54°F
weather icon Cloudy

Football: Clayton returns to Trojans

Pahrump Valley High made it official and announced its new football coach for next season, Joe Clayton. He returns to the gridiron after a year of Gent ball, who said he will be moving up to coaching college football.

Clayton had left due to family matters. He had coached for 12 straight years with seven of those years at the high school. The last three years were as the head football coach.

As Trojans head coach, he was 9-19. In 2012 he took the Trojans to the playoffs, which was the first time they had gone since 2006. In his last year of coaching he had close to 100 kids coming out for football.

Annette Fuentes, who has a son on the team, was excited about Clayton returning.

“I think Joe is a great coach,” she said. “He really knows our kids very well because he takes the time know each kid’s strengths. He knows how to communicate with the kids and spends time with every boy on the team.”

Fuentes’ son, Aaron Fuentes played for Clayton during his sophomore year and was excited to have his old coach back too.

“It was like getting a breath of fresh air,” he said. “I love playing football for him because he is an old-school coach that works you hard to get good results.”

Parker Hart will be going out for quarterback and was equally elated.

“I like the program he runs and he makes us work hard,” Hart said.

Trojans football coaches are also excited. Fred Schmidt, longtime lineman coach, will return to coaching because Clayton is coming back.

“All of the coaches that coached with Joe were tight,” he said.

Trojans football coach Craig Rieger also was happy on the return.

“I am excited to coach with Coach Clayton again,” he said. “We have been coaching football together for about eight years.”

Trojans coach Joe Clayton said he never closed the door to return to coaching football.

“It feels awesome to be back,” Clayton said. “I left physically, but I never left mentally. It was extremely difficult for me to watch and follow the football program from the outside looking in.”

Clayton said what he missed the most was working with a close staff and the hard-working young men.

“The quality of football that we, as a staff, feel we brought before the 2015 season will continue without skipping a beat,” the coach said. “We plan to continue with the ‘Jet Offense’with a few added wrinkles. In 2013 and 2014, with the Jet Offense, we were able to put up some of the best numbers in scoring and yards in a season that Pahrump has seen in 40 years.”

Contact sports editor Vern Hee at vhee@pvtimes.com. On Twitter: @pvtimes

THE LATEST
Pahrump Valley baseball gets fifth straight win

Sitting undefeated in the 3A South-Mountain baseball standings, the Pahrump Valley Trojans got their fifth win in a row.

PVHS slowly catching up to No. 1 The Meadows

Kayne Horibe (8) has been essential in the last two games the Pahrump Valley baseball team has played, earning the most RBIs on the team.

Trojans home run isn’t enough for win

A home run from Madison Rodriguez (6) wasn’t enough for the Pahrump Valley softball team to beat the Sports Leadership & Management (SLAM) Bulls in a conference game on Wednesday.

SOFTBALL: Trojans top Moapa, fall to Needles

The Trojans softball team suffered their first loss this season against a school from a neighboring state on Monday, but it also added a win in a weekend game against Moapa Valley (2-1) at home.

Muckers baseball off to 1-3 start this season

By the end of the weekend, the Tonopah Muckers had played four games, where they scored over 17 runs.

Muckers start softball season 1-3

Tonopah softball started their season over the weekend with four games on Friday and Saturday.

RODEO 2024: Here are the winners

The Nevada State High School Rodeo was in Pahrump last weekend where junior and senior high school students from around the state came to compete after their winter break.

Trojans girls basketball moves on to the quarterfinals

After Avery Moore stole a pass from the Sports Leadership and Management (SLAM) girls basketball team she passed the ball to Paris Coleman who ran up and scored the team’s fourth two-pointer in less than two minutes.