The Bernalillo football team won a state playoff game for the first time this past season and also finished 8-4 for the most wins the program has had in at least twenty years, if not ever.
Because of that success, Spartans head football coach John Cobos earned the All-Metro 3A-5A Coach of the Year award. However, Cobos said itโs not really his honor, but something the entire program โ including those behind the scenes โ should share. โTo me, itโs not about me,โ he said. โItโs not a one-person award. This belongs to my assistant coaches, my wife, my kids who share me with the team, and all the players.โ

Cobos and the Spartans also earned the award in the abbreviated COVID season in the spring of 2021 when Bernalillo went 4-0. Excluding the COVID season, the Spartans have been in the playoffs for four of the past five seasons, but it took some time for Cobos to get the Bernalillo program going. He has a career mark of 35-51, but was just 4-25 in his first three seasons as Bernalillo was known primarily as a basketball school.
โItโs been a change in culture,โ he said. โEverything was about Bernalillo as a basketball community, which I get. But I wanted to know why we canโt be good at athletics?โ His desire to add athletes from other sports paid off when the basketball players started coming out for football. โBasketball coach Terry Darnell, he was very supportive,โ Cobos recalled. โI told the kids that the strength and conditioning that we do and the plyometrics was going to help them come basketball season.โ

Adding that athleticism helped the basketball program immensely and also turned the programโs mindset.โThese kids are buying what weโre selling,โ Cobos said. โItโs the change of culture. Weโre not a gang, weโre a football team. Our expectations are a 3.0 (grade-point average). We want them to have a 3.0. Itโs easier for our guys to be recruited. Weโre starting to think of success when they leave Bernalillo. We have huge expectations for our kids.โAnother big change was encouraging athletes from the area pueblos to try football, he said.
โWe have somebody from San Felipe, Santo Domingo, Cochiti, Zia, all of these different pueblos and theyโre proud,โ Cobos said. โWe told them theyโre not just representing Bernalillo, but theyโre representing their pueblo.โ Another important factor in the programโs surge was getting the locals to buy in. โThe support of the community and our administration has been tremendous,โ he said. โThe town of Bernalillo is proud of us. Theyโre bringing us into the school board meeting this week to congratulate our kids. โWhat it takes, Cobos said, is a staff dedicated to making the players feel special in what has now become a year-round commitment to being better. โThe kids really know we care about them,โ he said. โAnd my staff cares about them. We work them hard and itโs not easy. We go from football to powerlifting to track and the coaches coach all three sports. Itโs a year-round program.โ
Cobos is a Roswell High School alum who played football at New Mexico Highlands and got his start coaching at West Las Vegas.ย Then he stepped away from the sport for quite some time before he was lured back to start essentially at the bottom rung at Bernalillo 16 years ago. He worked himself up to a coordinator position, then Cobos has been head coach for the past nine seasons. โWe are very excited and very proud of Coach Cobos,โ Spartans athletic director Ira Harge said. โHeโs done an amazing job. Over the 16 years, itโs been a series of ups and downs, but he set school history by making it past the first round of state. We couldnโt be more proud of him. We are definitely not just a basketball school anymore. Weโre a football school now.โ
With 41 players coming back, Cobos said he just sees the program just continuing to climb. โIโm no longer the red-headed stepchild when I talk with the other coaches,โ he said. โItโs been a great ride.โ

