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Dorrel legacy relies on recruiting success Brandon Zenner Editor in Chief @brandonzenner In December of 2010, Adam Dorrel was not expected to have his own office as the head football coach at Northwest Missouri State. That very office belonged to current Athletics Director Mel Tjeerdsma for 17 years and late head coach Scott Bostwick for nearly six months. Four seasons, 46 wins, two MIAA titles and one National Championship later, the months continue to sneak up on what may be Dorrel’s most crucial season as head football coach of the Bearcats. The majority of the biggest contributors to the Division II powerhouse, products of Tjeerdsma and Bostwick, are now on to life after college football and the pressure will be on to Dorrel to capitalize with the recruits he has brought to Maryville himself. To put the success of Northwest under Tjeerdsma in perspective, he witnessed 16 losses in his first two seasons – he went on to doubledigit win seasons in 13 of the next 15 seasons along with seven national title appearances – and was a victim to only 46 defeats in his 17 seasons as head coach. Tjeerdsma also produced more than 40 AllAmericans. While Bostwick never got the opportunity to stand on the sideline as head coach of the Bearcats, he spent six months finalizing the work Tjeerdsma did on the recruiting trail to bring in impact players such as defensive lineman Brandon Yost and quarterback Brady Bolles. When Dorrel was announced head coach in June of 2011, he said “I look forward to building on a proud tradition and fully embracing the tremendous responsibility that comes with leading this program.” That responsibility has never been as high. With minimal players remaining from the TjeerdsmaBostwick era, this team and program has finally been turned over to Dorrel. The days of the being led by D.J. Gnader, Eric Reimer, Matt Longacre and

Coach Dorrel

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Success for Dorrel legacy lies in his ability to recruit, produce his own talent.

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Page 1: Coach Dorrel

Dorrel legacy relies on recruiting success  Brandon Zenner Editor in Chief @brandonzenner  

In December of 2010, Adam Dorrel was not expected to have his own office as the head football coach at Northwest Missouri State. That very office belonged to current Athletics Director Mel Tjeerdsma for 17 years and late head coach Scott Bostwick for nearly six months. 

Four seasons, 46 wins, two MIAA titles and one National Championship later, the months continue to sneak up on what may be Dorrel’s most crucial season as head football coach of the Bearcats. The majority of the biggest contributors to the Division II powerhouse, products of Tjeerdsma and Bostwick, are now on to life after college football and the pressure will be on to Dorrel to capitalize with the recruits he has brought to Maryville himself. 

To put the success of Northwest under Tjeerdsma in perspective, he witnessed 16 losses in his first two seasons – he went on to double­digit win seasons in 13 of the next 15 seasons along with seven national title appearances – and was a victim to only 46 defeats in his 17 seasons as head coach. Tjeerdsma also produced more than 40 All­Americans. 

While Bostwick never got the opportunity to stand on the sideline as head coach of the Bearcats, he spent six months finalizing the work Tjeerdsma did on the recruiting trail to bring in impact players such as defensive lineman Brandon Yost and quarterback Brady Bolles. 

When Dorrel was announced head coach in June of 2011, he said “I look forward to building on a proud tradition and fully embracing the tremendous responsibility that comes with leading this program.” That responsibility has never been as high. 

With minimal players remaining from the Tjeerdsma­Bostwick era, this team and program has finally been turned over to Dorrel. The days of the being led by D.J. Gnader, Eric Reimer, Matt Longacre and 

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company are over and the eyes will be on the players that Dorrel has produced and brought to this school on his lonesome. 

Dorrel comes from an offensive background, having been an All­American offensive lineman under Coact T from ‘94 until ‘97. Dorrel returned to Northwest to become offensive coordinator and produced 14 All­Americans in his seven seasons. 

In 2014, the Bearcats saw injuries on the offensive side of the ball at times and were ranked 101 of 167 schools in passing offense at 207 yards per game and 82nd in passing efficiency.  

With offensive sides that were ranked in the top 10 with Dorrel at coordinator, the Bearcats’ offense ranked 50 in total offense last season. With a matured Bolles returning alongside the running tandem of Phil Jackson II and Cameron Wilcox, including wideouts George Sehl and Quanzee Johnson (both who showed sparks when their number was called), Dorrel should be able to build around the top­20 rush attack from 2014. 

It is the defensive side of the ball that may hurt the Bearcats, which shies away from the trend Northwest has witnessed the past five years. Four Bearcats on the defensive side that have a chance in the NFL graduated – linebackers Gnader, Reimer, defensive end Longacre and defensive back Travis Manning. The Bearcats posted the top defensive side in the country, allowing just 213 yards per game, anchored by a front seven that helped Northwest to the second­ranked rushing defense. Defensive backs Marcus Jones and Bryce Enyard will continue their level of play, along with linemen Collin Bevins and Brandon Yost to continue the winning tradition at Northwest. 

With much of the great talent the Bearcats have produced in the last five years gone, it is now on Dorrel and his recruits to get Northwest to an 11th consecutive playoff.