Week 12 winner: Mike Fuller
Growing up as the son of a football coach helped guide Mike Fuller to the position he now holds — head football coach for the
Heritage (Colleyville) Panthers.
"There's
something special about growing up in a field house,'' Fuller said.
"I've been close to high school football for as long as I can
remember.''

Mike Fuller, Heritage
Photo courtesy of Mitch Hagy/FOTOSPORT
Fuller
learned his lessons well. Heritage (10-1) defeated Hebron 50-24
Saturday night in Arlington's Cowboys Stadium to advance to the second
playoff round in Class 5A Division II.
In recognition of the bi-district victory, Fuller was selected as the Dallas area Coach of the Week presented by Comerica Bank.
In his own playing days at Arlington High in the 1980s, Fuller was a quarterback.
Not
surprising then that a trademark of Fuller teams through his years at
Heritage and earlier in a stint at Coppell is excellent quarterback
play.
Fuller calls current Heritage senior
Cody Thomas
the best quarterback that he has coached. Against Hebron, the
University of Oklahoma pledge completed 32 of 43 passes for 416 yards
and four touchdowns.
For the season, the 6-foot-5, 210-pounder has thrown for 3,779 yards and 42 touchdowns with only five interceptions.
"He's incredible,'' Fuller said.
In
the third game of Fuller's senior season in 1987, he suffered a broken
collarbone. But the most disappointing night of his football career also
produced the moment when Fuller knew he wanted to become a coach.
His
arm was in a sling when Arlington coach Mike O'Brien asked Fuller to
stand nearby on the sideline and perhaps offer suggestions in play
calling.
Fuller noticed when his replacement faked to the
tailback and ran the bootleg that no defender was assigned to the
tailback. If the tailback were to continue to run down the opposite
sideline, he would be all alone. The play wasn't in the playbook, but
during a timeout the suggestion was acted upon. Once implemented, it
worked.
"That's the moment I realized the influence a coach has on a game,'' Fuller said. "I wanted to be a coach.''
In
the spirit of being the best teammate possible, something Fuller
preaches to players now, he returned from his long injury absence and
was able to help Arlington in its playoff run as a receiver.
Now he looks at the injury as a blessing in disguise.
"If
I hadn't gotten hurt, I probably wouldn't have gone to Abilene
Christian and that's where I met my wife. Every year a senior player of
mine is injured and goes through disappointment. That's the worst part
of coaching. I'm able to tell my story, give some perspective and let
them know it is not the end of the world.''
Fuller and his wife of 20 years, Holly, have two children, Autumn (13) and Roman (10).
Dave
Fuller, Mike's father, was an assistant coach for some of the top
programs in North Texas including Southlake Carroll, Grapevine,
Arlington and Grand Prairie. He was a staff member of several state
championship teams.
He
came out of retirement last spring as a "consultant'' for Heritage.
"It was great getting his input,'' Fuller said.
Mike
Fuller's younger brother Trent is in his second season as head coach at
Lamar (Arlington). Lamar is also in the Class 5A Division II playoff
bracket.
Should Heritage defeat 11-0 Midway (Waco) in an area
playoff Saturday in Midlothian and should 6-5 Lamar beat 11-0 Abilene in
an area playoff Friday at UT-Arlington's Maverick Stadium, Heritage and
Lamar would face each other in the third round next week — brother vs.
brother.
"We've talked about it and we'd be so excited to play
each other,'' said Mike Fuller. "We scrimmaged each other this year, but
we've never played each other in a game.''
As for Heritage‘s
opponent this week, Midway has an outstanding quarterback in Kramer
Robertson, who recently signed a baseball scholarship with LSU.
Robertson is the son of Baylor University women's basketball coach Kim
Mulkey.
Fuller said Thomas and Robertson are good friends by way of summer baseball.
"Midway
is a very talented team, but something else comes across with them,''
said Fuller. "They just believe they are going to win. We've played
teams just as talented that didn't have that kind of belief.''
Midway was a Class 4A Division I state finalist a year ago.
Fuller's record at Heritage is 52-17 and he believes this year's team is special. Six times it has come from behind to win.
"We've probably been more physical on defense with some past teams,'' said Fuller, "but this group does not get rattled.''