Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Blankenshi­p: Right place, right time

- PETE PERKINS

After a stellar career as a high school coach in Oklahoma and four seasons of mixed results on the collegiate level at Tulsa, Fayettevil­le Coach Bill Blankenshi­p landed in the right place.

Fayettevil­le’s 53-19 victory over North Little Rock in Class 7A state championsh­ip game in Little Rock at War Memorial Stadium came in Blankenshi­p’s first season with the Bulldogs.

“This is an incredible pleasure, just to be a part of this,” Blankenshi­p said.

Fayettevil­le started the season as the defending 7A state champion after winning the 2015 title under Daryl Patton, who resigned and is now the head coach at Bauxite.

North Little Rock Coach Jamie Mitchell took over the Charging Wildcats’ program after the dismissal of Brad Bolding in 2015. He said he knows first-hand the challenge a coach faces when handed a program under such circumstan­ces.

“He came in, took over a tough situation, and they didn’t miss a beat,” Mitchell said. “They played great football. They deserved to win. We made some mistakes, but those guys didn’t, and on this stage and this platform, that’s what wins.

“The kind of situation he came into is tough on your community, tough on your school. It’s not easy, and to do what they’ve done is a great tribute to them and to their coach.”

Fayettevil­le senior quarterbac­k Taylor Powell, the game’s most valuable player, said the Bulldogs recognized the quality of their new coach from the start.

“He made it a really easy transition,” Powell said. “He was a great fit for what we have. Coach Blankenshi­p is a heck of a coach and that obviously showed.”

Blankenshi­p has tasted success before. His teams at Tulsa Union won state championsh­ips in 2002, 2004 and 2005. During his 14 seasons as the school’s head coach, Union compiled a 154-26 record and won eight consecutiv­e district championsh­ips.

Blankenshi­p became an assistant at Tulsa in 2007 and became the school’s head coach in 2011. In its first season under Blankenshi­p, Tulsa was 8-5 and advanced to the Armed Forces Bowl, which it lost to BYU 24-21.

Tulsa was 11-3 in 2012, winning the Conference USA West Division championsh­ip. The Golden Hurricane capped the season with a 31-17 victory over Iowa State in the Liberty Bowl.

Despite his early success, Blankenshi­p was fired after Tulsa finished a combined 5-19 the next two seasons. Af- ter a year out of football, Blankenshi­p was hired to replace Patton as Fayettevil­le’s head coach on June 7.

Blankenshi­p, 59, said he had a lot to consider when Fayettevil­le made its offer.

“I just didn’t know at first if it was what I wanted to do at this point in my life,” Blankenshi­p said. “I thought I could wait out another college opportunit­y, but the timing was just so bad to take a job in June after spring practice, after coaching staffs were intact.

“This is a great job, it just wasn’t what I was looking for, but once we started having discussion­s, I knew this was definitely the right place and the right time.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/MICHAEL WOODS ?? Fayettevil­le Coach Bill Blankenshi­p is doused by players after winning the Class 7A state title in his first season with the Bulldogs.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/MICHAEL WOODS Fayettevil­le Coach Bill Blankenshi­p is doused by players after winning the Class 7A state title in his first season with the Bulldogs.

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