sa国际传媒官网网页入口

Number of Black head football coaches in sa国际传媒官网网页入口 area triples with offseason hires. Meet these new program builders.

20230806-spt-newfbcoaches-01.jpg

These four were hired to fill sa国际传媒官网网页入口-area high school head football coaching vacancies. From left, David Lee, of sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Academy; LeDarrius Cage, of Valencia, Curtis Flakes of St. Pius; and Christopher Smalls, of Rio Grande.

Published Modified

There aren鈥檛 many Black men serving as the head coach of a high school football program in New Mexico.

But that is not true of the sa国际传媒官网网页入口 metro area.

Four Black men were hired to take over metro programs during the most recent offseason. Now, 26% (6 of 23) of the 11-Man programs in the metro area now have a Black man as head coach. In a state with a Black population of less than 3%, the spike is arguably coincidental but unquestionably eye opening.

鈥淚 definitely think there are a significant amount of African Americans who may not have gotten the opportunity,鈥 said Curtis Flakes, 41, the new head coach at St. Pius X, offering an explanation. 鈥淏ut I do think it鈥檚 significant that 25% of us (in the metro area) are Black coaches. It does open the gates for a lot of young Black men who aspire to be a coach.鈥

Flakes is the only one of the four newcomers who already has head coaching experience. He was previously the head coach at sa国际传媒官网网页入口 High (2014-15), and was one half of a historic meeting against Cibola鈥檚 Rod Williams nearly a decade ago in the city鈥檚 first matchup of two Black head prep football coaches.

Also stepping into the head coach鈥檚 office for the first time this season are LeDarrius Cage at Valencia, David Lee at sa国际传媒官网网页入口 Academy and, most recently, former Lobo Christopher Smalls at Rio Grande.

This quartet joins Del Norte鈥檚 Bruce Langston and West Mesa鈥檚 Landrick Brody as Black men serving as head coaches locally.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 just a testament to all the hard work the four of us have put in throughout the years,鈥 said Cage, gesturing to Smalls, Lee and Flakes sitting next to him as the men recently sat down together with the Journal for a roundtable interview.

Cage, 33, most recently had been an assistant at Cleveland. Landing the job at Valencia (he played at Los Lunas) was something of a culmination, he said, since he had interviewed for other jobs without success, saying he was passed up at Los Lunas and Capital.

鈥淥ne thing I鈥檝e been telling other people who have been trying to be a head coach is, ask 鈥榃hat do I need to do to break into head coaching?鈥 It鈥檚 not about coaching, it鈥檚 about program building,鈥 Cage said. 鈥淭hey know you can coach. They want to know what you can do for the entire school. What you can do to help the entire school step forward.鈥

Cage said it probably was just coincidental that four metro schools filled their coaching vacancies with a Black man in the same offseason. But it doesn鈥檛 detract from their shared vision that their presence can have a positive influence on young, Black coaches.

鈥淢y entire time as a player, I had four Black coaches my entire life, and one of them was my dad,鈥 Cage said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really good to be able to see men of color being leaders of programs. Guys who are younger than us, it鈥檚 good for them to see us building a program.鈥

Lee, 49, has been a longtime assistant both at Hope Christian (where he was on the Huskies staff when they won a Class 3A state title in 2019) and Academy before the Chargers promoted him to take over.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a big deal, only because we get an opportunity to influence some of these young men,鈥 said Lee, who is a member of the international nuclear security program at Sandia National Laboratories. 鈥淭hey have their perception of what Black men are, but we actually have first-hand knowledge that we can provide them and give them true insight about not only what it is to be a coach, but a Black coach. That鈥檚 unique, and it鈥檚 pretty significant in that way.鈥

Like Cage, Lee believes it is more coincidental than not that he, Smalls, Flakes and Cage became head coaches in the same year.

Still, he said, 鈥淓ven when I got that job (at Sandia Labs), I felt like you had to be extra qualified in order to get it. But at some point, you have to look at the r茅sum茅 and say, 鈥楾his guy is truly qualified.鈥欌

There was at least one other hire of a Black man as a new head coach in New Mexico this year: Class 3A Hot Springs named former Texas-El Paso player Dennis Barnes, 23, as its new coach in June. Barnes recently graduated from UTEP.

The only other vacancy in the metro area this offseason, at sa国际传媒官网网页入口 High, was filled by Desmond Anaya.

Flakes brought in former sa国际传媒官网网页入口 High coach Tim Johnson, who is Black, to work on the St. Pius staff this year.

New Mexico high school football: Key games for sa国际传媒官网网页入口 metro teams this season

Johnson was a professional guide to Rio Grande鈥檚 Smalls, 29, who was with the University of New Mexico under Bob Davie and later played for the Duke City Gladiators.

鈥淭im was definitely a mentor to me,鈥 said Smalls, who is taking on one of the most difficult and complex football jobs in the state as he tries to breathe enthusiasm into the the sport again in the South Valley. 鈥淚 thank him for a lot of things. He taught me a lot. He gave me a lot on my plate, and I really enjoyed it, being at sa国际传媒官网网页入口 High and just listening.鈥

Rebuilding Rio Grande, he said, will take time.

鈥淜eep it simple, stupid,鈥 Smalls said of his message to his team. 鈥淓specially with some of these kids who have never played football a day in their life. But I told them, if we master the simple skills, it doesn鈥檛 matter, because we can win games with these simple skills.鈥

Cage said he frequently was told he needed to 鈥渞aise (his) value as a coach,鈥 gaining experience and knowledge and also a deeper understanding of how a football program fits into the bigger picture in a community. That football culture is a cornerstone at Cleveland, where he was coaching.

Cage said the new coaches can help bolster the confidence of younger Black coaches who want to someday put a fingerprint on their own teams.

鈥淎nd I even take it a step further,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just necessarily being a Black coach. It鈥檚 being a coach in general. It鈥檚 hard to break into this as it is.鈥

All four men will open their seasons next week. Rio Grande is at Academy on Thursday night. St. Pius visits defending Class 4A state champion Bloomfield on Friday, and down the road from there, Valencia travels to Kirtland Central. And this quartet of men will meet up several times during the 2023 season. Valencia plays Rio Grande and St. Pius. Academy also faces St. Pius.

Lee said there is definitely a kinship between the four men as they embark on this season.

鈥淚鈥檒l be watching them,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 great.鈥

And who knows, Flakes said, how the future might be shaped.

鈥淗aving us in the position we鈥檙e in, in addition to Landrick and Bruce,鈥 said Flakes, 鈥渨ill inspire other youth who look like us to continue to move forward.鈥

Meet the program builders

LEDARRIUS CAGE

Updated
LEDARRIUS CAGE
LEDARRIUS CAGE

CHRISTOPHER SMALLS

Updated
CHRISTOPHER SMALLS
CHRISTOPHER SMALLS

DAVID LEE

Updated
DAVID LEE
DAVID LEE

CURTIS FLAKES

Updated
CURTIS FLAKES
CURTIS FLAKES