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Group photo of the 2023 Rams football team.

Football Coaches Receive Conference Awards

by | Aug 1, 2023

This article was originally published in the 2023 edition of 吃瓜社鈥檚 Spire magazine.

Since 2010, when 吃瓜社 announced that it would reinstate its football program, the Rams have persevered through several peaks and valleys. BU, having now enjoyed this iteration of the program for a decade, has celebrated several achievements by these student-athletes made possible by their numerous supporters, professors, mentors, and coaches. The excellence of the coaching staff is not only recognized within the campus community but throughout the region with the Appalachian Athletic Conference (AAC) naming BU鈥檚 Dewey Lusk a co-Coach of the Year and BU鈥檚 Mike Ketchum a co-Assistant Coach of the Year.

Dewey joined the Rams family in 2017 as the institution鈥檚 tenth head football coach and the third since the football program restarted intercollegiate competition in 2012. Now preparing for his eighth season with the Rams, he brings to the table thirty-eight years of coaching experience in both baseball and football. In November 2022, he was named Football Coach of the Year by the AAC alongside James Miller of Reinhardt University. He sees coaching as an opportunity not only to push young men toward athletic excellence but excellence in every aspect of life. Wanting his athletes to handle adversity well, he says, 鈥淔ootball is just like a game of life; it鈥檚 not whether you鈥檙e going to get knocked down 鈥 because we鈥檙e all going to get knocked down 鈥 but it鈥檚 how you get back up.鈥

Taking late night calls from athletes and leading conversations on sportsmanship at practice, Dewey does everything he can to ensure his players succeed on and off the field. 鈥淚t takes a whole village to raise a family,鈥 he says, always being sure to applaud the rest of the coaching staff, as well as Emily Cook, BU鈥檚 Director of Counseling Services, and Reverend Brent Brown, the team鈥檚 chaplain, for guarding the students鈥 spiritual and mental well-being.

鈥淐oach Lusk is a great guy to work for,鈥 defensive coordinator Mike Ketchum said. 鈥淗e gives you plenty of leeway to coach your position and to coach the kids, and he鈥檚 just been great to me.鈥

Dewey鈥檚 career began in 1985 at Gardner-Webb University. While completing a Master of Arts in Physical Education, he served as a graduate assistant. Since then, he has fulfilled his calling to help young adults become team players and well-rounded individuals through athletics. He explained, 鈥淢any, many years ago, I was sitting in church, and the preacher said, 鈥楪od gave us all a gift when He put us on this earth.鈥 I鈥檓 sitting there wondering, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 my gift? What am I supposed to be doing?鈥 and it hit me like a ton of bricks: I鈥檓 supposed to help kids.鈥

He moved into the role of assistant football coach in 1987 before returning to his alma mater, Emory & Henry College, in 1990. There, he served as an assistant football coach, volunteering for the first year while coaching Abingdon High School鈥檚 football and junior varsity basketball teams. He became Emory & Henry鈥檚 offensive coordinator in 1991 and simultaneously served as the institution鈥檚 head baseball coach from 1992 to 2004. He was named Baseball Coach of the Year by the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC) in 1998.

鈥淚f you ever run a baseball program by yourself, you learn a lot about coaching. People don鈥檛 realize how much is going on during a baseball game until you have to do it by yourself: call the pitches, arrange the defense, make pitching changes, get the field ready. I mean, there was a lot to it,鈥 Dewey said.

The University of Virginia at Wise welcomed Dewey as associate head football coach and offensive coordinator in 2005 before making him head football coach in 2011. After a season as Webber International University鈥檚 offensive coordinator in 2016, Dewey made his way to Bluefield. In his first season, he guided the Rams to more wins than the team had in its previous five seasons combined. In 2018, he coached the first BU football player named an All-American Athlete, DaMarcus Wimbush.

Over the past seven seasons, Dewey has strived to be a good role model and make positive changes to the team鈥檚 culture, telling his players, 鈥淏e where you鈥檙e supposed to, be on time, do the right thing, know how to handle adversity, and be willing to help somebody when they need help.鈥

Dewey鈥檚 leadership has created a chain reaction, Mike explained, as upperclassmen have matured, and newcomers followed in their footsteps. 鈥淲hen the younger players see the older players going to class, doing their work, they鈥檙e going to follow suit, and that has really, really helped.鈥

The way Dewey and the other coaches have invested in their players has certainly paid off, as evidenced by the abundance of awards they received from the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, American Football Coaches Association, and Virginia Sports Information Directors for both athletic and academic achievements.

Dewey believes his Coach of the Year award reflects the efforts of the team and the faculty and staff at Bluefield. He 鈥渃an鈥檛 do it without鈥 the institution鈥檚 athletic trainers and administration, as well as the admissions, financial aid, cafeteria, and Academic Center for Excellence (ACE) staff. Though he said the award came as a surprise, he named over a dozen players as reasons the Rams football program stands out.

吃瓜社 can equip students to go further professionally, athletically, and spiritually because of our engaged alumni and friends, generous donors, and excellent faculty and staff. Mike Ketchum, the offensive line coach and run game coordinator for Rams football, shared, 鈥淚 think one of the things about our coaching staff, the Athletic department in general, and of course, the entire faculty and staff is that everybody is a teacher, everybody wants to help. Everybody鈥檚 trying to help people succeed.鈥

In November 2022, he was named Assistant Football Coach of the Year by the AAC alongside Greg Blue of Reinhardt University.

Mike鈥檚 coaching career started at Eau Gallie High School, where he was the offensive line coach for the JV team in 1979. He served as a graduate assistant at the University of Florida during the 1983-1984 season while pursuing a master鈥檚 in education, helping bring the team to victory at the Southeastern Conference (SEC) championship and Gator Bowl. He later served at Carson-Newman College as the offensive line coach and the defensive line coach, seeing that team claim a NAIA championship win in 1986 and become the national runner-up the following season.

Mike returned to his alma mater, Guilford College, as head football coach in 1991, where he was twice named Conference Coach of the Year. Before his tenure ended in 2004, Guilford鈥檚 football team claimed the only two conference championships in the program鈥檚 history and produced six All[1]-Americans and sixty-seven All-Conference players. While coaching, he also served as Director of Athletics from 1996 until 2002.

鈥淭here鈥檚 been some really good things, Mike said, 鈥渂ut none of those beat the relationships with the coaches and the players that you establish. You know, championships and stuff are great, but the relationships that you get through coaching, that鈥檚 the best part by far, and there have been a lot of relationships over 45 years.鈥

Mike came to Bluefield from Hampton University after the departure of Markus Lawrence, who he had recommended to Dewey. With Markus headed for Alabama, Dewey called Mike, a friend since the mid-1980s, asking for another recommendation, and Mike expressed his own interest in the position.

鈥淗e鈥檚 just salt of the earth,鈥 Dewey said about Mike. 鈥淭he kids love him. Those boys need someone to kick their tail and hug their neck, and he does that all at the same time. Those boys eat it up when he fusses at them.鈥

The Assistant Coach of the Year award was no surprise to Mike 鈥渂ecause the last two years, we鈥檝e been awfully good,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ow, I would like to take credit for that, but I think you can see that it actually corresponds with when Nathan Herstich got here.鈥

From Dr. Olive鈥檚 vision for the institution to Dewey鈥檚 vision for the football program, 鈥渋t all fits together,鈥 Mike said. He added, 鈥淓verybody seems to be on the same page, and that is really, really helpful.鈥

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