Sometimes, the coaching carousel is almost formulaic.
Program struggles, coach exits after myriad factors thwart turnaround.
There is no routine, no precedent, for the situation at Northwestern State.
Thursday night, Northwestern State plays its first football game in 315 days – since the shooting death of former player Ronnie Caldwell and the decision to halt the season after a 37-20 loss to rival Southeastern Louisiana.
Blaine McCorkle, the first-year Demons head coach, embraces an opportunity to rebuild.
“Why do we coach? When I saw what happened in October, shutting down the season, for some reason I kind of felt like we could help these kids, help this place,” McCorkle tells FootballScoop. “It’s a real kind of call for me.
“I firmly believe coaching is not a job, it’s a calling. If God calls us and we are to do it for right reasons, why would everybody in the country not to want to coach at Northwestern State?”
McCorkle is fully aware the Demons enter this season without a win since Nov. 5, 2022, and losers in 21 of their past 28 games.
The son of veteran college coach Sam McCorkle and a former LSU player, he considers Louisiana his home.
The Natchitoches, Louisiana, community is eager to embrace and eager for a winner; McCorkle learns this within months of his new posting.
Charting the course, he also leans on a critical support system at home; his wife, Gina, is a former NCAA Division I field hockey coach at Richmond, among other spots.
Together, they seek to do something the Demons have not done in almost two decades – build a winner.
“The things people cared about the way people cared blew me away, and that’s exactly what drew me to it,” he says. “My wife was all in. When she was coaching at Richmond, she walked off the field seven times as conference champions.
“We’re a package deal with this. It’s neat to have a high-level coach you’re married to because you can go home and legit bounce things off of her.”
McCorkle specializes in turning around programs, including his final season at NCAA Division III program Belhaven last fall – an record-setting 9-2 campaign featuring a berth in the NCAA D3 Playoffs.
But he’s adamant he’s not protecting some secret formula. The success is in the work.