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Sunday, December 24, 2006

RHS grad takes helm at Air Force

Troy Calhoun to take over for longtime Falcons coach Fisher DeBerry next season

Calhoun: Played quarterback at Roseburg High
Calhoun: Played quarterback at Roseburg HighENLARGE
Calhoun: Played quarterback at Roseburg High
AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. — Troy Calhoun became the first former Air Force player to head the Falcons’ football program, rejoining the program Friday as longtime coach Fisher DeBerry’s replacement.

The 38-year-old Calhoun, a 1985 Roseburg High graduate who was the starting quarterback for DeBerry in 1986, was an assistant coach with the Denver Broncos before joining Gary Kubiak as offensive coordinator of the Houston Texans this season.

“Our thought going into this was Fisher DeBerry had been here for 27 years, head coach for 23. And during that time he has inspired, trained, taught, motivated, produced not just leaders for the Air Force but leaders for the NCAA athletic community,” Air Force athletic director Hans Mueh said during a news conference.

“Troy Calhoun I believe is at the pinnacle of that group of folks Fisher DeBerry produced and so we are proud that he would accept this offer from us to be our next head coach.”

Calhoun replaces DeBerry, who retired Dec. 15. Calhoun is only the sixth head coach for Air Force, joining a list that includes Bill Parcells and Ken Hatfield.

The Roseburg High graduate was an active duty officer in the Air Force from 1989-95 and was a three-year starter for longtime Indians coach Thurman Bell, receiving first-team All-Southern Oregon Conference honors as a senior.

Calhoun began his coaching career with Air Force and continued at Ohio University and Wake Forest. He caught on with the Broncos in 2003 as a defensive assistant and became an offense-special teams assistant in 2004. Last season, his title was “assistant to the head coach” for Mike Shanahan.

“Ultimately, this came down to deep down, in the heart, inside that chest cavity, you realize that hey, this is the academy and here’s a chance to go back and coach and work with the kids and at the same time get a chance to probably cross paths with a few more teammates and old friends, too,” Calhoun said. “It’s a place where as a graduate you’re extremely proud to return in whatever capacity.”

Calhoun, who had talked with DeBerry before the selection, will remain with the Texans during the remaining two games of their season.

The 68-year-old DeBerry finished with three straight losing seasons and two big controversies in his final years.

“I think Troy is going to reinstill the kind of fire and passion that has been missing over the past couple of years,” Mueh said, without elaborating.

Calhoun defied the odds at the Division I level by winning the quarterback job as a sophomore for the Falcons in 1986. In his collegiate debut, he scored what turned out to be the deciding touchdown late in the fourth quarter in a 24-17 victory over Hawaii.

DeBerry spent 27 years at the school, including four as an assistant coach. His 169-109-1 record made him the winningest coach in Air Force history and he had the third-longest tenure at one school of any active college coach, after Joe Paterno (41 years at Penn State) and Bobby Bowden (31 years at Florida State).

DeBerry was 35-11 against Army and Navy and led Air Force to 14 Commander-in-Chief trophies, though he lost his grip on award as Navy won it the last four years.

But DeBerry also had problems off the field in recent years.

In 2005, he was criticized after a 48-10 loss to TCU when he said Air Force didn’t have enough “Afro-American” players, singling them out for being able to run well. DeBerry was reprimanded by top brass at the academy and offered a public apology.

In 2004, academy officials asked him to remove a banner from the locker room that included the lines “I am a Christian first and last ... I am a member of Team Jesus Christ.”

During his nine-minute farewell news conference, DeBerry mentioned his faith, thanking “my Master Coach for leading us to Colorado 26 years ago.”


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