Week 2 Winner: Joe Prud'homme
Kick the extra point to tie the score and go to the second overtime period.
That
would be the common strategy for a high school football coach in the
circumstances that faced Joe Prud'homme on Friday night. His
Nolan Catholic (Fort Worth) Vikings had just scored in the first overtime to close to within a point of
Trinity Christian (Addison).
But
21 years at the school, including a run of six state titles in nine
seasons earn Prud'homme the license to deviate from the norm.
With the rematch of last year's TAPPS Division I state final riding on one play, Prud'homme gambled and was rewarded.
A successful two-point conversion pass from
Landon Russell to tight end
Jeremey LaGroue
carried Nolan to a 43-42 victory over previously-undefeated Trinity
Christian (4-1) Friday night at Doskocil Stadium in Fort Worth.

Joe Prud'homme, Nolan Catholic head coach
Courtesy of Nolan Catholic High School
For
making the call that resulted in the homecoming win, Prud'homme was
selected as the Capital One Bank Dallas Coach of the Week.
The
victory was the fourth in a row for Nolan (4-2, 2-0 in District 1). The
Vikings share the district lead with Prestonwood Christian (Plano).
"I
know most coaches would not make that decision,'' said the 48-year-old
Prud'homme. "But I didn't want to get in a back-and-forth with them. I
knew that we had the right play set up. The kids were executing well.
Their defense was leaving an opening that we could attack.''
The
Vikings lined up in what they call a "Two-Three'' formation, two running
backs lined up in the "I'' formation with three tight ends. Trinity
Christian had to respect the threat of run. Vikings tailback
Luke Alves had already gained 179 yards and scored three touchdowns.
"Landon
faked the lead play we'd been running all night and rolled right. We
gave him the choice and he felt more comfortable going right. Our tight
end waited and then went to the right flat. The play worked perfectly.
There was only one defender between the two of them. Jeremy was wide
open and Landon floated the ball to him.''
Prud'homme's gutsy
call looks even bolder considering quarterback Russell was playing in
only his second game this season. Although he had some quarterbacking
experience earlier in his career, Russell had made a decision to
concentrate full-time on basketball as a senior. He is slated to play
college basketball at Yale.
But a rash of injuries reduced
Nolan's quarterback depth to just one able body. Russell asked
Prud'homme's permission to rejoin Nolan's football program a couple of
weeks ago. The coach told Russell he would need to get an OK from his
parents, the Yale coaching staff and his basketball coach at Nolan (the
latter happens to be Steve Prud'homme, Nolan's athletics director and
Joe's brother).
Against Trinity Christian, Russell completed 7 of 11 passes for 123 yards and two touchdowns.
Prud'homme
said he very nearly called for a two-point conversion after Nolan
scored with 1:50 remaining on Russell's 15-yard touchdown pass to
Patrick Rich. He chose to send on
Grant Muehlstein for the extra point kick that sent the game into overtime.
Nolan and Trinity Christian have a history for staging wild shootouts. Nolan prevailed, 48-45, in the 2012 state title game.
Should
Nolan win a state title this season, it would be its third in a row.
Previous titles have come in two-year patterns: 2004-05, 2008-09 and
2011-12.
Program stability has been a key, Prud'homme said: "It's
pretty rare, but the majority of our coaching staff has been together
the entire time. Our players have the belief we're going to win, no
matter what.''
In his high school playing days at Bishop Gorman
(Tyler), Prud'homme was a defensive back and quarterback. He continued
his football career at Tyler Junior College and then got his degree from
the University of Texas.
Joe and wife Amanda have two children:
Joseph, who quarterbacked the Vikings to a pair of state titles the last
two seasons and is now at Kansas State and
Emily, a junior volleyball and softball player at Nolan.