Since Jeff Robinson took over as head
coach for the Chilhowie Warriors varsity baseball team in 2002 the
program has taken an obvious shift upward. While Robinson would contribute the
success to his talented players as any noble coach would, his knowledge and love
for the game is the crucial cornerstone for Chilhowie's baseball success. Since
2002, Chilhowie has been on the upper crust of the district including
consecutive Region C playoff appearances.
Jeff Robinson was gracious enough to lend some time to
Hogoheegee.com for an interview
about his career and this up and coming season.
(HogoOnline) What Coaches have been influential to you and your baseball career
(playing/coaching)?
(Coach) First of all, it would have to be Sam McKinney. He was my
baseball coach all the way through high school and taught me a lot about the
game. Coach McKinney was also kind enough have me back on his coaching staff
after I got out of college. When he resigned after coaching at Chilhowie for 11
years, I got the job. I still use some of the same philosophies I learned from
him many years ago. The second coach that has been very influential to me in my
baseball career as both a player and a coach is Danny Burnett. He
recruited me out of high school and I was part of his first recruiting class at
King College. He remained my coach during all four of my years at KC and we
still keep in contact.
(HogoOnline) Thinking back on your high school playing days at Chilhowie, what
was one (or what are some) memorable high school feat(s) that you or your team
accomplished?
(Coach) There would have to be two:
First, my Junior year in 1993 when we beat Castlewood and ace pitcher
Denny Wagner 2-1 at Chilhowie on a suicide squeeze in the bottom of the 7th.
Wagner had a 94 mph fastball and was drafted by the Oakland A's after a good
career at VT. I think he spent several seasons in the minors and made it as high
as AA. He only lost two or three games in his entire high school career and that
was one of them.
Second, during my senior year in 1994 we beat PH at their old field below
the pool 7-6. We were up 7-5 with the bases loaded and 2-outs in the bottom of
the 7th when somebody singled to me in centerfield and I threw out the runner
that was on second at the plate to end the game.
(HogoOnline) What has been your best moment as a coach?
(Coach) O.K. I'm going to have to give you top 5 on this one (in no particular
order):
2003 Hogoheegee District Tournament Semi-finals at JSB. We rallied to beat
Lebanon 6-4. It clinched our first regional tournament appearance.
May 22, 2006 – We went into the last day of the regular season in 3rd place and
needed to beat both GW and JSB on the same day at Warrior Field to tie for the
Regular Season Championship and force a one-game playoff for the automatic
regional berth. We beat GW 2-1 on a suicide squeeze in the bottom of the 7th and
followed that up with a 9-4 win over JSB in the second game that day.
May 18, 2007 – We again needed to beat John Battle on the last day of the
regular season (this time at Battle) to tie for the regular season championship
and force another one-game playoff. Keith Fenner had the gutsiest performance
I've ever seen in a 1-0 win. He overcame a bases loaded, nobody out situation in
the bottom of the 7th to secure the win.
May 21, 2007 – On the following Monday at Patrick Henry we beat John Battle 6-5
on a suicide squeeze in the bottom of the 8th to win the one-game playoff and
secure our second regional berth.
Finally, 2007 Region C Quarterfinal game at Chilhowie. Following a 30-minute
rain delay, we rallied from a 3-1 deficit by scoring 5 runs off of ace pitcher
Abram Williams in the bottom of the 6th to beat Radford 6-3.
(HogoOnline) You've put Chilhowie baseball on the map. What do you do
differently than what was done 8/9 years ago?
(Coach) Chilhowie has, in my lifetime, always been known as a football and
basketball school (probably in that order). When I first took the job at
Chilhowie prior to the 2002 season, baseball was just something to do between
basketball and football seasons. I had been involved in the Little League
program at Chilhowie as an umpire since I was in high school. I knew we had some
really good baseball talent coming, and to tell you the truth really good
baseball talent there when I took over. But I knew if we were ever going to be
able to consistently compete with the John Battles (who was coming off back to
back Group A State Championships) and Lebanon's, we would have to change the
attitude toward the sport and make it mean something special to play baseball at
Chilhowie. We modeled ourselves after the most successful programs in our area
(VA High, John Battle, Abingdon, etc.) and set our goals high…and made our
players believe we could reach them. Add some of the winners and great assistant
coaches I have had over the last 7 years and it's not hard to see why we have
had so much success.
(HogoOnline) If you could play one team that you've not been able to schedule,
who would it be?
(Coach) I have always believed in playing as tough a non-district schedule as
possible. In the past, we have played such non-district teams as Abingdon,
Sullivan East, Johnson County (TN), & Honaker. Last year we finally got into the
Coppinger Tournament in Bluefield and got an opportunity to play such teams as
Tazewell and Oak Hill, WV (I think they finished the season with a 32-4 record).
This year we will once again play in the Coppinger and have regular season games
with such teams as Grayson County and Richlands. My philosophy is that to be the
best you have to play the best.
(HogoOnline) At what point did you decide you wanted to become a teacher and a
coach?
(Coach) After we were eliminated from the State Basketball Tournament my Senior
year, Mike Sturgill (who was my football coach and also served as our
assistant basketball coach) told me to go to college and get my degree, then
come back to Chilhowie and help him coach. I had never really thought much about
teaching and coaching until then. While I was at King I briefly thought about
going to law school, but in the end I could not bear the thought of giving up
athletics and the sports that had been such a big part of my life.
(HogoOnline) You've been at Chilhowie for a while; do you see yourself retiring
there?
(Coach) Put it this way…My son is 15 months old and I would like to coach him
one day.
(HogoOnline) Many baseball professionals at all levels have superstitions and
pregame rituals they perform prior to a game. Do you have any worth noting?
(Coach) Unfortunately I do. Sometimes they become hard to keep up with. For
example, I refuse to wash my socks during a winning streak. My assistant coaches
hate that one. Also, last year my son was only a few months old during baseball
season. At one point in the year, we were 4-4 and he had only been to a few
games due to the cold weather. He came to this particular game and I walked with
him out onto the field while our players were stretching and they all rubbed his
head for good luck. We won that game and ended up winning 14 of the next 15. In
all those wins but one (you guessed it, the loss) we rubbed his head. Poor
fellow…one Saturday morning on the way to Bluefield we stopped the bus at my
house just to rub his head.
(HogoOnline) The R&R committee recently postponed consideration of a 5 division
realignment. What are your thoughts on that realignment? In favor of it or no?
(Coach) I'm in favor of anything to make it more fair for the smaller schools.
Our enrollment is not as small as some schools (even in the Hogo), but trying to
compete in Region C is very tough…especially with all the former AA schools that
have moved down over the past couple of decades. Our enrollment at CHS hovers
around 400, give or take. When you look at schools like Grayson County, Floyd
County, Giles, Fort Chiswell, and Glenvar all with enrollments over or near 600,
it makes a difference. Large schools like VA High, Gate City, and JJ Kelly in
Region D generally dominate. Go on up the road to Region A and B and the gap
only widens. For example, Goochland, who won the 2006 Group A State Championship
has an enrollment of nearly 800.
(HogoOnline) Besides your home-field, what other field is one of your favorites
to play on? Why?
(Coach) I have always liked Patrick Henry's new field. There's something about
the atmosphere of playing a night game with the crowd right on top of you. Lots
of fun and we have had many great battles there under the lights.
Former Hogoheegee schools Lebanon and Honaker have awesome facilities. I have
always enjoyed going there. Both have classy programs and coaches that really
care about their fields…and it shows.
(HogoOnline) How excited are you about this season? Anything you can add about
this upcoming season?
(Coach) The prospect of the challenge of a new season always excites me. This
season looks to be very challenging for a number of reasons, but our kids have a
great attitude and work ethic. We have a combination of experienced position
players and hitters and young but talented players moving up from the JV team.
We do not have the pitching depth we have had over the past several years, but
hopefully we can develop pitching as the season progresses. With any luck, when
its all said and done we will be able to play past the district tournament.
(HogoOnline) With Jerad Ward, one of your former players, taking over the
head coaching job at George Wythe, does this add a new twist to the rivalry?
(Coach) I think the GW-Chilhowie baseball rivalry was already pretty good to
start with, but this definitely adds a little more to it considering the fact
that Jerad was one of my former players. Joey Russell (another CHS
Alumni) did a great job with the GW baseball program during his stint as head
coach and made them a consistent winner. So I think Jerad finds himself in a
situation similar to the one I was in eight years ago, and that is a good
situation to build something without starting from scratch.
Jerad remains to this day the best all-around baseball player that I have ever
coached. I was an assistant coach at Chilhowie his Freshman, Sophomore, and
Junior years, but I was Jerad's head coach for his Senior year, and what a year
it was. He basically rewrote the record book at Chilhowie that year and still
holds some records that I think will never be broken. He brings a lot of fire
and enthusiasm to the game and I look forward to facing him in the future