JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================gK" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?4Kz h pَAx=#Co]GoGDP`~Yj?Ç La %ӋJy4Gw4,5X,N}=+3W#Ԋ4$n\GLWՄ1G Jxv QOݣFVۃ/kzup͆ET{:{HI ;LeĊ6`}5F .l ޽^?< n1!@coZ's;[ϖRsEcvƖI;EpF]r6F+^Vrȹ}_V00ma;u0Lz+vB`SQk\r{Yv5EԞWS$[P,=.}y2k/RюƅN6޻#N6<9C 'm7sV6i4Xc`d=:|Ig ͜Jfɮ6]^ζ;(cUtҪ30N8z.|;f|PV0|ZBM&@, {}ug|3}$ctwwɭoI%A5I6{ˈ:/2fZ8=W9?Q/{o0]',F80++Xd2h[PmU[M4Z[eܑy!k8ג.Ln4/kx#=qϵuJӚW$e_(Ƿ7/RL(J=jM:KgKpGTiE}il{ ::I4tPqVp=yeƭy[-H7q]-K:7ۮ;ЅPWV{])Nv[IOw#p'+_᷏OAD@3VߊFl4zW3f^8'Q%ֿ-5]IZK-"ud%l+q<#z7se;2yY _nmc'/E 3WMǮַC4LIMHK)-0,. t/#V(fEާ֝J[}-F?#quw$MrHDV5!%m"|`ʾfY&UV8\dA%gb`עͣCʐX!8$U{h1IÈO"vIЍ4/u]~{l唻+*8J[jZ.JmfӏwViEkxP߷+v8dqsSU?O .2NJ-*V})2ÑEe-?Id"I&F-jZIh\ck,W35ø*J&n Bʼpۥx \#Zڽ~U~]ksʟYhW3\\Ky3K) ~UVUe`{պ T]Od 609<]43.e;uErOyhKsuo<b8\hɶvW:/e b,a!$))a?.D+aSYqizc*4F2FS?G,isf<}k>V(BIԩ`A.4K{/gQRhUS7#l{XeH WV2麅ŬC{RX$ͷG{REgP%S&m^zQY^4g±mm#=M^ƙs;-,rN޵>l0vQk;%tle match, the team and Head Coach Mark (Pudge) Gjormand hurriedly climbed on a bus headed back to Vienna. Still clad in their uniforms, unshowered but adorned with the sweet smell of success, the players joined the last moments of the Madison High School prom, to the thunderous applause of their classmates. The perfect cap to the perfect season.<br>James Madison is the only high school in Vienna, a small, incorporated town in the midst of the affluent Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, DC. Vienna has a long tradition of highly successful Little League baseball and youth football programs, with local teams frequently winning championships at the regional and national levels. Similar success had, until recently, eluded Madison High.<br>In the spring of 2000 Coach Gjormand and Gordon Leib, who had been named head football coach in 1998, decided they both needed a year-round conditioning program to move their teams to the next level. For Coach Gjormand, whose teams had averaged 16 wins a year since 1995, that meant producing the nationally ranked team he had dreamed of since being hired. For Coach Leib, that meant building a winning, championship program after two injury-filled, bad-luck seasons that produced just three wins.<br>Coach Leib and John Lingenfelter, a BFS magazine subscriber, convinced other Madison coaches that they all needed to be on the same page, particularly to facilitate the training of the many multi-sport athletes Madison depended upon to compete in its games against the larger-enr