Legendary high school coach Rush Propst steps down from Pell City

Rush Propst has stepped down at Pell City.

Rush Propst, perhaps the best-known high school football coaches in the nation, has stepped down from a position he took on just last year.

Propst, who became nationally known as the head coach of Hoover High School (Hoover, Alabama), has had success mixed with controversy throughout his nearly three decades on the sidelines. The ‘Two-A-Days’ program, a reality show that ran for three years on MTV, chronicled life at Hoover and made Propst one of the most widely-known figures in prep sports.

But the show also drew criticism for Propst’s hard-charging and unapologetic style.

His decision on Friday to step down from Pell City High School (Pell City, Alabama) after one year was a bit of a surprise (even with a reported lack of support from the school’s board of education). Last year saw Pell City go 1-10 but seven of their losses came by seven or fewer points.

Five of those losses were by fewer than four points. It was progress, especially for a program that hasn’t had a winning season since 2017.

According to AL.com, a special meeting of the Pell City Board of Education was called to accept Propst’s resignation.

In a post on social media on Friday, Propst outlined his reasons for leaving the post:

“It has never been my desire to cause controversy or division in this community. I believe Pell City’s brightest days are ahead of it but I’ve concluded that I am not the right person to lead this program at this time.”

 

 

Rush Propst is back in Netflix’s ‘Titletown High,’ an update on an old classic

This is the “Two-A-Days” follow-up we’ve all been waiting for.

Editor’s note: Spoilers ahead. 

At the end of Episode 4 of the new Netflix series Titletown High, out today, the head football coach at Valdosta High School calls his quarterback into a meeting. The player’s mother enters the room seconds later.

The Wildcats have won two games in a row without giving up a point to move to 3-3 on the season. A string of wins, the coach knows, will be enough to push the team into the playoffs — maybe even with home-field advantage.

“Now we know going forward where you are,” the coach begins. “You’re the guy that’s either going to lead us (to) being successful or not being successful. You know, I think you’ve persevered through some things, and I think that’s a good thing.

“What I’m here to talk to you about, and why I wanted your mama to hear this, is that I am concerned, with the type of kid you are, with this girlfriend situation. And, mom, it’s not a good situation.

“You cannot be my quarterback and continue down this path.”

The episode ends with the quarterback staring blankly.

Courtesy of Netflix

It is unclear whether Amari Jones, the charismatic and quickly maturing junior, knows how bizarre this conversation really is. The head coach speaking to him is Rush Propst, who rose to fame while leading Hoover High and appearing on the MTV hit Two-A-Days 15 years ago.

Propst would leave that job, and the dynasty he built, amid the revelation that he **had an entire second family.** (He was also accused of having an affair with an administrator who was involved in changing players’ grades; he’s denied that.)

Maybe Propst has learned from experience that relationships can be a distraction. Or maybe it’s just old-school football-man manipulation. You can’t ever really tell, which is how it generally goes with Propst, who manages to be both remarkably direct while forever appearing to have a secret he might but probably will not share.

At heart, Titletown High is in so many ways a follow-up to Two-A-Days. It gives executive producer Jason Sciavicco a chance to revisit the project that propelled his career at age 24 and made Propst the most famous high school coach in the country. Here, 15 years later, is a study in how time changed it all: reality television, high school kids, a cantankerous football coach.

Whether it can replicate the success — Two-A-Days was at one point MTV’s most popular show and helped spawn a wave of embedded-with-the-team documentary series — is impossible to guess. The formula feels well-worn at this point (Netflix has had Last Chance U seasons in previous summers) and it’s hardly novel to have high school kids express themselves on video; they’re filming themselves a lot of the time, anyway.

Courtesy of Netflix

But if you give the show a chance — just get past the initial wave of remembering how cloying it can be to be in high school — you’ll find a warm, big-hearted look at growing up today. And of playing football in yet another place where football matters too much to the adults who generally manage to cause most of the problems.

Sciavicco, who would go on to produce a searing look at youth football called Friday Night Tykes and then embed for seasons with Notre Dame and Florida State, always had the idea of catching up with Propst in the back of his mind. Then Propst landed at the winningest high school program in the country.

“Seemed like the right time,” Sciavicco says.

The Wildcats have won 24 Georgia state titles but only one this century and while all the pressure of being a dominant program exists in town, the elements that actually make up such a program are, according to Propst, lacking. He puts the team through a fevered preseason — he runs his offenses at breakneck pace — while simultaneously telling his players outright that 1) the program is broken and 2) nevertheless, their goal should be a state title.

Titletown High is ultimately a show about the kids, though. One of them, quarterback Jake Garcia, is the quintessential grown-up-too-fast elite athlete: A USC-commit (who ultimately signed with Miami), he has moved to town because California canceled football due to Covid-19. He’s eventually ruled ineligible and leaves the team.

Grayson Leavy, meanwhile, is a sophomore defensive end who vacillates between two girls … but also between profound realizations and ridiculous justifications as he figures himself out.

Courtesy of Netflix

Jones’ mother encourages him to focus on football and school and not date, yet he can’t resist Morgan Miller, a fiercely passionate classmate determined to draw him out from the shelter of books and the huddle.

Sciavicco gives us an immersive look at life for the students as the coronavirus pandemic swirls. They live so much of it on their phones, a source of frustration for Propst. “The thing they’ve lost is that ability to be one-on-one, that personal interaction, because they don’t have to do it,” he tells me. “You sit down with them, and you have to dig things out of them.”

Yet they hardly shy from having intimate conversations in front of the camera. “They’re remarkably open, and they adjust to it so quickly,” Sciavicco says.

Propst remains an anti-Ted Lasso character. Sure, he wears a visor, deploys a  disarming Southern drawl and can — will — talk to anyone. He’s more slight now — he was bed-ridden and had suicidal thoughts while fighting cancer a few years after leaving Hoover — and his hair has gone white. He looks less bombastic, more grandfatherly, and, though he tells me that he regrets how brash and surly he seemed in Two-A-Days, he is much the same coach on film now, constantly belittling and challenging his players in hopes that they will rise to his challenges.

They mostly do, as they usually have for him, and Valdosta appears to be on the cusp of regaining its rightful place in Georgia high school football. Among many of his players, Propst is a revered figure; they gather at his house to eat and study, and he speaks proudly of the players headed to college on scholarship.

Then, in the final minutes of the show, it all crumbles. A man named Nub Nelson, who, yes, lost his arm when he was younger, has hovered over the story for most of the show. The executive director of the Wildcats booster group, he clashes with Propst and a recording he made of the coach discussing a slush fund to pay recruits becomes public.

Now Propst is out of football again, and Valdosta is, for the first time in the school’s history, ineligible for the playoffs. Propst has moved back to Alabama, not far from where he was raised, and is focused on being a dad.

“I’ve spent so much time raising up other kids,” he says, “that maybe my kids have been cheated a little bit.”

He reckons he’ll coach again someday, and says that the whole story about what happened at Valdosta will come out eventually. “It has always taken time for the truth to come out,” he says.

The truth about his other family at Hoover is this: He eventually divorced his first wife, Tammy, to marry his girlfriend Stefnie. She’s the other woman present for the meeting where Amari is told he needs to breakup with Morgan.

They have three kids, all born while Propst was at Hoover and hiding his relationship; the oldest is a junior in high school. A wide receiver, like his dad was. In one scene of Titletown High’s last episode, Propst has to tell them that his world, and therefore theirs, has been upended by scandal again. Sciavicco has made a career out of filming raw moments like this and even he felt like he was intruding on that moment.

I ask Propst why controversy has followed him, and he says it’s a mix of his success, his personality and his mistakes. He talks about learning from the past, about having Sciavicco film almost every second of his life and condense it into a cohesive, coherent narrative. He hasn’t seen Titletown High yet. He’s anxious to know what others will think. He’s anxious to know what he will think.

“Jason knows me better than I do,” he says. “But I remember a time, at Hoover, when we’d been to four state title games in a row, won three of four, and we’re on the bus back and, no lie, we had a staff meeting before we even went out to celebrate. We had to plan what to do next.

“I don’t think that’s who I am now. But, that monster’s still flourishing at Hoover, so, I don’t know.”

[mm-video type=playlist id=01f09p3bf720d8rg02 player_id=none image=https://ftw.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Rush Propst, Valdosta program Netflix series premiering Friday

Netflix is rolling out Season 1 of “Titletown High” featuring Rush Rropst’s Valdosta program on Friday.

With high school football season now officially underway, Netflix is rolling out Season 1 of “Titletown High” featuring Rush Rropst’s Valdosta (Ga.) program.

The series will make its premiere on Friday and it is the second time Propst has been featured on a reality TV program centered around his program — the first being MTV’s “Two-A-Days” series at Hoover High School in Alabama.

The first season of Titletown High figures to consist of plenty of juicy storylines considering the drama surrounding Valdosta’s program in the last year. Current Miami Hurricanes true freshman quarterback Jake Garcia transferred into the program from California before the beginning of last season and played one game for Propst before the Georgia High School Association began investigating Garcia’s eligibility.

The Garcia saga led to a sworn deposition from Michael Nelson, a member of the Valdosta Touchdown Club booster organization, saying that Propst recruited players, paid for the housing of two transfers, interfered with his own hiring process and requested a “funny money” fund.

Valdosta was stripped of all its wins at the conclusion of the 2020 high school football season, banned from participating in postseason play in 2021 and fined $7,500 after more players were found to be ineligible.

“The evidence is clear that this is not an isolated instance (of recruiting) and that Coach [Rush] Probst (sic) and members of the Valdosta Touchdown Club have on other occasions contacted other student-athletes or their families and provided gifts of money, payment of utilities and housing incentives in an attempt to persuade those student-athletes to transfer to Valdosta High School,” GHSA Executive Director Robin Hines wrote in a letter to Valdosta school superintendent Todd Cason.

RELATED: Valdosta HS football program hit with fine, postseason ban for using ineligible players

Valdosta reportedly ‘reconsidering’ firing of head coach Rush Propst

Rush Propst might not be out as Valdosta High School’s football coach after all.

Rush Propst might not be out as Valdosta High School’s football coach after all.

According to the Atlanta Constitution Journal, Valdosta is reportedly “reconsidering” its decision to fire Propst following allegations of the veteran head coach recruiting players and their families to Valdosta and then paying for their living expenses. The allegations first surfaced in February and Propst was placed on administrative leave shortly after.

Valdosta City Schools confirmed to the Atlanta Constitution Journal that it will meet next week to “revisit” Propst’s non-contract renewal after a 5-3 vote to remove him from his position earlier this month. Per the Atlanta Constitution Journal, next week’s board meeting agenda reads: “Revisit non-renewal of head football coach at VHS — Mr. Warren Lee — action required.”

Valdosta was recently hit with a postseason ban and a $7,500 fine for using five ineligible players, including top quarterback recruit and current University of Miami freshman Jake Garcia.

RELATED: Valdosta HS football program hit with fine, postseason ban for using ineligible players

GHSA Executive Director Robin Hines announced the fines as $1,000 for each of the five ineligible players and tacked on an additional $2,500 fine for “lack of institutional control” in a letter to Valdosta school superintendent Todd Cason.

“The evidence is clear that this is not an isolated instance (of recruiting) and that Coach [Rush] Probst (sic) and members of the Valdosta Touchdown Club have on other occasions contacted other student-athletes or their families and provided gifts of money, payment of utilities and housing incentives in an attempt to persuade those student-athletes to transfer to Valdosta High School.”

Propst has won 299 games in his storied, but controversial high school football coaching career. Off-field issues have followed Propst at many of his previous coaching stops, including Hoover High School, where he resigned after admitting to an extra-marital affair.

Propst then became the head coach at Georgia’s Colquitt County High School in 2008, but was relieved of his duties in March 2019. At the time of his removal as head coach at Colquitt County, the Colquitt County Board of Education voted to remove Propst from his coaching position after it was determined he violated the Code of Ethics for Educators for legal compliance, conduct with students, honesty, and public funds and property, including giving pills to students “on more than one occasion” and owing nearly $450,000 in federal and state taxes.

Infamous high school coach accuses SEC teams of paying players, names culprits

Accusations of paying players in the SEC should come as no surprise.

In the southern states, everyone who knows high school football hears the name Rush Propst remembers the time he was a reality star for MTV’s Two-A-Days while coaching at the infamous Hoover High School in Alabama all while having a secret second family. He pulled a Woody Hayes but on one of his own players, headbutting one of his Colquitt student-athletes.

Controversy continues to surround Propst and again this weekend he accused Georgia and Alabama to be funneling money to play their players. In an interview with the Valdosta Touchdown Club’s executive director Michael Nelson, he claims that Kirby Smart has been giving recruits anywhere from $90,000 to $150,000 for their signatures.

Not only that, Propst claims that when players opt to return to school, like UGA running back Nick Chubb, receiving payments also.

In Tuscaloosa, it was Paul “Bear” Bryant, former 6-time national championship winning coach’s bank that helped funnel money to players claimed Propst.

The real question is how much can anyone actually trust Propst, as he is under investigation currently about paying his own players at Valdosta High School in Georgia. He was also fired from his last coaching position at Colquitt, not due to the headbutt incident, but for numerous ethics violations.

Allegations like this are obviously large, but you have to look at the source. Do SEC players get money under the table? Most likely, but many schools outside the conference probably have stories about similar situations.

It’s hard to trust Propst accusations, but there could be some truth behind them. You can listen to the whole interview here, and make your own judgement.

Joe Osovet discusses the Bolt offense

Joe Osovet discusses the Bolt offense.

In 2001, Joe Osovet started running an offensive scheme called a manipulation within his Bolt offense at Nassau Community College in New York.

20 years later, manipulation plays are executed throughout the sport, as they are known as RPOs.

Osovet later became head coach at Nassau Community College from 2013-15. He then was hired as head coach at ASA College from 2016-17 before joining the Southeastern Conference in an off-field role at Tennessee.

With the Vols, Osovet served as Director of Player Development (2018) and Director of Football Programming (2019). He was tight ends coach for Tennessee in 2020.

Osovet joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” to discuss his Bolt offense.

“When I took over as the OC at Nassau, we were always a hard-nosed, pro-style offense, run the ball down your throat,” Osovet said. “We got to a point where we were seeing so much loaded boxes.

“I figured lets spread things out and we can still maintain our power run game, but now when people start adding that eighth and ninth defender in the box, we’ll be able to do some type of manipulation of them.”

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Osovet’s Bolt offense features various formations that can manipulate a defense. The offense is a physical uptempo brand in pistol looks.

His offense showcases a double-stack in 10-personnel, a double stack extend in 10-personnel with wide receivers from numbers to numbers.

2×2 sets are also used with wide receivers typically around four yards apart.

Tiger packages feature 3×1 sets that can provide a two-stack at times.

A down-the-field passing game also places stress on defenses with looks in Hooters, Motorboat, Sting and Sail.

Osovet is also creative in the red zone and uses a yo-yo motion to manipulate defenders to find the end zone.

The entire show with Osovet can be listened to here or below. Valdosta head coach Rush Propst also joined the show and discussed implementing a power Air Raid scheme at the same time Osovet began his Bolt offense. (Note: Propst was in a static reception area during his part of the show).

[vertical-gallery id=34770]

Early signing period: Wide receiver to keep an eye on for the Vols to flip

Tennessee Vols’ football recruiting news.

The early signing period has kicked off and goes through Dec. 18.

Thursday is the second day during the early signing period and the Vols look to continue adding to its 2021 recruiting class.

Part of the recruiting process is coaches flipping players from being committed to one school and having them sign with their respective program.

One 2021 prospect to keep an eye on for the Vols in the 2021 recruiting cycle is wide receiver Javonte Sherman.

The 6-foot-1, 170-pound wide receiver is from Valdosta High School in Valdosta, Georgia. His head coach is Rush Propst, Jeremy Pruitt’s former boss at Hoover High School.

Tennessee had two wide receivers sign in the 2021 class Wednesday. Walker Merrill from Brentwood High School in Brentwood, Tennessee, and Julian Nixon from Centennial High School in Roswell, Georgia signed with the Vols.

Jordan Mosley remains committed to Tennessee for the 2021 class, however it is uncertain if he will sign with the Vols. Mosley is from McGill–Toolen Catholic High School in Mobile, Alabama.

Sherman verbally committed to East Carolina in June.

The early signing period takes place Dec. 16-18 for the 2021 recruiting class. National signing day is slated for Feb. 3.

University of Tennessee’s early signing period tracker

University of Tennessee’s 2021 commitment tracker

Fab Four: Selecting Tennessee football’s Mount Rushmore of all-time recruits

A look at coaches that could be part of wholesale changes to Tennessee’s staff

A look at coaches that could be part of wholesale changes to Tennessee’s staff.

Tennessee (2-6, 2-6, SEC) has two games remaining in the 2020 regular season.

The Vols travel to Vanderbilt today and host Texas A&M Dec. 19 to conclude the regular season.

Third-year Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt could make wholesale changes within his coaching staff following the conclusion of the regular season.

Tennessee has three assistants with expiring contracts. Offensive line coach Will Friend, wide receivers coach Tee Martin and inside linebackers coach Brian Niedermeyer are signed through Jan. 31, 2021.

A vacant defensive line position will also be filled after Jimmy Brumbaugh was relieved of his duties during the season.

Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Ahead of the Tennessee-Vanderbilt game, Rush Propst, Pruitt’s former boss at Hoover High School, discussed changes that could happen for the Vols’ coaching staff after the season ends.

Propst discussed how Pruitt needs to decide the direction of the staff, offensively and defensively.

“I just think that he needs to make some adjustments to his staff,” Propst said of Pruitt on the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days.” “I think he will. I think he’ll look at it and make some decisions. He’s got to decide what he wants to do. What philosophy, what kind of offense do I want to be, he knows what he wants to do defensively, that is not going to change. Does he bring in a defensive guy, there are some available, to relieve him of what he has been doing, to give him a chance to be more of a head football coach and concentrate on other areas. I think that Jeremy is really good in a lot of other things, maybe from that perspective, or he maybe happy with his whole defensive staff. I’ve got Todd Watson on that staff, that I know helps out in certain ways. Shelton Felton worked for me. I have tremendous amounts of confidence in Shelton Felton. I told Jeremy two years ago you should hire Shelton Felton, he is that good.

“Offensively is where his most work has to come. He’s got to decide which way to turn, but before you go hiring coaches, he has to decide deep down in his heart, deep down in his mind and soul where do you want the offense to be. Do you want to be uptempo, spread, swinging it around the field and doing that kind of stuff, or do you want to be a ground and pound, play-action and run-combo — those kinds of things. Really, there can be a little bit of both.”

The entire show with Propst can be listened to here or below.

Vols Wire takes a look at coaches that could be part of changes within Pruitt’s staff for the 2021 season.

NEXT: Coaches that could join Tennessee’s staff next season

What an evaluation process could look like for Tennessee’s program following the 2020 season

What an evaluation process could look like for Tennessee’s program following the 2020 season.

Tennessee (2-6, 2-6 SEC) has two games remaining in its 2020 regular season.

The Vols travel to Vanderbilt and host Texas A&M to conclude a 10-game, SEC-only regular season.

Tennessee is currently on a six-game losing streak after winning eight consecutive contests dating back to last year.

Following the conclusion of the regular season, third-year Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt will evaluate every aspect of the Vols’ program.

The process will include a self-evaluation, as well as an in-depth look at the program from a coaching staff and off-field aspect.

Tennessee’s coaching staff features three assistants that have expired contracts on Jan. 31, 2021, in Will Friend (offensive line), Tee Martin (wide receivers) and Brian Niedermeyer (inside linebackers).

Decisions will also be evaluated if Pruitt wants to bring in other coaches to replace assistants that do not have expiring contracts. Familiarity could be ideal with coaches such as Mike Bobo, Bo Davis and Will Muschamp.

Any changes, along with the direction of the football department, will be evaluated as a whole from third-year Tennessee Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer and others associated with the program in making sure they are deemed feasible in bettering UT in 2021.

Dec 7, 2017; Knoxville, TN, USA; University of Tennessee Athletic Director Phillip Fulmer (left) introduces Jeremy Pruitt (right) during his introduction ceremony as Tennessee’s next head football coach at the Neyland Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Calvin Mattheis/Knoxville News Sentinel via USA TODAY NETWORK

Rush Propst, Pruitt’s former boss at Hoover High School, joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” to discuss what could lie ahead for UT under a fourth year of the current regime.

“A lot of times we make changes based on, you just need to, because that is what people think you should do,” Propst said. “I don’t think Jeremy is that way a lot of times. I think he is pretty head strong when it comes to, I’m going to do it my way — he may not make a change period. I think he is the only one that can make that decision.

“He’s got to put a lot of thought to it, but outside looking in, being pundits and talking heads, it looks like with Mike Bobo, Will (Muschamp), Will Friend and Jeremy, they are all sort of got the same marriage type deal. They sort of know each other.”

From left University of Tennessee Chancellor Donde Plowman, head football coach Jeremy Pruitt, athletic director Phillip Fulmer, and UT System President Randy Boyd, Saturday, Aug. 29, 2020. © Caitie McMekin/News Sentinel via Imagn Content Services, LLC

An evaluation process for Pruitt would include what he would want to do personally and how drastic changes could be.

“First and foremost, you got to sit back and not pressure him and let him make the right call,” Propst said. “He may not make a change or he may make wholesale changes. I don’t know.

“I just know when you lost six in a row, after winning eight in a row, you have to reevaluate yourself, you have to reevaluate your staff, reevaluate what you are doing, is it strength and conditioning, are they getting the right nutrition, are they getting the proper rest, are they getting the proper work on the field. There is a fine line of a lot different things that a head coach has to evaluate. You have to self-evaluate yourself all the time.”

The entire show with Propst can be listened to here or below.

[vertical-gallery id=31064]

Where Mike Bobo fits when Jeremy Pruitt reevaluates his coaching staff

Where Mike Bobo fits when Jeremy Pruitt reevaluates his coaching staff.

Tennessee (2-6, 2-6 SEC) plays at Vanderbilt (0-8, 0-8 SEC) Saturday (4 p.m. EST, SEC Network).

The Vols have two regular season games remaining.

With the regular season coming to a close, the process in which programs begin to evaluate their coaching staff in preparation to make any changes takes place.

South Carolina concluded its regular season Saturday and hired Shane Beamer as its head coach.

Nov 28, 2020; Columbia, South Carolina, USA; South Carolina Gamecocks interim head coach Mike Bobo directs his team before the game against the Georgia Bulldogs at Williams-Brice Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Blake-USA TODAY

Mike Bobo served as interim head coach, as well as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for the Gamecocks in 2020.

Bobo has a history with third-year Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt. He coached alongside Pruitt at Georgia.

Valdosta head coach Rush Propst, Pruitt’s former boss at Hoover High School, discussed Tennessee’s coaching staff and the possibility that there will be changes following the 2020 season.

“I just think that he needs to make some adjustments to his staff,” Propst said of Pruitt and UT on the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days.” “I think he will. I think he will look at it and make some decisions. He’s got to decide what he wants to do, what philosophy, what kind of offense do I want be, he knows what he wants to do defensively, that’s not going to change.”

Propst discussed Bobo and how he relates to Pruitt’s thought process of what he wants to do offensively.

“I really deep down think that is what Jeremy wants to do, really right now,” Propst said. “Jeremy is big about wanting to protect his defense, not letting them play a bunch of snaps, sometimes a tempo offense can score real quick or three and out, your defense has to play to that.

“Now, with that being said, Mike is smart, a run-combo guy, where he will call two runs and check at the line. He is a very good play caller.”

The entire show with Propst can be listened to here or below.

[vertical-gallery id=31064]