Sunday, April 30, 2017

Chiesa named new football coach at North Farmington.

Written Sunday April 30th at 5:40 PM
Updated Thursday May 4th at 11:30 AM

North Farmington has found their football coach.

Bob Chiesa was named football coach succeeding Todd Schultz whom will focus on being the Athletic Director at North Farmington.

From two accurate sources Chiesa was named Raiders coach on Friday. He met with the players on the same day he was named coach.

Chiesa was a member of the Michigan football team in 1978 and 1979. He was a Letterman for the school under legendary coach Bo Schembechler. Chiesa has been well known around High School Football especially from his days in the former Kensington Lakes Activities Association. He was the defensive coordinator at Hartland. When Chiesa was there, the Eagles allowed 168 points in 2014, in which Hartland was a playoff team that season. 

Chiesa left Hartland in 2015, in which he became the defensive and special teams’ coordinators at Waterford Mott. His defense allowed 283 points including two games where they allowed 37 points against Lakeland and 35 against Walled Lake Central last season.

Chiesa takes over a North Farmington football team that was abysmal, allowing 334 points and only scored 32 points in nine games. The Raiders had to forfeit their game against Harrison for not having enough players last season.

North Farmington went winless in the White and moved down to the Blue this season.

North Farmington hopes that Chiesa can turn around a program that is in desperate need of a jump start heading into the season. The Raiders will have some players to lean on in quarterbacks Nigel Weems and Brendan Hudson, along with running backs Taj Cheathem and Dylan Gordon, and wide receivers Jaylen Ferguson, and Myles Gresham.

Chiesa has had a checkered past according to MIPrepZone. In 2011, he was suspended along with another former assistant coach Bill Brenner when he was an assistant at Walled Lake Western for an alleged hazing incident off campus at a team gathering. He was at the School Board meeting but did not speak.

Chiesa was cleared from any wrong doing surrounding the incident.

Chiesa has bounced back since the incident as mentioned with two successful defensive coordinating jobs at Waterford Mott and at Hartland to earn his first opportunity as a head coach.

North Farmington opens up the season at Grand Valley State against Greenville in August. The Raiders will compete in the Blue this season and will have a tough schedule which includes games against Farmington, Avondale, Ferndale, and Pontiac Notre Dame Prep.

Thoughts.

This is an interesting hire for North Farmington because Chiesa is a strong defensive minded coach despite having a checkered past when he was at Walled Lake Western but he had success at Hartland and at Waterford Mott.

I’m curious how his style of play would match up against OAA teams especially against those whom are offensive powers in the Blue like Avondale and Ferndale. Chiesa takes over a defense that was just awful a season ago allowing the third most points in the league. If Chiesa can get a strong offensive coordinator whom can put up some points and address the football program from the freshman level up then maybe the Raiders could go somewhere this season. North Farmington has not made the playoffs since 2013.

Chiesa will have a very tough challenge ahead of him. He must create a Junior Varsity team and get the numbers back up at North Farmington. North Farmington has an enrollment of 1249 students for next season so there is talent there, it's just getting the students out to play football for the Raiders.

Stay tuned to OAA Now for updates on this developing story.

Here is the MIPrepZone story surrounding the checkered past.

4 comments:

  1. Great insight as always, but some key facts have been omitted which is surprising.

    The Walled Lake Western incident you reference, Coach Chiesa was completely cleared of everything as it came out he was not even there when the alleged incident occurred as he did not attend these. If I may add my personal feeling, he's a heck of a coach and I wish he was still coaching my son.

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  2. I'll update it shortly. Anyway I think he will do a great job at North Farmington but there are so many problems surrounding that program that he has to fix. He has to address the JV team situation, also on the Varsity front, if he can get a strong offensive coordinator that can score points and use his defense to fix that was not very good last year then maybe this could be a playoff team. Also schedule is tough, have to play Avondale, Ferndale, Farmington, NDP, and Greenville. Won't be easy games but we'll see what happens.

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  3. Things have already started to turn around. Nearly 100 signed up this year for football. Compared to last years 45.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Biggest omission from this article is that he has 2 state titles as a varsity assistant coach. 1996, 1999 wlw.

    ReplyDelete

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I have highest function of autism (Asperger Syndrome.) I'm a huge Dallas Stars fan. I like to play and watch football, especially when the Dragons play on Friday nights. I am a 2006 alum and used to play football for the Dragons. I ran track, I ran the 100, 200, 400 meter dashes along with shot-put and discus. During my time in Orion I was a manager for Junior Varsity Boys Basketball team. I'm the volleyball, girls basketball, and football announcer for the team and do the book on the road for girls basketball. I do the clock for volleyball in the fall along with girls basketball in the winter and announce some boys basketball games as well. In the spring I coach shot-put at Scripps Middle School, in my fifth season coaching. I run the shot-put for high school meets. I played Special Olympics Basketball, I've won three gold medals for them. I host "Between Taorminas" which is on ONTV along with a podcast called "OAA Now". In other various things outside of Lake Orion, I love to jet ski over Saginaw Bay. Saginaw Bay is basically my life. I'm a trained weather spotter for the National Weather Service for Oakland and Huron counties.