O - Play by Play
Transcription
O - Play by Play
INSIDE Vol. 8, No. 1, October 24, 2011 3Coolest Sport 3Indian Uprising Youth hockey in Roanoke Roanoke players aid Catawba 8 11 3Field Goal for the Ages ‘The kick’ of 1960 18 2 Play By Play OCTOBER 24, 2011 Dave Sarmadi has an important message for his many Southwest Virginia customers… “Come see me in Leesburg; I’ll make it worth the drive!” S ince closing his Roanoke dealership last year, Dave has become affiliated with Dulles Motorcars, a superior automobile dealership based in Northern Virginia. He has joined forces with his two longtime friends, Senior Saghafi and Kevin Saghafi, who handle six outstanding franchises — Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram, Kia and Subaru. Dulles has been voted the No. 1 dealership in Loudoun County, and is proud to have served more than 21,000 happy customers since opening in 1990. Dave’s goal is to make Dulles Motorcars the No. 1 dealership of its kind in the state of Virginia, just as he accomplished previously with Dave Sarmadi Mitsubishi. “I want to thank all of my Roanoke Valley customers over the past 30 years who have put me where I am today,” Dave says. “I haven’t let you down in the past; if I can help you, please give me a call.” Dave Sarmadi and Dulles Motorcars make a perfect match — both are committed to impeccable customer service and both understand the importance of wide selection, attractive pricing, easy financing and a capable sales, support and service staff. We have 800 cars on site, the area’s best selection — and we’re open seven days a week! Dulles Motorcars is located less than 3½ hours from Roanoke, not far off Interstate 81. As Dave Sarmadi says, “Come see me; I’ll make it worth the drive!” 107 Catoctin Circle, SE, Leesburg, VA 20175 • 703-777-7077 • Kia, Subaru 211 Catoctin Circle, SE, Leesburg, VA 20175 • 703-777-5055 • Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram dullesmotorcar.com PLAYMAKER OCTOBER 24, 2011 3 Play By Play were one shot behind Dominion’s Sam Stilwell, who took individual honors by virtue of a sterling second round 66. Stilwell’s 66 included six birdies on the front nine. Coupled with his opening round 76, Stilwell edged Brediger by the thinnest of margins. Cave Spring, which finished second in state competition in 2007 (Group AA) and 1998 (Group AAA), was playing without the services of Drew Lagan, who missed this year’s state tournament due to a knee injury. Picking up the slack for Lagan were Drew Board (who placed 16th individually at 152) and Jessie Hart (tied for 18th at 154). The last time a Cave Spring golfer won a state championship was Keith Myers (Group AAA) in 1978. Spotlight Nick Brediger and the Cave Spring golf team P aced by the 36-hole score of 143 by junior Nick Brediger, the Cave Spring golf team placed second in the Group AA state championship played in Front Royal Oct. 10-11. The Knights team score of 612 (306 each day from its top four players) was six shots behind team champion Western Albemarle. Brediger’s steady rounds of even-par 71 and one-over 72 Bill Turner Tim Smith T Brian Hoffman he Roanoke College senior captain has been leading the Maroons cross-country team all season, earning Old Dominion Athletic Conference runner of the week honors three times. Smith had won three meets this fall at press time, his most recent performance being a 26:05 in an 8K race in Pennsylvania Oct. 8, beating a field of 220 runners. Smith, a Cave Spring graduate, transferred to Roanoke from the University of Richmond. Playbook Page 10 Opinions Todd Marcum............................................ 4 Mike Stevens............................................ 5 John A. Montgomery.............................. 7 Mike Ashley............................................. 19 Danny Cruff Christian Moody ...................................... 6 Articles Youth Hockey Lays the Framework.....................................................8 Larry Basham’s Turning Heads in Vinton..........................................10 Net Gains: Lauren Sledd Excels in Two Sports...............................12 Joe Greenway Establishes Himself at Concord..............................13 Softball Player Takes her Game on the Road..................................14 Fleming Taps Second Hall of Fame Class..........................................15 Bill Edmunds, a Legend of the Games..............................................18 Bill Turner Page 12 Extras Playmaker Spotlight.......................3 Ask A Ref...........................................6 Snapshots of the Season...............9 Brian Hoffman Roanokers Catalyze Catawba’s Resurgence................................... 11 Photo courtesy of Roanoke College Sponsored by: 4 Play By Play OCTOBER 24, 2011 Good catch, Doc – it made the difference I TODDS AND ENDS by Todd Marcum is the glory of high school football. “I have a passion for football,” says the perennially smiling Chumbley. “I like the physical side of the game.” Over the past two seasons, the William Fleming player moved from fullback/linebacker to where the big boys play, the offensive line. “We put Tyler on the offensive line because we need guys who can comprehend a scheme,” says Colonels head coach Lee Johnson. “At 180 pounds, he is definitely undersized. As a player, what he lacks in size, he makes up with work ethic. He doesn’t mind doing what’s needed for the team.” Life in the O-Line has its share of bumps and bruises. During two-a-days almost three months ago, Tyler was accidentally speared in the back of the left calf by a teamPhoto courtesy of David Conner f you like high school football, you’ll love Tyler Chumbley. “I just love the idea of being out there with other guys, going through the same things and trying to get better as a team,” says the undersized junior offensive lineman. Tyler carries the banner for the guys who know they will never be an NFL star, but just like the game and play every snap to the best of their ability. I might argue that this Tyler Chumbley Players in this Issue Publisher/Editor John A. Montgomery Graphic Designer Donna Earwood Contributors Mike Ashley Rod Carter Leslie Coty Danny Cruff Donald Earwood Brian Hoffman Sam Lazzaro Bo Lucas Todd Marcum Gene Marrano Joyce Montgomery Christian Moody Mike Stevens Bill Turner Dan Vance Primary cover photograph courtesy of Bill Edmunds P.O. Box 3285, Roanoke, VA 24015 (540) 761-6751 • E-mail: jmonty@cox.net On the Web: www.playbyplayonline.net and at www.facebook.com/playbyplaysports ©Copyright 2011. All rights reserved. No part of Play by Play may be reproduced by any means or in any form without written permission from the publisher. Play by Play is published every fourth Monday. Deadline for submissions for the November 21 issue is November 7. What to do if you suffer a sports injury W hile this is not intended as medical advice, most minor injuries can be treated using the RICE (Rest, Ice, Compression, and Elevation) method to relieve pain, reduce swelling and speed healing. Follow these four steps immediately after the injury occurs and repeat for at least 48 hours. Call a doctor when: • The injury causes severe pain, swelling or numbness • You can’t put any weight on the area • An old injury hurts or aches • An old injury swells • The joint doesn’t feel normal or feels unstable • Despite precautions, an injury will not heal • Momma tells you to mate. News flash…when a twohundred-pounder torpedoes into the back of your leg with a helmet unexpectedly, it hurts. The ache was something Tyler carried with him on and off. At times it simply throbbed; at other times the pain was so intense he could hardly walk, but he gritted his teeth and kept going to work. “It would heal a little, then get worse…heal a little, then get worse,” says Tyler, who never missed a practice during this period. A few weeks later, the injury bug bit again. At the beginning of September, he started having problems breathing. His parents, David and Pam Conner, took him to a doctor and the initial diagnosis was a simple case of bronchitis. The leg was examined at the same time and the injury was thought to be a strain. Tyler soldiered on. It could have been a fatal mistake. Johnson and his staff had been watching Tyler carefully after the diagnosis, but when he voluntarily pulled himself out of the E.C. Glass game, everyone wondered if it might be more serious. “I knew if I stayed in, I was going to pass out,” Tyler remembers. “I didn’t want to do that.” “It wasn’t like Tyler to take himself out of the game. Like everyone else, we thought it was bronchitis because he’d already been to the doctor,” Johnson says. The Conners checked back with their family doctor who was concerned that the injuries had shown no progress. Tyler was referred to orthopedic specialist Dr. Alfred Durham, the thought being there might be a tear in the muscle. After one leg measured an inch-anda-half larger in circumference than the other, Durham was pretty sure he knew the problem. The bad news was that the injury to his calf had caused a blood clot. The worse news was that two pieces of the clot had broken off and migrated to Tyler’s lungs, which was causing the breathing problems. It was a condition that could have been fatal. Durham immediately transferred Tyler to the hospital where he underwent a pair of surgeries, one to install an “umbrella” above the clot to keep another clot from going to his lungs. He was in the hospital for four days. “It’s the first time that I can remember not dressing for a game during football season,” Tyler says. “I felt it was a real blessing that his parents took him to the orthopedic and caught it,” Johnson says. “No one had a clue....It’s a blessing, nothing short of it.” While Tyler is on the shelf for the rest of this season, his outlook is good. He should be ready to play baseball in the spring and should be back for his senior campaign none the worse for wear. While Tyler won’t be in the lineup, Johnson and the team will benefit from Tyler’s sideline enthusiasm for the rest of the season. “My teammates have been great,” Tyler says. “They asked about me and checked up on me all the way through. When I came back in the locker room, they were all there to meet me.” A team player knows his teammates will always be there for him. OCTOBER 24, 2011 Play By Play Division I moment, Division III setting OPEN MIKE The 2011 Stagg Bowl will be played Friday, Dec. 16 at Salem Stadium. Tickets are available at the Salem Civic Center box office, 375-3004 Photos courtesy of Bridgewater Sports Information I t’s been 10 years since the Stagg Bowl was last played in primetime and while the game itself returns to that coveted TV time slot this December, it reby Mike mains to be seen if Cinderella will again appear in a starring role. Stevens In case you weren’t part of the overflow crowd that rocked Salem Stadium in 2001, let me remind you that Cinderella, Rocky Balboa, the Milan High School basketball team, Buster Douglas, Harry Truman and every other great underdog was well represented by Bridgewater College as the Eagles took on mighty Mt. Union. Most football fans remember Bridgewater was a scoring machine that season and entered the game unbeaten at 12-0, but few remember that just three short seasons earlier the Eagles were a dismal 0-10. In fact, Bridgewater had three seasons in the 1990s when it failed to win a single game, yet in 2001 the school was on football’s biggest stage. “I can remember sitting around with members of our administration the night before the game, looking at each other and saying, ‘Would you have ever “thunk” it?’ It was a neat time in our professional lives to be a part of something like that,” says Bridgewater head football coach Michael Clark. Clark brought his wealth of experiences as both a player and coach from his days at such storied programs as Virginia Tech, Cincinnati and VMI to a place where competitive football was nothing more than an oxymoron. Bridgewater was the Old Dominion Athletic Conference’s doormat, whipping boy and automatic “W” all rolled into one before Clark and a supportive administration changed the culture on the Rockingham County camIn the 2001 Stagg Bowl, Bridgewater scored pus. “I remember on the first offensive play of the game but walking to work ultimately lost to powerhouse Mt. Union early around 7 a.m. the Monday before the Stagg Bowl and seeing people lined-up outside of our administration building on campus,” he says. “When I found out they were standing in line to buy tickets for the game, I couldn’t believe it. It was a first for Bridgewater.” Students and faculty members bought every single ticket in the school’s original allotment in less than two hours, forcing Salem officials to get in a car and hand deliver to the campus another batch of tickets that also were gobbled up in a heartbeat. “There’s not a lot of times when a Division III ticket has a hard dollar value, but we knew this was one of those rare occasions when our sports information director was contacted by several ticket scalpers,” says Clark. The game was not only considered a sellout, but the fans from both schools came early and turned the Taliaferro Complex parking lot into one of the biggest outdoor parties the city has ever seen. “The fans from both sides produced the largest amount of trash, mainly bottles and cans, of any event ever held at the Civic Center,” says Carey Harveycutter, Stagg Bowl game manager. “If there is an officially sanctioned event, the Brethren community will 5 Bridgewater football coach Michael Clark: ‘Who would have “thunk” it?’ look for a reason to party,” says Clark. “In this instance, the event was way bigger than the game itself.” Those Brethren had plenty to celebrate when their Eagles scored on the first play of the game. The 67-yard touchdown strike from Jason Lutz to Marcus Richardson served notice to the Purple Raiders and the record crowd of 7,992 that the Eagles belonged. Mt. Union eventually won the game 30-27, but not before the two teams amassed nearly 1,000 yards of offense and proved that Division III football could hold its own in primetime. “The broadcasting world has changed so much since then, but on that particular Saturday night we were the only football game on TV, and these teams put on an amazing performance from the first snap to the end,” says Brad Bankston, commissioner of the ODAC. Bridgewater hasn’t made it back to the Stagg Bowl since that historic night in 2001, while Mt. Union and Wisconsin-Whitewater have assumed ownership of the game. No matter who makes it this year, Clark guarantees they won’t be left out in the dark. “Playing this game at night will give all involved a Division I moment in a Division III setting,” he says. “Certain accomplishments stand the test of time and I know that the 2001 Stagg Bowl will always be one of them.” It’s certainly something no one in Salem has forgotten, including the trash men. Former Jefferson hoops great dies Lewis Mills, a native Roanoker who helped lead the Jefferson High School basketball team to the Group I state championship in 1955, died in Richmond Oct. 12 following a long neurological illness. He was 74. Mills was involved in sports for most of his life. A first-team all-state guard known for his ball-handling prowess, Mills served as co-captain of the Magicians along with 6-foot-8 post player Dick Kepley. Mills was named MVP of the state tournament and then enjoyed a successful college career at Virginia Tech. He was Lewis Mills inducted into Tech’s Hall of Fame in 1991. Mills served as head basketball coach for the University of Richmond from 1963-74 and as athletic director at Virginia Commonwealth University from 1976-86. He also served five years as AD for Western Kentucky in the late 1990s. 6 Play By Play OCTOBER 24, 2011 Now is best time to enjoy most sports Ask A Ref To inform fans of the games’ finer points, Play by Play publishes “Ask A Ref,” a chance for fans to ask a question about specific sports rules, preferably those related to high school or the NCAA. Questions can be sent to moodyreferee@gmail.com. This month we have a sandlot football question. It will be answered by Play by Play contributor Christian Moody, who has officiated high school football for more than 20 years. Q. I went to a sandlot game recently and a team was called for intentional grounding at the end of the game when they were spiking the ball to stop the clock. Obviously they were grounding it, but I thought in that situation it was legal. A. It is legal, but there are still requirements within the rules to make it legal. The quarterback must take the snap hand-to-hand and must spike the ball immediately. A team cannot spike the ball to stop the clock from a shotgun formation, and the quarterback cannot step back or run around. He has to do it quickly. Internet photo O h, October, how I love you. Is there a better month than October? If a year had six months of May and six months of October that would suit me fine. But of those select two, October rules. Really, sports fans, is there a time that’s more fun? I’m not writing a weather piece. Kevin Myatt writes a brilliant column for The Roanoke Times and roanoke.com about weather. No other columnist should mention it unless there are lives or massive insurance claims at stake. Airy-fairy columns about how pretty the first warm days of spring are should never see ink on paper. But seriously, how great are those first nights of autumn when a sweatshirt is needed to go to a football game? Of course it’s the weather that makes October great. Highs in the 70s and lows in the 50s with only an occasional rainy day…what’s not to like? OK, enough about that. Let’s look at the sports. They’re all there in their glory. That’s another great thing about October. No matter what you like, it’s there. Football rules the fall. Who disputes me? The NFL hasn’t hit the halfway point yet but it’s not something that will ever be a low point of interest, so might as well call it king. As a Miami Dolphins fan I must admit the season really is over, but maybe the team can be so bad it can earn the rights to draft Andrew Luck. I really hoped he would come out last year and go to Carolina, but Luck in Miami would be OK with me. College football in October — does it get any better? Football on campuses amid the colored leaves, the warm days, kicking off in the afternoon and ending after sunset: that’s a slice of Americana that most sports fans count among their favorites. Blacksburg and Charlottesville are marvelous places to see a college football game. I’ve been to games in October in Clemson, Chapel Hill, Winston-Salem, Durham, Annapolis, (dare I say it?) Morgantown, and they’re all beautiful, but my bucket list includes seeing a game at William & Mary, Appalachian State, Furman, Michigan, Wisconsin, West Point and even Nebraska. October would be the best time to go to all of those places. Who’s up for a road trip? High school football is winding down but the games are huge. The big rivalry games are mostly played at the end of October and district championships, along with playoff berths, are being decided. A cool night, where the aroma of popcorn and hot dogs hangs in the air along with the drumbeat from the band and the chants of the students…it doesn’t get any better than that. Football and October are such an obvious pair, but not as obvious as baseball. They called Reggie Jackson “Mr. October.” No heroic baseball deeds have ever led to a player being dubbed “Mr. June.” The World Series is on, and for a Midwest boy like me, it’s great to see the central region of the country dominate the championship series in each league. No Northeast. Boston and New York reckon themselves close to the center of the baseball universe, but I would stack St. Louis next to either of them. And I say that as a Chicago Cubs fan. Reggie Jackson, “Mr. October” Detroit is the team that’s from the farthest east and Texas is the farthest west. Both were American League finalists. My father grew up outside Detroit and was a lifelong Tigers fan. Glad to see them make it as far as they did. The National League came down to Milwaukee and St. Louis, a battle of beer brands. There’s Anheuser-Busch versus Miller. The Cardinals play in Busch Stadium. The Brewers, whose nickname is a tribute to those who create beer, play at Miller Park. Only 374 miles separate the ballparks, but most Americans who enjoy a cold, hoppy beverage have a definite preference between the brands. Playoff baseball has a special feel to it, and it only happens in October. College basketball is soon to get underway. The problem with early season college hoops is that the games are seldom interesting. They are usually gross mismatches played for money or record, but there are occasional early-season tournaments that have fun pairings. The problem is that those games mean nothing. In most years the NBA starts in late October, but I hear that’s not the case this year. Frankly, that’s fine. They can cancel the season and I won’t shed a tear. I’ll just be happy not to have the NBA playoffs dominate 95 percent of sports talk radio come spring. I think the first round itself lasts in the neighborhood of five weeks. The lack of pro basketball, I’m hoping, will focus attention on hockey. Not sure that will be the case, and a lot of people are dead-set against liking hockey, but watching a game in high-definition television is an experience that may boost the popularity of the sport. Here’s the thing about hockey: I miss it. I miss the Roanoke Express, when Frank Anzalone paced behind the bench and Dave Stewart and Michael Smith led the team from the backline. I miss the excitement in the civic center when John Brophy brought the hated Hampton Roads Admirals to town, or the Richmond Renegades came in to go 10 rounds. I don’t know if professional hockey can ever again be viable in Virginia. But when it was, that sure was fun. I know it’s possible to see college hockey at the civic center. It’s club hockey, but it’s a good watch and a lot of fun to attend. College hockey starts in October just like the pros. Check it out. Finally, getting back to the weather, is there a better time to get out and play golf? The only drawback is having a ball make its way under fallen leaves. Sometimes I might lose a ball that way because, for some reason, the woods tend to be full of fallen leaves and my shots occasionally make their way off the beaten path. Being on a golf course when the colors are vibrant and the air is pleasant sure beats baking in the summer heat. October tends toward warm, calm days — the best possible for touring 18 with a friend. Better enjoy it now. November is right around the corner, and no one ever says how much they’re looking forward to November weather. OCTOBER 24, 2011 Play By Play 7 Surgeon shares how he improved his serve O ne of the most rewarding things in this business is when you encounter a good story told especially well. A heartwarming story, enhanced by some sort of sports backdrop, presented in a lucid, inspiring, creative or clever manner — that’s what it’s all about for me. Sometimes you find the whole package. It’s what we strive for within the pages of Play by Play — and on occasion, we get it. Considering the lineup of subjects and the capabilities of the contributors whose work we are featuring, I believe the frequency of such an occurrence is increasing. In the past month, on a larger stage, I unexpectedly found an example of what I’m describing. The New Yorker Festival, a prestigious forum sponsored by the esteemed magazine, is held in Manhattan every fall. Conceived by editor David Remnick, a prolific author as well, the conference features a wide array of presentations in various venues around the city. This year’s program was held Sept. 30-Oct. 2, Friday evening through Sunday afternoon, and included speakers Steve Martin, Malcolm Gladwell, Nancy Pelosi, Amy Poehler, Joyce Carol Oates and Owen Wilson, among several dozen others. Artists in various disciplines share their stories, their opinions, their secrets and their advice. Nearly 80 percent of the tickets to the more than 40 weekend presentations sold out the first day they went on sale. This was the second festival that I’ve attended. Last year’s program included luminaries James Taylor, Alec Baldwin, Steve Carell and Seth Meyers. I dragged my Joyce along with me this year, but her attendance won’t require much prodding in the future. That’s because one of the most impressive speakers we heard, Dr. Atul Gawande, likely will be on next year’s docket as well — judging by audience reaction. Gawande’s topic, “Do Surgeons Need Coaches?,” played to an SRO audience Saturday morning at the School of Visual Arts (SVA) Theatre on West 23rd Street. Dr. Atul Gawande Gawande’s speech is the cover story of the Oct. 3 New Yorker, a neat tie considering the magazine hit the streets as we were arriving in the city. I have been an avid subscriber to The New Yorker for nearly 20 years, ever since I heard novelist Sharyn McCrumb recommend the publication. McCrumb, a local who has made an international name for herself, told a group of aspiring writers that the best way to improve one’s craft is to read the best on a regular basis. Within hours of that comment, I started a subscription. I haven’t been disappointed. The magazine touts its annual renewal rate of 85 percent, a statistic I fully accept in part because The New Yorker prides itself on accuracy. Good luck on finding a mistake in it. They employ 16 full-time fact checkers. The New Yorker regularly features long pieces, painstakingly researched and beautifully written, by its stable of gifted authors. In its 86-year history, the magazine has employed some legendary writers, including E.B. White, Philip Roth, J.D. Salinger and John Updike. The long list of contributors glitters with celebrated names. Among its current crew is Gawande. Writing for The New Yorker is a sideline for him. The son of Indian immigrants, both doctors, Gawande is a Boston-based cancer surgeon and Harvard medical school professor who has a penchant for writing, and has penned more than 40 pieces in the magazine since the late 1990s. Last year, I heard him speak at the festival about end-of-life issues; his presentation hooked me for his future speaking engagements. I was already a fan of his writing. Gawande has authored three best-selling books, “The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right,” “Better: A Surgeon’s Notes on Performance,” and “Complications: A Surgeon’s Notes on an Imperfect Science.” His Wikipedia entry reads in part, “He is known as an expert in reducing error, improving safety, and increasing efficiency in surgery and has written extensively on medicine and public safety.” I would unabashedly add that his writing style is riveting. He is a 2006 MacArthur Fellow, meaning he received a $500,000 grant. This stipend is called the “genius award,” presented each year to about 20 United States citizens who “show exceptional merit and promise for continued and enhanced creative work.” Gawande is the real deal and I encourage you to read him, whether you want to be a better writer or simply a better person. (The fact that a doctor has found the time and has the talent to write for one of the most respected magazines in the world, a role that most full-time writers can only dream of, is quite the story in itself.) I should mention that Gawande has a lot of other talents. In college he aspired to be a rock star. He was a Rhodes Scholar and delivered the commencement address at Harvard Medical School 10 years after he earned his medical degree. He’s also an athlete, tennis being his best sport. Growing up in Ohio, Gawande was a player of some promise, although he says his exposure to national tournaments cured him of any unrealistic expectations. In the early 1980s he enrolled at Stanford, an outstanding academic institution and coincidentally one of the best college tennis programs in the country. Gawande knew he was not of the Cardinal caliber in that regard. But he still plays tennis occasionally, and it was while hitting balls during a break in a medical conference that Gawande got the idea for his festival speech. Gawande says that the pro that was hitting balls with him (charging $125 an hour for the lesson, the surgeon noted), offered some advice as to how the doctor could improve his serve. Now Gawande, who says that his serve was the best part of his game when it was at its peak, was taken aback at first, but then realized his “coach” knew what he was talking about. By the end of the session, Gawande says he had added speed to his serve and that it’s now about 10 mph faster than it ever was. Since he’s 45 years old, Gawande was elated. Gawande got to thinking about his primary line of work and how coaching might improve his technique in that area. “Doctors are supposed to coach themselves,” Gawande said in his 2005 commencement address. “We have no one but ourselves to buck us up. But we’re not good at it.” Gawande was afraid that surgical performance had peaked, and wasn’t sure what to do about it. He says that if Rafa Nadal and Michael Jordan and professional singers employ the services of coaches, he had to ask himself, ‘Why shouldn’t surgeons?” Gawande began to research his theory, knowing that coaches are abundant in many professional fields, and became particularly intrigued with coaching success in the field of education. He spent time in Virginia, traveling to schools within Albemarle County, and watching how coaches work with teachers. Gawande has since found his own coach, a retired mentor who helped Gawande get started years ago. Gawande says that while it can be a bit unnerving for everyone concerned when patients ask, “Who is that guy in the corner?” during medical consultations — in the end, any patients who raise eyebrows during the process are generally placated. Gawande maintains that just like he couldn’t see what was inhibiting his tennis serve, none of us can see our performance like an impartial expert. His success rate as a surgeon has improved. Maybe there’s an idea here as to how to be a better writer? 8 Play By Play OCTOBER 24, 2011 ‘Coolest sport in the world’ by Bo Lucas Photos courtesy of Roanoke Valley Youth Hockey I ce hockey is one of the fastest sports there is. The speed of players on the ice eclipses that of most other non-mechanized sports. According to local hockey players, it’s “the coolest sport in the world.” And apparently it’s one of the most fun, too. Come watch these enthusiastic youngsters on the ice at the Roanoke Civic Center and see for yourself. If you are tempted to join in the action, hurry and contact the Valley Youth Hockey Association. Their next instructional clinic begins in early November. It’s open to aspiring young athletes 5 and up. The Valley Youth Hockey Association can be reached by calling (540) 890-4659 or by visiting their Web site at http://www.vyhroanoke.com. Ice hockey is one of those sports where every player is involved in the action virtually the entire time he or she is on the ice. This continuous involvement provides many benefits. Physical conditioning, team camaraderie, responsibility and enjoyment are just a few. These reactions from players themselves really put this experience in perspective. Cole Devine (6, Learn to Play, Highland Park Elementary): “I love to go fast with big steps. I think Learn to Play is cool because they teach me to do things that my dad can’t.” Jack Kenney (6, Learn to Play, Highland Park Elementary): “I like skating fast and shooting and passing. I like watching the older kids play.” Mason Esworthy (8, West Salem Elementary): “I love playing hockey because it is the fastest game in the world. It is cool to skate fast and play well. I love my teammates and being part of our team. I’ve gotten to know lots of kids from other schools and we travel together to play hockey games.” Madison Caldwell (9, Mites, Glenvar Elementary): “I love to skate fast. I also like playing goalie, wearing all the equipment and making great saves. I love being part of a team.” You may love it, too. The Valley Youth Hockey Association (VYHA) of Roanoke provides the opportunity for aspiring young boys and girls to become a member of one of their ice hockey teams. All ages from 5 years to 18 years old are welcome. It doesn’t matter if they never played hockey before, or even if they haven’t skated before. VYHA has a place for all experience levels. While skating experience is a plus, it’s definitely not a requirement. The association offers a “Learn to Play” program that teaches these novices everything they need to know to become ice hockey players. Equipment is also available to rent. The Learn to Play program is an eight-week clinic that teaches the essential skills including “safety, rules, positions, skating, s t ic k-h a nd l i ng , shooting and game play.” This age-appropriate instructional program is made up of two groups, Future Stars and Rookies. The Future Stars clinic is for boys and girls age 5-8. It’s all about having fun on the ice. VYHA promises “Our Future Stars will love playing structured games designed to teach basic skating/hockey skills.” The Rookies clinic is for novice boys and girls 9 years old and above. These sessions focus on competitive games and activities that develop the skills necessary to participate on their house league and travel league teams. This fall these two groups will introduce nearly 50 new players to the exciting realm of hockey. More experienced players may sign up for the house league and travel league teams in their appropriate age groups. These leagues offer team membership in each age group and provide players with scheduled games against other organized teams. The house teams play games against other teams within the local organization. The travel teams provide serious players the opportunity to compete at a higher level versus teams in various leagues throughout the Mid-Atlantic states. The VYHA has five age-based house teams and five travel teams. The 6-8 year-old group is the Mites. They currently have 25plus players in the house league and 15 players on the travel team. Mites are divided into majors and minors. The Squirts are 9-10 yearolds. They have 15-plus players in the house league and also on the travel team. The 11-12 year-old Peewees also have 15-plus house and travel players. For the 13-14 year-old Bantams and the U16 and U18 Midgets, 12-plus players make up each team on the in-house and on the high school travel hockey squads. The Valley Youth Hockey Association of Roanoke is a not-forprofit sports organization. This magnanimous group of volunteers is led by a board of directors. Key members of the board include President Rodney Ferguson and Vice President Steve Esworthy. Ferguson’s day job is with the Roanoke County Fire/EMS as Battalion Chief. His son has played for the various VYHA teams throughout the years, and is nearing the end of his career with them. Esworthy is an editor with Cengage Learning Solutions. He has two younger children who are just getting started in the program. Another notable member of the board is Dick Sher. Sher’s longtime commitment to hockey in this area is legendary. Esworthy elaborates on Sher’s contributions saying that “special recognition is due Dick Sher, who serves on our board and is the director of the VYHA Learn to Play Program. Dick is a retired college math professor who took up playing hockey in his 50s. Now in his mid-70s, Dick has put his boundless energy to work for Valley Youth Hockey and its newest participants through the Learn to Play Program.” (Sher was featured in a September 2009 Play by Play adult hockey article that can be accessed online at playbyplayonline.net.) Development and retention of new talent is a critical element for any organization. Sher’s success with these Learn to Play groups is instrumental in the continued success of the VYHA. Sher has a special way with these young athletes and instills his love of hockey in many of his protégés. Members of the VYHA are well aware of the competition for these young participants’ time and energy. They must continue to provide a quality program to attract these novice athletes to their sport. Esworthy iterates “kids (and their parents) have almost limitless options for their entertainment and athletic pursuits. In order to attract and retain young boys and girls to our sport, our organization believes that we need to offer a fun, safe and positive learning environment. Our coaches realize that we have a responsibility to not only teach our players the game of hockey, but we know that it has to be fun for the players. “As a coach, I step onto the ice for each practice and each game with the thought that I want to capture the fun and excitement of that first time a kid steps on the ice and skates to where they want to go. It’s empowering for these See YOUTH HOCKEY, Page 17 OCTOBER 24, 2011 9 Play By Play 7 Sweep at Metro Invitational Cross Country at Green Hill Brian Hoffman Photo courtesy of Jenna Adams Cave Spring High School individuals (right) dominated the Roanoke County race in early October, with Knights Katie Fortner (18:20.58) and Cody Seymour (15:40.59) winning their respective divisions. Double winners were in vogue as the Blacksburg High School girls and boys won the team competition. Bill Turner photos Snapshots of the season 7 Meeting Rick Dempsey 7 Weekend in Dallas 7 Photo courtesy of Natalie Newman-Yost Roanokers Rob Yost and Natalie Newman-Yost (below) visited Cowboys Stadium Sept. 26 when Dallas nipped the Washington Redskins 18-16. Rob, who is employed by Owens Corning, was taking business clients to the game. The $1.15 billion stadium features an HD video screen (visible above their heads) that is 160 feet wide. 7 Former Roanoker Carol Adams (above) had the opportunity to meet the former Baltimore catcher and get his autograph after an Orioles game in September. Dempsey, the hero of the Orioles 1983 World Series, is currently a broadcaster with the team. He is one of only six catchers to be named Series MVP. Times-World Baseball Team Identities Play by Play has learned the names of the players in the 1933 photo we published this past spring. According to Ralph Berrier of The Times, they are: Front: Homer ‘Little Bud’ Terry, George Terry (both sons of Homer, Sr.), and Jimmy St. Clair. Second row: Elwood ‘Itchy’ Butler, Mack Powell, Charlie Shank, Herb Nash, Kermit ‘Corky’ Mitchell, Carl Kendrick, and Homer ‘Bud’ Terry. Third row: Carl ‘Cricket’ Thomas, Luke Wilburn, Russell Smith, Pug Jackson, Conrad Stultz, Claud ‘Cocky’ Barbour, and Red Owens. Berrier got his information from Jo Ann Terry, who coincidentally submitted the photo to The Times as part of the paper’s recent 125th anniversary celebration. Remember the Wolverines Brian Hoffman Andrew Lewis High School players from the 1971 football team (above) held a 40th reunion in late September at Salem Stadium. Those on hand were: (from left) Coach Dale Foster, Dick Tate, Coach Bill Winters, Carl Lowe, Steve Fagg, Gary Graham, Mark Blevins, Ben Boyd, David Heath, Grant “G”Sprinkle, Dwayne Wheeling, Bob Long, Coach Danny Wheeling, Billy Sample, Melvin Dickerson, Robert Marmaduke, and James Penn. This is the team that lost in Victory Stadium to T.C. Williams High School for the Group AAA state championship, a game that was an integral part of the “Remember the Titans” 2000 movie starring Denzel Washington. 10 Play By Play OCTOBER 24, 2011 LJ Basham knows ‘it’s not all about him’ ing runner in Botetourt’s Hunter Duke. ever before have I seen On the field this season, Basha young athlete stick out so am continues to run the ball as much from the others, yet he always has, but has also taken paradoxically fade so quietly into on some quarterback duties for the background. Versatile, trecoach Robert Shepherd’s Vinton mendous, humble and quiet. All Junior Razorbacks, an extension these adjectives describe Larry of the Vinton Seminole teams that Basham, the kid who very well dominated in the past. In one of could have a bright athletic future. his highlight plays at quarterback, In Vinton, it is hard to find a LJ found Dalton Shepherd in the person who doesn’t already know end zone to pull ahead with 1.5 his name, in spite of the fact that seconds left in an Oct. 5 win over he has just recently begun sixth the Botetourt Cavs, showing the grade at William Byrd Middle comfort LJ has found with the ball School. He’s shredded football dein his hand and the pressure on. fenses across the area so convinc “He thrives on competition Larry ‘LJ’ Basham (No. 26, above) has emerged ingly that other coaches come into and when he plays better teams, as a sandlot football star at an early age yet mangames these days with specific it brings out the best in him,” the ages to keep his priorities in proper perspective game plans for Basham more than elder Larry says. “We’ve played the team he plays for. At age 12, about him. his friends. The games he plays are this [particular] coach so many his résumé reads well: two SandFor LJ, it restill so pure. times that he game plans just for lot Super Bowl titles in three conally is still “It’s really important,” says LJ him [LJ]. He beat them with his secutive trips from 2007-2009 and just about bashfully, about keeping the game arm and that’s the first time he’s yardage and touchdown totals playing more about fun at this point in his really had to change everything that would make Barry Sanders and having life. in the midst of a game because he blush. fun with “You don’t want it to feel like it’s has weapons around him now to a job,” says his father, Larry. “You do that. I’m glad that it makes him want him to just go out there and happy that he can get everyone enjoy doing it. At the end of the else involved.” day, if he’s not having fun, there “I just listen to my coaches and is no point in doing it. I’ve never the things they tell me,” LJ adds head him say ‘you know, I’m pretty about being the focal point, but November 5, 2011 • 10 am start good.’ I have never also making othheard him talk ers around him about any of his better. “I’m not the accomplishments only person [out and I think that’s there].” rare for an athlete It’s an unselfto not sit back and ishness that Bashlook at your body am has developed of work, no matter in part because what level you are of the unselfon. I think he just ishness of playgoes out and plays ers around him. and whatever hapHe specifically Proceeds pens, happens.” notes five guys in benefit: As the primary former and curVirginia offensive weapon rent teammates Canine 5K Run - $35 for the Vinton Bryson Byrd, Recovery Team Seminoles in years Jaylen Wheeler, Runner with dog - $40 past, LJ helped Dalton Shepherd, take the team to Jon Dalton and 1 Mile Walk - $35 the aforemenAustin Haymaker tioned Sandlot Suwho have helped Walker with dog - $40 per Bowl appearhim become the ances, capped by a Basham was making baskets player he is. But 20-14 victory over on a 10-foot goal at age 5 even outside of the Cave Spring Knights at Salem those five, LJ remains humble in Stadium in 2009, in which Bashknowing that his accomplisham scored all 20 points, including ments would not be much without Register now! an 82-yard run. Last season, the teammates. He knows he doesn’t www.CommonwealthGames.org Seminoles fell short when Basham have to do it all. did battle with another outstandSee BASHAM, Page 17 Dan Vance N Danny Cruff Speaking of blushing, the kid simply known to friends and family as LJ probably already has had that reaction reading the first paragraphs of this story. That is the astounding thing about him; he understands that it is not just by Dan Vance 5K Run & 1 Mile Walk Danny Cruff Big Lick Vet Tails and Trails OCTOBER 24, 2011 11 Play By Play nearly eight per set over a two-game stretch to earn the honor. Young is a defensive stalwart for Catawba, and part of a core of juniors that has been instrumental in the team’s early success this season. “She’s a go-getter, a fireball,” says Hamric. “She’s a very good defender, left-handed, and she’d probably be a good hitter at this level but we need her too much on defense to sacrifice playing her there.” Richardson, a sophomore who had her choice of playing small college basketball or volleyball, T ucked away in North Carolina, about halfway between Charlotte and Winston-Salem, Salisbury, N.C., is the home to Food Lion, Cheerwine and a pretty good little volleyball team at Catawba College. Coach Ginger Hamric passed 450 career wins this year, her 22nd season coaching, the last seven for the Indians. Her team is off to a solid 14-6 start this year, in part, thanks to some talented players from the Roanoke area. Photos courtesy of Catawba College Athletics by Mike Ashley Jenny Young (above) and Emily Richardson (left, No. 8) have helped propel the Indians to a 14-6 record “I had never heard of (Catawba), to be honest,” says one of those players, Salem native Emily Richardson. “But I really like it. It’s a nice little school and town.” They must be nice. Catawba was one of just five schools that won an appeal from the NCAA in 2006, to continue using the nickname “Indians,” when they were able to prove that the local native Catawba Indians actively supported them. The campus is about a threehour drive from Roanoke, and Hamric has made that trek often, but particularly in late winter to come watch the popular Shamrock Festival and Showcase, a prominent volleyball competition. That’s where she first spotted Richardson, and she had also seen another now-Indian mainstay, junior defensive specialist Jenny Young, play there. Young, a Patrick Henry High product, was South Atlantic Conference Specialist of the Week in mid-September after a remarkable performance in a win over Tusculum. She had a school record 55 digs in the game, and averaged DAV DA AVI VID ID BOW OWE OW WERS Attorney • Divorce • Traffic • Social Security Disability 33 30 Years Experience 345-6622 335 W. Church Ave., Roanoke (Next to City Courthouse) Brian Hoffman Young and Richardson help Catawba Indian uprising At 6-feet, Richardson was a strong player at the net for Salem High leads the team in blocks and has been a fixture in the lineup since stepping on campus. “Emily’s a middle blocker and she has really improved since last year,” says Hamric. “She was starting and playing a lot as a freshSee CATAWBA, Page 16 12 Lauren Sledd Net gains Play By Play OCTOBER 24, 2011 Cave Spring’s Lauren Sledd excels in volleyball and tennis T he concepts are simple and strikingly similar. Hit the ball across the net in a fashion the opponent cannot return. Tennis and volleyball look very different, but they have much in common, including being a passion for Cave Spring High School senior Lauren Sledd. As the years tick off, the accolades come in bunches. On Oct. 11, in a volleyball match with archrival Hidden Valley, Sledd became the Knights all-time leader in service points and aces. Even though WINN ERS The libero cannot attack in the typical way — a mighty swing, striking the ball above the net — but Sledd knows how to place a ball so it can’t be returned. She has 212 career kills. “She has a powerful back row attack, she’s like a front row player on the back row,” says Cave Spring coach Tamalyn Tanis. “She does her job so well. We have a lot of confidence in her. Her tennis swing really complements her volleyball.” Bill Turner photos by Christian Moody such statistics are fairly esoteric, to hold an all-time record in volleyball at Cave Spring, given the history and tradition that sport has at the school, is a major accomplishment. Sledd relegated former Knight Lauren Clary, who went on to play Division I volleyball at Radford University, to second in both categories. Sledd also has nearly 1,100 career digs at press time, second in the Cave Spring record book, with a good shot at holding that record before she ends her time in the red and black. The dig is the key, she says. Keeping the ball off the floor and passing it to the setter at the same time is a talent that’s vital to a team’s success. To that end, she plays the libero position, a defensive specialist who is allowed more freedom in substituting, but must play in the back row. for the direction. Morgan Shannon, a senior with a booming right arm, knows how to hear Sledd. “I’m just in tune with her voice,” Shannon says. “After playing together five years I have complete trust in her when she tells me where to hit. I love the way she brings so much energy to the team.” Tanis calls it swagger. She says Sledd is the floor leader who exudes so much confidence, the rest of the team feeds off her. “The swagger factor is what we count on most from Lauren. She keeps it light, keeps it loose out there,” Tanis says. It’s also nice to see her take the ball for service, knowing she has only missed 64 serves in her Sledd receives strong support from her father, Cave Spring career. Tracy Sledd, and her mother, Carol Hall That’s less than one Tanis says the leadership Sledd a match. Her serve is deadly and brings to the court is beyond meaaccurate. sure. One of five seniors on this Sledd says the tennis serve has year’s squad, Sledd has been a a lot of shoulder turn and a snap member of the varsity team all at contact that works in volleyball. four years of high school. She says Plus, tennis requires precise footshe has a feel for her teammates. work, a skill that benefits volley “I’m not there setting the kills, ball players, as well. but I’m in the back telling them It all comes back to tennis, bewhere to hit,” Sledd says. “I read cause tennis is the first love. Volthe blocks and I can say hit it to the leyball is a Johnny-come-lately. line or hit it in the middle.” Sledd didn’t take up volleyball un Even with all the noise in a til she was the ripe old age of 11. crowded gym, the Knights know See SLEDD, Page 16 how to communicate and listen C OTY CONNECTIONS SOCIAL MEDIA FOR SMALL BUSINESS Please call or email us today to start connecting with more customers! Leslie Coty • 540-588-0117 Leslie@CotyConnections.com • www.CotyConnections.com Twitter.com/LeslieCoty • Facebook.com/CotyConnections • LinkedIn.com/in/LeslieCoty 13 No ordinary Joe OCTOBER 24, 2011 Play By Play Greenway working overtime for Lions Bill Turner break prior to an 11 a.m. class, and then he works as socc e r t rainer from 1-7. He has a 7-9:30 night class that day, too. with Even this kind of scheduling Bill Turner J oe Greenway always figured being involved in sports kept him “out of trouble.” Growing up in Roanoke County, he was too busy playing his beloved sports to ever do much wrong, and well, he has taken that idea to an extreme now as a senior at Concord University. Not only is the Hidden Valley High School product one of the Mountain Lions’ leading tacklers and a team captain, but when he’s not playing and practicing football, he’s a student-trainer for men’s soccer on Concord’s athletic training staff. “I have to average 15-20 hours a week in the training room,” says Greenway, who puts in similar hours, if not more, in football. “It’s pretty rough. It wears you out.” Take Greenway’s Tuesdays this fall. Please. Third-year football coach Garin Justice, who has his team’s full attention since turning the program around during his tenure, has Tuesday and Wednesday practices scheduled at 5:30 a.m. Tuesdays are particularly tough for Greenway the player, the student and the trainer. After getting out of practice at 8 a.m., he has a quick breakfast, and heads to an 8:45 class. He has a shor t The Greenways have it down to plays because of squeeze since his an art following Joe these days. that. He has sophomore year, They bought a 2010 Subaru Outmade himself Greenway estiback just to haul the family to Coninto a great footmates that he has cord for games. ball player.” only missed “a Following in his brother’s cleat Justice’s trust handful of classsteps worked out pretty well for in Greenway is es,” and he’s a Joe, too. so complete that pretty decent stu “It was kind of nice because I Greenway serves dent. He would didn’t have to adapt much because as the team’s have to be with I already knew everybody here only “speaking this schedule. because of my brother,” he says. captain” each Greenway is “High school football to college week. Justice roone of four athfootball is a big adjustment but it tates the seniors letes on the trainwas a little easier for me because as captains for ing staff among of Matt.” the pregame coin 36 total students What wasn’t easy was dealing toss each Saturin the program. with an 0-11 season that first year day, except for The powers that Joe Greenway currently ranks in 2008. “I had never had a losing Greenway. Grebe at Concord second in tackles for Concord season all the way through high enway is always at midfield to call have already announced in the fuschool,” says Greenway. “Coming the toss and tell the officials which ture that they’re no longer going to up here and going 0-11 was really a options the Lions will exercise. let athletes work as student trainshock. You never know how much That’s only fitting because when ers. It’s just too much. Call it the winning means to you until you Greenway got to Concord, he Joe Greenway Rule. don’t do it.” thought he was going to major in So maybe Greenway is taking The 5-10, 215-pound outside broadcasting and pursue his love it out on opponents on Saturdays linebacker has been a big part of for sports that way. Soon, though, this season. Concord is 4-3, three turning things around at Concord, the lure of the training room drew victories coming on consecutive from 0-11 to 6-5 in 2009, and 8-3 him in from video and audio tape weeks, and Greenway is second in last season. He is well on his way to rolls of white athletic tape. tackles with 67, and tops in tack “I had a good trainles for loss with eight, including a er athletic trainer in sack. He also has three intercephigh school — James tions and a couple of fumble reHargenrader, and he coveries. was an influence,” says In a 38-7 win over West VirGreenway. “This field ginia State in September, he had interests me. I’m fas16 tackles, a sack and two intercinated by how people ceptions, showcasing the kind of get hurt. I know that player he has become the last two sounds bad but the huseasons. man body and how it “Joe’s the epitome of a guy that works has always interif you come in and do the right ested me.” things all the time and bust your Greenway actually tail and do exactly what coachcame to Concord at the es ask, you’re going to become a Greenway scores for Hidden Valley in 2006 behest of his parents, great football player,” says Justo completing his 1,200 hours Frank and Mary Beth, because tice. “When I first got here he was of work in the training room to older brother Matt was already coming off his freshman year, and help earn his degree, and then there. A sports-loving family, the he was a little undersized, a step he hopes to pursue post-graduGreenways could make one trip slower and not strong enough. He ate work in physical therapy and on football Saturdays and see two was all those things but the one start rehabbing athletes instead sons play Joe’s first two years — thing you saw was he was a great of just downtrodden football when Matt was a starting fullback person, a great student, a smart programs. for the Lions before he graduated. kid that wanted to be great. “It’s been great for me here be The five Greenway kids have al “He just kept on working and cause I’ve gotten a lot of clinical ready had a pretty big impact on working and working and workhours here, a lot of experience,” the collegiate sports landscape. ing. Now he’s fast enough. Now says Greenway. Older sister Mary, who went to he’s big enough. Now he’s one of And Concord seems to have Cave Spring, was a two-time Allthe strongest guys on the team. gotten more than their money’s Southern Conference selection in And he’s still the same kid who’s worth, too, Joe. softball at UNC-Greensboro. intelligent, and makes football Photo courtesy of Concord University by Mike Ashley 14 Play By Play Bier at the beach Maroon hopes to play internationally next summer 14 RBI). With the Knights at Cave Spring, Bier was a shortstop/right fielder/DH, earning numerous postseason honors. She made AllTimesland first team and All-state second team during her tenure. No slouch in the classroom either, she was a two-time National Fastpitch Coaches Association National Scholar-Athlete and graduated in the top 10 percent of her class. The double major (International Relations and Criminal Justice) “fell in love” with the Roanoke College campus and chose to stay close to home. Bier also wanted to stay active in the local community. Making the jump from high school softball to Division III college was a bit harder than she expected, even though Lindsey Moore, her head coach at Cave Spring after Mast left, had tried to prepare her. by Gene Marrano Photos courtesy of Roanoke College A lea Bier has never been on a plane, never ventured farther from Virginia than Florida by car. Now she hopes to jet all the way to Aruba to play softball. Bier, a Cave Spring graduate now attending Roanoke College, has been selected to participate in a tournament for USA Athletes International, which brings together competitors in a variety of sports, from all over the world, to play in an Olympicstyle atmosphere while they learn about other cultures. At usaai.org the organization describes itself as a non-profit “dedicated to giving amateur athletes and coaches the opportunity to participate in international Olympic-style sporting events throughout the world, while also allowing them to broaden their educational and cultural knowledge of the world through the experience.” In the past 18 years it has grown from one baseball team going abroad to more than 60 annual tours, more than 900 athletes in seven sports and travel to 14 countries. One of those athletes will be Bier — provided she can raise enough funds to cover her travel and housing costs. “They send athletes pretty much all over the world,” says Bier, who was selected by softball coaches connected with the USAAI program. The overall cost for the trip, including transportation and passport fees, should run her about $3,500-$4,000. “It fosters a lot of goodwill within the country [where the games are held],” says Bier, who also looks forward to the time scheduled for athletes to visit the community away from the softball field. There will also be time to hang out on the beach in Aruba, a resort island off the coast of Venezuela that is property of The Netherlands. Bier, who made it as far as the Group AA state semifinals under former Cave Spring head coach Beth Mast, has played at second base and in the outfield at Roanoke College for head coach Mike Mitchell. Bier started all 36 games as Maroon freshman, hitting .313, and 27 of the 28 games she played as a sophomore last season (.338, periences in my life, something that not everybody gets to do — to talk to the face of softball today,” Bier says. Bier has also allowed herself to think about going pro — like Finch has done — via a minor league softball circuit started by one of her former assistant coaches at Roanoke College, Rick Anderson. “It’s for players like me from a DIII school that are good, but didn’t OCTOBER 24, 2011 selected for a USAAI tournament this past summer but the Bent Mountain native couldn’t come up with the money. She’s determined not to let that stop her next year, and has already put funds aside from a part-time summer job. Bier could use some help however, and is seeking tax-deductible contributions (USAAI is a non-profit after all) for the Aruba jaunt, scheduled for June 18-25, 2012. Bier will compete with softball players from all over the United States, including several from Indiana State University, Larry Bird’s old school, which is also supplying the head coach. They’ll play teams from Aruba and other countries that were assembled by organizations similar to USAAI. Cave Spring graduate Alea Bier has played second base and the outfield for Roanoke College, batting well over .300 her first two seasons Now Bier is trying to pass on what she learned about a game that was “so much faster” at the college level, at least at first. This past summer she helped coach softball travel teams and emphasized that message. Keeping her hand in the game by coaching is one of her long-range goals. “I would love to coach one day…at the high school level [or] on a travel team,” says Bier, “I feel the need to give back what I’ve been given from my coaches.” Bier has seen the U.S. National team play several times during barnstorming stops in Salem in recent years. She rubbed shoulders with superstar pitcher Jennie Finch during a camp the Maroons helped run in Radford several years ago. “We got to interact with [her] — it was one the coolest ex- want that pressure in college [from big time sports]. They didn’t get the attention that D-I players get.” Roanoke College holds its own in fall ball games against Radford University, which has assured Bier she could compete against players from higher level schools. Playing professionally, even for another year or two after college, would be “beyond amazing,” says Bier, who can’t see herself not playing somewhere, on some field, for many years to come. Noting that many softball teams are coached by men, who learn the game from seminars and the like, Bier believes being a female coach might constitute an advantage: “To have somebody who’s actually been there would be completely different,” she says. Bier is not sure who nominated her for the Aruba trip, which will take place next June. She was also Teams will play one game a day for a total of six during their stay in Aruba. “I’ve never been to another country, I’ve never even flown on an airplane,” says Bier, who says her trip, if she can raise the money, is about more than softball: “For me [it’s also about] getting to know other cultures, being able to experience that.” Being abroad would also complement her international relations major. “It fits in really well,” she says. Contact her at anbier@mail. roanoke.edu for information about how to make a donation, or go directly to her Web site link and make a contribution at http://usaai.org/payment?user=4724&trip=241254. “It’s a great opportunity for me [and] it’s warm,” chuckles Bier. “I never thought I’d get the opportunity to play at an international level. I think that’s cool.” OCTOBER 24, 2011 Play By Play 15 Impressive in its own right illiam Fleming High School’s 2011 Athletic Hall of Fame inductees had a hard act to follow after the inaugural class last year. That first group included two future NFL players (Lee Suggs, John St. Clair), a former Colonels basketball player who went on to be a big time Division I women’s coach (Charlene Curtis) and a Virginia Tech football legend (Donald Divers). Not to mention former head football coach and athletic director George Miller, who took Fleming to a state title game in the late 1990s and also starred in several sports as a Colonel more than 40 years ago. The 2011 Hall of Fame group, who was selected by a committee and will be honored Dec. 17, isn’t too shabby, either: Monica Cabbler ran track in the 1990s, earning all-state honors, and then went on to the University of Georgia. The NCAA All-American was also a U.S. Olympic trials qualifier. Cabbler, who now finds endorsement opportunities for athletes, will travel from California for the induction ceremonies. Don Woods played football, basketball and track as a Colonel in the 1950s (earning all citycounty, district, region, and state honors) then competed at Virginia Tech (football) and Austin Peay. Sherley Stuart, a multi-sport coach and athletic director at Fleming for two decades, led the Colonels to a 1985 AAA outdoor track state championship. Bob Lenoir, a football, basketball and track star, went to Emory & Henry to play football, and then came back to Fleming to teach, coaching football, wrestling, baseball and golf. Lenoir also enjoyed a long stint as a high school football and basketball referee, officiating ODAC college basketball games as well. Lenoir returned to Fleming as a football line coach for Fred Smith (HOF class of 2010), leaving behind a head coaching position in Buena Vista. Don Lee retained Lenoir on his staff when Smith retired. Corbin Bailey (football, track, basketball) was a key member of the state football and basketball championship teams and was the 1954 Roanoke Valley B’nai B’rith winner. Bailey went on to play Stuart, who also coached football in college while he earned a master’s at North Carolina A&T, before returning to Fleming, was the Colonels head football coach for more than a decade. He was also a Fleming baseball coach. As for being named to the Hall of Fame, says Stuart, “Any time others recognize someone’s accomplishments, it’s an honor. You’re very appreciative that others [value] the time you spend working with kids. It’s super…that others even think about you. It’s the first time I’ve been in something like this.” You can even say there is “royalty” in Stuart’s family — grandAt the ribbon cutting of William Fleming’s new facilities in 2010, Bob son David Prince is the celebrated Lenoir (center) was surrounded by local celebrities and dignitaries quarterback at cross-town rival Patrick Henry. Prince, a junior, has football at Virginia Tech. McGeorge and others on the received scholarship offers from The late Kenneth French was selection committee continue to both Virginia Tech and Virginia. a coach and athletic director seek input from the community as Prince once lived in the Flemfrom1954-86 (football, basketball they assemble the 2012 HOF class. ing school district before the famand wrestling). Many members of Announcements made at Fleming ily moved. “His whole life was the first two William Fleming Athsporting events and on the school wrapped around the [Fleming] letic Hall of Fame classes enjoyed Web site solicit nominations. As blue and gold,” Stuart says, but careers that overlapped and develthe school dates to the 1930s, there “you play where you live; this is oped friendships along the way. are hundreds of bona fide sports life.” “I was at his bedside when he stars to consider. Lenoir spent two years as a [passed away],” says Lenoir of his A donation made this year has student at Fleming after his famlongtime friendship with French. led to construction of a new disily relocated from North Carolina. “He was my idol [and] the reason I play case, away from the school’s French was his line coach when went into coaching.” trophies and ribbons. “Those inLenoir was a Colonel. He ques The 2011 honorees will be recogdividuals [selected] needed their tions his selection as a Hall of nized at a reception before Flemown section to be represented,” Famer, but adds that “to go in with ing plays a varsity boys’ basketball says McGeorge. “The more I get Sherley Stuart and Coach French game on Dec. 17 against Chrisinto this the more names pop up, is my highlight. I’m just tickled to tiansburg. Memorabilia from the and the more I learn about the hisdeath.” hall of fame group will be placed tory of Fleming,” he notes. McGeorge in display cases set up says that being outside the cafeteria. The part of the selechall was created in part to tion committee let current students know has taught him a about the sports legacy at thing or two, even Fleming, and some of the though he was a accomplishments of forColonel himself. mer Colonels when they “I’ve learned so moved on to the next level. much about the Troy McGeorge, head history of Flemof the selection commiting and the athtee (he played football letes that have and basketball at Fleming, gone through the graduating in 1986), said school,” says Mcit “just worked out” that George, whose the two first classes were daughter was a connected in so many The inaugural hall of fame class included John St. Clair and recent basketball ways. French, for example, Lee Suggs, both of whom enjoyed several years in the NFL star for Fleming. “thought the world of Bob “I’m just amazed. It’s such a rich Lenoir,” says McGeorge. “I’m glad The school spans three campushistory, people who put their heart they’re going in together.” Mces (including what is now Breckinand soul, and almost their lives, George has his own connection to ridge Middle School) and several giving back to the community and this group: Lenoir and Stuart were eras, including almost 40 years giving back to William Fleming.” his driver education teachers. pre-integration. Gene Marrano W William Fleming selects its second HOF class Catawba From Page 11 man, which is very unusual for a middle blocker but she did a nice job, and is even better this year.” UNC-Greensboro transfer Savannah Tomlinson has plugged in alongside Richardson to shore up Catawba’s blocking, and Young and outside hitter Kaitlyn Whitmer, a former Franklin County High standout, headline a junior class that has led the Indians’ fast start this fall. Whitmer, who was born in Roanoke, was secondteam all-conference and all-region last year. “Jenny and Kaitlyn, and all the juniors all started last year so we had a core coming back,” says Hamric. “That experience is what has made us a lot better.” Not that the Indians were that bad last season, finishing 14-13. Of course that was Hamric’s fewest wins in five years for a program that has had 14 20-win campaigns Sledd From Page 12 Her father, Tracy, had her learning tennis at 6. “Tennis is big in my family,” Sledd says. “My dad played tennis and I started taking lessons early. He also played volleyball which made me want to play that, but I played tennis first.” Excelling at either sport required sacrifices. At first, tennis took a back seat. Once volleyball started, Sledd joined a travel team and was on the Roanoke Junior National team for three years. “I missed tennis,” Sledd says. “I made a decision I want to play tennis in college.” So a change was made. She enrolled in Johan Kriek’s Roanokebased tennis academy and made that her focus. She scrapped travel volleyball and considered giving up playing for the Knights. “We’re really thankful it all worked out for tennis and volleyball,” Tanis says. No doubt. While her Cave Spring teammates are playing volleyball tournaments all over the eastern United States, Sledd is playing tennis tournaments miles from home and doing well. She hopes to have an offer from a college soon so she can settle the issue of where she’s going. If that happens by the spring, she will likely take the court for the Knights’ tennis Play By Play since 1986. “I think we work well together this year,” says Young. “We’re just pulling it together and communicating better, having fun. We’re definitely having fun out there this year.” Young came to the small school (enrollment 1,300) because of the exercise science program. She hopes to someday be a personal trainer and run her own business, making folks more fit and helping them with nutrition. Right now, she’s eating up the way her team is playing. “I’m really hoping we can go far in the postseason,” she says. “If we keep working and playing smart I think we’ve got a chance.” The Indians went to the NCAA Division II Regionals in 2008 and 2009, but haven’t won an SAC crown since 2002. With only two seniors on the roster this season, the future is bright, too. In some situations, it might be team. If the offer isn’t there come spring, Sledd thinks the exposure through Kriek’s academy is a better way to catch the attention of a college coach. She ranks 14th in the state in the girls 18 Division. “A great winner in tennis is just as sweet as a kill for our team in volleyball,” Sledd says. She practices both sports in season, but make no mistake about Sledd’s priorities. As a studentathlete, the student still comes first. She is sporting a 3.7 grade point average and knows that the classroom is the ultimate arena where success will be defined. Along the way happen to be the courts. The team-versus-individual aspect of the two sports is the most obvious difference, but that variation does not factor in to her appreciation of the games. “I love tennis, and the individual competition, but I love being part of my [volleyball] team,” Sledd says. “Everyone on this team, we really love each other. I wouldn’t want to be on any other team.” That team has only one goal — win the state championship. After making the state semifinals the last two years, the Knights hope to hang their fifth state title banner in their gym this year, and anything short will be a disappointment. But when it’s over, tennis will be Sledd’s focus and passion. OCTOBER 24, 2011 hard for an unproven player to come in and contribute as a freshman the way Richardson did last season. “That was such a great opportunity,” Richardson says. “It opened a lot of doors for me to grow. I thought it was really cool to come in and play at this level. I was shocked.” Coming out of Salem High, the 6-foot Richardson found she had better volleyball options than basketball, and that helped her make her decision. She also just fell in love with Catawba. “The professors really work with you here and there’s a real feeling of community since it’s a small school,” she says. Richardson is majoring in elementary education and someday hopes to teach. Hamric credits her trips to the Shamrock Festival, Roanoke’s annual junior volleyball buffet, with discovering Richardson, Young and Whitmer, although she also Edmunds saw Young play for PH at a Wake Forest summer camp, where Hamric is a coach. “The level of volleyball in Roanoke is pretty good,” says Hamric. “It’s better all over the East Coast with more and more year-round play. Tamalyn Tanis and her husband Mark (see related story on page 12) have done a great job in Roanoke with that tournament.” Last year, 228 teams competed in the event, all performing in front of coaches representing 56 different colleges. This year’s tournament is scheduled March 10-11, and it has become one of the largest nationally-sanctioned USA Volleyball tournaments and showcase opportunities for juniors on the East Coast. Veteran coach Hamric serves up a final, knowing word. “I know it’s good for Roanoke as far as the economy but it’s awfully good for volleyball, too.” Photo courtesy of Bill Edmunds 16 Cave Spring’s 1960 10-0 team. Edmunds is on the back right From Page 18 kicked it through from 28 yards.” Edmunds also points to a memorable play against George Wythe. “Our scouting noted that George Wythe had the unusual tendency of rushing the punter, then immediately sending the line back downfield to form a blocking wedge. Our punter took the snap, hesitated and tossed a shuttle pass to our halfback in motion. He went running down the field right behind the George Wythe defense.” The ruse set up the only score of the game in the 6-0 Cave Spring win. “That play put Cave Spring on the map,” Edmunds notes. Edmunds points to his players and assistants as the keys to his coaching success. “I had three great assistants in Ray Waskey, Tommy Jones and Jack Lindsey. And our players were a tight-knit team — like family.” Ask Edmunds to single out an outstanding player or top performer and you won’t get a name. “I couldn’t pick one out,” he says with a smile. “They were all so good.” Edmunds received the ultimate recognition as a coach on Sept. 9 when he, along with his Cave Spring coaching successor, the late Charlie Hammes, had the field at Dwight Bogle Stadium named in their honor. As Edmunds stood at midfield along with his wife, Becky, his name was unveiled on the end zone scoreboard. “I was completely surprised they were going to do this until I got a letter in the mail,” Edmunds says. “It’s quite an honor.” Thirty-eight of Edmunds’ former players returned for the ceremony. It was a perfect convergence — players whom Edmunds credited for his coaching success joining the coach those very players credited for being the brain behind their teams’ legendary legacy. OCTOBER 24, 2011 Youth hockey From Page 8 17 Play By Play remain frozen for much of the winter. Skating and playing hockey outside is a regular winter pastime. E s w o r t h y summarizes this crucial issue. “As an organization it is important to us to take those first few tentative steps toward getting a full-time ice rink back in the Roanoke Valley. The Roanoke Civic Center is a great home for our organization and the staff at the RCC has been an incredibly supportive and thoughtful partner for the VYHA. As the Civic Center attracts more and more entertainment events, ice is getting harder and harder to come by. We believe that having another ice surface in the Roanoke Valley offers a great synergy with the Roanoke Civic Center. “Having a full-time ice rink greatly enhances the opportunity for a return of professional ice hockey to the Roanoke Valley and offers greater opportunity to col- leges and universities in the area. We very much want to explore options for public-private partnerships that could bring an ice facility to the Roanoke Valley that could act as an engine for economic development and greatly increase quality of life.” Perhaps Roanoke could build an “indoor” snow skiing park on the slopes of Mill Mountain similar to the world-famous one in Dubai. With the natural mountain terrain and the moderate temperature here in Roanoke, it must be more feasible than the one in the 120º F desert of Dubai. And what avid ski enthusiast wouldn’t want to stop on the way home from work for a couple hours on the slopes. The financial benefits could be substantial. See pictures and info at http:// www.skidubai.com/ski-dubai/ photos. Of course it would come with an obligatory ice skating rink. it was a good experience,” Larry says, while his son nestles mod “It’s taken some of the pressure estly on the family couch as the and anxiety from him. I remember topic of middle school football before games he used to be really and getting to partner with former uptight and now, it’s just like ‘listeammates and opponents alike ten to music or talk’ because he when they put on Terrier jerseys knows he has other people around comes up. him that are capable “We’re going to of making plays,” be a good team,” Larry notes. LJ chimes in, LJ thinks his team cracking a smile has a shot at a Super as these differBowl return after a ent thoughts run one-year absence. through his head. “It’s my last year As efficient as in rec and I want to LJ has been on a win it the last year,” football field, he he says. “I’d be really also excels on the upset [if we didn’t].” basketball court Next school year, where he likes LJ will be greeted playing point with something he guard. In 2010, hasn’t had to deal he left the Vinmuch with in his ton Recreation very young playing Basham with former William League behind career: a complete Byrd great Derrick Palmer to focus on AAU change in coaching. and coach Gary But leaving Shepherd and his sysWheeler’s Virginia Terriers. LJ tem behind for a school system has been playing AAU basketball program doesn’t seem to scare the since he was 7 years old, but with shy star. Wheeler’s stacked Terrier team, “I’ve been down that road and he has flourished. And as any kid would, LJ loves the travel aspect of the AAU scene, noting a trip to Myrtle Beach as his favorite. During that trip to Myrtle Beach for Nationals, an opposing team from South Carolina tied a game at 42 with just over 10 seconds left during one of the games. Before Wheeler could even call timeout, the ball was inbounded to Basham, who made his way up the floor and hit a floater with five or six seconds remaining for the win. Basketball has been one of the important areas of LJ’s life, no matter how recognized he is for his football accomplishments. The Bashams previously lived across the street from a park and his parents, Larry and Carol, remember how passionate he’s been about basketball since those days where he would go across the street and shoot from the time they got home from work until it was almost his bed time. He’s been able to score on a regular-sized basketball goal since he was 4 or 5, they say. Wheeler, who also spent several years as a football assistant coach for LJ, is continually impressed by the youngster not resting on his laurels and working hard to get better. “LJ always has the drive to be the best at whatever he does,” Wheeler says. “He takes the challenge to be the best player on the field or court. Some kids shy away from that but LJ embraces that and strives to be the best. He is not a very vocal leader by nature, but every kid that plays with him will follow him and do whatever it takes to win in football and basketball.” It may be no surprise in ways that LJ has blossomed as he has. Sport has played a vital role in his family over the years, dating back to 1966 when his great uncle, James ‘Hoolie’ Childress, Jr., was integrated into the William Byrd school system as a high school senior and went on to average more than 30 points per game during Terrier basketball season. He was also named All City-County in football. The Childress lineage has brought several Byrd standouts over the years, including LJ’s aunt, Lisa, and cousin, James III. LJ’s father also had his share of fun on the gridiron, playing at William Fleming High School and Ferrum College. kids to step onto the ice and learn a completely new skill — one that many people can never do successfully. Imagine how empowering it is to be an 8-year-old kid and be able to do something well that most of your friends and neighbors can’t do.” Perhaps the most important element in the success of this hockey program is the generous cooperation of the Roanoke Civic Center. Their willingness to keep the ice down through most of the winter makes it possible for VYHA teams to play scheduled games. In previous years when various professional hockey teams played in Roanoke, Salem or Vinton, having ice throughout the winter was assured. The Salem Rebels of the 1970s insured that the Salem Civic Center had ice throughout their venture. Various teams located at the Roanoke Civic Center throughout the years kept ice on their floor through the winters. The Lancerlot Ice Arena in Vinton was an asset until it was destroyed in 1993 by a massive snowstorm that collapsed the structure. The Basham Danny Cruff From Page 10 Courtesy of Roanoke Valley Youth Hockey Ice Station in North Roanoke also provided significant ice time until it closed in 2006. Now the Roanoke Civic Center provides the only consistent ice around. Several collegiate hockey teams also benefit from the Roanoke Civic Center’s benevolence. Virginia Tech, Roanoke College, Radford University and VMI all practice and play games on this ice. Public skating sessions at the civic center occasionally provide the general public with a venue to enjoy skating. These hockey clubs and ice skating enthusiasts in the region make up a sizable coalition of proponents for consistent ice time. The mutual cooperation of these proice groups and the Roanoke Civic Center management has provided the essential ice time so far. They all benefit from each other’s successes. There is a strong movement among these proponents to identify other potential sources for ice. Ice hockey in the South doesn’t share the luxury of the sport’s proponents in the North. Just a half-day drive north of here ponds, lakes and backyard rinks 18 Play By Play OCTOBER 24, 2011 legends of the games Edmunds: master of the sleight of hand The “unexpected factor” presented the need to tip off the officials. “I’d go to them before a game to explain the trick play we had for that night,” Edmunds says, chuckling. “It got to the point they’d see me come in, yawn, and say, ‘here we go again.’ One night I started explaining the play and told them the field lights would go off during the play. Believe me, I got their attention then.” Edmunds points to a key game and a specific play that were cornerstones of his 11-year coaching tenure that produced a 65-31-11 record. “The biggest game was the 10-7 win against Franklin County on a final-play field goal that secured our 10-0 championship season in 1960. I don’t think I’d ever seen a field goal kicked in a high school game before that win.” by Bill Turner T Bill Turner Photo courtesy of Bill Edmunds Bill Turner here is little doubt the landscape of high school football has changed in the last 25 years. Complicated play calling, rigorous condi- Legends of tioning and a the Games high level of Sixty-ninth in a Series coaching expertise have become the standard for Friday night lights. But one of the greatest forerunners of coaching ingenuity came onto the Roanoke scene in 1956 with the opening of Cave Spring High School, and the hiring of Duke University graduate Bill At the field-naming ceremony, (from left) Becky and Bill Edmunds were Edmunds to lay the foundation for joined by officials Dr. Lorraine Lange, Steve Spangler and Fuzzy Minnix Knights football. of establishing a football program. wins began mounting. But Ed A Roanoke native, Edmunds “Along with principal Con Davis munds knew he still needed had established himself as a standand assistant principal Elizabeth something to keep his players’ out end at Jefferson High School Powell, we picked out the school interest. Along came the solution under longtime Magician head colors, scarlet red and black, along that would forever establish the coach Rudy Rohrdanz. Edmunds’ with the official school mascot,” Edmunds legacy — unconventalent was recognized early, he Edmunds, now 81, says. “Origitional formations and crafty trick being one of three players on the nally we were the Black Knights. plays. Local high school football Jefferson junior varsity team while But, it quickly became apparwas about to witness an evolution. still a student at Lee Junior High ent that the name was associated “I took formations and made variSchool. He moved to the varsity with a villain, so it was shortened ations,” Edmunds says. “Every day in 1947 and was an integral part to simply the Cave Spring Knights.” at practice it was something differof three straight Jefferson teams Edmunds says the name Black ent. The players thrived on it.” that contended for state champiKnights unofficially hung round Edmunds says he tried to introonships. His senior year, in 1949, for years, and is still reflected in the duce a new trick play every week. Edmunds earned all-state honors. mural that adorns one end of the “Trick plays are great if they work,” He received a football scholarship current Cave Spring gymnasium. he says with a laugh. “You could to Duke where he played on the “We had nothing to start,” Edonly pull it off once.” freshman team in 1950, and was a munds explains. “No field, no se But, the unusual plays typically roommate that year with a figure niors, we practiced at Back Creek, did work, and fans watched in anthat would become famous in basand for a special occasion would ticipation. “Our plays were comketball circles, Lefty Driesell. move practice to the VA (Veterans plicated,” Edmunds remembers. After his freshman year, EdAdministration) Hospital field in “We spread the entire field with munds left Duke to serve 2½ years Salem. I had 18 players that first our formations; we’d put our ofin the military, joining the Army’s year, most of whom knew little fensive line at one sideline; we’d 82nd battalion. He returned to the about football. We were potenput the quarterback in motion and Blue Devils in 1953 where he retially easy meat.” The first Cave snap the ball to another player. tained his scholarship and played, Spring squad played an abbrevi “It hasn’t been that long ago although sparingly, until his gradated schedule and, despite the adsince you started hearing about uation in 1956. versities, went 4-1-2. teams employing spread offenses That year brought the opening of But, according to Edmunds, and signaling in plays from the Cave Spring High School, with Edit was those sideline. Heck, we were doing both munds returnplayers who of those 50 years ago.” ing to Roanoke advanced the One of Edmunds’ favorite forto become a hisprogram immations involved putting an eighttory and physim e a s u r a b l y. man line at one sideline, with the cal education “Those kids center, a guard and the quarterteacher at the were great,” he back toward the center of the field. new Brambleton remembers. The set-up could send the opposAvenue facility, “The players lising defense into chaos. “If they more recently tened and did overplayed our line, the quarterthe site of the what they were back would take off with the snap,” middle school told. There were Edmunds says. “If they played it which was disno questions.” straight up, our guard could step mantled this As the proback, making the center eligible to past summer. He moved catch a pass. Nobody knew what to also took on the Originally the Black Knights, Cave gram the expect.” challenging job Spring chose to drop the adjective forward, Edmunds and Galen Conner (left) vividly remember 51 years ago The kicker that day was current Vinton resident Galen Conner. Does Conner remember the game? “Like it was yesterday,” he says. “It looked like the game was destined for a 7-7 tie,” Conner remembers. “We got a late interception from Joey Collins and QB Bill Alvarez followed with a swing pass to Roger Nichols that Nichols took to the 15-yard line after breaking three or four tackles. The clock was running out and we were out of timeouts. Franklin County got a penalty that stopped the clock with three seconds. Coach Edmunds said, ‘We’re going to kick a field goal.’ “Nobody in our time had kicked a field goal,” Conner says. “Rarely did they kick extra points. Coach Edmunds had the courage to call that play. I just closed my eyes and See EDMUNDS, Page 16 OCTOBER 24, 2011 Play By Play Football, biscuits, fall Sunday mornings A s I get older, seems like the simplest things can bring back a flood of memories, I said, knowing that I was shifting by Mike into Old Man gear. Ashley Sometimes a good dog food commercial makes me tear up. I was planning a tailgating party — one of my favorite endeavors (more the actual tailgating rather than the planning) — and we had to work with a noon kickoff. Noon kickoffs stink (unless you’re a sportswriter covering the game, then they are wonderful. I’m a little schizophrenic on this topic, depending on my duties on any given Saturday). This Saturday I was anxious to tailgate with friends and family but the whole noon thing puts a crimp in the schedule. Do you have breakfast in the parking lot out of the back of your Toyota Highlander? Brunch? Early lunch? Can you get everyone up and moving fast enough so you can lounge in a parking lot, rubbing elbows with other fans who are trying to figure out what they’re going to eat off their cheap paper plates, too? We finally settled on someone bringing ham biscuits for a brunch right before kickoff after we all got up early and went out for breakfast. Then we packed some cold cuts, cheese, condiments, bread, chips, pickles and those fancy little toothpicks with the frills on top for a postgame repast while the parking lot cleared. You can never over-tailgate, I’ve learned. It goes hand-in-hand with the most important thing I learned in college — that you can never have too much ice. Anyway, it was hard to think of ham biscuits and football and not think of my mom. I was transported back to when I was a wee lad — okay, okay, I was never actually a “wee” lad, but I was younger and living at home, and Sundays included a big feed right after church just before the NFL games kicked off. As a blossoming football fan, I had the major homefield advantage of going to church right across the street from my house. That meant on a good morning when the Rev didn’t go overtime, I was out the door and on the couch soon after noon. I got out of my Sunday best in record speeds and depending on the homework load I had put off until Sunday, most of my obligations were over, save parking my carcass in front of the TV for the next seven hours or so. The ham biscuits come in because that was my favorite Sunday meal: country ham, Mom’s homemade biscuits, eggs, grits and fried apples. The weekly ritual helped make me the man I am today in more ways than one. And being the Momma-loving, God-fearing Southern boy I am I wouldn’t give back a single Sunday grit. Our kitchen table was set so that when you sat on my side, you could look to the right through the doorway into the living room and follow whatever was on TV. Mom sat at the head of table so I was always sort of looking that way so it didn’t seem so rude. And I was a teenager, for Pete Rozelle’s sake, so I was supposed to act sort of distant and unfocused. Truth is I was honed in on those biscuits, ham and fixin’s. I made polite conversation. Back when I was young I could multitask like that — eat, talk to my mom, not miss a down of the football game, plot an English paper in my head, fret over my lack of popularity with the fairer sex and then wonder if all this was somehow interrelated. Pass me another biscuit, please. Some Sundays, if I was feeling a might poorly and stayed home from Sunday school and church, I got the full plate of Sunday football fare back SIDELINES 19 before the advent of ESPN and the three-hour pregame show. We had two networks on the big console Magnavox and three if the winds were blowing in from Lynchburg and WSET just right. Generally you just tuned in to Channel 7, if I remember correctly, and the odds of me remembering correctly are getting less and less each passing day. I remember the Notre Dame football show with highlights narrated by Lindsey Nelson. How they squeezed a whole game into 30 minutes I don’t know. Live sporting events today can barely squeeze a quarter or a couple of innings into an hour. I wasn’t a big Fighting Irish fan but that was part of few college football highlights available back then. The other was the Virginia Tech football coaches’ show, which I first remember with Charlie Coffey. Okay, I actually don’t remember Charlie Coffey on the show and Tech fans have been trying to forget him for a long time. Then it was Jimmy Sharpe. The “Hokies were Sharpe, dadgummit.” The team still wasn’t very good but Sharpe was pretty entertaining. Anyone else remember Roscoe “Too 2 Fast” Coles? Bill Dooley showed up my senior year of high school and the show was a little drier though the football started to get better. Jeff Charles was “The Voice of the Hokies” by then, and a highlight of my sporting life was later sharing an office suite with him when I worked at Tech. Over in my half of the office, where we had the Nerf basketball hoop, it was a thrill to play against him and have him doing silly play-by-play of the action. Jeff Charles calling my name! Now, after an exchange of punts, we move to action later in this column. Then it was the old CBS “NFL Today” show, the gold standard of pregame shows. Late breakfast tasted better with Brent Musberger, Irv Cross and the ill-fated Jimmy the Greek breaking it down for me. I think I can still make a pretty strong argument that Phyllis George may be the perfect woman. Of course, I don’t know how good her biscuits are. 20 Play By Play It’s a team effort. JoIn Kroger In goIng green. OCTOBER 24, 2011