The Columbus Dispatch

Zagorski sees opportunit­y as Otterbein football coach

- Colin Gay

Tommy Zagorski idolized his high school football coaches at Benedictin­e High School in Cleveland. They made him want to do what they did.

After playing for them, it was imperative for Zagorski to teach what he was passionate about and aim for the opportunit­y to earn a living from the game he loved.

Zagorski’s passion grew with each coaching stop, teaming up with Los Angeles Chargers coach Brandon Staley at John Carroll and serving as a quality control coach at Tennessee before offensive coordinato­r jobs at Eastern Kentucky and Akron, taking things from each level and molding his own coaching style and culture.

“You have to have the humility to listen to what people at different levels have to say, and does it match up to who you are?” Zagorski said. “How does it fit into your culture? How does it fit into your schematics that you can execute on any given Saturday?”

Now Zagorski has a chance to put that coaching style and culture into a program, taking over Otterbein’s football program from Tim Doup, who posted a record of 41-64 in 11 seasons.

He said he wants a program that is pillared on character, humility and love, adapting the battle cry of leaving the place better than he found it initially.

It was a pitch that resonated with Gavin Edwards.

The sophomore wide receiver out of Pickeringt­on Central just finished his second season with Otterbein, experienci­ng three wins in 20 collegiate games. As Otterbein began its coaching search, Edwards was asked to play a part as one of the players tasked with vetting each coaching candidate.

Edwards was sold after the first interview held.

“Zagorski just stood out,” Edwards said. “He was the very first candidate we interviewe­d, and he had plans on the desk. His three things were character, humility and love. That really stood out to us.”

Zagorski’s pitch was how he ran each position room he was in, whether it was at John Carroll after playing offensive line at Case Western, to his most recent stint as the head coach at Gilmour Academy in Gates Mills.

“Right now, we’re opportunis­tic,” Zagorski said. “And once we get this thing rolling the right way, then the players in our program have the obligation to uphold that tradition, to uphold that standard that now has become what Otterbein football now is.

“There’s a perception of what we are on the outside. But realistica­lly, we know who we’re going to be.”

Zagorski said some players bought in quickly, eagerly jumping at the challenge of revamping the Cardinals program when he held his first team meeting.

The challenge is contagious, Zagorski said, something that turned into bought-in players calling others who had no intention of returning with the message that something special was happening with the program.

“They want to maximize the talent we have in our program,” Zagorski said. “Our kids are recruiting guys on campus to come be part of it with them. That’s exciting to me. … When we get this thing rolling, doing it the right way, every single day, like it’s a different animal.”

Zagorski doesn’t know how much success Otterbein will have next season. He doesn’t even know where the Cardinals will be two years from now.

But that’s not what he’s focused on. His gaze is fixed on 10 to 15 years down the road, knowing that if the team is built off his pillars of character, humility and love, success will come with it.

To Zagorski, that’s his recruiting pitch: Why not Otterbein?

“We’re not for everybody,” Zagorski said. “We’re for an elite group of men that are wired a certain way that want to get this done.”

 ?? COURTESY OF ADAM PRESCOTT ?? Tommy Zagorski was hired as Otterbein's football coach after spending one season as the head coach at Gilmour Academy.
COURTESY OF ADAM PRESCOTT Tommy Zagorski was hired as Otterbein's football coach after spending one season as the head coach at Gilmour Academy.

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