Skip to content

Thunderbirds reflect on successful season

It was more than they ever anticipated at the beginning of the season, but their semifinals loss in the playoffs was tough to swallow for the Westlock Thunderbirds football club.
Jacob Williston leaves a defender in his wake as he blasts through for one of his three touchdowns scored during the T-Birds 29-17 victory over Vermilion on Thursday, Oct. 8.
Jacob Williston leaves a defender in his wake as he blasts through for one of his three touchdowns scored during the T-Birds 29-17 victory over Vermilion on Thursday, Oct. 8.

It was more than they ever anticipated at the beginning of the season, but their semifinals loss in the playoffs was tough to swallow for the Westlock Thunderbirds football club.

After securing a playoff berth and a quarterfinal win over the Wainwright Commandos, the T-Birds’ season came to an abrupt end on Saturday, Oct. 24, when the team was handed a 59-6 loss by the St. Paul Lions.

The 2015 season marked the 10th anniversary of the T-Birds football club and the goal for the club was just to stay competitive.

“If you asked any of the players or any of the coaches ‘how would you guys feel about making the semifinals?’ we would have been really excited about it,” said coach Jon Kramer.

“Once you get there and get a taste for a little bit more success, or to move on the championship final, that’s where the disappointment comes in.”

The team more than lived up to its own expectations during the regular season and in the playoffs.

“With the crew that we had and all the guys that we graduated last year, the guys just really worked to get to the top of their game and got a great result,” Kramer said.

Looking back on the campaign Kramer said the foundation was laid last November at awards night.

“We had our biggest group of grads ever, we had 12,” Kramer said.

“When our team saw those guys up there and knew they wouldn’t be back, it really set the tone for offseason training and guys realizing if those guys are gone, their roles are free to step up into.

“It was a great motivator.”

Kramer said it was when the season kicked off and the team began realizing its own potential that the talk of making playoffs first emerged.

“That’s when we started to really set goals,” Kramer said. “We realized we could make it to the championship final.”

With 14 players set to graduate from the football program this year, Kramer said it’s once again up to the new senior players to lead the team in 2016.

“We don’t know what the future will hold, we could have a couple tough years or we could find more success. You don’t know that,” he said.

“It’s allowed us to get to a point where the culture has been established now. I think regardless of whether we win or lose a whole lot of games, the guys have that toughness.”

Over the 10 years of Thunderbirds football Kramer said he’s seen the program grow and players fall in love with the game.

“I think guys have made football a year round priority and a year round culture that has really started filtering down to the younger guys that will benefit from it,” he said. “Just the people that have put effort into the program, it has been really good.

“I think we’re set up for another decade to come.”

While the 2016 season is still months away, the club will soon begin preparation for it and is looking for new coaches to join the program.

“A lot of the coaches we’ve had are players that come back for a couple years … and then they’re off some place else chasing something else.” Kramer said.

“We could use help on the coaching side.”

Football knowledge or coaching experience aren’t necessary, however dedication is, Kramer said.

“Mostly people that are excited about investing in the lives of the youth in our community,” he said.

“We can send you to clinics, we can help you learn to coach football, just people with the time and energy.”

Anyone interested can contact Kramer at 780-283-0107.




Comments

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks