It is high-time to put Coach Dan Goble in the KHSAA Hall of Fame. @minguabeefjerky @1776Bank @PrepSpin @KyHighFootball @Christian_Co270 @CountyColonels @BentzelChris @KHSAA @MaxPreps @kyhighs

Coach Dan Goble

I have never known a better football coach nor man then Coach (Dan) Goble. I am who I am because of him. He’s made me a better player, coach, and man for having had my life intersect with his.

Tony Mccombs, Linebacker Coach/Recruiting Coordinator Warner University; Inducted into the EKU Football Hall of Fame as a player and 5-year NFL veteran

He should be a lock.

Mike Holcomb, Head Coach at Madison Central (6A semifinalist in ’21), winner of three (3) titles at Breathitt County, on whether Coach Goble should be enshrined.

Sometimes around the magazine we get summoned to champion causes. Some of what we do serves the public more than it serves our business interests.

There are some causes we are pleased to advocate. Today’s cause is such an instance.

Dan Goble

A member of our editorial board, Fletcher Long, was summoned to the office of the District’s Director of Athletics today in Christian County, Kentucky. All of us at the magazine were both thrilled at the prospect and curious about the reason for the perceived need for our services.

The questions came fast and furiously when Long called into the office afterward. Long told the office, “Coach Stovall and Mr. Lindsey Clark (CCPS Board Member) have asked KPGFootball to help get Coach Dan Goble inducted into the KHSAA Hall of Fame.” Well, I thought upon hearing this, at least they didn’t ask us for anything difficult.

I am being completely serious. Why would getting Dan Goble inducted into the KHSAA Hall of Fame even be a challenge?

After all, the man coached 37-years and only had 7-losing seasons among the bunch. Coach Goble has done much more than just that.

We are talking about a guy who won 185-football games as a head football coach. We are discussing a guy who won two 4A titles when 4A was the highest classification of football competition played in the commonwealth (1982, 1984). Class 4A was known as “big boy football” in those days.

Coach Goble won 12-WKC championships (1981, ’82, ’83, ’84, ’85, ’88, ’89, ’90, ’91, ’92, ’93, & ’96), 6-District titles (1981, ’82, ’84, ’85, ’92, & ’93), and 3-Regional titles (’82, ’84, & ’92). Is that the Coach Goble we are discussing?

How can getting him inducted into the Hall of Fame be any trouble? Heck, this ain’t no hill for a bunch of steppers.

Coach Goble was the Kelloggs Kentucky 4A Coach of the Year in 1982 and the Champion Products Kentucky 4A Coach of the Year in 1984. Coach Goble won the Kentucky New Era’s Coach of the Year Award in both 1991 & 1992.

This is the guy we need to help get in the Hall of Fame? Piece of cake! Slice of pie!

Kentucky New Era file photo Christian County quarterback Phillip Brooks (10) prepares to hand off the ball to running back Mack Major during the Colonels’ 1982 Class 4-A state championship game against Louisville Southern. The Colonels won the game 10-3 for the school’s first state football championship.

We called our buddy Coach Mike Holcomb. “Coach Holc,” as he is called by the people who know and love him (pretty much everyone who doesn’t regularly appear on his schedule) is one game short of winning number 300 in his own illustrious career. “Coach Holc” won 2A titles in 1995, ’96, and ’02, was runner up in ’08.

“Coach Holc” had his Madison Central Indians in the Class 6A semis just last season. Holcomb is universally believed to be a sure-fire, first-ballot Hall of Famer when he hangs up his whistle.

We called Coach Holc and asked if he would help us get Coach Goble in the KHSAA Hall of Fame. Holc’s response, “He (Coach Dan Goble) should be a lock.” One would think.

Never was able to get a W against Coach Goble as a player in the 80’s, but I was fortunate enough to have a son play for a CCHS team with him on the staff. There was neither a finer man nor football coach to ever walk the sideline. If Dan Goble isn’t HOF material there shouldn’t even be one.

Chuck Hughes, Former All-Stater at Hopkinsville High and former Hilltopper at WKU

So here we are…charged with making Coach Goble’s “best case” for enshrinement. In reality, Goble achieved so much it is hard to know where to begin or exactly what to include. We can’t put everything, there isn’t enough room on the nomination form.

Consider this…in addition to everything else we have above listed, Goble began his coaching career at Erlanger Lloyd where he helped that team win a 1A title (1965). Then he went to Shelby County where his first team was 0-10. He took the next two teams to 6-4 and 10-1 before moving to Louisville’s Atherton High.

Goble was at Atherton for nine-seasons. Goble finished with a winning record (48-47-2). Leaving Atherton with a winning overall record in those days was a feat worthy of Hall of Fame consideration in and of itself.

Goble next spent 21-seasons at the helm of Christian County High School when it played Kentucky 4A or “big-boy football.” Over that tenure, Goble became the program’s all-time winningest coach with 121-wins and the only coach, outside of Louisville, to win a football title in Kentucky’s largest classification of competition twice.

Consider this, and I really want you to think about this for a moment; four (4) schools had all-time seasons with Coach Goble either at the helm or on its football coaching staff. How many coaches Kentucky-wide can make such a claim?

Erlanger Lloyd was 12-1 in 1965 with him as an assistant. Shelby County was 10-1 in 1971 with Goble at the helm. Atherton turned in a 9-1 worksheet with Goble as its head coach in 1973. Christian County went 14-1 in 1982.

Shelby County, a place he coached a whopping three (3) years, still hosts an annual fishing tournament named for him. That is how much Coach Goble meant to those young men, they still come back yearly just to fish in a tournament carrying his name.

Being a championship football official for almost 30 years, I called several big games for Coach Goble over my career. I never had a coach treat my crews any better than he. Coach Goble was both a Hall of Fame coach and person. Coach Goble has helped many people in our community in ways other people aren’t even aware.

Mike Walker, KHSAA football championship official

Perhaps any coach’s most lasting legacy is the impact the coach has on the young men who played for him. Tony McCombs, one of his most famous players at Christian County, had some incredible things to say about his old high school football coach.

What he had to say was convincing to us. Of course, McCombs had us at “hello.”

Coach McCombs, formerly known around Hopkinsville as “Cheese,” was among the best players to ever play for Goble. Coach McCombs went on to have a Hall of Fame, All-American and All-OVC career as an EKU Colonel before five years in the NFL as a linebacker.

“Cheese” McCombs

Now coaching linebackers and serving as Recruiting Coordinator at Warner University, McCombs told us the following, “I have been involved in football from the high school level to the NFL as a player and coach. I have played for and worked for many coaches over that time.”

McCombs continued, “I have never known a better football coach nor man than Coach Goble. I am who I am because of him.”

“He’s made me a better player, a better coach, and a better man for having had my life intersect with his. He will always be, in my opinion, one of the best to ever have done it. (Coach Goble) set almost impossible to reach standards along the way.”

With all of the body of work considered, is there any doubt in any of your minds Dan Goble should be enshrined in the KHSAA Hall of Fame? No sir, we don’t have a moment’s hesitation about that either.

Let’s get behind this application. Christian County School Board, you had us at “hello.” Next time, ask us for something a little more challenging.

This is Coach HB Lyon, reporting for KPGFootball, and we’re JUST CALLING IT LIKE WE SEE IT!

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About Henry Lyon 1210 Articles
Have coached at the high school and middle school level. Have worked in athletic administration. Conceal my identity to enable my candor on articles published by this magazine. Only members of the editorial board are aware of my true identity.

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