Milem leads resurgence of Erie-Prophetstown football

ONE BIG STEP FORWARD

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Erie-Prophetstown's Chuck Milem guided the Panthers to the playoffs for the first time in a decade in 2012. He is Sauk Valley Media's coach of the year. (Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@saukvalley.com)
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What Milem found at E-P was a mess, and he set about to fix it the best way he knew how. He saw two areas that needed to be immediately corrected.

First, he needed to bridge the 12-mile gap that separated Erie and Prophetstown by getting more and more people on the same page when it came to football.

For the first 2 years Milem was on the job, Prophetstown had its own junior tackle football program and Erie had its own. They were independent of each other, though they were the feeder program for the E-P Panthers. Coaches had their own agendas in coaching philosophies.

That changed in 2010. After a 2-year battle that included making pitches at multiple school board meetings, Milem brought the youth tackle football program together under one umbrella – his. Coaches were teaching things that Milem wanted to be taught.

"Other coaches have tried, but it was met with resistance," Milem said of bringing the youth programs together. "People thought everyone would not get a chance to play, when you want kids at that younger level to get in there. They thought there would be issues with travel, but basically I said all those things are solvable. All we had to do was replicate what we do at the high school."

The next thing Milem set about to improve was participation, be it in in-season or out-of-season activities.

His first Panther team in 2008 had 14 upperclassmen, and even they weren't committed the way they needed to be.

"I had maybe eight kids in the weightroom," Milem said, "and I couldn't even keep them in there consistently."

Prophetstown football players were training at a recreation center in town, while Erie gridders lifted in the weightroom at school. To build unity, as well as muscles, Milem took to the road – literally.

"I drive a bus all summer," Milem said. "I go get Prophetstown kids and bring them to Erie, and then we do 7-on-7s where I get Erie kids and go to Prophetstown. We had to create more opportunities where we were together."

A pair of seniors from both communities, Cody Beyer of Erie and Inskeep of Prophetstown, emerged as ringleaders. They were voted team captains as juniors and the driving forces from a players' standpoint toward preparing for the 2012 season.

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