OSUBasketballJunkie
Never Forget 31-0
Dispatch
5/13/06
5/13/06
Destroyers coach proves his worth
Kay guides team to cusp of playoffs
Saturday, May 13, 2006
Bill Rabinowitz
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
<!--PHOTOS--><TABLE class=phototableright align=right border=0><!-- begin large ad code --><TBODY><TR><TD><TABLE align=center><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle></IMG> </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Doug Kay knew what people were thinking last summer.
The Destroyers had hired a 69-year-old coach who had been out of the Arena Football League for a year, having been fired as defensive coordinator in his previous job.
Just another dunderhead move by the Destroyers, skeptics thought.
"I don’t blame them," Kay said.
That said, he didn’t spend much energy worrying about the doubters. He’d coached for four decades; he knew how to build a team.
And so he has. In his first year, Kay has done what five previous Destroyers coaches could not — make the team a winner, or at least not a loser.
If the Destroyers (8-7) win tonight at San Jose (9-6), they’ll finish above .500 for the first time since their inception, in Buffalo in 1999. More important, a victory — or a loss by Philadelphia — will clinch Columbus’ first playoff berth.
Kay has employed a simple formula. He attracted top-shelf assistant coaches and players and has gotten them to work as one unit.
It required a selling job to assemble the talent. Given the franchise’s sorry history, Columbus wasn’t the preferred destination of free agents.
"How can you sell a guy on a franchise that doesn’t win, even when they were the Buffalo franchise?" lineman Kelvin Kinney said.
Kinney himself was skeptical until he met with Kay, who showed him a board listing players he planned to sign.
"He said, ‘Here are the guys we’re bringing in. I want you to be a part of it,’ " Kinney recalled. "I said, ‘If you can get these guys, we are going to win.’ "
Kay was able to attract players such as quarterback John Kaleo because of his reputation. He’s regarded as a sound X’s-and-O’s coach and a straight shooter, even if his blunt manner occasionally ruffled feathers. Kay’s penchant for speaking his mind was one reason he wondered last year whether his coaching career was over.
"I don’t think anybody is happily retired," he said. "I don’t think there was anybody that cared or wanted me. That’s the truth. I’d probably (ticked) enough people off."
But Kay was exactly what the Destroyers needed. He wasn’t among the first candidates after Chris Spielman resigned, but he gradually rose to the top of the list.
"We set out for certain goals, and that was to get someone experienced in this league who can recruit and coach," team president David Paitson said. "He hit all those check marks."
Kay decided to purge the Destroyers’ roster. Only Ken Jones, Chris Janek and Brandon Hefflin remain from last year’s 2-14 team. Kay put his faith in the veterans he signed, even when it looked like they might not pan out.
Kaleo struggled most of the season, in part because of an ever-changing lineup of receivers. The past two years, the Destroyers showed little patience when quarterbacks struggled, and the ensuing revolving door doomed those seasons. But Kay stuck with Kaleo.
"The best thing he has done this year is change his ways a little bit," Kaleo said. "He’s more patient. Before, he used to maybe make changes real quick instead of letting problems work themselves out."
It’s easy to draw the inference that Kay has mellowed with age, but that shouldn’t be taken too far. Any Destroyers player would laugh if asked whether Kay is a grandfatherly presence. For one thing, he doesn’t look 70.
"I have friends who’ll say he’s got at least another 10 years of coaching in him, and I say, ‘No way, he’s 70,’ and they don’t believe me," said Kay’s wife, Dawn. "He acts like he’s 45. He takes care of himself not only mentally but physically."
Dawn has remained in Tampa, Fla., during the season with occasional visits to Columbus. But she can tell how excited her husband is about having success as a coach again.
"You can hear it in the tone of his voice more than what he says," she said.
When a team improves from two victories to at least eight, he usually becomes a candidate for coach of the year. Kay shuddered at the possibility.
"I’d turn it down," he said. "Why would I accept it? "
Part of that is his characteristic modesty. But he genuinely believes that his assistants and players deserve credit for the team’s transformation. Like many coaches, Kay dwells more on his mistakes than his successes.
But one thing is undeniable: Under Kay, the Destroyers’ successes, for the first time, will at least match their failures.
"He has done a fantastic job," Paitson said. "We go from being a nonentity in terms of performance on the field to being a playoff contender. Going from two wins to at least .500 with three returning players is quite an accomplishment."
[email protected]
Saturday, May 13, 2006
Upvote
0