Albuquerque Journal

Dykes happy to be ‘home’ again at SMU

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

DALLAS — Sonny Dykes didn’t even have to finish the story of his favorite SMU memory to stir some in the crowd who showed up to greet the Mustangs’ new coach.

All he had to say was 1982, Lubbock and Texas Tech — and never mind that the thrilling SMU win on a last-second kickoff return was at the expense of the school that would later become the longtime coaching home of Dykes’ late dad, Spike Dykes, and his alma mater.

How all of that came about explains better than anything why Dykes considers it a homecoming to replace Chad Morris on the Hilltop, even though he had already been back in his home state — and the Dallas-Fort Worth area — for a year.

“I always loved this place,” Dykes said after his introducto­ry celebratio­n Tuesday. “I always thought this was a program that had a tremendous amount of potential. The road of a college football coach, you just end up in some places you never think you’re going to end up in.”

The 48-year-old Dykes is back as a head coach a year after he was fired at Cal, having spent the past season as an offensive consultant under Gary Patterson at TCU.

He will coach SMU (7-5) in the Frisco Bowl near Dallas next week against Louisiana Tech, which he turned around before taking the Cal job and doing the same thing. Morris left after three seasons for Arkansas.

Dykes was 13 when his dad, then a high school coach, asked his son what he wanted for his birthday. Enamored by the Pony Express of Eric Dickerson and Craig James, Dykes’ answer was tickets to an SMU game, so the two small-town West Texas natives made the trip to Lubbock.

Texas Tech had just pulled even on a field goal with 17 seconds left when Bobby Leach took a long lateral on the kickoff and ran untouched 91 yards up the sideline for a 34-27 win during SMU’s 11-0-1 season.

“There’s a picture somewhere of the pile of SMU players in that end zone celebratin­g,” said Dykes, whose first coaching job was at a Dallas-area high school. “I can promise you there’s a 13-year-old kid in the background celebratin­g with them somewhere.”

Two years later, Spike Dykes joined the Texas Tech staff as an assistant, and two years after that became the head coach, staying for 13 full seasons. The younger Dykes graduated from Texas Tech in 1993 and played baseball for a couple of seasons.

Sonny Dykes soon followed his dad into the coaching business, and now has become a college head coach in Texas the same year Spike Dykes died at age 79.

“It’s been a hard year for me,” Sonny Dykes said. “Coaching in the state of Texas and growing up in the state of Texas meant so much to him and the relationsh­ips that he had. I had an opportunit­y to learn from him. It’s really been a blessing just to be back in the state.”

Dykes, who was an assistant at Texas Tech after his dad retired, took Louisiana Tech from 4-8 the year before he arrived to 9-3 in the last of three seasons in 2012, which led to a similar turnaround at Cal.

IDAHO POTATO BOWL: Wyoming quarterbac­k Josh Allen says his injured throwing shoulder is better than 90 percent recovered, but it’s still too early to say whether he will be able to play against Central Michigan on Dec. 22.

Allen has been mentioned among the top quarterbac­k prospects in next year’s NFL draft.

He sprained his right shoulder Nov. 11 against Air Force and missed Wyoming’s final two regular-season games.

“We’re still getting better day by day,” Allen said Monday.

Allen said he has been practicing with the No. 1 offense.

“It’s still not where I think it needs to be or where I’d want it to be, but things are progressiv­ely getting better, and I can feel it getting better day by day,” he said. “Throwing is becoming a lot easier.”

WISCONSIN: Badgers linebacker Jack Cichy has decided to enter the NFL draft, skipping a chance to ask the NCAA for a sixth year of eligibilit­y because of a right knee injury.

Cichy announced his decision in a story posted Tuesday on The Players Tribune website.

ARIZONA STATE: Defensive coordinato­r Phil Bennett will not be on new Sun Devils coach Herm Edwards’ staff. Bennett said after practice on Tuesday he was leaving the program for personal and health reasons.

Edwards retained the entire offensive staff and had hoped to keep Bennett.

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