May 30, 2026

Building Corners From the Ground Up: Inside Waxahachie's 6A Defense | ft. Rashawn Moser

Building Corners From the Ground Up: Inside Waxahachie's 6A Defense | ft. Rashawn Moser

Send us Fan Mail Waxahachie corners coach Rashawn Moser joins the show to talk Texas high school football, what it takes to develop elite defensive backs in one of the most competitive states in the country, and the culture behind a program that went from 0-9 to a 6A State Quarterfinals run. We get into his coaching path — from Nolan Catholic to Greenhill to Henderson State and back home to Waxahachie. How he teaches press coverage against 6A receivers. What the new coaching staff transition ...

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Send us Fan Mail

Waxahachie corners coach Rashawn Moser joins the show to talk Texas high school football, what it takes to develop elite defensive backs in one of the most competitive states in the country, and the culture behind a program that went from 0-9 to a 6A State Quarterfinals run.

We get into his coaching path — from Nolan Catholic to Greenhill to Henderson State and back home to Waxahachie. How he teaches press coverage against 6A receivers. What the new coaching staff transition means for the Indians in 2026. And what separates the corners who make it from the ones who don't.


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SPEAKER_01

A native of Waxahatchie, Texas. Hopefully I got that pronunciation right. The current coach for the Indians for their cornerbacks. Welcome, Coach Moser. How are you doing?

SPEAKER_00

I'm doing good, man. Thank you for having me. It's a blessing, bro.

SPEAKER_01

Amazing. I know we really appreciate you joining us today to talk about your journey as well as uh the school you're coaching, what the plans are going forward, and the ever-elusive and the very important cornerback position. Before we get into cornerback football stuff, what's your journey been like from Nolan Catholic, Green Hill, Henderson State? Now you're back home. Tell us, tell the people listening what that what that journey's been like for yourself with football.

SPEAKER_00

I got you, man. So I'm a walktache native, kind of what you spoke to. Born and raised here. I was a cornerback here from 2012 to 2015 going on. But man, it's an awesome experience, bro. One, just to kind of pour into the guys that kind of, these kids all saw me when I was in high school. So now it's like, oh, Coach Moser, I remember. And it's good, bro. But after that, when I left, I went to Texas State and went there, went to school there. And then loved, I wanted to give back, bro. My coaches are kind of my big mentors. They were my father figures. I mean many people know as a coach, you wear so many different hats, dog. And so that's what I wanted to do when I left. I met a guy named Coach KJ Williams, who is one of my good mentors now. He was a head coach at Nolan Catholic. And there, you know, he kind of gave my first opportunity. I never coached before. That's where I also met Terrence Calais, who worked FCS football, and then became one of my mentors now. Shout out Coach Calais. But those two guys mentored me. We had a defensive staff of two coaches. Terrence Calais was a DC, and I was the guy on the field. And so I had to trial by fire. Left there, followed Coach KJ to Green Hill School up in Addison, where I learned how to do it a different way. You're talking about an STC, different type of kid. They didn't love football. They didn't all love football. Football was a hobby for them, but it taught me how to teach. It taught me how to teach football. And from there, I went on to Henderson State to coach at a very high level under Coach Greg Hallsworth, who's one of the best in the country and taught me a lot. And then got to come back home and little bets walks edgy.

SPEAKER_01

So no, that's amazing, man. And I think it speaks to how many people along the way are part of that journey. And I think that's the most important part. And like you're now being a coach, and especially being a coach where you're at going back home, you're now a part of the journey for so many others. Like so many people that are gonna go out and you know, maybe they'll play football in college, maybe they won't, maybe they'll go back to coaching, maybe they'll become referees. Whatever they decide to do, you're part of that journey. And I think coaches are incredibly important. Um, you mentioned like doing different wearing different hats. You've done recruiting coordinator work and you're also a coach. Do you do you think those things complement each other? And where have you kind of seen things uh where it's like some of your expertise in coaching has helped you recruit, and some of your recruiting help expertise has helped you in in coaching?

SPEAKER_00

They do. I I think the biggest thing about being a coach and recruiting coordinator is being transparent. Those things go working hand in hand. Also, it helps you identify talent and what you're looking for. And you get to sit down and talk to college coaches and ask them. And not just, you know, I was Fortunate Greenhill, I was a recruiting coordinator over all sports.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

So from badminton to, you know, swimming to you name it, I got the chance to talk to all these college coaches about what they are looking for. And then when I get on the field, it allows me to see it from that lens. Hey, man, I'm talking to a coach who said your bend isn't great. And that's something I never thought about just as a coach all the time is your bend, who's thinking about bend or these angles or yeah. And so, you know, those things do work hand in hand. A lot of times, I'll say this recruiting coordinator is one of the most important jobs on staff because you have to be extra critical and you have to be transparent. But that's being a coach. That's being if you're if you're a good coach, you're critical and you're transparent. Those two things are why I am, you know, thank God I'm a really good coach. And that's what people have told me. That's not me giving me my own flowers, is those two things are essential to success.

SPEAKER_01

100%. I think that's amazing. I think that's yeah, really well put when it comes to the important stuff that now, like in the NIL era, you see it more and more, is like the emphasis on transparency and recruiting and going both ways. So it's definitely a game changer now. Now, for before we dive into football, I was talking to you before we started recording, and I, you know, I've been down to Texas. Uh my ties to the Dallas Cowboys have have led me down there. What is high school football like for people that aren't from Texas or listening to this and have never been down there, what does high school football mean to the state of Texas?

SPEAKER_00

I'll I'll put it to you like this. We played Dunkin' in the fourth round of the playoffs last year.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

There was 15,000 people there.

SPEAKER_02

Amazing.

SPEAKER_00

You cannot hear the state champion game, state championship games are at Cowboy Stadium. They're packed. Football is life. And if you cannot figure out how to get there on a Friday night, you're in the wrong spot.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

It is um kids grow up in it. This is all we know. Your plans on Friday night are go to a football game. That is, as a fan, you love it. I mean, you you that's what you do. As a kid, I remember going to the football games, and that's all we did on Fridays.

SPEAKER_01

That's like surreal stuff. Friday night lights is not a it's not like a made-up thing. I I think it's it's very much real. It's very much real. Coach, what's what's been the biggest adjustment you've had to make now? You're coaching corner corners at 6A versus uh FCS. A lot of talent in the pipelines in Texas. Um, a lot of talented receivers. What's kind of been the biggest um adjustment you've had to make schematically when your kids are facing those elite receivers every week?

SPEAKER_00

But last year I was blessed. We had a kid named Corinne Brown, a receiver who's at the University of Texas now.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

He gave us a lot of trouble. I would say the biggest adjustment is the mental. When you're in college, kids are mentally prepared. The high school level, they're so emotionally driven that mentally it's hard in the game. They give up a catch and they get really down.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

At this level, I probably see an FPS kid every week. Sometimes two. When we play North Crowley, we'll play three.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Um we played Duncanville, they had two. One went to TCU, one's a four-star, and the other one to SMU at tight end. Every week is a college football game. You have to prepare your kids mentally, physically, emotionally. It's a nonstop. Like I said, I trained before we had this.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

It's offseason. We start June 1st. We're back on the weights. We're back on skills. It's a full-time job. So it's a lot like college. Honestly, the adjustment wasn't the physical, it was more so the mental getting the kids prepared for college because most of the kids in my room will play college football.

SPEAKER_01

That's amazing, coach. Now, you talked a little bit about the the emotional side of the game and like getting getting in your head and getting down on yourself if you make, you know, you give up. And the thing about being a corner is you give up a bad play and you mess up, everybody sees it because everybody you got a guy celebrating in the end zone. And and it it reminds me a lot of being goalie in hockey. Yes. Because if you let in a bad goal, everybody's everybody's on it. So like when when you do get the corner that's you know giving up the bad play or he he makes a mistake, or you know, sometimes, hey, they just slip. Like they're they're human, they're running, things are going at very fast speeds, they just slip. How do you build up that confidence for a player like that in that situation?

SPEAKER_00

One of my things I say, a lot, I'm a history, I teach history as well. But I try to tell my kids Rome wasn't built in a day. And, you know, the confidence that I instill in you, I can't give you overnight.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

You have to have not only belief in me as your coach, but belief in yourself that what we are doing every day works. You work Monday through Thursday, you get paid on Friday.

SPEAKER_02

100%.

SPEAKER_00

So, you know, a lot of times things will happen in life. That's a life lesson. Things will happen. How do you kind of bounce back from that? We had a game against North Fourny. There's a kid named Bryson Thrower. He's a big four-star receiver. He's about 6'3. I have a three-star corner. He's about 5'9. And Bryson Thrower made two big catches on him down the field. And he was emotional. Um, it's around two of the playoffs. He's giving it up, and he's he's fighting, coach. He's fighting. And, you know, we went to halftime. I told him, believe in everything you've done before this moment, good things will come. We came out in the second half, they threw a deep post, he caught an interception. So you have to be okay with the journey. And that's life, right? Like your journey. There's things you're gonna fall, you're gonna hurt yourself, bumps and bruises. But how do you finish? That that's kind of one of my big things is how can you finish the play? Every play has its own life. And every life sometimes is not gonna be great. Wake up, get back up, you know, do what you gotta do. So that's kind of my thing. I'm big on that. I'm big on mental health. And because it's something that I kind of struggle with going on, just trying to feed those guys every day, every day. If it's motivational text, if it's, hey man, how you doing, bro? Remember, we got a game to think about all the things that he's good at. Let's take it away. So stuff like that. That's kind of how I combat combat that.

SPEAKER_01

And it seems like you're 24-7 involved in this process. Like you're not, your job doesn't just end with, you know, practice is over, the game's over, um, I'm gonna go home and go watch Netflix, I'm gonna go chill out. You're probably thinking about these kids and thinking about how you guys can get better 24-7, even probably when you're sleeping. Do you feel like parts of your life you have to sacrifice if you want, if you need to be a successful coach? And what advice do you have for someone that maybe is looking to get into coaching or looking to get into this in in this industry at all of football?

SPEAKER_00

So I have three daughters, I have a wife. With all that, you have 115 kids at the football varsity level. That's just varsity alone. You are a mom or dad 100% of the time. At the same time, the things that you deal with are crazy. So if you're gonna get into this, it's your life and it's a life decision. Um, the money that you'll get is not gonna equal to the time you put into it. But the rewards you get are lifelong because you'll create relationships with people and these kids will always pour into you. They'll love you. I have kids, I went to graduation last night. It was the it was awesome to see and reap some of those benefits. So, my my my advice to you is know that no matter what decision you make, good or bad, there's consequences. Yeah, you're gonna have to sacrifice. Any great person, athlete, coach, human being has made sacrifices.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Choose your heart, right? You have to choose your heart. Do I want to work a nine-to-five at a factory? Do I want to coach? And do I want to be at a cubicle all day? Choose your heart. And so those things are that's my advice. I do think it's the greatest job in the world.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Because you get to pour into people daily.

SPEAKER_01

And a lot of people will look at your job and think, I could do that. And there's gonna be a lot of people that are that are gonna look at your job and be like, man, that's not work. He's just coaching football. That's just fun. But like you talk about the the grind and the struggle, and like you see a lot of the behind the scenes work that goes into being a coach, especially being a high school coach, because these guys aren't getting paid. Like these high schoolers are not getting paid. They're coming from all walks of life, all sorts of different situations. Like, they're trying to get to the next level. I don't think there's a high school athlete out there that's playing football in Texas that's not trying to go to college and play football. Yeah, I think the drive is there to get there. And I think there's a lot of disappointment that happens along the way. Not everyone gets to go to the University of Texas.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

But I but at the same time, for those players that you've mentored that have gone out and done crazy things, they've done amazing things in football. Um what are some of the things that you notice that those kids have in common? They can be that can be a mental thing, that can be a physical thing. What is the what is the trait that you notice in in your in your stars that you mentored that, you know what? That guy's got it.

SPEAKER_00

They got it. Yeah. So I was lucky enough in high school to play with Jalen Rager, who was a first-round pick for the Philadelphia Eagles.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Um, and I knew immediately he was really good, just from the work ethic standpoint. Obviously, you got to have the genetics, right? That's something that's when you talk about things that you cannot coach, is effort, effort, effort, pursuit to be greatness, first one in, last one out, asking every question in the book, wanting to be great, and then taking that and becoming great. Because we all want to be great.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

But are you taking that when everybody's walking off the field or running off the field? What is he doing? Hey, I'm finna go get another ball. I'm on the cones, I'm on a jug machine. That's something I saw from Jalen Rager as a player that I was like, yeah, man, I don't know if I'm that good. You know, when I look at that. And so, you know, and then I think about my coaching life. I just had a kid, Paul Manning from Henderson State, just signed with the Broncos, made it through rookie camp. Now it's a training camp every day. Coach, can I, hey, let's get extra work. Let's watch extra film. It's extra. Everything is extra. That's what I love about those types of kids. Keith Abney, who just got drafted from Arizona State, is from Walks Hatchie. I got to train him. I knew immediately. Those things are mind-blowing as a coach when you get around those kids and they want it just as much as you want it. They are a coach on the field just like you are. Those are, we talk about mental. Physically, you got to be gifted. Mentally, can you, there's a maturity level that you find in those kids that want to be great. That, coach, I don't understand it, but I'm not scared to ask. Coach, I don't understand it, but I'm gonna figure it out. Coach, how do I do this? How do I get from point A to point B and be the best player to do so? Those are the, you know, I've had Tremel Windham and Antonio Hall. These are guys that are going on to play FPS football that I'm like, yeah, they're really good. They're really good. You make a good point there, coach.

SPEAKER_01

And is this a coachable thing? Can this be coached into players, this kind of thing? Or is it do you think it just comes from within? Like it has to come from themselves versus you telling them, hey, because you just gave every kid the blueprint right now. There's gonna be a kid listening to this and they they they've got the blueprint and make it to the make it to the show. But can that be coached into a can that be coached into a player?

SPEAKER_00

I truly, I truly do think it's 50-50 because as a coach, you have to try to pull out everything you can out of this kid. You gotta pull it out. As a kid, you gotta wanna have it.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

You gotta wanna have it. And so I do I do think it can't be coached. But I think, you know, I I tell my parents, especially as a recruiting coordinator, it's a pie chart. Your parents gotta do 33%, you gotta do 33%, your coach has to do 33. If everybody can do that, you're gonna be as successful as you can be. I got kids in my room that are gonna go D3. I got a kid in my room that's probably gonna go to vision too. I got a kid in my room that's going to FPS. I think they all are achieving things that they, that is your ceiling because you you're doing the best you can. You're doing the best you can. And you have to be okay with that. Like you said, everybody can't go to the University of Texas. We have Jay Quonsnell, who's a five-star safety, he's going to Tex AM.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Everybody cannot be Jay Quonsnell.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

But can you work as hard as Jay Quantanel? Yes, you can, because success looks different for every everybody. So, you know, I do think it can be coached. Get that kid to whatever ceiling he has.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. No, that that's amazing, coach. And and you mentioned a key part of the pie chart being parents. How do you manage you are you having crazy parent stories?

SPEAKER_00

I do. I mean, I I I have parents who see their kid. And for instance, I had a parent one year and he told me, you know, his son is is Notre Dame worthy, uh, D-Lamon. He is like 5'10, 215, 210.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Probably runs 5'3, 5'4.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

And I and I, you know, I I I challenge them. Instead of me telling you how bad I think your kid is, because I don't believe in that, I want you to go for yourself. Go to a practice, go to a workout, and it doesn't have to be Notre Dame. Go right here down the street to SMU, go to North Texas, go, go to I want you to just go and sit and watch practice. One, you see how the kids look. Two, you see the maturity level.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Three, you understand. There's a reason why that's only 1% of kids. That is not a that is not a that is not bad for your kid. That's not that's not a negative. Like, everybody wants to be a millionaire. We're not millionaires. That's not bad. You make a good living. I have a nice house. My kids have their own room. So, like, take your wins where you can take them. So, parents, man, you gotta, we have some unrealistic parents. Yeah. You gotta reel them in. And you got, and it goes back to being transparent. And we have, we have our coach of staff. Shout out our new head coach, Lawrence Williams, who's our defensive coordinator. He will tell you from Jump Street, he's as real as they come. That is the key. To me, I don't believe in any other way. You be real with them. And if they do not like it, you did your job because you're honest. You can never say a lie to you. You can never say, Cosmo lied to me. He told me, he sold me a dream. I don't sell dreams.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. No, that's that that's amazing. And I think that there's I think there's so much glitz behind uh so we were in Pittsburgh for the draft um this past uh couple this past month. There's so much glitz in the draft. Everybody, it's you red carpets out, everybody's, you know, the the prospects are looking their best. They got the best suits on. People are screaming their months. Everybody's looking good. But coach, if there's one thing that you tell play, like how can someone stay on the course? Because it's easy to get it's easy to get swayed, especially you talk about your five stars that are going to big programs. You talk about even now with NIL, you lot you got four stars, three stars making money. Like you got money. You got you guys you got serious money that's coming into the sport here when it comes to your players getting recruited. How do you how do you get that that player to stay the course versus uh chasing the glitz?

SPEAKER_00

There's something that Coach Talston said that kind of struggled me. And he said, we all eat off the floor. And you figure out how hungry you are if you're eating off the floor.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

And the journey does not change. Once you sign a contract NIL, or once you get your first division one offer, or once you it cannot change. And the ones that don't make it, they change their work ethic, they change their mentality. They change. You have to act as if you have accomplished nothing because then you are the hardest worker in the room. If you cannot do that, somebody else is. That's the key. You, you know, you get parallel because you don't think that there are other cars next to you. There are. Y'all all going fast, 100 miles an hour.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Who's gonna win? Who, how you know, you get there and you think, I'm the man. Everybody's the man. I yeah, I have a kid, like I said, I have a kid in my room that's gonna go to Division III. I don't treat him any different than my kid that's going FPS because he's just as hungry. He's just as hungry. He just he wants it just as bad as the other kid. So, beast, you gotta starve, dog. If you if you're not starving, it's gonna be hard for you to make it. At the draft, those guys were hungry. The work, the sacrifices they made, the times not going to birthday parties or going out with their friends or sacrifice. That's the key. The key to all this is what are you willing to sacrifice?

SPEAKER_01

Amazing. Amazing. I think that like there's a lot of gold that like has been this episode. You dropped some crazy one-liners. That one, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna steal that one. I'm gonna write it out, I'm gonna print it out, put it on my wall. Coach, I know, I know you're a busy dude. And uh I want to I want you to spend some time with your family. They got you for uh they got you for a Saturday before you're rushing off to do some uh some sort of other things for for high school football. Now, I really wanted to touch on this because when you when you Google this the school's program, this is the number one thing that's that comes up, and it's a big thing, is Shane Tolson leaving for Denton Ryan. Uh, how does a coaching staff handle a transition like that and keep the locker room locked in for the next year?

SPEAKER_00

First and foremost, I want to thank Shane Tolson for giving me a job here at Walks Hatching. Let me come back to my Alabama. He's awesome. That's an awesome dude. And the move for him was what was best for him and his family. He was from there. He's won a state championship there, and you know, that was kind of the path carved that God carved for him. So, for first and foremost, awesome job on what he did for my, you know, alma mater in my program. Now, to answer your question, when they hired Coach Williams, who was our defensive coordinator, we kept the staff the same. That was the big thing. We are a family. We are all a family. The kids, you know, they were right there with us, step blocking key to make sure that we got the guy that we thought was gonna help us move forward in this program. Coach Williams has been a lot of, he's been around a lot of great programs. He's won a lot, but more importantly, he's a great mentor for us young coaches. And he didn't want to, he did it for us and the kids more than he did it for herself because he could have walked away and retired. And so, you know, I there's no better man for the job. But what we did is rallied the troops. You gotta rally the troops. And the message doesn't change. We're a family. It doesn't matter, you know. We kept the head of the household. He just moved up, looks different, but it's still the same. It's the same. So we kept, we, we kept everything the same. We didn't change much of anything, and it worked out for us. Our kids are are ready to go. We had a great spring. We've seen growth from that to now, just you know, the emotional toll that it took on the kids. Some of those kids noobs. This was his seventh grade year was when a lot of these singers came, uh, when Tolly came when we're there in seventh grade. Now they're singers, and so you know, there was a lot of hurt there. There was like, man, this is how it's gonna be. But, you know, like you said, you gotta rally the troops, you give them a few days, brush them off, tell them we're good. And right now we're hitting on all sooners, man.

SPEAKER_01

No, man. That's that that's amazing. That's amazing. I like to do what I call a lightning round, coach. This is gonna be this is how we're gonna we're gonna end this one. So I'm gonna ask you a question, just a quick little answer. We'll start off uh we'll start off nice and fun. You know, you're looking good. You told me you didn't hit the workout today. Favorite fast, favorite fast food joint? Chick-fil-A. Nice and easy. What's your order?

SPEAKER_00

It is a well depends. The breakfast or lunch. Uh let's go lunch. Lunch. I'm getting a uh grilled chicken sandwich with no tomatoes, can't do tomatoes, and then a cookie crumble granola.

SPEAKER_01

Nice.

SPEAKER_00

Unsweet tea. That's the key. Unsweet tea. Save it, count.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, there it is. There it is. There's everybody lock in those orders right now, unsweet tea. Who's your favorite corner of all time? Could be NFL call?

SPEAKER_00

Um, I would say Deion Sanders, obviously, like everybody else. Obviously, though, I was a Chargers fan growing up. I love Antonio Camardi.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, there you go. There you go. Uh, who's the toughest wide receiver you've ever had to game plan against?

SPEAKER_00

Toughest receiver we ever game plan against was this year, Trent Yancey from Duncanville. Dude alert.

SPEAKER_01

If you could ask any NFL player currently playing in the league, one question, which player would you choose? And what question would you ask?

SPEAKER_00

I would ask Derek Singley what is his mode of preparation week in and week out.

SPEAKER_01

Amazing. Amazing. Uh and the final question. Coach Moser is blank. I'll let you fill it out.

SPEAKER_00

A man of great faith. Amazing.

SPEAKER_01

Amazing. I appreciate this so much, Coach. Um listen, I was telling you before, I'm gonna come down. I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna come down, I'm gonna visit you guys. I'm gonna come, I'm gonna get nice and early. I'm gonna make my way down on a Thursday.

SPEAKER_00

I'll make sure I have everything for you. Shirt. I got you a pass, a sideline. We're gonna get you set up, man.

SPEAKER_01

Oh man, I appreciate it, coach. I appreciate it. Uh once again, coach, where can people find you on social media? Uh plug plug that in for me real quick.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, so you can find me on Twitter. I believe it's Coach Mo12. I think. I believe that checks out. Yeah. I believe. And that's kind of where I do most of my stuff is on X. So that would be awesome.

SPEAKER_01

Moser 12. Coach Moser 12. There, there, that's the handle there on X.

SPEAKER_00

Follow me, baby.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, let's get those follows up. Um coach, you've been a wealth of knowledge. I really appreciate the talk that you've had, just not just football, but also about life, also about the ups and downs that people face. I think it's incredibly important, especially as men. I think it's incredibly important to have those conversations. Once again, thank you so much, Coach. This is not gonna be the final time we're gonna have you on. I'm gonna have you on. Let's go. Yeah, we're gonna get you on. I'd love if you want some of your players to come on as well. Oh yeah. Happy to happy to have players coming on, whether that be interview prep, whether they're the first time they're getting in front of a mic, all that sorts of stuff. So we're gonna build this relationship, and I'm gonna see you this fall in uh for that game.

SPEAKER_00

I'll be in Vancouver. Remember, we gotta set it up.

SPEAKER_01

There it is, there it is. And I'll I'll make sure I take care of you. We don't have the high school program here, but I'm gonna, you know, we'll take you out on a boat and show you the mountains and all that love.

SPEAKER_00

Let's go, man. You're awesome.

SPEAKER_01

No, I appreciate you, Coach Moser. Once again, that's Coach Moser12 on X. Go follow him, go give him a follow, show him some love, and uh can't wait to see what he's gonna cook up this year. Thanks. Appreciate you, Coach.