The Christian Broadcasting Network

The 700 Club with Pat Robertson


Credits

Football Coach, Athletic Director, Grapevine Faith Christian School, 6 years

Has appeared on CBS, ABC, NBC, ESPN2, and others




Guest

Kris Hogan: Hogan's Heroes Fill Football Stands

By Mimi Elliott
The 700 Club

CBN.comA STRANGE MATCH-UP

It was not your usual Friday night football game. In November 2008, Grapevine Faith Christian School, a 9-time state championship team, was playing Gainesville State School, a maximum security correctional facility for boys 12 to 19.

At Gainesville, the boys who are juniors and seniors in the facility have to earn the right to play football. Their ability to play is based on the fact that they have served half their sentence, they have no behavioral incidents and they have good grades. They have no cheerleaders and zero fans sit in the stands each game. 

“We discovered when we were reassigned to a new district, that our week 10 game was Gainesville State School. Immediately, we looked at this as a ministry opportunity as soon as we saw it,” said Coach Kris Hogan, athletic director for Grapevine Faith Christian School. 

Grapevine Faith has a reputation in the community for winning numerous state championships in the last four years. They have a big following and lots of parental involvement. Kris decided to send an email to all of the parents in the school.

“I told them that we had was an opportunity. I wanted to send a message to these Gainesville kids that they are just as important and valuable as any other kid on planet earth. We wanted to show them that Jesus loves them and we loved them,” Coach Hogan said.  “And I wanted to affirm their good choices for them having earned the right to play football.” 

It would be the first time the two teams played each other. Gainesville State played other high school football teams in other districts, but no one ever cheered for them. So Coach Hogan asked the Grapevine parents to sit on the opposing side so the Gainesville team would have fans. 

“In the case of the Gainesville kids, some don’t even know their parents,” Coach Hogan said. “And if they did, they couldn’t come because technically they are incarcerated.  These kids have never had anyone cheer for them.” 

Coach Hogan printed off a roster. 

“We cheered for them by name,” he said. “We divided our cheerleaders in half and formed a 40-yard ‘spirit’ line. We treated them like it was their home game.”

Normally, people look at the Gainesville kids as criminals. This time, the Gainesville kids saw love, and were filled with gratitude. 

“They had no idea what to do. They sprinted through the spirit line and were pumped up.  They acted like they just played in the Super Bowl because people were loving on them,” Coach Hogan said. Even though Faith beat Gainesville 33-14, the Gainesville kids were so happy that after the game they gave their head coach, Mark Williams, a sideline squirt of Gatorade, just as if he had won the state championship. 

After the game, each boy was escorted back to their bus under the watch of 12 uniformed police officers. Each were handed a bag for the ride home: a burger, some fries, a soda, some candy, a Bible and an encouraging letter from a Faith player. The Gainesville coach grabbed Coach Hogan by the shoulders. 

“You’ll never know what your people did for these kids tonight. You’ll never, ever know,” he said.

Coach Hogan says God has opened many other doors of opportunity to share the gospel.  He shared his story on ESPN, Good Morning Texas, and was even on 341 radio stations in Australia. Most recently, Coach Hogan got invited to the Super Bowl by the NFL commissioner. 

“God continues to work this platform. I speak to corporations and churches as a motivational speaker. So I’m hoping out of some of this, that there are other platforms to expand my speaking field so I can expand his kingdom,” Coach Hogan said.

Coach Hogan is the grandson of a preacher and his grandmother taught Sunday school for 60 years. He affirmed his Christian faith 15 years ago as a college sophomore. Within weeks, he says his life began falling into place. 

Gainesville State has about 260 boys, incarcerated for various reasons. It is a facility of the Texas Youth Commission.



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