than understanding. “Armando, I respect the hell out of you. But I repeat, there is no way in hell you’re getting on that sideline this weekend,” he reiterated for the third time on the ten-minute phone call. “Monday? Back in the saddle, but not this weekend.”

So for the first time since I was the defensive coordinator at Havre, I was home on my couch while the Montana State Bobcats took the field.

It is never an experience I want to repeat again. Watching guys line up out of position, completely miss assignments, and generally look lost was akin to torture to me. But despite the many miscues, including a 52-yard run by Eli Gillman to pull within three points, the defense held just enough for us to end the Grizzlies’ perfect season with a gritty 31-28 victory.

I was the first one in the facility Monday morning, already breaking down game film and on my second C4 of the day when Coach Vigen walked in.

“You know better than I do, those are bad for you,” he joked, before pulling me in for an embrace. “I haven’t gotten to say it in person yet, but I’m sorry, Armando. If there’s anything you need, you know we’re here for you.”

“I appreciate it, Coach,” I managed, starting to lose my composure sooner than I’d anticipated, “I just need to get back to work and make sure I keep making her proud.”

He clapped me on the shoulder with a nod and simply said, “Well, letls get to it then. We’ve got a Championship to win.”

You couldn’t have written a better story if you tried. We’d earned the #2 seed in the playoff with the win over Montana, meaning we had home field throughout the playoff until the Championship Game and we took full advantage of it. #24 Yale was first and left Bobcat Stadium limping after a 24-0 demolition that featured three turnovers and six sacks. #20 Stephen F. Austin was next and suffered a similar fate, a 44-14 drubbing with five more sacks and both touchdowns coming in garbage time.

A rematch against Montana, who were eager to end our season after we thwarted their perfect season, was the closest game of the bunch, and that isn’t saying much. The 20-16 game at the half ended in a 48-23 victory after we conceded a kickoff return touchdown on special teams, but collected a pair of interceptions and four sacks in the 2nd half to boost us to the Championship Game.

#17 Illinois State had dethroned the North Dakota State Bisons, robbing us of our shot at redemption on the biggest stage, and we took that personally. 35-0 read the final score after Tommy Rittenhouse absorbed six sacks, threw three interceptions, and was pulled after the 3rd quarter in the blowout victory. After the heartbreak of last season, then the earth shattering death of Mom, this moment felt cathartic, proof that perseverance and hard work rewarded those with the guile to power through. A final reminder that I was everything my father had never been. And I was only just getting started.

I’d dodged questions the entire playoff run about the emotional weight of coaching through my mother’s death and had given the generic, by the book answers of “one game at a time,” and “grieving is a process,” but standing on the stage with the FCS Trophy in our grasp, it finally hit me in a wave.

When Stormy Buonantony finally got to me on the stage, the question didn’t pull any punches.

“Coach Leon, by now we all know the enormous grief your family suffered right before the playoff with the sudden passing of your mother, Tara Briggs, after a long battle with Stage 3 Lung Cancer. What can you say about the strength it took to return to the sideline and inspire a historic defensive effort on the way to the Bobcats first FCS Championship since 1984?”

I fought the tears back as long as I could, which admittedly wasn’t long, before gathering myself to answer:

“I can’t thank my family enough for their support. My wife Jessica, my children Tara Lydia and AJ, they’ve always been my anchor. But, of course, Mom was always there first. Just to be able to use her memory as a guiding light, keep making her proud, that’s what drives me. I know she’s looking down and smiling.”

Then with AJ in my arms, Jessica and Tara Lydia by my side, I pointed up and added through tears, “Keep looking Mom, cause we’re just getting started.”

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djp73
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No Father's Son

Post by djp73 » 11 Jan 2026, 16:58

redsox907 wrote:
10 Jan 2026, 23:41
“Keep looking Mom, cause we’re just getting started.”
:fatback:

Soapy
Posts: 13693
Joined: 27 Nov 2018, 18:42

No Father's Son

Post by Soapy » 12 Jan 2026, 07:35

:romeo:
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