An anonymous donor has purchased Dorchester Longhorn Football t-shirts for Dorchester boys participating in football next year. Students were spotted on social media wearing their shirts today (Friday).
Next football season will bring the return of high school football to Dorchester on Friday nights, following a unanimous vote by the Dorchester Public School board earlier this month. Dorchester leaders had been exploring six-man football as an option, and board members decided there was sufficient support from parents and student interest to bring back DHS football in the six-man form.
An online survey of Times readers, conducted in late September, showed nearly three-quarters of readers said they wanted DHS football to return.
Dorchester has been without a football team of its own since 2013, as fewer enrolled boys in grades 9-12 and decreased participation rates raised questions whether a viable eight-man team could be fielded. Soon after, DHS decided to co-op with Milford, which is in Class C-1.
DHS is entering six-man football as the version of the game is gaining popular support, with more than 40 Nebraska high schools expected to be play six-man ball next season, including nearby schools.
This is the last season the Nebraska Six-Man Coaches Association will be overseeing six-man football in the state. It will move under the umbrella of the Nebraska School Activities Association (NSAA) in 2018, just as Dorchester restarts its own team on Nerud Field.
The idea of six-man football at Dorchester is not new. Sixty-nine years ago this fall, Dorchester resumed its football program (following an hiatus in the program following the 1930s death of a DHS player) with only 11 players going out. From the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s, the Longhorns played six-man ball for 10 seasons, getting better with every snap. In fact, Dorchester's six-man teams of the 1950s were quite successful. DHS alum Vern Johnson once told us that "the best six-man player DHS ever had was Jack Bruha, a two-year all-state player in the early 1950s."
DHS transitioned to eight-man football in 1959, when DHS went undefeated. (Back then, Nebraska did not have a state playoff system for football.) By 1969, Dorchester was playing 11-man football, a tradition that continued until 1991, when DHS reverted to eight-man ball and dropped to Class D.
Love the shirts!!
ReplyDeleteCan you tell us what other schools in our area are transitioning to 6 man?
ReplyDeleteI played on that team and Bruha was a heck of a back but he really did well because he had Charlie Prybl,Rog Larson,Ron Hoppe, Bob Moser and myself blocking for him. HA
A wide-open game in which teams sprint up and down the field and where the combined score can typically exceed one hundred points, six-man football was invented in Nebraska in 1934. At its peak in 1953, 30,000 teams across the country and in Canada competed in the sport.
ReplyDeleteA big THANK YOU to who ever donated the shirts. The design and great and they even have names on the back. The kids are excited and school spirit is alive and well. Go Big D!
ReplyDeleteOnly in a small town. Nice! Amazing what a small gesture can do to make a difference
ReplyDeleteStoked.
ReplyDeleteI would wear one of those shirts! Thanks to whoever provided these shirts to our Boys of Fall!
ReplyDelete