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Brown changed Prairie Ridge’s fortunes

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Prairie Ridge boys soccer coach JC Brown is a man who always tires to learn better ways to get the most out of his players. He chooses his words carefully before speaking and often does a lot of reflecting.

Last year, Brown was the team’s junior varsity coach and upon taking the reins this season, he flipped the program around into a formidable one. The Wolves advanced to a Class 2A regional final, where they lost to Grayslake Central, 2-1.

For his efforts, Brown has been named the Northwest Herald Boys Soccer Coach of the Year.

He coached the Wolves to a 13-7-2 record, an inverting of last year’s 7-13 record. He was able to do so by applying knowledge and information he soaked up through the years serving as a coach at lower levels and as a volunteer assistant at Cary-Grove.

“I took that time when I was serving elsewhere to absorb as much as I could,” he said. “And seeing what I liked and didn’t like, and I put that all into practice. I knew myself and my personality, and I made sure I know what kind of coach I want to be, and it ended up working.”

Brown took over a team that underperformed the year before, and he wanted to try to make this season a full team effort.

“Coming in looking at the season, I reflected quite a bit coming off a 7-13 season and asked, ‘How am I going to change this?’ ” Brown said. “I wanted to give a memorable end to the seniors’ careers, and the more I thought about it, it could have easily been the same type of season like last year.

“They don’t need a coach to be yelling at them all the time, they needed a coach to be positive. Always trying to positive, that was one of my biggest goals.”

The Wolves scored 51 goals this season, coming from nine players, a testament to Brown’s philosophy of true teamwork.

“They played the game the right way,” Johnsburg coach Rob Eastland said of Brown’s team. “I think he did a great job with them this season, and I don’t want to say they didn’t have any stars, but they sure got the job done as a collective team. That is one of the hardest things to accomplish is to get your players to not worry about personal statistics but to play for the good of a team, and that is what he did over there.”

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