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Rob Wein walking Dolgeville sideline 25 years after state championship

2025-11-24 09:03
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Rob Wein walking Dolgeville sideline 25 years after state championship

Assistant coach Rob Wein looks back at Dolgeville's 2000 state championship football season.

Rob Wein walking Dolgeville sideline 25 years after state championshipStory byUtica Observer-DispatchJon Rathbun, Herkimer Times TelegramMon, November 24, 2025 at 9:03 AM UTC·4 min read

Monday, Nov. 24, marked 25 years since the Dolgeville Blue Devils marched into what was then the Carrier Dome on the morning after Thanksgiving, routed Fort Edward's Flying Forts 55-3 and brought home the program's first state football championship.

A quarter of a century later, the first remains the one championship for the Blue Devils, who returned two years later and were beaten 38-35 by Dobbs Ferry.

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The success on the field has continued, and faces and names around the program remain familiar. Rob Wein, a senior offensive lineman on the state championship team, graduated the following spring, went away to college and returned to Dolgeville as a math teacher and modified football coach four years later.

Now the associate varsity head coach, Wein has helped extend the tradition of a program that has won more football titles – 21 – than any other Section III school, including the streak of four in a row that ended last week with a loss to Lowville Academy in the 2025 final.

A Carrier Dome ticket stub, a championship team photo and a picture of the congratulatory message on the dome's scoreboard are among the 2000 football season mementos in a scrapbook made for Jerry Walczak by the now retired retired Dolgeville Blue Devils coach's sister.A Carrier Dome ticket stub, a championship team photo and a picture of the congratulatory message on the dome's scoreboard are among the 2000 football season mementos in a scrapbook made for Jerry Walczak by the now retired retired Dolgeville Blue Devils coach's sister.

More: 20-season anniversary of Blue Devils' state championship run shares lack of home games

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More: Dolgeville football will chase third title with new coach. Here's what you need to know.

“I remember Coach (Jerry) Walczak saying how happy he was that the kids were not letting the success change them in any way, becoming arrogant. They were staying humble and continuing to work hard.

“The lessons you learn serve you well in life. I like the way that sounds.”

Wein well represents the role high school football continues to play in Dolgeville culture, as well as other small towns across the state and beyond its borders.

“I started watching (Dolgeville game) in the middle of the 41-game winning streak, and I was there when it ended,” Wein said, referring to a series of undefeated Dolgeville teams that predated New York’s state playoffs. “I was devastated as a kid.”

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Having first made the trip to see Dolgeville play in what was then the Carrier Dome when he was 9, Wein and his friends grew up envisioning themselves in the roles occupied by older brothers, cousins and neighbors.

Rob Wein, Dolgeville's associate head football coach, works at the desk in his Dolgeville High School classroom.Rob Wein, Dolgeville's associate head football coach, works at the desk in his Dolgeville High School classroom.

“We wanted to be like the big kids,” Wein said, “and I think it’s still like that now.”

Dolgeville’s class of 2001 included a large group of varsity football players who walked off the field in uniform for the final time as winners at the Carrier Dome on Thanksgiving Weekend. The 2000 Blue Devils extended a couple more impressive Dolgeville streaks, finishing the season with 72 consecutive wins within Section III and 59 in league play.

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Wein’s younger brother, Jordan, played on the 2002 finalist team – and the 2000 game was played on his birthday. That was not Rob Wein’s last trip to the state championships.

“For a long time, I just drove up and watched the state championship game,” he said. “I wanted to see how good do you need to be to beat the state championship team. It’s a lot easier now to just subscribe to NFHS (an on-demand video service for high school sports).”

The championship season saw the Blue Devils compete without a home field while work on Bynon Field was part of a district project.

“That was the year they were redoing Bynon Field for the second or third time,” Wein recalled. “They were working on the drainage; that never really worked. So we had to walk down behind the firehouse each day to practice.”

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Even the opening game, which had been scheduled at Veterans Memorial Park in Little Falls, wound up on the road, rescheduled because of a Labor Day storm that passed through the area. Dolgeville defeated Sauquoit Valley 20-14 in a game that went five overtimes that day, the first stop in a season that included a 14-3 win in Mohawk and a 28-12 victory over Frankfort-Schuyler in Frankfort’s Hilltop Park.

Sauquoit Valley and Frankfort-Schuyler currently compete in eight-player football, and Mohawk has merged with Ilion to become Central Valley Academy. None of the eight teams Dolgeville defeated during the regular season in 2000 currently field 11-player football teams: New York Mills and West Canada Valley field eights with Frankfort-Schuyler and Sauquoit Valley, Hamilton sends football players to Waterville for a combined eight-player team, Richfield Springs fielded a combined team with Mohawk and later dropped football when it relocated to Section IV and Rome Catholic has closed its doors.

Dolgeville went without a home field again for the Fall II season in the spring of 2021, and its new turf field opened on the upper level for the 2024 season.

Dolgeville was the second Section III school to win a state football championship, following neighboring West Canada Valley three years earlier, and the Blue Devils were the first of three Class D champions from the section in a five-year span, with Onondaga and Weedsport following in 2003 and 2004. Those remain Section III’s four Class D state championships.

This article originally appeared on Times Telegram: Dolgeville football state championship 2000

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