Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Details special to coach

- CLAY HENRY

Down to my core, there are two things that I think lead to football victories: line play and special teams.

Show me a coach who knows both, I’ll show you a winner.

I love a pretty play as well as the next football man, but the most important parts of the game are blocking and tackling and execution in special teams.

No, it’s not that simple, but it speaks volumes that first-year Arkansas head coach Sam Pittman made his new special teams coach one of two assistant head coaches on his staff.

Then, as I dug through Scott Fountain’s resume, there was clear evidence that any words typed should be in bold-faced caps. Fountain played in the offensive line in high school and college, then got his start as a college assistant as an O-line coach.

When a reporter suggested those two areas of coaching are important, Fountain said, “I think my background coaching O-line helps me coach special teams. The two areas are really detail oriented. Technique is important in both. So many little things are important.”

From the reporter’s perspectiv­e, both areas are important. And, nothing is little about either.

Fountain, who has essentiall­y coached in four national title games working at Florida State, Auburn and Georgia, began his career in the high school ranks. He got a nudge toward special teams when legendary Florida State coach Bobby Bowden hired him as a graduate assistant in 1994. He played for Terry Bowden, Bobby’s son, in college at Samford.

“Coach Bowden asked if I would teach the long snappers,” Fountain said. “I really enjoyed it. I was intrigued. In time — and that’s over several years — it became obvious to me that coaching special teams is what I wanted to do.

“I’d been a high school coach for six years, but I really didn’t know much about technique for long snappers. I started reading books and studying it.”

There was a lesson in the importance of a good snapper early in spring practice.

“We had two snappers,” Fountain said. “One of them was Darren Bush, a starting linebacker. The other, Clay Ingram, was just a walk-on and had never played in a game.

“Coach Bowden asked who was the best snapper. I told him I thought we should play Bush because he’d played in some games.”

It goes without saying that a starting linebacker would be good covering punts.

“Coach Bowden said, ‘No, I asked

who is best,’” Fountain said. “It was Ingram. He said, ‘That’s who you play.’

“That’s what I did. We started Ingram. Then, we play North Carolina in Week 1 and our first punt was from the minus-1-yard line.”

It’s not clear who was more nervous, Ingram or Fountain.

“He did great, a beautiful snap,” Fountain said. “As they say in coaching, you live to play another down.”

Fountain’s first full-time coaching job was as offensive line and recruiting coordinato­r at Central Florida.

“They had a special teams coordinato­r and about the time I got there,” Fountain said. “He asked if I would help him by taking the kicker, punter and long snapper for a 15-minute meeting before every practice. It forced me to start learning more about kickers and punters and technique.”

It wasn’t long after that Fountain sought out a real expert in special teams, Bill Curry’s now famous assistant at Georgia Tech.

“Curry hired the first woman assistant coach in Division I football, Carol White,” Fountain said. “I went to see her and she gave me incredible insight.

“What I learned is that God kept putting special teams coaching in front of me. It became more and more obvious that’s what I had a passion to do in coaching.”

Soon after joining Gene Chizik’s staff at Iowa State in 2007, special teams became an integral part of what Fountain did on a daily basis. His bio indicates his primary responsibi­lity under Chizik was tight ends and recruiting coordinato­r,

but Fountain began to take special teams, too.

After moving to Auburn, eventually special teams became part of his job descriptio­n. That’s been his only responsibi­lity the last three years - two at Georgia and one at Mississipp­i State.

Meanwhile, staffs all across the country are still splitting duties with a position coach dabbling in special teams. Kirby Smart at Georgia was one of the first to use the 10th position allotted by the NCAA just solely for special teams.

“I think 75 percent of the 10th coaches in Division I coach a position as well as special teams,” Fountain said. “That’s a bad idea. Not having to coach another position really frees me up to cover the details.”

Covering the details means Fountain went “six or seven deep” with his special teams on the first day of camp this summer.

“We are down to four deep now,” he said. “Every player has learned two spots. We coached them in two spots at Georgia, too.

“With covid-19, we did go a little deeper to start camp this year. I wanted everyone on the team to have a little foundation on special teams. We don’t know what we will get into as far as depth as the season goes along. Having a foundation is going to help us.”

Fountain preaches the rich tradition Arkansas has with special teams. He knows about Steve Little, a first-round draft pick as a kicker, one of the first soccer-styled kickers in college football.

Told that Lance Alworth and Ken Hatfield both led the nation in punt

returns twice, Fountain became excited. He was more aware of the many All-America kickers.

“I’m so glad to be here,” he said. “I want to add to that. I thought this was a great opportunit­y when Sam asked me to come here.”

“I know the names on that NFL board in our hall. I know who Steve Little is and what he did here. I phoned our kicker from last year, Connor Limpert, and talked to him to learn a little bit about our history. It’s rich.”

The idea is to make some of these guys rich.

“I’ve got a guy with the Atlanta Falcons making $800,000 in his sixth year,” Fountain said. “I tell my guys if they get good, they can make a living doing this, a great living.”

It’s a fun job for Fountain. He’s working for his old next-door neighbor. He and Pittman had homes in a cul-de-sac in Athens, Ga., and became close while working together on Smart’s staff.

The idea of working together at Arkansas was first hatched “about six or seven games into the season. That’s when Sam told me maybe it could happen.”

Would he come?

“I said I would,” Fountain said. “Then, the morning after the SEC Championsh­ip Game, Sam came to me again. He said, ‘You remember what I asked you about? I think it’s about to happen. You still coming?’ And, here we are.”

Yes, and what no one knew then, first up for the Razorbacks is No. 4 Georgia. It’s makes you focus on the details a little harder.

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