Back in the Valley
JON ALLEN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 year, 8 months AGO
SPORTS REPORTER Jon Allen is a sports reporter for the Daily Inter Lake. He covers youth and high school athletics across the Flathead Valley and Northwest Montana. Allen reports on major games, athletes and teams throughout the region’s prep sports landscape. In addition to game coverage, he contributes features and analysis across print and digital platforms. Jon can be seen on our Big Sky Now podcast, weighing in on the college landscape. His work highlights the athletes and communities that define Northwest Montana sports. IMPACT: Jon’s work tells the stories of local athletes and the communities that support them. | July 21, 2024 8:23 AM
Former Flathead quarterback Brock Osweiler took the field at Legends Stadium one more time Saturday.
This time, he was helping coach over 200 current and future Braves at the Flathead football camp.
Osweiler reminisced about his youth football days and walking up Third Avenue West ahead of games each Friday night.
“Seeing those 200 third through eighth graders running around, I saw myself in so many of them,” said Osweiler, the former NFL quarterback and current ESPN football analyst. “It fills my heart with joy. Coming out on this football field, Legends Stadium, in the heat of summer was some of my best childhood memories.”
Campers split into age groups as they ran through different drills on both offense and defense, trying to work passing, catching, running and tackling. Following the drills campers gathered for some friendly competitions. including throwing accuracy, tug-of-war and a 50-yard dash.
Lunch and ice cream was provided for all campers after the day was over.
First on the field was a group of high school quarterbacks, receivers and tight ends for a throwing session as the Braves continue summer workouts ahead of the 2024 season.
Osweiler delivered a passionate message following the session about changing the narrative of Flathead football from recent seasons.
“My message to them was they’re going to dictate what their season is going be by how hard they work in the offseason,” Osweiler said. “My message was. ‘Listen you are out here working hard, that’s great, because today is going to decide if you win on Friday night in the fall.’
“You guys as football players have the opportunity to go change that narrative. You can change that narrative in the weight room, by coming out on the football field without your coaches and doing throwing sessions and having offensive and defensive linemen doing drills. You guys control that.”
This is the second year in a row that Osweiler made the trip up to Kalispell for a football camp. Osweiler and Braves head coach Caleb Aland said the turnout doubled from last summer.
Current Braves junior quarterback Eli Coopman, who is fighting for the starting job, said the team benefited greatly from that camp.
“I learned a lot from (Osweiler), he showed me a lot of mechanics and footwork drills, but also I can see his spirit and his willingness to work hard and just become a better football player,” Coopman said.
Though grateful for his time as a professional player, Osweiler says he sees the game in a different perspective now as an analyst and he strives to use both experiences when coaching.
“I think the more you can do within the sport and touch on different areas, the better coach you can be,” Osweiler said.
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