“ATHLETIC FREAK”
Ross Develops Into Top-Ranked Recruit in Vestavia Hills’ History
By RuBin E. GRantJordan Ross hears all the wonderful things being said about him, but he’s not taking it to heart.
In the spring, 247 Sports ranked Ross, Vestavia Hills’ 6-foot-5, 230pound senior defensive end, the No. 1 recruit in Alabama in the Class of 2024, describing him as a “total athletic freak of nature.”
ESPN 300 ranks him the 24th best recruit in the nation.
Rebels head coach Robert Evans labeled Ross as “the top-ranked recruit in the history of Vestavia Hills High School.”
For Ross, such talk is merely yada, yada, yada.
“I don’t really listen to all of that,” Ross said. “I see myself as one of the guys, trying my hardest to be the best player I can be. I don’t like talking about all that other stuff.”
But Ross, whose nickname is “Childs Play” because of his attachment to his Chucky doll when he was younger, is more than just another guy on the football field. Playing on the edge, he’s a physical presence and dominant force. During the 2022 season, Ross recorded 49 tackles with 16 tacklesfor-losses and 2.5 sacks. He also forced several fumbles and scored two defensive touchdowns.
“There are not many people like him,” Evans said. “He runs the 40-yard dash in 4.5 seconds. It’s hard to find someone with his type of body and his skill set.
“He’s kind of quiet, but he’s self-motivated. He just continues to get better. If he stays healthy, he should make a lot of money one day. He’s an NFL talent and hasn’t even scratched the surface of what he is going to be one day.”
Ross began playing football when he was in kindergarten, but when he reached the sixth grade he quit.
“I just got tired of playing,” he said. “I stopped in the sixth and seventh grades.”
Instead, Ross played basketball, which he began playing in the third grade.
Following his two-year absence, Ross returned to the football field in the eighth grade with a commitment to get better.
Let Him Roam
Evans, who had been a defensive coordinator at Hoover and Mountain Brook before returning to his alma mater as head coach last year, added another dimension to Ross’ game. He allowed
Ross to roam around, to take more advantage of his athleticism.
“Before Coach Evans came, I didn’t drop back in pass coverage,” Ross said. “I was more of a defensive lineman/defensive end. But now I’m dropping back into coverage and doing some other things.”
Pass coverage is fine, but what Ross really likes is rushing the quarterback.
“I have two personal goals this season,” he said. “I want to try to have the most sacks in school history and try to win a state championship and beat the best teams on our schedule.”
Ross also is embracing a leadership role on the Rebels’ defense.
“I’m encouraging my teammates to get better and in different schemes to get in the right stance and play the right way,” he said.
Ross continues to play basketball. Last season, he averaged 9.2 points, shooting 64% percent from the field, 8.1 rebounds, 2.0 steals and 1.0 blocks,
helping the Rebels reach the Class 7A Northwest Regional final and finish with a 25-5 record.
But his future is clearly football.
“We’ve never had a guy that has been as nationally prominent as Jordan, especially in the age of social media,” Evans said. “When he gets to college and is just a football player and starts eating right and getting in a college weight-room program, he’s really going to become a physical specimen.
“I just hope he goes to a school with a great program. I’d love to see him stay in the South.”
Ross is still trying to make up his mind about where he wants to play at the next level. He has more than 20 offers, including Alabama, Auburn, Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, LSU, Texas, USC and Oregon.
“I’m still thinking about a number of schools,” Ross said. “I haven’t narrowed it down. The deciding factor is going to be my relationship with the coaches.”
‘He’s kind of quiet, but he’s self-motivated. He just continues to get better. If he stays healthy, he should make a lot of money one day. He’s an NFL talent and hasn’t even scratched the surface of what he is going to be one day.’
ROBERT EVANS VESTAVIA HILLS COACHIn the spring, 247 Sports ranked Jordan Ross, Vestavia Hills’ 6-foot-5, 230-pound senior defensive end, the No. 1 recruit in Alabama in the Class of 2024, describing him as a “total athletic freak of nature.” Right, Ross continues to play basketball. Last season, he averaged 9.2 points, shooting 64% percent from the field.
2023 Football
BRIARWOOD HIGH SCHOOL
Date Opponent Location
Aug. 25 Clay-Chalkville HOME
Sept. 1 Spain Park AWAY
Sept. 8 Chilton County AWAY
Sept. 15 Pelham HOME
Sept. 29 Oak Mountain HOME
Oct. 6 Helena AWAY
Oct. 13 Calera AWAY
Oct. 20 Benjamin Russell HOME
Oct. 27 Homewood HOME
Nov. 3 Fairhope AWAY
JOHN CARROLL HIGH SCHOOL
Aug. 25 Homewood HOME
Sept. 1 Marbury HOME
Sept. 8 Fairfield AWAY
Sept. 15 Hayden AWAY
Sept. 22 Carver-Bham HOME
Oct. 6 Pleasant Grove AWAY
Oct. 13 Ramsay HOME
Oct. 20 Jasper AWAY
Oct. 27 Wenonah HOME
Nov. 3 Maplesville HOME
SPAIN PARK HIGH SCHOOL
Aug. 25 Calera AWAY
Sept. 1 Briarwood Christian HOME
Sept. 8 Hoover HOME
Sept. 15 Thompson HOME
Sept. 22 Vestavia Hills AWAY
Oct. 6 Tuscaloosa County AWAY
Oct. 13 Chelsea HOME
Oct. 20 Hewitt-Trussville AWAY
Oct. 27 Oak Mountain AWAY
HOMEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL
Date Opponent Location
Aug. 25 John Carroll AWAY
Sept. 1 Vestavia Hills HOME
Sept. 8 Helena HOME
Sept. 15 Calera AWAY
Sept. 22 Benjamin Russell AWAY
Sept. 29 Pinson Valley AWAY
Oct. 13 Chilton County HOME
Oct. 20 Pelham HOME
Oct. 27 Briarwood Christian AWAY
Nov. 3 Jasper HOME
MTN BROOK HIGH SCHOOL
Aug. 24, Thur. Vestavia Hills HOME
Aug. 31, Thur. James Clemens AWAY
Sept. 8 Minor AWAY
Sept. 14, Thur. Woodlawn AWAY
Sept. 22 Jackson-Olin HOME
Sept. 29 Hoover AWAY
Oct. 13 Parker HOME
Oct. 20 Mortimer Jordan HOME
Oct. 27 Gardendale AWAY
Nov. 2, Thur. Baker HOME
HOOVER HIGH SCHOOL
Date Opponent Location
Aug. 25 Auburn HOME
Sept. 1 Oak Grove HOME
Sept. 8 Spain Park AWAY
Sept. 15 Vestavia Hills AWAY
Sept. 22 Hewitt Trussville HOME
Sept. 29 Mountain Brook HOME
Oct. 6 Oak Mountain HOME
Oct. 13 Tuscaloosa County AWAY
Oct. 20 Chelsea AWAY
Oct. 27 Thompson HOME
Aug. 25 Northridge AWAY
Sept. 1 Pelham AWAY
Sept. 8 Hewitt-Trussville HOME
Sept. 15 Chelsea AWAY
Sept. 22 Tuscaloosa County HOME
Sept. 29 Briarwood Christian AWAY
Oct. 6 Hoover AWAY
Oct. 13 Thompson HOME
Oct. 20 Vestavia Hills AWAY
Oct. 27 Spain Park HOME
VESTAVIA HIGH SCHOOL
Aug. 24, Thur. Mountain Brook AWAY
Sept. 1 Homewood AWAY
Sept. 8 Thompson AWAY
Sept. 15 Hoover HOME
Sept. 22 Spain Park HOME
Oct. 6 Chelsea AWAY
Oct. 13 Hewitt-Trussville HOME
Oct. 20 Oak Mountain HOME
Oct. 27 Tuscaloosa County
ONCE IN A LIFETIME
John Carroll Is Marking 50 Years Since the School’s Only State Championship
By RuBin E. GRantWhen the Toy Bowl Association, an athletic league sponsored by the Catholic Diocese of Birmingham, was founded in 1952, no one could have foreseen how it would pave the way for a state championship team two decades later.
The Toy Bowl was the first youth football league in Birmingham and turned into a breeding ground of athletes for John Carroll Catholic High School. Among them were high school All-Americans Pat Sullivan, in 1967, and Lou Green, 1973.
In 1972, a bunch of those former Toy Bowl players led the Cavaliers to a 9-2 season, setting a school record for wins, and reached the state playoffs for the first time. They didn’t stick around long, losing 25-13 at Oxford in the first round.
But the Cavs were just warming up.
In 1973, John Carroll was unstoppable, finishing 12-0 and winning the Class 3A championship, which at the time was the second-highest classification in the state.
“We had 29 seniors on that team,” said Bobby Lorino, who was a senior wide receiver. “I didn’t get to play a lot ‘cause we had so many good ballplayers.
“It all stems back to the Toy Bowl days. We played together then and then got together in high school. We had a great nucleus of players, and it was one of those once-in-a-lifetime things.”
Coached by James McNally, a 1953 graduate of John Carroll, the 1973 Cavs outscored their 12 opponents 296-37, recording seven shutouts, including five during the regular season.
They had four seniors named first-team AllState: Green, a guard-tackle; linebacker-tackle Pat LaRock; tackle Pat Mullen; and running
back Ronald Wright. Junior running back Mark Salem was named second-team All-State. Green went to the University of Alabama and LaRock went to Auburn University.
“It was an incredible group of athletes,” said Mike Bouton, John Carroll High School director of Alumni Relations. “And it wasn’t just in football, but multiple sports.
“I had graduated in the spring of ’73 and was at St. Joseph’s seminary outside Covington, Louisiana, but I came up to watch them against T.R. Miller in the playoffs. It was an intense game. They were really something.”
‘It all stems back to the Toy Bowl days. We played together then and then got together in high school. We had a great nucleus of players, and it was one of those oncein-a-lifetime things.’
the winning touchdown two plays later on quarterback Tom Donahue’s pass to split end Bruce Petway. Petway also caught a 14-yard touchdown pass from Norman Moreno in the second quarter. The 10 points were the most John Carroll would allow in any game that season. The Cavs followed the victory against the Spartans with shutouts of Abrams (43-0) and Shades Valley (200).
Then, they beat Homewood 27-6 with defensive end Bill Self returning a fumble 73 yards for the Cavs’ first touchdown.
High Expectations
Coming off their first playoff appearance in 1972, the Cavs figured they had a chance to win it all.
“The expectations were high,” Lorino said. “We went to the playoffs the year before and had almost everybody back.”
“We were 9-2 our junior year and that catapulted us as a team,” Green said. “We had a great class, not only the athletes but the entire student body. We were like a family.
“I remember playing a lot of good teams in ’73. We played several 4A teams (then the highest classification).”
The Cavs opened the season with a 13-10 victory against Mountain Brook. Trailing 10-7 in the fourth quarter, John Carroll recovered a fumble at the Spartans’ 15-yard line and scored
They capped the regular season with victories against Fairfield (26-0), Thompson (28-6), Glenn (34-0 on homecoming), Vestavia Hills (34-8) and Childersburg (21-0).
State Playoff Title Run
In the state playoffs, John Carroll won its first two games by identical 10-0 scores against Sheffield in the first round and against T.R. Miller of Brewton in the semifinals.
Against Sheffield, the teams were scoreless at halftime before the Cavs scored 10 points in the third quarter. Johnny Walker, who had intercepted a pass and recovered a fumble in the first half, kicked a 23-yard field goal and Wright scored on a 10-yard run.
Against T.R. Miller, Walker kicked a 23-yard field goal in the first quarter and Wright ran for a touchdown in the fourth quarter, set up by a Mike Muro fumble recovery. LaRock had 10 tackles in the game.
That set up a showdown with undefeated and once-tied Andalusia in the championship game. Andalusia had recorded shutouts of Thompson (36-0) and Cherokee County (21-0) in its first two playoff games and entered the contest with five consecutive shutouts.
But the Bulldogs couldn’t hang with the Cavs on the final day of November at Legion Field in Birmingham. John Carroll won convincingly, 30-7. It was the most points Andalusia (11-1-1) allowed during the entire season.
In the championship game, John Carroll trailed 7-6 early in the second quarter after Andalusia’s Albert Weeden scored on an 18-yard run. It was the only rushing touchdown the Cavs allowed the entire season.
Salem had scored on a 7-yard run in the first quarter to give the Cavs a quick 6-0 lead, but Walker missed the PAT.
Following Andalusia’s touchdown, Wright scampered 80 yards around left end and down the sideline for a touchdown with 2:39 remaining in the half. Walker passed to Moreno for the two-point, putting the Cavs ahead to stay, 14-7.
With nine seconds left in the half, Walker kicked a 24-yard field goal, giving John Carroll a 17-7 halftime lead. Walker’s 35-yard interception return set up the field goal.
Salem scored on a 1-yard run with 3:05 remaining in the third quarter and John Mullen returned an interception 41 yards for a touchdown with 13 seconds to play to cap the scoring.
The Cavs had 290 yards total offense, including 216 on the ground, while holding Andalusia to 186 total yards, including 132 rushing.
The Cavs’ defense forced six turnovers, four interceptions and two fumbles. They had more interceptions, with four, than pass completions by Andalusia (3 of 16 for 54 yards).
"Whether you’re in college, or about to enter college, this book is for you.
College is one of the most exciting and meaningful times in life. You make new friends, many of whom will last a lifetime. However, for all the exciting things college offers, I’m sure you’re also wrestling with some big questions— perhaps even some fear or anxiety. Who am I? Will I succeed academically? What do I really believe?
My hope is that this book will make you wiser and equip you to better navigate your own journey through the college experience." — Richard
E. Simmons IIITrey Saunders, Carter Fountain, Zeke Turner, Cole Carter, Luke Schultz, Hank Freeman, Barnabas Karanja, Charlie Thompson, Dane Whitehead, Christian Lavett, Blake Herritt, Rocco Valentinni, Garrett Witherington, Brandon Henley, and Garrett Heinemann.
TURNING THE PAGE
Lions Looking to Bounce Back After Playoff Streak Ends
By RuBin E. GRantBriarwood Christian football coach Matthew Forester is ready to turn the page on last season.
The Lions saw their streak of 29 consecutive trips to the state playoffs end in 2022 as they finished with a losing record.
“We went 3-7 and it was really ugly,” Forester lamented. “It’s not what you want to happen. We’re going to do our best to make sure that it doesn’t happen again.
“We talked a lot this summer about what our goal is. Each team is a new team and you can’t hold on to what happened in the past. The idea is trusting not in recent successes, not in trends, but in foundations of what has been built. We want to get back to the level we’re used to playing.”
If Briarwood bounces back this season, they will do it without quarterback Christopher Vizzina, who started for four years and is now at Clemson University. Vizzina passed for 7,220 yards and 59 touchdowns in his career and scored 29 rushing touchdowns.
Forester, however, is looking forward to what the Lions can do this season without the most highly recruited player in school history.
“I’m excited,” Forester said. “We’re getting to reinvent the offense
briarwood KEY PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 25 Clay Chalkville
Sept. 1 @ Spain Park
Sept. 8 @ Chilton County*
Sept. 15 Pelham*
Sept. 29 Oak Mountain
Oct. 6 @ Helena*
Oct. 13 @ Calera*
Oct. 20 Benjamin Russell*
Oct. 27 Homewood*
Nov. 3 @ Fairhope
*Conference game
briarwood
AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Matthew Forester
2022 Record: 3-7
Region: Class 6A Region 3: Homewood, Calera, Helena, Pelham, Benjamin Russell and Chilton County.
Stadium: Lion Pride Field (5,000)
and do something different. It’s a whole new learning process.”
Briarwood returns only three starters on offense but has nine returning starters on defense. Here’s a positionby-position breakdown of the 2023 Lions.
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
Senior Josh Thompson and junior Will Clark are tasked with filling the void left by Vizzina.
“Both guys will play quarterback,” Forester said. “We feel comfortable with both of them and what we ask them to do. Josh has been with (the team) for three years and knows the offense and is a good runner. Will is a good athlete and he runs well. Will has a big arm, but Josh is more accurate in the intermediate routes and does a good job reading defenses.”
Running Backs
“We want to establish a physical downhill running game,” Forester said.
Senior Cooper Higgins returns to running back after being moved around last year. Junior Gavin Gurtis will join Higgins as a primary ballcarrier.
“They form a two-headed mon-
Brooks Travis, Britt Wagoner, Josh Thompson, Griffin Albright, Jack Rath, Luke Reynolds, Max Luster, Garrett Cooper, Ben McNulty, SawyerClick, Tram Walker, Cooper Higgins, Eli Stubbs, Jon Jobes, Luke Livingston, John Paul Harbor, Chance Freeman, Eli Thompson, Will Werchanowskyj, Gavin Gurtis, Gabe Margene, Grey Reebals, Wes Burgess, Parrish Prickett, Evan Robson, Ethan Carr, Patrick Wilson, Harris Jones, Asa Harris, Patton Miller, Vaughn Wilson, Braiden Klamer, David Campbell, Brandon Frank, Cace Reynolds, Gavin Nguyen, Grayson Pewitt, Jackson Bunn, Chris Davis, Brogan Summers, Knox Jones, Tanner Hutson, Lude Solomon,
ster,” Forester said. “They’re both downhill, physical runners.”
Sophomores Eli Thompson and Rocco Valentinni add depth.
Receivers
Seniors Sawyer Click and Caleb Keller head a talented group of receivers. Also in the mix are senior Gabe Marlene and juniors John Paul Harbor and Ben McNulty.
“We’re looking for all five of them to do a good job,” Forester said.
The Lions also have three guys who will play tight end, juniors Vaughn Wilson and Chance Freeman and sophomore Dane Whitehead.
“Vaughn is a good blocker and Dane and Chance catch the ball well,” Forester said. “I’m looking forward to see which one of them will start to finish blocks.”
Offensive Line
The Lions return two starters. Senior left tackle Luke Schulz (6-foot-7, 295 pounds) is a three-year starter who has committed to Mercer. Senior Trey Saunders (5-11, 220) will play left guard.
“He started last year,” Forester said of Saunders. “He’s a fireplug, a pulling guard who you love. He’s quick and explosive.”
Seniors Lude Solomon and Charlie Thompson, and sophomore Carter Fountain are battling for the right tackle spot. Senior Cole Carter is expected to start at right guard with juniors Tanner Hutson and Barnabas Karanja battling for the center spot.
“We brought in a new offensive line coach, Tony Johnson, and we have guys on the line who will be moving around,” Forester said. “I’m excited to have some depth on the offensive line.”
DEFENSE
Defensive Line
The Lions will rotate seniors Cace Reynolds and Luke Dickinson and sophomore Garrett Witherington on the defensive line.
“All three of them can play on the edge or the interior,” Forester said.
Seniors Andrew Kassouf and Max Luster and junior Eli Stubbs also will see action on the line.
“We just moved Eli down to the defensive line,” Forester said. “He has a ton of potential. He could be really good.”
Linebackers
Senior Jack Cornish will play middle linebacker. Junior Luke Reynolds will play on the strong side after being moved to linebacker from safety. “He’s going to be a big part of what we do,” Forester said.
Three players are in the mix to receive playing time on the weak side – sophomore Brooks Allred, junior Griffin Albright, senior Luke Livingston. Junior Asa Harris adds more depth.
Secondary
The cornerbacks will be senior Ethan Carr and senior Grey Reebals, who will play both ways and be the team’s kick returner.
In reserve are junior Patrick Wilson and sophomore Patton Miller.
Four players are in the mix at safety –juniors Rylan Hamm, Wes Burgess and Jon Jobes, and senior Brooks Travis.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Junior Garrett Heinemann will handle the punting and place-kicking chores.
“He has a really strong leg and has had a really good summer,” Forester said.
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Members of the 2023 Homewood High School varsity football team are: Davis Griffin, George French, Camron Fortson, John Martin, Evan Ausmer, Talton Thomas, Kaleb Carson, John Griffin, Drew Susce, Connor Brunner, Malek Smiley, Alijah Lavender, Luke Eldridge, RC Gartman, Jack Myers, Tomon Felton, C.J. Tidmore, John Esslinger, Luke Berguson, David Walden, Darren Stitt, Will Myers, Winn Heath, Maurice Johnson, King Walker, Kylen Newell, Alex Law, Henry Delk, Henry Templeton, Cade Engle, Charlie Dabbs, Logan Johnson, A.J. Crear, JaMichael Murray, Aidan Bodkin, J.D. Jordan, Eric Davidson, Whit Armistead, Cannon Ford, Jackson Nugent, Trust Darnell, Randall Jaquez, Bryan Thomas, Mushaba Zulu, Muhammed Camara, Hardy Butler, Khristian Kennedy, Judson Eanes, Richard Fields, Parker Lindsey, Van Sansing, Reed Edwards, Ford Hawkins, D.C. Young, Joey Luckianow, Bardon King, Peyton Irving, Nick Myers, Henry Studinka, Jack Watson, Thomas Downey, Luke Jenkins, Clay Thornton, Luke Bowlby, Marcus Swaika, Walker Williams, Juan Gonzalez, Khalil Winchester, Marvin Patrick, Ben Pannell, Tristan Bell, Jaxon Brooks, Hayes DeCoudres, Graham Jourdan, J.T. Watts, Coleman Judd, Nicholas Hughes, Will Ray, Hayden Eldridge, Will Keown, and Bryce Williams.
CARRYOVER EFFECT
Young Patriots Hoping Success Breeds Success
By RuBin E. GRantWhenever Homewood scores its first touchdown of the 2023 season, it won’t be scored by someone who played for the Patriots last year.
The Patriots scored 400 points in 2022, and except for extra points and field goals, all of it came from their class of 30 seniors.
Quarterback Woods Ray was mostly responsible, passing for 2,677 yards and 27 touchdowns and rushing for 812 yards and 11 TDs. The Patriots finished 10-3 and reached the Class 6A quarterfinals before losing 57-56 in overtime to eventual champion Saraland.
Another key weapon gone is receiver Jackson Parris, who had 80 receptions for 1,288 yards and 13 touchdowns.
So, the Patriots will have a host of new faces on the field this season. They return only two starters on offense and three on defense.
“We’re young,” Homewood coach Ben Berguson said. “We’ve got a lot of question marks. But success normally breeds success, so I hope some of that 10-win season will have some carry over.”
Here’s a position-by-position breakdown of the 2023 Patriots:
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
Junior Will Myers will take over at quarterback with the departure of Ray,
homewood KEY PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 25 @ John Carroll
Sept. 1 Vestavia Hills
Sept. 8 Helena*
Sept. 15 @ Calera*
Sept. 22 @ Benjamin Russell*
Sept. 29 @ Pinson Valley
Oct. 13 Chilton County *
Oct. 20 Pelham*
Oct. 27 @ Briarwood*
Nov. 3 Jasper
homewood AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Ben Berguson
2022 Record: 10-3
Region: Class 6A Region 3: Briarwood Christian, Pelham, Helena, Calera, Benjamin Russell and Chilton County
Stadium: Waldrop Stadium (5,000)
Nick Myers, D.C. Young and Darren Stitt
who is at Dartmouth.
“Will is one of the best leaders
I’ve been around,” Berguson said.
“He knows how to take control of a
room when he walks into it. He’s a very elusive and shifty runner. He also can throw it, although his arm is not as strong as Woods’. But Woods
was a once-in-a-generation player.”
Sophomore Kaleb Carson will serve as Myers’ backup.
“He’s a tremendous athlete and a
dual threat, too,” Berguson said. “There’s no drop-off when he’s in the game.”
Running Backs
Junior Evan Ausmer will be the Patriots’ primary ballcarrier. He’s the younger brother of former Homewood standout receiver Trae Ausmer.
“He’s real explosive,” Berguson said of Evan Ausmer. “He’s also got good hands, so we’ll use him as a receiver out of the backfield.”
Senior A.J. Crear will share some of the running load.
“He’s a good runner and will allow us to use some two-back sets,” Berguson said.
Junior Eric Davidson will also play and is a dangerous pass-catching threat.
Receivers
The Patriots will rotate three players at wide receiver, juniors King Walker and Alijah Lavender and sophomore Tomon Felton.
“What I like is all three are over 6-foot tall and will give us some length on the outside,” Berguson said. “Tomon is fast and gets great separation.”
Three players will be used in the slot – senior Camron Fortson, junior Kyle Newell and sophomore David Walden.
Senior Alex Law, sophomore John Esslinger, and juniors Connor Brunner and R.C. Gartman provide depth.
Four players will be employed at tight end, junior Whit Armistead,
sophomore Hayes DeCourdres, sophomore J.T. Watts and senior Nicholas Hughes. Hughes will serve as a hybrid player, playing fullback when the Patriots need one.
Offensive Line
“I believe the strength of our team will be the offensive line,” Berguson said. “We’ve got two starters back, left tackle Jaxon Brooks (6-2, 285 pound senior), a three-year starter, and center Jack Watson, a four-year starter.”
The other starters will be junior left guard Walker Williams, junior right guard Marvin Patrick and junior right tackle Luke Jenkins. Sophomore Henry Studinka and junior Khalil
Sophomore nose guard Randall Jaquez is small (5-8, 200 pounds) but is a quick and disruptive force.
Sophomore Ford Hawkins and senior Richard Fields also will play.
Linebacker
Junior Talton Thomas will be the strong side linebacker. He had more than 100 tackles last season as a sophomore.
“He has a presence on the field,” Berguson said.
Sophomore Luke Eldridge will play inside linebacker along with junior Trust Darnell. The other outside linebacker is senior Maurice Johnson.
Sophomore Joey Luckianow and junior Luke Berguson will provide depth at outside linebacker.
Secondary
Junior Malek Smiley and sophomores George French and John Martin will rotate at cornerback. Gartman will be in reserve.
Rotating at safety will be junior C.J. Tidmore and sophomores John Griffin and Henry Templeton.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Armistead will handle place-kicking duties.
Winchester provide depth.
“I think the experience we have on the line will be the key to us being able to run the football,” Berguson said.
DEFENSE
Defensive Line
Senior Hayden Eldridge is the only returning starter on the defensive line, but senior Will Keown (6-3, 220) has become the vocal leader.
“I’m excited about him,” Berguson said. “He’s bigger and stronger, and he can kick the ball into the end zone. He’s a soldier ‘cause he’ll also play some tight end and linebacker.”
Gartman will be the punter.
“He does a good job,” Berguson said. “He has a strong leg. He’s a good athlete.”
Sophomore Hardy Butler will be the long snapper, following in the footsteps of his brother, Brody, who is now at Middle Tennessee State University.
‘We’ve got a lot of question marks. But success normally breeds success, so I hope some of that 10-win season will have some carry over.’
Members of the 2023 Hoover High School varsity football team are: Freddy Dunson, Christopher Warren, Jamar Moultrie, Braydon Gerstenberg, Jonah Winston, Jeremy Cook, Jordan Woolen, Bradley Shaw, Brady Sheppard, Avery Crawford, Micah Hampton, Noah Schubach, Michael Nixon, Ian Suttle, Steele Lowery, Chalmers Peters, Cooper Darty, Jabari Mosley Jr., Jamar Jones, Andy Howard, Keilan Jefferson, Hudosn Babb, ArMari Towns, Demarion Gardner, Jeremiah Tabb, Trey Sanders, Dylan Bunkley, Moss Fleming, Caleb Cook, Jeremiah Robinson, Treshawn Darden, Kamal Amerson, Donell Williams, Chris Wilburn, Anthony Allen, Payton Morris, Kasey Zylstra, Steven Snodsmith, Jordan Jacobs, John Whisenhunt, Tyson Batchelor, Jackson Lassiter, Darian Carlise, Emori Walker, Omari Bryant, Kayden Preyer, John Robert Clark, Will Holden, Christian Marcus, Jude Williams, Carson McCain, DeAngelo Garner, Pa’Landing Drammeh, Sam Huffstutler, Cameron Spates, Justyn Hartley, Tyler Dorsey, Darrell Garner, Henry Smith, JP Ware, Shawn Sutton, Parker Hubbard, TJ Fields, Preston Morrison, Lincoln Anderson, Storm Fain, Garrett Page, Trot English, Samson Coler, Sam Anderton, Jamie Travis, Caleb Reynolds, Landon Costello, Carter Kerr, Rashad Smith, Tyler Callins, Toby Richard, Hunter Perdue, Darian Mosley, Cameron Torbor, Taylor Jones, Grant Weighall, Matthew Daibes, Jackson Digirigio, Darious Crawley, Jimmy Morrell, Tyson Bacon, Garrett Brasher, James Bryant, Demetrius Yelling, Branden Rudolph, Dylan Thuo, and Will Barton.
STEPPING UP
Bucs Are ‘Totally Different Team’ With the Same State Championship Goal
By RuBin E. GRantWade Waldrop’s first season as Hoover’s head football coach in 2022 ended the same way as Josh Niblett’s final four seasons: with a loss to Thompson in the Class 7A semifinals.
But instead of focusing on what happened last year and the previous years, Waldrop is more concerned about the 2023 Bucs pulling together as a team.
“We’re a totally different team,” Waldrop said. “We graduated a lot of good players, but we’ve grown a lot since January. We want to get even better before we play any games.”
That’s not to say Waldrop isn’t concerned about ending Hoover’s streak of semifinal losses.
“The goal is the same as it’s always been here: to win a state championship,” he said. “That’s always the standard. Now it’s the next group’s turn to step up and try to make it happen.
“We might need a couple of weeks to see who we are. We can’t look too far ahead. We need to play some games to grow. I’m excited to see how we do.”
With seven starters returning on offense, the Bucs figure to put points on the scoreboard.
hoover KEY PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 25 Auburn
Sept. 1 Oak Grove
Sep. 8 @ Spain Park*
Sep. 15 @ Vestavia Hills*
Sept. 22 Hewitt Trussville*
Sept. 29 Mountain Brook
Oct. 6 Oak Mountain*
Oct. 13 @ Tuscaloosa County*
Oct. 20 @ Chelsea*
Oct. 27 Thompson*
*Conference game
hoover AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Wade Waldrop
2022 Record: 11-2
Region: Class 7A Region 3: HewittTrussville, Oak Mountain, Spain Park, Thompson, Tuscaloosa County, Vestavia Hills and Chelsea
Stadium: Buccaneer Stadium (5,000), The Met (10,800)
“Offensively, we feel like everybody at every skill position can do something with the ball,” Waldrop said.
Here’s a position-by-position breakdown of the 2023 Bucs.
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
Noah Schuback finished the 2022 season as the Bucs’ starter as a freshman and heads into his sophomore season as the projected starter.
“I liked what he did down the stretch,” Waldrop said, “but we’ve got three or four guys getting reps.”
The others are Andy Howard, a transfer from Albertville, junior Brady Sheppard and sophomore Jonah Winston, who will spend most of his time at receiver.
Running Backs
The Bucs will rotate three players in the backfield, seniors Kamal Amerson and Chalmers Peters, and sophomore Keilan Jefferson.
“All three are different, but they are really good, strong runners,” Waldrop said.
Receivers
Winston heads up a strong receiving corps that also includes seniors Jordan Woolen and Fred Dunson.
Others in the mix are juniors DeMarion Gardner, Avery Crawford
OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL HOOVER
and Moss Fleming, and sophomore Jeremiah Tabb.
“I really like our depth,” Waldrop said. “We’ve got six to eight guys who can play. They’ve all had a great offseason.”
At tight end, the Bucs will employ juniors Chris Warren and Braydon Gerstenberg, and senior Payton Morris.
Offensive Line
The Bucs are solid up front with eight guys capable of seeing action, including three returning starters – senior guard Rashad Smith, junior tackle Toby Richard and junior guard-tackle T.J. Fields.
Junior Trot English will start at center. Juniors Storm Fain and Samson Coler are competing for the other guard spot. Junior Tyson Batchelor is moving to tackle after playing tight end last year. Senior Jamie Travis will be the backup center.
“I think we have a chance to have a great offensive line,” Waldrop said. “All eight guys are getting a lot of reps.”
DEFENSE
Defensive Line
The Bucs have only one returning starter on the defensive line, senior Michael Nixon, who will play inside. Three others working on the interior are seniors Micah Hampton and Jamar Jones, and junior Pa Drammeh.
The defensive ends are junior Cam Torbor, senior Jimmy Morrell and sophomores Henry Smith, Justyn Hartley, Tyson Bacon and Braden Rudolph.
“We’ve got guys who play defensive end or defensive tackle, which gives us some flexibility,” Waldrop said.
Linebackers
Senior inside linebacker Bradley Shaw (6-2, 210) could be one of the top linebackers in the state.
“He has the ability to make every play on defense, and that’s special,” Waldrop said.
“He’s a great athlete.”
Senior Cooper Darty and sophomore Trey Sanders also will play inside linebacker.
“I think Trey will be big time,” Waldrop said.
Seniors Preston Morrison and Chris Wilburn, and junior Parker Hubbard, are expected to play outside linebacker.
Secondary
“I think the secondary is our biggest question mark,” Waldrop said. “We graduated three cornerbacks and three safeties, guys who played a lot of football.
At corner, the Bucs are looking to juniors J.J. Moultrie and Donell Williams as starters, with junior Tre Darden, sophomore Jackson Lassiter and senior Omari Bryant also vying for playing time.
At safety, senior Jeremy Cook has moved back from offense. Seniors Steele Lower, Kasey Zylstra and Braydon Gertenberg are also at safety, along with juniors Cameron Spates, Jeremiah Robinson and Steven Snodsmith, and sophomore Caleb Cook.
SPECIAL TEAMS
The Bucs have to replace standout kicker Peyton Argent, who’s at the University of South Carolina. Waldrop said junior Matthew Daibes, sophomore James Bryant and junior Grant Weighall are working hard to fill the void.
Senior Garrett Brasher has emerged as the punter, with either Zylstra or sophomore Lincoln Anderson as the long snapper and Sheppard as the holder.
Brandon Rashleigh, Grey Higgins, Carson McFadden, Koron Wright, Collin Hamilton, Max Plaia, Austin Pfarner, Braden White, Garrett Barnes, Jaylin Shepherd, Will Duncan, Garvey Hannon, Braydon Lowery, Charles Farr, Jacob DiChiara, Jackson Rankin, Sequoah Hicks, John Ford, Alex Perrin, Mitchell Nutter, Tristen Rutledge, Max Sullivan, Truman Vines, Jonathan Asuzu, Jack Tibbs, Cameron Graham, Noah Phillips, Niajel Morgan, Alex Plaia, Tucker Rice, Kieran Ford, Lucas Rankin, Bobby O’Farrell, Lucas Rankin, Aaden Cain, Michael Grinder, Isaac Kelley, Miller Hatfield, Che Johnson, Anthony Mokry, Nic Gagliano, Wes Evanko, Andy Everett, William Fieno, Kyle Heberlein, Josh Chandler, Bo Burke, Jack Chandler, Hugh Tighe, Charlie Boone, Elzey Gibson, Michael Helton, Jose Hernandez, Jacob Childress, Whit Edmonds, Joseph Hounkpe, Keiran Ford, Gavin Letcher, Nic Crawford, Ryan Redmond, Sebastian Guerrero, Pryce Smith, Stephen Thornton, and Oliver Gonzales.
BACK TO BASICS
Cavaliers Emphasizing the Fundamentals in Quest for Winning Season
By RuBin E. GRantAs he enters his fourth season as head coach at his alma mater, John Carroll Catholic’s Will Mara hopes the program can finally put together a winning season.
The Cavaliers had consecutive 5-5 seasons in Mara’s first two seasons but slipped to 3-7 in 2022.
Mara believes the pieces are in place to have a better result this fall. The Cavaliers graduated 10 seniors from last year, but only three or four played significantly.
“There’s a lot of things I like about this group,” Mara said. “At any given time, we could play five or six freshmen, and nine of our 11 juniors started as sophomores. We’ll have 12 returning seniors who have played a lot of football.
“Our seniors are an amazing group of leaders. There’s been a lot of continuity. Since they were freshmen, they’ve seen what has worked and what has not worked.
“I’m not a big math guy, but we probably ran over 1,400 plays last year and if we could change 14 of those plays, we could have won a few more games.”
With that in mind, Mara and his staff have been emphasizing that their players carry out their assignments and play sound, fundamental football. He believes his players are committed to doing just that.
john carroll catholic KEY PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 25 Homewood
Sept. 1 Marbur y
Sept. 8 @ Fairfield*
Sept. 15 @ Hayden*
Sept. 22 Car ver-Bham*
Oct. 6 @ Pleasant Grove*
Oct. 13 Ramsay*
Oct. 20 @ Jasper*
Oct. 27 Wenonah*
Nov. 3 Maplesville
*Conference game
john carroll AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Will Mara
2022 Record: 3-7
Region: Class 5A, Region 5: Ramsay, Fairfield, Carver-Birmingham, Pleasant Grove, Wenonah, Jasper and Hayden.
Stadium: Carroll Field (4,000)
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
Senior quarterback Carson McFadden is coming off a successful 2022 season. He had several games in which he rushed and passed for more than 100 yards.
“He’s a very special and talented kid, one the best if not the best I’ve been around,” Mara said. “He’s like a coach on the field. I’m comfortable with letting him call plays.”
Sophomore Garrett Barnes will serve as McFadden’s backup. “He’s grown up a lot,” Mara said. “He’s mostly a pocket passer.”
Running Backs
Senior Mitchell Nutter and junior Koron Wright give the Cavs a solid tandem at running back.
Aubrey Walker, a transfer from Spain Park, also will get his share of carries.
“He’s a very natural instinct guy who ran a 4.3-second 40-yard dash in a camp this summer,” Mara said.
Sophomore John Ford also will play some.
“He’s a tough kid,” Mara said.
Receivers
Senior Max Plaia is returning for his third season as a starter. Mara is expecting junior Austin Pfarner to make an impact.
“There’s definitely a fire and hunger from some missed opportunities last year,” Mara said. Here’s a position-by-position
“He’s a big-time player,” Mara said.
breakdown of the 2023 Cavaliers:Several members of the 1973 John Carroll Catholic High School state championship team get together once a week for lunch. From left, front, Joe Sudano, Joe Milan,and George Sawaya. Back, Richard Cashio, John Bahakel, Sherwin Sledge, Pat LaRock, Bobby Lorino, Jimmy Sissa, Lou Green, John Milan, Johnny Walker, and Rob Crawford.
’73 CAVS
From page 4
“It was a great team effort,” said Green, who now runs a bitcoin business. “We had some sure-fire bandits. John Mullen would practice making interceptions with one hand, then in the championship game he wound up intercepting a pass and running it back for a touchdown.”
Recognition
With this being the 50th anniversary of that state championship, the team will be recognized before the Sept. 22 home game against Carver. The 1973 and 1974 indoor and outdoor
CAVALIERS
From page 12
Versatile senior Zach Archer will play a key role.
“He played 95 percent of the snaps last year,” Mara said. “He can play slot, H-back or go out wide. Him and Carson are our two most valuable players.”
Sophomore Braden White, the son of former Auburn quarterback Stan White, also is in the mix at receiver.
“He’s kind of a possession guy,” Mara said. Senior Ryan Redmond will play tight end.
“He had a little bit of a back issue last year, but he’s 6-foot-3 and super strong.”
Seniors C.J. Wyatt and Nic Crawford (6-3, 225 pounds) also will be used at tight end.
“Nic is a big kid who had been playing basketball and decided to come out,” Mara said. “He’s tough as nails.”
Offensive Line
The Cavs have a blend of youth and experience on the offensive line.
Junior Anthony Mokry (6-0, 263 pounds) will start at center, senior Jack Chandler (6-3, 222) returns for his third season as a starter at right tackle, Michael Helton will play right guard, Elzey Gibson will play left tackle.
Sophomores Bo Burke and Charlie Boone and freshman Che Johnson are competing for the starting spot at left guard.
DEFENSE
track teams, which featured many of same players, also will be honored.
“I can’t believe it’s been 50 years and we’re the only undefeated team the school has ever had,” said Lorino, now a restauranteur. “I think that makes it even better. It’s kind of like a record that might not be broken.”
The ’73 Cavs remain the only undefeated team in the history of the John Carroll football program, which dates to 1946.
“Some folks have compared us to the 1972 Miami Dolphins,” Green said, referring to the only undefeated team in NFL history. “It was a special class. I was glad to be part of it.
“We still get together once a week on Tuesdays, about 12 of us, at Full Moon Barbecue.”
Wyatt, a four-year starter, will play defensive end. Braydon Lowery is another returning start er on the edge. His versatility allows him to play on multiple levels, including dropping back into pass coverage.
Senior Brandon Rashleigh and junior Alex Perrin provide depth. “Alex is smaller (5-7, 160), but he’s quick and tough,” Mara said. “He’s almost like an outside linebacker in the body of a nose guard.”
Linebacker
Rashleigh, Plaia and Plaia’s younger brother Alex, a sophomore who Mara said is super smart, will play inside linebacker.
Sophomore Jacob Dichiara and Wright also will be used at inside linebacker.
Nutter, Lowery and junior Sequoah Hicks will play the “star or nickel back position” as outside linebackers.
Secondary
Senior Hayden Dupre and junior Jaylin Shepherd are returning starters at cornerback. Pfarner and sophomore Jackson Rankin also will play some corner.
Archer, a four-year starter, will play safety. “He’s only 5-9, but he can play any position on the field,” Mara said. “He’s just a football player.”
Walker, McFadden and Ford also will be used at safety in certain situations.
SPECIAL TEAMS
A concussion is nothing to play with.
A concussion is a traumatic brain injury and should be taken seriously. Although fewer than 10% of concussions involve a loss of consciousness, it is important to understand the dangers and not take them lightly. Even a minor fall or collision may be of concern, so be alert to symptoms such as headaches, unsteadiness, confusion or other types of abnormal behavior.
Any athlete with a suspected concussion should immediately be removed from play and activity, evaluated right away by a doctor or healthcare professional, monitored and not left alone and not drive a motor vehicle.
To make an appointment, please call 205-934-1041.
1600 7th Avenue South • Birmingham, AL 35233
Defensive Line
The Cavs are looking for a new kicker with the graduation of Heath Jehu, who’s now at the University of Kentucky.
Childrens AL .org/Concussion
Sophomore Nicholas Gagliano (6-5, 235) will anchor the middle of the defensive line, either at nose guard or tackle. Johnson and Crawford also will play on the interior.
Junior Sebastian Guerrero, a multiple-sport athlete, has a big leg and is expected to fill the void left by Jehu.
Seniors Will Duncan and Charles Farr are also kickers. Perrin is in line to be the punter.
Mountain Brook capped off its third consecutive 12-win season by reaching the 2022 Class 6A state championship game and finishing as runners-up to Saraland.
But head coach Chris Yeager is not thinking about winning it all in 2023.
“This is not going to be an ‘unfinished business tour,’” Yeager said. “We learned a lot of lessons from that (loss) that were valuable.
“Our focus is something higher than a state championship. I try my best to focus on taking a bunch of guys and forming a team and focus on the pulse of the team and to see where that takes us.”
For the Spartans to become a cohesive unit, Yeager said, players have to take leadership roles.
“We’ve got to get better at being a player-led team,” he said. “That’s been a big challenge.”
What hasn’t been a challenge is getting players who want to play.
“Out of 450 boys in the school, 120 are playing football,” Yeager said. “That’s the sign of a healthy football program.
“We’ve had a good spring and summer. We had 90% showing up
A HIGHER GOAL
Spartans Focusing
on Team Cohesiveness, Not State Championship
Members of the 2023 Mountain Brook High School varsity football tream are: Stuart Andrews, William Grier McDuffie, Beckett Smith, John Cooper, Mac Mandell, Sam Smith, Rivers Young, Hosford Roberts, Reed Smith, Gabe Smith, Ham Mandell, Boyd Cooper, Hulsey Boehme, Luke Maddox, Henry Bell, Jack King, Henson Estes, Hayes Windle, Cole Gamble, John Hanson, Clyde Beavers, Miller Brooks, Clark Sanderson, Ryan Pugh, Drew Widener, JB Cook, George Evans, Oliver Bloomston, Lawson McKnight, Pierson Avery, Hudson Young, Parker Rogers, Harris Crumpton, Aidan Caskey, Douglas Johnson, Jackson Yokel, Tucker Crawford, Nolan Beck, Abbotte Browning, Anderson Roberts, Simms Sledge, Jack Currie, Charlie Elliott, David Estess, Benjamin Payne, Oliver Clark, Miller Lee, Jack Burgess, Harrison Fell, Bo Currie, Jack Donahue, Hampton King, John Evans, David Tynes, Bodi Brumfield, Parker Redden, Pelham Comer, Hudson Miller, Jackson Short, Parker Wright, Harper Zanaty, Fleetwood Ashurst, Joseph Green, JC Adams, Billy Flowers, Thomas Armstrong, Ben Burkhart, Henry Short, John Thompson, Graham Waldrop, Rushton Doster, Harris Vinoski, Tate Davis, Harrison Dukes, Richard Kinsaul, Wil Lucas, Rocco Gray, Rob Schoenvogel, William Courtenay, Charlie Pickett, Campbell Miller, Charlie Smith, Noah Jones, Watts Alexander, Kevin Hughes, Reed Nelson, Mark Torbert, Carter Colvin, Rickey Whitworth, Ayden Pledger, Slade Anderson, Billy Pharo, William Tabb, Henry Gimenez, Haston Simmons, Meagher Teague, Daniel Ellis, Webb Walker, Hooker Cook, Trey Vinson, Gaines Drew, James Hard, Alex Leonard, Korda’e Harper, Andrew Marks, Sam McIlvaine, Jack Walthall, Cannon Mussafer, Frank Lee, Ellis Sokol, Beau Dionne, Drake Demedicis, Parker Silsbee, James Morano, Graydon Griffin, Braden Whitworth, Jack McNeil, and Will Cain. mountain
PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 24 Vestavia Hills (Thurs.)
Aug. 31 @ James Clemens (Thurs.)
Sept. 8 @ Minor*
Sept. 14 @ Woodlawn (Thurs.)*
Sept. 22 Jackson-Olin*
Sept. 29 @ Hoover
Oct. 13 Parker*
Oct. 20 Mortimer Jordan*
Oct. 27 @ Gardendale*
Nov. 2 Baker (Thurs.)
*Conference game
mountain brook
AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Chris Yeager
2022 Record: 13-3
Region: Class 6A Region 5: Minor, Woodlawn, Jackson-Olin, Parker, Mortimer Jordan and Gardendale.
Stadium: Spartan Stadium (4,500)
with perfect attendance. Sometimes it’s easy to take those things for granted, but it’s of great importance.”
Mountain Brook returns six starters on offense and four on defense. Here’s a position-by-position breakdown of the 2023 Spartans:
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
The Spartans will turn to senior John Cooper to replace John Colvin, who had started the past two seasons and is now a preferred walk-on at Auburn.
Yeager likes Cooper’s makeup.
“He’s a heck of a football player,” Yeager said. “He’s a dual threat, which is more of what we had in 2018, 2019 and 2020. He can throw it and he can also run it.”
Freshman Ryan Pugh, one of the top junior golfers in the state, will serve as Cooper’s backup.
“He’s got this high-powered processor and is an incredible decision maker,” Yeager said. “If you watch him play golf, it’s easy to see why he’s so cool under pressure. He’s going to be one great football player.”
Running Back
Cole Gamble, the 2022 All-OTM Offensive Player, returns for his
O’Dell,
Jayden Aparicio, Sean Carson, Jaylen Myricks, Jack Ray, William Yoder, Colby King, Evan Chapman, Carter Hill, Cole Kelly, Adrian Borja, Dylan Dawson, Drew Field, Luke Tanner, Conner Roberts, Landon Pfaffman, Peyton Gamble, Hudson Hagood, Colton Cason, Nick Florence, Luke Kelly, Gavin Lamb, Luke Parmer, Cordell Williams, Colin Prestidge, Bradley Haizlip, Will Burgess, Barron Meadors, JC Schwender, Walker Shook, Keller Tibbetts, Jackson Blackwell, Paul Regan, Jordan Pierce-Harris,
Nick Varvoutis,
NEW BEGINNING
McComb Hoping To Bring Competitive Spirit to Oak Mountain
By RuBin E. GRantNew Oak Mountain football coach Shane McComb hit the ground running after being hired in January and officially taking over in April.
“There was a lot of work to do behind the scenes,” McComb said. “I had to hire a new staff ‘cause I only kept one assistant from the previous staff. I brought in eight new coaches. They’re a great group of guys, not just coaching but also the type of people they are.”
McComb had spent the past seven years as head coach at Palm Desert High School in Southern California. He led Palm Desert to six consecutive district championships with a 33-2 record in district play over their last 35 games.
In addition to hiring a new staff, McComb upgraded the Eagles’ equipment and, more importantly, began changing the mindset of his players with Oak Mountain coming off a 3-7 season in 2022.
“The culture switched,” McComb said. “We had 15 kids who quit, but the guys we have are guys who really want to be here. They have bought into the work ethic.”
McComb installed a new offense and new defense. The offense will emphasize a variety of formations and motion and the defense will play an attacking style.
“Every Friday night we want to battle and we want to compete,” he said.
Oak Mountain will have a young team, with six or seven freshmen expected to start.
oak mountain KEY PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 25 @ Northridge
Sept. 1 @ Pelham
Sept. 8 Hewitt Trussville*
Sept. 15 @ Chelsea*
Sept. 22 Tuscaloosa County*
Sept. 29 @ Briarwood
Oct. 6 @ Hoover*
Oct. 13 Thompson*
Oct. 20 @ Vestavia Hills*
Oct. 27 Spain Park*
*Conference game
oak mountain AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Shane McComb
2022 Record: 3-7
Region: Class 7A Region 3: HewittTrussville, Hoover, Spain Park, Thompson, Tuscaloosa County, Vestavia Hills and Chelsea
Stadium: Heardmont Park (5,000)
mores at running back, Le’Kamren Meadows and Marty Myricks.
“They’re both put together well and have good vision and athleticism,” McComb said.
Receivers
“We’re going to do receiver by committee,” McComb said.
Seniors Sawyer Smith and Tristyn Vardaman will head up the committee.
“Sawyer is going to be a huge guy for us on offense,” McComb said “Tristyn has strong hands and we’re going to play him in the slot. I think he’ll be great there.”
Junior Jacob Moore is expected to be a contributor and freshman Colby King will join Vardaman in the slot.
Senior Jackson Blackwell, junior Niko Varvoutis and freshman Peyton Gamble are in the mix to play tight end.
Offensive Line
The offensive line has some size and experience. Junior Colton Cason (6-foot-1, 240 pounds) will start at center with junior Cordell Williams (5-11, 315) and senior Luke Parmer (6-3, 285) starting at the guard spots. Junior Barron Meadors (6-3, 250), and sophomore Bradley Haizlip (6-3, 230) will man the tackle positions.
Freshman Luke Kelly (6-0, 215) will also
“We’ve got a lot of youth with a lot of potential,” McComb said.
“We’ve moved guys around to create depth.”
Here’s a position-by-position breakdown of the 2023 Eagles:
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
Junior Will O’Dell returns for his second season as the Eagles’ starting quarterback.
“He’s really improved from spring up until now,” McComb said. “He’s
really bought in to what we’re doing with formations and movement.”
Senior Drowdy Hackbarth, who will start at free safety, will serve as O’Dell’s backup.
Running Backs
The Eagles will have two sopho-
a lot. “He’s got a chance to be really good,” McComb said.
DEFENSE
Defensive Line
McComb is high on freshman Peyton Gamble, who will play
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Members of the 2023 Spain Park High School varsity football team are: Andrew Thornton, Reggie Jackson, Jonathan Bibbs, DJ Haynes, Brock Bradley, Derrick Shanks, Mitchell Frazer, Cam Mcfarlin, Jaxon Haygood, Logan Brownlee, Jaylon Hatcher, Drake Hibbard, Jared Smith, Jacob Olsen, Nik Alston, Hagen Holley, Josh Lewis, Landon Huey, Arnold Bush, Jamari Mosley, Kelby Roberson, Chase Wolsoncroft, Keionte Robinson, Riley Harrelson, Eli Smallwood, John Higginbotham, Omar Badawi, Jack Sellers, Landon Crane, Alex Mancill, Aden Walker, Dakarai Shanks, Ryan Breazeale, Brayden Matherson, Christian Smith, Noah Hendrix, Tyler Walker, Harris Gregory, Kameron Stevenson, Carter Holloway, Kam Voltz, Charleston Gray, Ethan Kline, Elijah Ferguson, Caden Knoffloch, Tyler Davidson, Michael Ritchey, JD Bonamy, Kaelen Taylor, Parker Weimar, Kian Taylor, Jacob Roe, Dalton Weaver, Gabe Mooney, George Ritchey, Brady Heath, EJ Kerley, Nathan Byrd, Jayden Starks, Josh Tulloss, Wilson Sisk, Connor Langston, Gage Herritt, Jovan Taylor, Andy Monroy, Noah Lee, Hudson Cahalan, Hudson Reed, David Toolabi, Keenoah Stevenson, Alan Vargas, Mason Cooper, Trevon Hill, Holden Sweitzer, John Lutenbacher, Zion Mcclain, Clete Ponder, Xavier Winston, Peyton Wood, Houston Peace, Fisayo Aduroja, Jackson Bell, William Turney, Jackson Bryant, Reed Oatridge, Jayden Craig, Frankie Glenn, Charlie Glenn, Sean Corey, Alex Lloyd, Clay Robbins, Andrew Owen, Zion Mims, Henry Gregory, Camden Major, Clay Bailey, Weston Brock, Andrew Meilan, Morgan Rich, Alden Dorn, Marcus Ellis, Ethan Boykin, Geno Ferguson, Myers Wade, and Landon Johnson.
CHANGING THE NARRATIVE
Jaguars Searching for a Winning Script After Recent Struggles
By RuBin E. GRantThe Spain Park Jaguars have fallen on hard times in recent years.
The Jags have not made the state playoffs since 2017 and have endured five consecutive losing seasons, including a 3-7 record in 2022 in Tim Vakakes’ first year as the head coach.
Vakakes is more than ready for a different script.
“I think we’ve got a chance,” Vakakes said. “We’ve got some good players who are tired of losing. We want to change the narrative, to go out and get the dial turned the other way.”
For that to happen, Vakakes said, the Jags have to win close games.
“Against some teams we just couldn’t get over the hump,” he said. “A lot of that has to do with believing you can win. There are teams in our region who expect to win and that’s a big part of why they win. We’ve got to get there. We’ve got to turn every game into a legal fistfight.’
Vakakes is trying to instill toughness in the Jaguars while competing in Class 7A, Region 3.
“The Hoovers and Thompsons know how to win,” Vakakes said. “It’s bred in them. We’ve got to get there. These kids are not going to be scared
spain park KEY PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 25 @ Calera
Sept. 1 Briarwood
Sept. 8 Hoover*
Sept. 15 Thompson*
Sept. 22 @ Vestavia Hills*
Oct. 6 @ Tuscaloosa County*
Oct. 13 Chelsea*
Oct. 20 @ Hewitt-Trussville*
Oct. 27 @ Oak Mountain*
Nov. 2 Pelham (Thurs.)
*Conference game
spain park
AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Tim Vakakes
2022 Record: 3-7
Region: Class 7A Region 3: Hoover, Hewitt-Trussville, Gadsden City, Oak Mountain, Thompson, Tuscaloosa County, Vestavia Hills
Stadium: Finley Stadium (5,000)
of whoever is on that other sideline.”
Spain Park has six starters returning on offense and six on defense as it attempts to end its playoff drought. Here’s a position-by-position rundown to the 2023 Jags.
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
Senior Evan Smallwood has graduated, but Vakakes is high on 6-foot0, 175-pound sophomore Brock Bradley.
“He has a chance to be special,” Vakakes said. “He has everything you want in a quarterback. He’s a good athlete. He can throw it and he can run it, and he’s got a little bit of moxie.”
Bradley already has offers, including from Texas A&M, West Virginia, UAB, Memphis, Arkansas State and Troy.
Junior Eli Smallwood, the younger brother of Evan Smallwood, will serve as Bradley’s backup.
Running Backs
Brothers Derrick Shanks, a senior, and Dakarai Shanks, a sophomore, will carry the load. Derrick is coming back from wrist surgery, but Vakakes expects him to be completely healthy once the season starts.
“We’ve got a couple of freshmen
and we can put a defensive back or wide receiver back there, but they are our primary guys,” Vakakes said.
Receivers
Senior Jonathan Bibbs will be Bradley’s primary target. He’s gotten a few offers from NCAA Power 5 conference schools.
Senior Logan Brownlee and Reggie Jackson, a 6-3, 190pound junior who is the nephew of Bo Jackson, are also in the mix.
“They’ve got a chance to go out there and make plays,” Vakakes said.
Senior Cam McFarlin will play tight end. “He’s 6-4, 215 pounds and has gotten a lot more physical and stronger,” Vakakes said.
Offensive Line
Senior tackles Hudson Cahalan and Connor Langston are returning starters along with junior center Jackson Bell.
A trio of players – senior Clete Ponder and juniors Jayden Craig and Jovan Taylor – are battling for starting guard spots.
“We’ve got those six guys, but I feel like we’ve got some young guys capable of stepping up to provide depth,” Vakakes said.
DEFENSE
Defensive Line
Junior defensive end Jared Smith (6-6, 240) is being recruited heavily by Power 5 schools.
Junior tackle Nik Alston (6-3, 255) also is attracting attention from Power 5 schools. He’s the younger brother of Brian Alston, who graduated and signed with Arkansas State last year.
Senior Josh Lewis also plays tackle, while senior Jacob Olsen is the other edge rusher.
Sophomore Christian Smith (6-2, 200) will serve as a backup to Smith and Olsen at defensive end.
Linebacker
Senior Landon Huey is a returning starter at inside linebacker and the defensive leader. Senior Chase Wolsoncroft and junior John Higginbotham also will play inside linebacker.
Junior Noah Hendrix, sophomore E.J. Kerley and senior Jacob Roe will be in the mix at outside linebacker along with junior Kam Stevenson.
Secondary
Senior Jamari Mosley is a returning starter at cornerback, but the other starting spot is up for grabs.
“We’ve got a couple of guys we’re working at corner, and they’ve gotten better,” Vakakes said.
Seniors Kelby Roberson, Tyler Walker and Keynote Robinson will man the safety position.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Senior Alex Lloyd and junior Josh Tulloss will handle the kicking chores.
‘We’ve got some good players who are tired of losing. We want to change the narrative, to go out and get the dial turned the other way.’
Downey, Carson Mann, Jordan Ross, Charles Dedmon, Kaden Daniels, Ben Wallace, Brady Brown, Matthew Lebbetter, Keown Richardson, Yates Bannon, Hayes Hudson, Grayson Bruno, JD Adkins, Cooper Mollison, Garner Leake, Bo Shea, Luke Beckham, John Paul Head, James Neely, Parker Fulton, Carson Purdy, Kohen Nelson, Jacob Herr, Brayden Robertson, Bo Stockard, Sully Blake, Whit Bohorfoush, Charlie Taaffe, Carter Shirley, Eli Rooks, George Wolf, Anthony Beam, William Cross, Bruce Littleton, Carter Metcalf, Jamari Lewis, Caden Taylor, Drew Vercher, McCall Moore, Jacob Parson, Cooper Young, Walker Hogue, Harrison Heath, Loftin Sheppard, Blake Smith, Liam Boryczka, Talan Turner, Owen Carter, Lincoln Goforth, Cayden Wilson, William Plaisance, Jordan Skrabo, Harrison Faust, Brendan Marshall, Baker Stewart, Grey Gardner, Tanner Mcinnis, Wrenn Smith, Josh Milner, David Hahn, Greer Smith, Hunter Frey, Patton Cook, Owen Wilbanks, Grayer Manown, Jack Mayhall, Pearson Tucker, Whit Williamson, Smith King, Hollis Smith, Jacob Watson, Marshall Henderson, Nikia Ragsdale Brayden Belski, Charlie Ingram, Major Weaver, Gibson Bean, Rooks Black, Ethan Denaburg, Reid Woodward, Caleb Jackson, Ryan Felgner, Walker Gardner, Ford Brown, Allan Peterson, Caleb Boylan, Brooks Towry, Wesley Smith, Wesley Newman , Garrett Hurst, Caleb Mallory, Jake Caldwell, Ivan Phillips, Blake Smitha, Matthew Hilsmier, Carson Fagan, Landon Page, Brody Glenn, Thomas Smith, Ben Mendheim, Colt Riley, Hunter Stough, JD Haynes, Lofton Orkus, Townsend Tinney, Grayson Folmar, JD Livingston, Ezell Webb, Aarya John, Cole Stafford, Nathan Ransome, Cole Holley, Demarco Hill, Fowler Jackson, Jackson Garner, Paul Spain, Hill Hughen, Will Ainsworth, Seth Rouse, Chuck Hammack, Layton Osborn, Noah Jones, Josh Arendall, Mason McDaniel, Anden Schifano, Owen Simpson, Ben Almanza, Ben Stallworth, and Monte Hedgemon.
DAUNTING CHALLENGE
Health Will Be a Key Factor in
Rebels’ Success
By RuBin E. GRantIn his first season as head football coach at his alma mater, Robert Evans guided the Vestavia Hills Rebels to a 7-5 record and a second-round Class 7A playoff appearance.
But Evans faces a daunting challenge to improve on that kind of success in his second season.
When asked about the outlook for the Rebels this season, Evans replied, “I wish I knew.”
“We lost 43 seniors on both sides of the line of scrimmage,” Evans added. “The question is can we compete up front with the big guys we’ll face. We have tough kids, but we don’t have size.
“Another thing is, can we stay healthy, playing in the region we do? It’s going to be tough to navigate if we don’t stay healthy.”
The Rebels will again compete in Class 7A, Region 3, arguably the toughest region in the state. It includes four-time defending state champion Thompson and perennial powerhouse Hoover, Vestavia Hills’ arch-rival.
“My goal for our team this year is to have a winning record against the five best teams on our schedule at the
vestavia hills
KEY PLAYERS TO WATCH
2023 SCHEDULE
Aug. 24 @ Mtn. Brook (Thur.)
Sept. 1 @ Homewood
Sept. 8 @ Thompson*
Sept. 15 Hoover*
Sept. 22 Spain Park*
Oct. 6 @ Chelsea*
Oct. 13 Hewitt-Trussville*
Oct. 20 Oak Mountain*
Oct. 27 @ Tuscaloosa Cty*
Nov. 2 Helena (Thur.)
*Conference game
vestavia hills
AT A GLANCE
Head Coach: Robert Evans
2022 Record: 7-5
Region: Class 7A Region 3: Hoover, Hewitt-Trussville, Oak Mountain, Spain Park, Thompson, Tuscaloosa County, Chelsea.
Stadium: Thompson Reynolds
Stadium at Buddy Anderson Field (5,000)
end,” Evans said.
Here’s a position-by-position breakdown of the 2023 Rebels:
OFFENSE
Quarterbacks
John Paul Head returns for his senior season as a second-year starter. He accounted for more than 3,500 yards total offense and 38 touchdowns last year, surpassing 1,000 yards both passing and running.
“Having J.P. back is a plus,” Evans said. “He’s a guy who can hurt you with his arm and his legs. He’s faster and has gotten more athletic. He’s tailor-made for what we do.”
Brayden Robertson, a 6-5, 200pound junior, and freshman Charlie Taafee are the backups.
“Brayden does a good job and Charlie is a mature, skilled athlete,” Evans said.
Running Backs
Junior William Tonsmeire will be the Rebels’ primary ballcarrier.
“He’s an explosive, efficient back,” Evans said. “He’s also a very talented baseball player. He’s got several offers to play baseball.”
The other running backs in the
EAGLES
SPARTANS
juniors Jack Walthall and Alex Leonard also in the mix.
From page 16
From page 14 defensive end and nose guard.
“He’s stepped up,” McComb said. “He’s strong and explosive. He has a bright future.”
Senior Ian Laughlin has moved to defensive end after playing offense last season. Junior Daveon Johnson and Varvoutis also will play on the edge.
Sophomores Joey Lewis and Jordan Pierce-Harris will receive the bulk of playing time on the inside.
Linebackers
Senior middle linebacker Jacob Porco (6-1, 200) is the leader of the defense.
“I’m excited about him,” McComb said. “I wish I had him a couple more years. He’s picked up the new defense great. He’s coachable, got savvy, great closing speed and he’s strong.”
Sophomore Colton Moore, junior Caleb Jaworski and freshman William Yoder are competing for roles at outside linebacker. McComb likes the makeup of Yoder.
“He’s got a good mind for the game,” McComb said. “I believe he has a bright future.”
Secondary
Hackbarth will play safety, with junior Robert Yoder at the nickel position and junior Cole Kelly at weak side safety.
Freshman Jayden Aparicio (6-1, 175), McComb’s stepson, will play a prominent role at cornerback. “He’s long and lengthy and has amazing ball skills,” McComb said. “He has a chance to be a big-time player.”
Juniors Sean Ray and Malachi Plummer and freshman Kylan Baker also will play cornerback.
McComb described Ray as “one of the best athletes” on the team. Ray and Aparicio also will spend time at receiver.
SPECIAL TEAMS
McComb believes senior kicker James Whatley has the potential to play NCAA Division I.
“He consistently puts the ball deep in the end zone on kickoffs, he’s good from 55 yards on field goals, and he’s a heck of a punter,” McComb said.
REBELS
From page 20
mix are sophomore Carson Purdy and senior Caden Taylor, who transferred from Gulf Breeze, Florida.
“We’re going to have a running back by committee,” Evans said.
Receivers
Senior Keown Richardson returns to head up the receiving corps after catching 45 passes for 602 yards and five touchdowns last season. Senior Jaden Daniels also is back to complement him.
Senior Cooper Mollison is a slot receiver who knows how to get open.
“He’s a solid possession guy,” Evans said. Junior Chase Webb, a speedster who was second in the state in the Class 7A 100 meters in the spring outdoor track and field meet, is a deep threat. Junior Carson Mann also is in the mix.
senior season. He rushed for 2,180 yards, averaging 8.2 yards per carry and 39 touchdowns last year while amassing 2,388 all-purpose yards.
“He runs hard and he’s got great speed,” Yeager said. “He’s a good receiver, and we’ve got to do a better job of throwing the ball to him because he’s a dual threat.”
Senior Jack King and sophomore Stuart Andrews will also get their share of carries.
“Jack is a pretty good runner,” Yeager said “We call him ‘Seabiscuit’ because he runs with all he has. Stuart is not very big, but he’s talented.”
Receivers
Yeager believes the Spartans’ receiving corps has a chance to be special.
“Last year we had Jackson Beatty, but this group is one of the better ones we’ve had in a long time,” he said.
It starts with senior Clark Sanderson, who had 53 receptions for 955 yards and eight touchdowns last year. Senior Hudson Young and a trio of sophomores – Trey Vinson, Gabe Smith and Sam Smith –round out the group.
Senior J.C. Adams will play tight end with
Offensive Line
Seniors William Courtenay (left guard), Watts Alexander (right tackle) and Carter Colvin (guard); sophomore Rocco Gray (center); and junior Daniel Ellis (guard) are the frontrunners to start.
“They are a very athletic group,” Yeager said.
Depth pieces are junior Kevin Hughes; seniors Ben Burkhart, Charlie Smith and Richard Kinsaul; and sophomore Henry Gimenez.
DEFENSE
Defensive Line
“We’re rebuilding up front,” Yeager said. “We’ve got six guys battling for three spots. It’s a competition.”
Senior Rickey Whitworth and junior Parker Redden are on the edge along with junior Frank Lee and senior Wil Lucas. Senior James Hard and junior Beckett Smith are battling for the nose guard position.
Linebackers
Senior William Grier McDuffie will play middle linebacker with junior Miller Brooks serving as his backup.
Junior Bruce Littleton will play some H-back and tight end.
“He brings us a lot of toughness,” Evans said. “He will be a good matchup piece for us.”
Offensive Line
Junior guard J.D. Livingston is the only returning starter.
Versatile sophomore Caleb Boylan also will start at either guard or center. Senior Ford Brown, a converted linebacker, will play tackle. Senior Hill Hughen will be the other tackle.
“We don’t have a lot of depth,” Evans said. “We’ll have some competition in camp to see who steps up to be that fifth guy.”
DEFENSE Defensive Line
Defensive end Jordan Ross (6-5, 230 pounds) is one of the top edge recruits in the nation. He had 49 tackles, 16.5 tackles for loss and 2.5 sacks in 2022.
“He’s gotten a lot of well-documented accolades,” Evans said. “He’s a freaky good athlete.”
Outside of Ross, Evans said the Rebels are trying to find the other defensive linemen.
“We’ve got eight to 10 guys competing and they’re all seniors.”
Linebackers
“I feel good about our linebacking corps,” Evans said.
Junior Jacob Watson will start at middle linebacker.
“He’s the alpha dog,” Evans said. “He likes contact.”
Junior Grayson Bruno will start at weak side linebacker and senior Gibson Bean will start at strong side linebacker.
Secondary
Seniors Kohen Nelson and Kaden Daniels will be the starting cornerbacks while the safety positions will rotate between junior Spence Hanna, senior Bo Shea and sophomore Cross Tonsmeire.
“I feel good about our secondary,” Evans said. “Spence reminds me of Ben Abercrombie (who played at Hoover). He’s smart and tough.”
SPECIAL TEAMS
Senior Carter Shirley, a standout soccer player who played football for the first time in 2022, returns as the place-kicker.
“He did a great job last year,” Evans said.
Junior Owen Simpson will handle the punting.
“He’s got a big leg,” Evans said. “We’ll also use him on kickoffs.”
Senior Charlie Ingram will serve as the long snapper.
‘Our focus is something higher than a state championship. I try my best to focus on taking a bunch of guys and forming a team and focus on the pulse of the team and to see where that takes us.’
Yeager believes the Spartans’ receiving corps, led by senior Clark Sanderson, has a chance to be special. Sanderson had 53 receptions for 955 yards and eight touchdowns last year.
Sophomore Boyd Cooper, junior Billy Flowers and seniors Pelham Comer, Drew Widener, Joseph Green and Benjamin Payne are competing for the outside spots.
Secondary
The Spartans have plenty of depth and experience in the secondary.
“We’ve got more starters back in the secondary than any other position,” Yeager said.
Juniors Hampton King and Henry Bell and seniors Tucker Crawford and Jack Currie will rotate at cornerback.
Senior Clyde Beavers and juniors Harris Crumpton, Reed Smith and Bo Currie are the safeties.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Senior Harrison Fell will handle the kicking duties with the departure of standout kicker Reed Harradine, who is now at the University of Alabama.
Senior J.B. Cook will be a three-year starter as long snapper.
“I feel good about our special teams,” Yeager said.
Internal Medicine Specialists Welcomes Dr. Jesse Hilton
We are a physician owned and led practice, with collectively over 150 years experience in Internal Medicine commonly known as “Internists”. Our physicians are Board Certified in Internal Medicine.
We treat patients from 18 to over 100 years of age. Our physicians possess an extensive ability to treat and manage most medical conditions and when necessary they have access to a wide range of specialists to assist. Internal Medicine Specialists provide premium care with a personal touch for all our patients.
Why should adults over 30 need an internist?
Most patients over 30 need to establish care with a physician that will be able to treat them for a variety of reasons throughout their life.
How often do healthy patients need to have an appointment with their internist?
We suggest an annual checkup for healthy patients.
How long has IMS been in Birmingham and what is the history of the clinic?
IMS formed as Brookwood Internists in 2001. In 2010 we changed our name to Internal Medicine Specialists (IMS) because we are independently owned and not affiliated with any one hospital. We now have 12 physicians and continue to provide top quality care whether you need a same day sick appointment
or long-term management of chronic conditions. If we need to incorporate a specialist into the care team we are not limited to any one hospital system. The care of our patients is our #1 concern.
How do I get to your office?
We are located in Brookwood Medical Office D. This is the professional office building that is only attached to the main campus via a skywalk. The parking deck entrance is on Brookwood Blvd across the street from Target. The entrance to the building is on level P4 and you will see our office in front of you as you walk into the building.
What services do you provide in your office?
We offer a wide range of professional health services within the convenient setting of our office:
• Comprehensive Adult Medical Care
• Wellness visits
• Complete Physical Exams
• Routine immunizations
• Xrays
• Electrocardiograms
• Ultrasounds
• Cardiac Stress Tests (GXT)
• Echocardiograms
• Spirometry
• Pulsoximetry
• Same Day Sick Appointments
• COVID Vaccines
• Laboratory Testing
Dr. Hilton is originally from Dallas, Texas. He earned his bachelor’s degree in biochemistry at Baylor University before completing medical school at Texas Tech University School of Medicine. After medical school Dr. Hilton moved to Birmingham to complete his residency in Internal Medicine at Brookwood Baptist Health. He decided to stay in Alabama and join our practice as of August 21, 2023.
Premium Care with a Personal Touch
In 2001 some of the most respected internal medicine physicians in this area came together to form Brookwood Internists which is now Internal Medicine Specialists. Since that time we have been very selective in hiring like-minded board certified physicians to our group to ensure that all our patients receive the same quality of care they have come to expect and deserve.
Our board certified physicians are:
Amanda Bowden, MD; Joshua Ivker, MD; LaDonna Richardson, MD; David Riddle, MD; David Kimbrell, MD; Robert Frederickson, MD; Charles Boackle, MD; Todd Schultz, MD; Larry Gazzini, MD; Roxanne Travelute, MD; Jesse Hilton, MD; Andrea White, MD
ABOUT TOWN 4
NEWS 6
LIFE 8
SOCIAL 10
otmj.com
Guest Column
Life Lessons Football Taught Me
My earliest memory of my life was when I was 3 years old. I was on the high school football field with my family in Thomasville, where my dad was the head football coach for 31 years.
Throughout my childhood, I have many fond memories of being on the field when my dad was the coach. Regardless of whether I was shagging extra point kicks, carrying the water bucket with a dipper, or my brother and I were performing as ball boys and managers. However, my brother and I mostly played our own madeup games on the side as the team practiced.
always brought out the best of our teams as well as our rivals.
Thoughts came to my mind as each one of the Over the Mountain schools starts their season. Each team starts with a lot of the same goals – area/ region championships, going to the playoffs and ultimately a state championship. These quests have many challenges, such as practicing in unbearable heat and having to convince their players “the hotter the heat the better the product.”
OTM FOOTBALL 24-PAGE PULL OUT INSIDE
SPORTS 20
With everything that’s happening “Over the Mountain,” it can be difficult to keep up. That’s why we have launched the OTMJ newsletter. Published every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday - we’ll give you a quick recap of the latest news, sports and social events as well as a heads up on upcoming events so you won’t miss any of the interesting and fun happenings in the Greater Birmingham metro area. To sign up for our newsletter, visit otmj.com.
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Since then and still today, even after playing football in junior high, high school and college, as well as coaching for 49 years at Vestavia Hills High School, there are certain smells and sounds that alert my senses that football season is near. The smell of fresh cut grass (even though my last 16 years of coaching were on artificial turf), the smell of sweaty players and locker rooms, and the smell of ointments like “Icy-Hot, etc.” or what us old timers used to refer to as “analgesic or atomic balm.”
The sounds of whistles, footballs being punted or kicked, defensive players making calls to line up correctly, QB’s barking signals, coaches encouraging and coaching players, and when drills or plays start, the sweet sound of pads popping and all out effort. The sounds of drum cadences, bands and cheerleaders totally add to the excitement.
Coaching and competing year in and year out against the toughest competition with great competitive coaches in the Birmingham metro area, especially all the Over the Mountain rivals, this competitive spirit
Over the Mountain Views
At the same time, they are molding young men into believing in themselves, and for the team to be successful, it will take each player working together as one, regardless of their talent level. A few players will go on to play at the next level, but for the vast majority high school will be the pinnacle of their football experience. These young men will learn many life lessons that can never be learned in a classroom, a book, a computer, the internet, or by “asking Siri.”
They will learn so many lessons that are too numerous to list in this short column. Just the camaraderie to know you are going through tough, hard, exciting and fun situations together. Being there for one another through thick and thin as they are playing together now. In all of this, coaches and players build strong bonds that last a lifetime. Nothing to a coach is more pleasing than when you hear those magical words, “Thanks coach, I love you.”
Good luck to all, but “Once a rebel always a rebel.”
Go Rebels!
Longtime Vestavia Hills High School coach Buddy Anderson retired at the end of the 2020 football season.
Back to School!
Families of kindergartners and new students were welcomed to Vestavia Hills Elementary West on Aug. 3 with a popsicle party hosted by West PTO. More than 60 families attended the social, kicking off the first PTO event of the 2023-2024 school year. The PTO distributed “I love West” sunglasses to the students and freeze pops for the whole family. New students also had an opportunity to explore West’s playground. Morgan Leonard, parent of an incoming kindergartner, said the party helped her daughter get acclimated with West and meet new friends. “My daughter loved running around on her new school’s playground, seeing old friends and meeting new ones,” Leonard said.
Nothing to a coach is more pleasing than when you hear those magical words, “Thanks coach, I love you.”Buddy Anderson
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2023
AUG 24 - SEP 8
Thru Aug. 27
Sidewalk Film Festival
The 25th annual Sidewalk Film Festival will present a variety of films in Birmingham’s historic Theater District. When: Various times Where: Various venues
Aug. 24-26
Lil Lambs Consignment
Mission to Rescue Children
Sozo Children to Host “Evening of Dreams” Gala
Sozo Children International, a Birmingham-based nonprofit ministry dedicated to serving at-risk children in Uganda, will host its annual fundraising Gala at The Club on Sept. 7.
The “Evening of Dreams” will feature a silent auction from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. with a dinner and live auction from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Sherri Jackson from CBS 42 will emcee.
“We’re excited to fellowship with our friends and supporters again this year,” said Suzanne Owens, CEO of Sozo Children. “It’s a great time to update everyone on our next steps and celebrate with so many friends who love our children and help us care for them.”
Friday, Sept. 8 | 8 A.M.–5:30 P.M.
Saturday, Sept. 9 | 8 A.M.–2 P.M.
AT B IRMINGHAM B OTANICAL G ARDENS
Benefiting the Gardens & featuring our Member Plant Gift
MEMBER EARLY-BIRD SHOPPING:
Thursday, Sept. 7 | 1 P.M.–5:30 P.M.
Bring a cart or wagon • Check and credit card only
bbgardens.org
Trinity’s annual sale that provides gently worn clothing, toys, and furniture at reasonable prices. All unsold items marked “donate” will be shared with families and organizations in need in our area. When: Times vary based on day Where: Trinity United Methodist Church, Homewood
Aug. 24-Sept. 29
Stay Awake
Imagine an upside down lullaby: Mia and her Dog are getting ready for bed when her mobile comes to life! Using music, movement and puppetry, young theatre makers will explore shapes, sounds, numbers and more in this interactive production. Recommended for children up to age 5. When: Saturdays, 10 a.m.; Thursdays and Fridays, 9:30 a.m. Where: Birmingham Children’s Theatre
Fri., Aug. 25
UAB Arts Block Party
UAB celebrates the start of the school year with a free Arts Block Party featuring Red Baraat, band from Brooklyn, in concert. There will be an ArtPlay kids zone, food trucks, a DJ, art exhibit, vendors, food trucks and more. When: Starts at 5 p.m. Where: UAB Cultural Corridor, beginning at 1200 10th Ave. South
Sat., Aug. 26
Smile-a-Mile 5K & 1 Mile Fun Run
A dove release will launch the Smilea-Mile 5K and 1 Mile Fun Run to support the whole family during the childhood cancer journey. Award ceremony and activities follow the race. When: 7:55 a.m., dove release; 8 a.m., 5K starts; 8:45 a.m., 1 Mile Fun Run starts. Where: Smile-a-Mile Place, downtown Birmingham
Tailgate Challenge
The Bell Center for Early Intervention will host its 15th annual fundraiser to celebrate the upcoming football season. This family-friendly event invites football fans to sample delicious food and drinks from some of Birmingham’s best tailgaters. All proceeds benefit The Bell Center, which provides early intervention therapy for infants and toddlers with special needs. When: 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Where: The Bell Center
Back to School Bash
The ministry recently bought more land in Uganda with plans to build a school and medical center. Officials also hope to expand to serve locally in Alabama.
Sozo began in 2010 when the new ministry rescued 17 children from a children’s home that had been abandoned and was being closed by local officials.
Now in its 13th year, the ministry operates Sozo Village, a 28-acre community that has grown to serve more than 150 children – providing housing, medical care, education and other services. Sozo Children also leads Kid’s Club, a twice-weekly Bible club for Ugandan children living around the village.
As many as 400 children, some of whom walk miles to attend, share a meal and devotional time each week during Kid’s Club.
Sozo Children funds much of its operations through child sponsorships, donations and its upscale thrift store in Avondale, Sozo Trading Co. The ministry also leads mission teams several times a year to Uganda and every two years presents the Sozo Children’s Choir, which serves as a mission trip for some of the children served by Sozo.
Sozo Children hopes to raise more than $175,000 at the dinner through the auction, event sponsorships and table sponsorships. To sponsor a table, donate an auction item or buy dinner tickets, visit sozochildren.org/2023dinner.
Stories of Exile
Hoover Library Series Kicks Off With Focus on Yiddish
“Stories of Exile” is the theme of a series of book discussions and events that will be held at the Hoover Library this fall.
The book discussions are part of a national reading program made possible by a Stories of Exile grant from the Yiddish Book Center. The Hoover library is the only library in Alabama to be awarded the grant. The program will launch Sept. 5 with an opening reception at 6 p.m. at the library. It will feature Rabbi Josef Friedman, an expert in Yiddish, and Olena Vyshyvanyuk, a refugee from Ukraine who works as a case manager with Inspirtus, an organization that helps refugees and immigrants.
Books for discussion, which originally were written in Yiddish, will be distributed at the reception. They are “On the Landing,” by Yenta Mash, “The Glatstein Chronicles,” by Jacob Glatstein and “In the Land of the Postscript,” by Chava Rosenfarb. All three are also available through the Hoopla Digital app, free to all Hoover Library cardholders.
An Alabama-centric young adult novel-in-verse will be part of the reading program, as well as a series of other programs focusing on themes of displacement and diaspora.
These will include a memoir writing workshop, an Empathy Project in conjunction with the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute’s welcoming activities surrounding the arrival of Little Amal to Birmingham and a presentation by University of Alabama history professor Janek Wasserman on the history of exile throughout Europe.
The library also will be showing films and documentaries corresponding to the theme in the Library Theatre each month, and in December Alabama author Irene Latham and Atlanta-based actor Charles Waters will discuss their book “African Town,” which depicts the voyage of the last 110 African slaves to be transported to Mobile on the Clotilde slave ship. For more details about the events, visit hooverlibrary.org.
cookmuseum.org
This event kicks off the new school year with rides, bounce houses,
food and live entertainment. There is no admission charge but to jump and play on the bounce houses and ride the mechanical attractions, you can pruchase a $10 wristband that will provide unlimited access to everything. Proceeds from the
wristband sales go to benefit the Homewood High School Band. When: 4:30pm-8:30pm Where: Patriot Park
FAIRY TALE BALL | SAT., AUG. 26
Ready your shiny suit of armor, dress in your most sparkly ball gown, or throw on a super hero cape as Childcare Resources will host its annual kid-friendly gala, including a silent auction, gourmet hors d’oeuvres and more. When: 5:30 p.m. Where: Hyatt Regency Birmingham, The Wynfrey Hotel
Aug. 26-27
Taste of 4th Avenue Jazz Fest
Headliner David Sanchez and Jazz in Pink are the headliners for this two-day jazz festival that will have plenty of food and drink vendors to serve hungry and thirsty festivalgoers. When: Aug 26, 2-10 p.m. Aug 27, 2-8 p.m. Where: Birmingham’s historic 4th Avenue Business District
at
Sat., Sept. 2
Labor Day Fest
The Southern Museum of Flight is holding a Labor Day Fest, with live entertainment, a kids zone with games and crafts, and food trucks. When: 3:30-7:30 p.m. Where: Southern Museum of Flight
Sept. 7-9
Fall Plant Sale
The Birmingham Botanical Gardens will hold its annual Fall Plant Sale, with a variety of plants and shrubs available. When: Early bird shopping for members on Sept. 7 from 1-5 p.m.; Sept. 8, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sept. 9, 8 a.m.2 p.m. Where: Birmingham Botanical Gardens
Sept. 8-9
Giggles and Grace Fall Consignment Sale
Thur., Aug. 31
Walking to Remember
Team Pledge Kickoff
Alzheimer’s of Central Alabama is holding a circus-themed event, with treats, fabulous team leader t-shirts, and info on creating a successful team for this years walk in November. Meet 2023 Ring Leader, Honorary Walk Chair Susan Womack. When: 4:30 - 6 p.m. Where: ACA Office 300 Office Park Drive, Suite 225
Lisa “Roxanne” Richardson to Speak at September Salt and Light Event
Lisa “Roxanne” Richardson, radio and podcast host and registered chaplain, will be featured in the Salt and Light Event being hosted by Riverchase United Methodist Church Women’s Ministry on Sept. 10.
“Cultivating the Joy of the Lord as We Reach for His Best” is the theme of the event.
Richardson now co-hosts the podcast and Youtube Channel called “Roxanne and Ace Unlimited” after working decades in Birmingham radio. She has appeared on the Fox News Network, The 700 Club and The Learning Channel.
She also leads a group of local church members, called “Special Ops,” that ministers weekly to the homeless, addicted and exploited. She was presented with the “Radio for Good” nationwide Humanitarian Award on
allacess.com and was named one of the Top Women in Alabama Media by Business Alabama Magazine.
She is a founding board member of The Wellhouse Inc., Alabama’s only 24-hour shelter for women seeking refuge from human trafficking. Richardson also sells her own blend of coffee to benefit missionaries to Southeast Asia, which can be purchased at mybrotherscup. com.
She is married to retired Deer Valley Elementary School Principal Wayne Richardson and together they run an Amazon-based business called “Joyful Gestures.” They have four adult children.
The event will be held at Riverchase United Methodist Church from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sept. 10. For more information, visit riverchaseumc.org/event/salt-light.
Asbury United Methodist Church holds its Giggles and Grace Fall Consignment Sale of baby and children’s clothes. When: Sept. 8, 8 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sept. 9, 8 a.m.-noon. Where: Asbury United Methodist Church
Fri., Sept. 8
Tailgate Fundraiser
Buy a tailgate meal to help raise money for Magic City Harvest, which works to alleviate food insecurity, malnutrition and food waste through
free distribution of donated excess food to programs in Birmingham feeding those in need. When: 4-6 p.m. Where: Little Donkey & Rodney Scott’s in Homewood
Opera Shots
Opera Shots returns for its annual series of casual pop-up concerts featuring members of the Opera Birmingham Chorus and surprise guest artists. Concertgoers should
bring lawn chairs, blankets and can bring coolers at this outdoor event. When: 6 p.m. Where: Hill Opera Center
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last year’s event.Journal file photo by Jordan Wald
Homewood Educator Maddox to Take Over as Hoover Schools Superintendent
The Hoover Board of Education on Aug. 17 unanimously appointed Dr. Kevin Maddox as the new superintendent of education.
Maddox succeeds Dr. Dee O. Fowler, who is retiring.
Maddox has been assistant superintendent of Homewood City Schools since 2012, according to a statement from the Hoover school system, and has 29 years of experience as an educator.
Vestavia Police Foundation to Honor Sen. Jabo Waggoner
By Anne RuisiState Sen. Jabo Waggoner will be honored by the Vestavia Hills Police Foundation at a Signature Event fundraiser Sept. 13 at the Vestavia Country Club.
“We will honor Senator Jabo Waggoner (R-Vestavia Hills) for his decades of service in helping the citizens of Vestavia, Jefferson County and the state of Alabama, and especially for his support of the mission of our Vestavia Hills Police Foundation,” Thomas S. Hale, the foundation’s president, said in an email.
“Senator Waggoner has long realized the tremendous value of our high-quality Police Department and its personnel in keeping Vestavia Hills such a safe and thriving community,
In It to Win It
Vestavia Hills Firemedic Wins in Firefighter Challenge, Will Compete in National Event
Ana Ruzevic, a Vestavia Hills Fire Department firemedic assigned to station 4 in Liberty Park, recently took home top honors from the 2023 Paul Davis Restoration Southwest Region Firefighter Challenge Championship Event at The Strat in Las Vegas.
Ruzevic was the overall winner in the Division 1 Under Age 40 Female category of this regional Firefighter Challenge event.
Ruzevic has been competing in the physically challenging event for the past five years in hopes of attending the national event. In 2021, she won the national event and went on to place second in the world event.
With her first-place finish at the regional event this year, she has quali-
and also recognizes the need for more citizen volunteers to stand up in vocal and monetary support for our police and to stand guard against the constant negative media slams against them,” Hale added.
Attorney General Steve Marshall will be the keynote speaker, with Steve Ammons, the foundation’s first president, as emcee. Ammons was a Jefferson County commissioner until he was named CEO of the Birmingham Business Alliance earlier this year.
fied for the national event being held in Hoover in September.
The Firefighter Challenge is called the “toughest 2 minutes in sports.” In it, firefighters compete against each other by simulating the physical demands of real-life firefighting. Competitors from all over the world are placed in full gear and SCBA and perform tasks such as carrying a high-rise pack upstairs, advancing a charged hoseline and dragging a 175-pound mannequin for 100 feet.
After competing on the Tulane track team in college, Ruzevic wanted to find a way to challenge herself and keep in top physical shape. Competing in the Firefighter Challenge accomplishes this, along with helping her build friendships with firefighters from other departments.
“Even though these firefighters are competing against each other, all competitors are pulling for each other to do their best,” Ruzevic said.
Her best time is 2:24, but her ultimate goal is to finish the course in under 2:00.
“His professional journey has been marked by a commitment to investing in staff members, coordinating hiring processes, leading strategic planning teams and engaging with stakeholders on various topics and issues,” that statement reads.
It also states that he has led comprehensive facility improvement strategies and overseen construction, as well as having maintained partnerships with city departments.
At the event, the foundation will present special gifts to Waggoner and to the family of the late Vestavia Hills Police Chief Danny P. Rary, who died Aug. 1.
A primary function of the foundation is to encourage support of the men and women in the police department through citizen and business contributions to underwrite the expense of a multitude of things not included in the Police Department’s annual budget. It also helps pay for unexpected issues, Hale said. For example, when one of Vestavia’s officers and his family lost their home and all their belongings to a fire, the foundation raised more than $50,000 in a few days to support them, he said.
Hale noted the foundation will soon announce a capital campaign to pursue a state-of-the-art training simulator so advanced that only one community and the U.S. Marshal’s office have it in Alabama.
“Hoover City Schools is an amazing school system with high academic expectations, extracurricular successes and dedicated employees. I am extremely humbled and excited to serve the Hoover community, and I look forward to working alongside the administrators, teachers, staff and families of Hoover,” Maddox said.
Board President Kermit Kendrick said in the statement that the board is negotiating a contract with Maddox.
Mountain Brook Recognized as One of Top Local Governments for Services to Residents
The city of Mountain Brook recently received the “Leading the Way Award” for the services it delivers to residents.
The award was presented to the city in July by ETC Institute, placing it in the top 10% of all local governments surveyed.
Mountain Brook ranked first in the nation in more than 29 categories and scored among the top 10% in 12 additional categories.
The recognition is based on a point system evaluating three core areas: satisfaction with the overall quality of services, satisfaction with customer service provided by employees, and satisfaction with the value residents think they receive for local taxes and fees.
The city scored 101 points above the average composite score for all cities surveyed in the United States.
“We are thrilled to see the hard work and dedication of so many in Mountain Brook recognized through this award,” said City Manager Sam Gaston. “We are grateful to our citizens, business owners, city employees and city leaders for investing their time and efforts into making our community truly the best place to live.”
ETC Institute CEO Christopher Tatham said, “The city of Mountain Brook is truly setting the standard in many areas. In addition to ranking in the top 10% overall, the City of Mountain Brook had the highest satisfaction rating among communities that participated in DirectionFinder® between January 2023 and May.”
DirectionFinder is the public opinion survey instrument developed by ETC Institute, which is a national corporation dedicated to helping local governments “enhance community planning” by conducting research projects including surveys, focus groups and stakeholder meetings. The institute has clients in 49 states and works on Mountain Brook’s yearly citizen survey.
For more information on the award, please visit etcinstitute.com or contact Lillian Brand, lillian@srcomm.us.
Homewood Teacher Named History Teacher of the Year
Homewood City Schools’ Amber Broadhead has been named the 2023 Alabama History Teacher of the Year by the Gilder Lehrman Institute.
Broadhead, currently a fourth-grade teacher at Edgewood Elementary School, has taught for 14 years, according to a statement from the school system.
She has worked with the Alabama Department of Archives and History for seven years leading educator workshops, and she recently joined the Alabama Association of Historians. She also serves on the board of directors for the Alabama Historical Association.
The History Teacher of the Year award honors one K-12 teacher from each state, the District of Columbia, Department of Defense schools and U.S. Territories. Each of those
THE HISTORY TEACHER OF THE YEAR AWARD HONORS ONE K-12 TEACHER FROM EACH STATE, THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SCHOOLS AND U.S. TERRITORIES
honorees then becomes one of 53 finalists for the National History Teacher of the Year award.
Each History Teacher of the Year receives a $1,000 honorarium, a core archive of American history books, Gilder Lehrman educational materials and recognition at a local ceremony.
“Knowledgeable and impassioned teachers bring our country’s history to life for students, allowing them to understand that engaging with history is about more than a series of facts,” said James G. Basker, president of the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. “Teachers are the lifeblood of our students’ education, and these are the best of the best.”
Bruno Montessori Academy’s popular theater program is rising to a new level with the addition of two seasoned actors to work with students in first through eighth grades.
Rachel Burttram is the school’s new full-time drama teacher and her husband, Brendan Powers, is assisting. They are veteran performers and members of Actor’s Equity Association, the stage actor’s union, and eligible for membership in the Screen Actors Guild.
“They have just been a perfect addition,” said Susan Downs, the academy’s head of school, who noted their background and professional experience made them a perfect fit for the job.
“They are already knowledgeable about drama in every aspect and had so many new things to offer, such as creating short videos or teaching poetry,” the school thought they could offer more experiences to the students, Downs said. “We’re just thrilled that they’re here and excited about the opportunity and the kids will have.”
Bruno Montessori has had a thriving theater program for several years, including producing two musicals each year.
When the previous drama teacher resigned shortly before the start of this school year, Downs was left scrambling to find a replacement. She contacted the theater department at Birmingham-Southern College, which recommended Burttram and Powers.
“The joy right now is that we’re both in a position to be available to do this,” Powers said, adding that the couple are taking a team-teaching approach to instruction.
The couple have presented workshops together over the past 20 years for people of all ages, but this is the first time they’ve taught at a Montessori school, he said.
Productions on the Horizon
Besides classes, Burttram and Powers will work with the students to present a play in the fall and a musical next spring. “The Hunt for Milo Gatto,” is the fall production, which will be performed on Oct. 27. It’s a play the couple wrote about a team of detectives who are pursuing a jewel thief who keeps leaving riddles and word games for them - and the audience - to solve.
The play is silly and fun, interactive with the audience and has quirky characters among the 20 featured roles. Auditions will be open to students in first to eighth grades, and everyone who auditions will participate, Powers said. Rehearsals will begin the week of Aug. 28.
Star Turn
Actors Bring Theatrical Experience to Bruno Montessori Drama Classes
Just as important as the actors are the students who will work backstage and help with costumes, painting, prop management and perhaps a stage manager, Burttram said.
In the spring they’ll present the musical “The Lion King Jr.”
Participating in theater classes – which will be tailored to different age groups – and the performances offer many benefits to the children, Burttram said.
“It’s not just about training somebody to learn how to say lines in a play,” Burttram said. “Theater teaches respect for each other. Theater teaches you to hone your listening skills. Theater gives you the confidence to stand up in front of a group and speak.”
It will help the students find their voice and make connections, and it will give them a safe place to share their opinions, she added.
Like many actors, Burttram and Powers participated in high school plays before going to college.
Having acted in high school theater is “one of the reasons this job is really fun, because I’m reliving a lot of my youth as I’m with (the students),” said Burttram, a Pleasant Grove native whose family moved to North Carolina at the end of her sophomore year in high school before returning about a year later. “And you know, it’s just very fun to be back in this environment.”
Bluff Park: Then & Now Program on Bluff Park to Go Into It’s History and a Proposed New Park
The Hoover Historical Society will meet Sept. 19 for a program on “Bluff Park: Then & Now,” during which the group will hear a presentation on the history of the area and discuss a proposal to establish The Bluff Park Preserve as a city park in its midst.
Speakers for the event will be landscape architect Birgit Kibelka and historian Marjorie White.
Working with the Birmingham
Historical Society over the past decade, Kibelka and White have documented historic landscapes for the National Park Service and the Alabama Historical Commission, including the Civil War-era Ross Creek Culvert (aka Ross Bridge); Brock’s Gap, the 1871 cut in Shades Mountain that made the way for the railroad; the 1913 Altamont Park; and the 1920s planning for Mountain Brook.
She and her husband earned bachelor’s degrees in fine arts, she from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and he at Niagara University in Western New York. Powers received a master’s degree in English from St. John’s University in Queens.
“Once I graduated from there, I sort of jumped into the acting scene in New York,” he said.
Credits
Powers has appeared on TV in “Graceland” and “Bloodline” and was associate producer for the short film, “Emma’s Fine,” in which his wife was the principal actor.
After earning her degree, Burttram got a job as an apprentice for a season at the Tony Awardwinning Actors Theatre of Louisville. The acting industry is a trade, in a way, and “being an apprentice is a wonderful way to learn the craft from professionals in a real hands-on setting,” she said.
Her television credits also include portraying Betty Grissom, the wife of astronaut Gus Grissom, in seven episodes of National Geographic’s “The Right Stuff” on Disney+ and appearing in episodes of “Burn Notice,” according to imdb.com.
The couple also have worked on stage in many productions and were longtime actors with the Florida Repertory Theatre in Fort Myers, which is
This summer they turned their gaze to the historic Bluff Park, discovering historic details and opportunities for the future that they will share in an illustrated presentation.
Bluff Park was established more than 100 years ago and later annexed by Hoover, now standing as the oldest subdivision in the city. The Shades Crest Road and Park Avenue Historic Districts encompass its historic homes and churches.
The meeting is free and open to the public.
Speakers for the event will be, from left, landscape architect Birgit Kibelka and historian Marjorie White.
where they met in 2007. They married at the theater in 2013.
The couple moved back to Birmingham about 18 months ago to be closer to her parents in Pleasant Grove. It was in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic and there were few opportunities for work, so they produced a series of online murder mysteries they called “Tiny Theatre.”
“The Hunt for Milo Gatto” is one of the productions they wrote.
When the Writers Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild went on strike in July, Burttram and Powers were weighing their options of what they could do.
“What a blessing it was that Bruno Montessori happened to be looking for a drama teacher,” she said.
Besides presenting theater workshops, the couple have worked as teachers or instructors. Powers taught high school for a year after college and Burttram taught at the former Children’s Dance Foundation in Birmingham. And years ago, she taught a dance class at Bruno Montessori.
“I think that’s what’s so fun about an experience like this or the other teaching opportunities that we’ve had in the past is to be in a room with young folks. That enthusiasm and childlike curiosity and imagination reinvigorates you as an artist to see things in brand new ways,” Burttram said.
Fashion Funds Academics
Linly Heflin Unit’s Scholarship Fashion Show Funds Scholarships for Women
The Linly Heflin Unit’s 64th annual Scholarship Fashion Show will be Oct. 18 and will celebrate 100 years of funding scholarships for women.
The cocktail gala is the primary fundraiser for the organization and will be held at The Club. This year’s fashion show, once again, will be coordinated with Gus Mayer and will highlight featured designer Lafayette148 New York.
Show chair Katherine Debuys and co-chair Valerie Lightfoot planned the event.
The Linly Heflin Unit is named in honor of Birmingham resident Linly Heflin, who helped establish a Red
Megan Montgomery Foundation Golf Outing Raises Money to Prevent Relationship Violence
The Megan Montgomery Foundation is hosting a Charity Golf Outing on Sept. 20 at the Legacy Course Greystone. All proceeds will benefit Megan’s Foundation to prevent relationship violence before it starts.
In its first two years, the foundation has allocated $104,000 to schools and nonprofits for healthy relationship education programs. Grants have been awarded to Samford University, UAB
SUMMER GIVE SUMMER Boot the
Cross surgical unit during World War I so that women at home could support the war effort. After her death in 1919, the Linly Heflin Unit was created to continue her work.
In 1923, the organization began awarding scholarships to women to attend college. This year, the unit is celebrating 100 years of awarding scholarships of $10,000 per year for up to four years to young women pursuing undergraduate degrees at Alabama universities.
For more information, contact linlyheflin.org.
Student Wellness, University of West Alabama, Wallace State, Girl Scouts of North Central Alabama and many others.
The golf outing will start at 10:00 a.m., lunch at 11:45, shotgun start at 1 p.m. and a dinner and award presentations after play.
Medical Properties Trust is the presenting sponsor. Blue Cross Caring Foundation and BTC Wholesale/D’Amico Family are co-sponsors.
Hole sponsorships and foursomes are still available. For more information, contact Rod Clark, event chairman, at 205-531-0946 or Rod.clark@ megansfoundation.org.
The Rotary Club of Shades Valley Names New Officers and Board Members
The Rotary Club of Shades Valley recently announced the appointment of new officers and board members for the upcoming year, 2023-2024, starting with Jon E. Lewis as president.
“These dedicated individuals bring a wealth of experience, enthusiasm and a shared commitment to service that will help drive the club’s mission forward,” a press release on the announcement stated.
Other new officers and board members for the club are Immediate
Past President Marcus Chatterton, President-elect William Wentowksi, Secretary/Treasurer Willard Dean and Sergeant-at-Arms John Beard. The club also announced new board members: Ashley Neese, club admin chair/club service chair; David Bell, community service projects chair; Tom Killian, Rotary Foundation chair; Frank O’Neil, international service projects chair; James Somers, vocational projects chair; William Longshore, youth service projects chair; William Johnston,
membership chair; Laura Gilmour, public relations chair; Kim Ryals, director-at-large; Richard Sanders, director-at-large; Lindsy Gardner, past president/director-at-large; and John Porter, club executive director.
The Rotary Club of Shades Valley sponsors a wide range of service projects, charitable initiatives and educational programs in its mission to promote peace, fight poverty, support education and address critical social issues.
JOURNEY OF HOPE
Birmingham Celebrities Host Gala
United Ability celebrated 75 years of empowering children and adults with disabilities at the Journey of Hope Gala on Aug. 19 at UAB’s Alys Stephens Center.
Honored for their contributions to United Ability were Bob Chapman, Charles Leesburg and Charlie Moses. Last year’s honoree, Birmingham golf pro Chris Biggins, one of the world’s most highly ranked adaptive golfers in the world, was cohost for the event with Birmingham actor and disability inclusion advocate Alie B. Gorrie.
Gifted Brazilian ballerina Vitoria Bueno performed at the event. ❖
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J’La Gala
Southern Graze Caters LJCC Fundraiser
The Levite Jewish Community Center was the setting for the 2nd annual J’La Gala on Aug. 5.
The event, a fundraiser for the LJCC’s programming for children and adults, featured a silent auction and a gourmet kosher meal catered by chef Maureen Holt of Southern Graze.
Guests were served appetizers such as charcuterie on a stick, watermelon and cucumber salad, pan-roasted chicken breast with basil pesto, chive Yukon gold mashed potatoes and squash and zucchini ragout. ❖
Celebrating
This is your AD PROOF from the OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL for the Please make sure all information is correct, including address and phone number!
YOUR PURCHASE OF A NURSES SAVE LIVES CAR TAG GOES DIRECTLY TO:
STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS AND ENDOWMENT FUNDS
To date, ANF has initiated more than $600,000 in nursing student scholarships.
NURSE PRIDE
Nurses are among the most trusted professions for 21 years in a row, according to Gallup. Show your support for friends, family members, and loved ones who are nurses.
NURSES IN NEED
In times of crisis or emergency, ANF provides support for Alabama's nurses in need.
LEADERSHIP GRANTS
Rewarding and investing in innovations of nursing practice.
Will Klein, Alicia Maggard
Christmas in August was the theme of the third annual Jenny’s Treasures fundraiser on Aug. 5.
The event, held at the North Shelby County home of Bob Alden, is a memorial benefit for the Greater Birmingham Humane Society in honor of Jennifer Tedder Alden, who passed away suddenly more than two years ago.
Alden was a philanthropist and fundraiser for the humane society. ❖
Bezshan
Picasso Pets
Pet Portraits Featured During Dinner Event
Tutus and top hats was the theme of the 22nd annual Picasso Pets to benefit Hand in Paw at the Harbert Center on Aug. 19.
A cocktail reception kicked off the evening, which also featured a seated dinner, wine pull, photo booth and a live auction. The 2023 Picasso Pets
paintings, created by prominent local artists, debuted at the party. Hand in Paw’s mission is to improve human health and well-being through animal-assisted therapy. Special guests included Hand in Paw therapy teams, which interacted with guests. ❖
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NOTICE OF ESTABLI SHMENT OF BANK BRANCH
CB&S Bank
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Over The Mountain Journal, phone 205-613-2080
August
This is your AD PROOF from the OVER THE MOUNTAIN JOURNAL for the Aug. 24, 2023 issue.
Please make sure all information is correct, Including address and phone number!
Notice is given that CB&S Bank, Russellville, Alabama has made application with the Regional Director of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to establish a branch office at 7 Office Park Circle, Suite 111, Mountain Brook, AL 35223.
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Any person wishing to comment on this application may file his or her comments in writing with the regional director of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation at the appropriate FDIC office 10 Tenth Street, NE, Suite 800, Atlanta, Georgia 30309-3906 not later than September 9, 2023. The nonconfidential portions of the application are on file at the appropriate FDIC office and are available for public inspection during regular business hours. Photocopies of the nonconfidential portion of the application file will be made available upon request.
Dragon Boat Race & Festival
Mitchell’s Place Benefits From Event at East Lake
Teams in traditional dragon boats paddled across the waters of East Lake in Birmingham at the Mitchell’s Place Dragon Boat Race & Festival on Aug. 19. The event at East Lake Park was a fundraiser for
Mitchell’s Place, which serves children on the autism spectrum and their families.
Food trucks were on hand and the fun included a kids zone and a Bloody Mary contest. ❖
SEPTEMBER 28 – OCTOBER 1
presenting sponsor O’NEAL INDUSTRIES design sponsor de GOURNAY
textile sponsor COWTAN & TOUT
benefiting FRIENDS OF BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS
BBGARDENS.ORG / ANTIQUES
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Art on the Rocks
Music and Dance Mingled With the Art at the Birmingham Museum of Art
R&B singer Durand Bernarr was the headliner for the Birmingham Museum of Art’s annual Art on the Rocks event on Aug. 4
The evening included a variety of art, live music and dance performances, interactive artistic fun and cocktails throughout the museum’s galleries, sculpture garden and outdoor terraces.
Guests also had the opportunity to help Birmingham-born artist Amy Pleasant complete her indoor mural commission for the exhibition series, “Wall to Wall.” ❖
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Fairytales and Frogs
Costumed Children and Adults
Meet Characters at the Zoo
A magical morning and afternoon awaited guests Aug. 12 at the Fairytales and Frogs event at the Birmingham Zoo.
A court of enchanted princesses and other royals were on hand to take photos with guests, who were treated to breakfast.
Participants of all ages were encouraged to dress up in their favorite costumes for the event on the zoo’s expansive Henly Park Lawn. ❖
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Books, Bands and Brews Literacy Council Benefits From Fundraiser
Supporters “rocketed” to Saturn in downtown Birmingham on Aug. 17 for the 2nd annual Books, Bands and Brews fundraiser for the Literacy Council of Central Alabama.
The event, presented by the Literacy Council’s junior board, featured live music from local band Crimson Cabins and Nashville-based singersongwriter Tristen Gaspadarek.
The literacy council’s mission is to improve the lives of adults and their families through literacy education by teaching people to read, write and speak English. ❖
‘CAV WAY’
John Carroll Players Learning What It Takes to Succeed On and Off the Field
By RuBin E. GRantIn the early months of this year, John Carroll Catholic head football coach Will Mara was looking for a better way to connect with his players as he approached his fourth year at the helm.
“This has been an interesting group for me,” Mara said. “This group were freshmen my first year, but oddly enough before I became the head varsity coach, I coached in middle school and I had them in the seventh and eighth grades, so this is our sixth year together. There’s a special camaraderie and commitment.”
In an effort to strengthen their relationship on and off the field, Mara turned to his defensive coordinator, Mike Plaia, and his other assistants to develop a way to do that.
They settled on what they termed the “CAV WAY,” an acronym for “Commitment, Attitude,
McCOOL
From page 20
Carolina State and Northeastern University in Boston.
She’s thinking about studying biomedical engineering, so that will play a factor in her college decision. Her dad and her mom, Dr. Tarika Bhuta, are both ear, nose and throat specialists and run McCool & Bhuta Hearing Aid Clinic.
“All three schools are great options,” Mira McCool said. “I’ll try to decide in the next month so I can focus on our season and the club season.”
Hopes for the Year
McCool is one of three seniors on Homewood’s volleyball team, joining Carson Jarmon and Liz Cleland, both outside hitters/defensive specialists.
“We’ve got a good group of seniors,” Freedman said. “They have a good friendship and they’re good leaders.”
The Patriots have seven juniors on the team: middle hitter-opposite Ella Serotsky, outside hitter Abby Przybysz, defensive specialist Emerson Buck, libero Mariyah Ahmed, setter Katherine Fitts, setter Izzy Knudsen and middle hitter Alora Austin.
Ellis McCool, a 6-1 middle hitter, is one of two sophomores on the team. Right side Mae Noerager is the other.
“Ellis is a special player, too,” Freedman said. “She started last year as a freshman. I think it’s cool to have
Valor … We Are You.” It signifies togetherness, putting others first and being accountable to each other.
“We wanted it to be more about life and not just football,” Mara said.
Plaia put together a handbook of life lessons called: “A Tradition of Winners … Me Over Me
both of them on the team. I have two sisters and we never played together.”
Mira McCool likes having her sister as her teammate.
‘It’s fun having my sister on the team,” she said. “It’s brought us closer.”
Rounding out Homewood’s roster are freshmen Lucy Murphree, a defen-
– We Over We.”
“We want them to be winners in life,” Mara said. “We want them to take these lessons and learn from them. It’s not just about having success this season but having success 10 to 15 years down the road after they have stopped playing football.
“You’re always hearing about a way to change the culture of a team. We wanted them to get involved in these lessons, learning lessons for the society they’re living in now. They have a lesson plan for each day and exercises to do as a team.”
The handbook includes 14 life lessons:
• Trust
• Growth Mindset
• Commitment
• Attitude
• Valor/Overcoming Adversity
• Comfort Zone
• Self-Discipline
• Fear of Failure
• Self-Doubt
• Resilience
• Mental Toughness
• We Are You
• Identity
• Leadership
“We didn’t have social media with SnapChat, Instagram and TikTok when I played,” Mara, a John Carroll alum, said. “I am turning 30 this month. I graduated in 2011 and it’s been crazy to see how things have gotten.
“I didn’t understand commitment when I
sive specialist, and Kam Coleman, a setter.
Freedman is excited about what Coleman brings to the team. “Kam has so much athleticism and she has a killer work ethic,” Freedman said. “Katherine will set as well. She joined us a few times last year from the junior varsity.”
was high school age, so you never know how something like this will impact these guys.”
John Carroll’s players have eagerly embraced the CAV WAY.
“During the summer when I got here at 7 a.m., the seniors were already here, diving into one of the lessons,” Mara said. “We have an amazing group of leaders and a lot of continuity.”
Senior quarterback-safety Carson McFadden believes the lessons from the handbook are making a difference among the players.
“I think it’s pretty awesome,” McFadden said. “It’s definitely more player driven. Players as a whole are focusing on being the best you can be. The main leaders are the players and not the coaches.”
John Carroll is coming off a 3-7 season, after finishing with identical 5-5 records in Mara’s first two seasons. The handbook offers them a way not to let the fear of failure creep in.
“We really started at the end of the last school year in spring,” McFadden said. “We had a smaller group in the spring, mainly seniors. We went through it with coach Plaia last spring. This summer we brought in the whole team.
“It helped us with things we struggled with, such as a negative attitude and letting doubts seep in. It allowed us to have a much better mindset.
“Coach Plaia was good in putting stuff into terms we could understand. Mainly it talks about self-discipline in life in general and not just football. A big part of it is the growth mindset. If you don’t believe you can improve where you are, you’ll stay where you are. The end point is the starting point, and it’s really just self-discipline. Football just helps prepare you for life.”
Homewood opens the season Thursday at home against John Carroll Catholic at 6:30 p.m. The Patriots will play in the Juanita Boddie tournament Friday and Saturday at Hoover.
Mira McCool believes the Patriots are capable of making a run at a berth in the state tournament.
Joy League Baseball Ends Season With Competitive Playoffs
Joy League Baseball concluded its 66th season of youth baseball in Homewood with a postseason tournament during which every team in the league’s 1A, 2A and 3A divisions competed.
The championship games in all three divisions were competitive, with two of the three games resulting in upsets of previously undefeated regular-season champions.
The following teams were awarded trophies as the champions of their respective divisions after the season ended on June 10:
• 3A regular season and tournament: the Yanks, coached by John David Owen.
• 2A regular season: the Bucs, coached by Micah Hamilton.
• 2A tournament: the Jays, coached by Robbie Rosenbaum.
• 1A regular season: the Bucs, coached by Wes Hill.
• 1A tournament: the Sox, coached by Shannon and Will Brackett.
“Overall, we have a young team,” McCool said. “We have several players who are new to the varsity. But the potential is there for us to have a good team. We just have to put the pieces together.
“I think we’ll have a good season, but we’ll see.”
More than 250 boys and girls aged 4 to 12 from around the Birmingham metro area played Joy League Baseball this year. Games were played at Homewood Middle School.
Joy League also offers opportunities for teenage boys to play baseball through an affiliated league called Edgewood Majors.
This season, Joy League honored the memory of two men prominent in the founding and development of the league, both of whom passed away last December. Bob Smith was the first player in Joy League history and was a lifelong supporter of the league. Perry Akins coached his son in Joy League and then served almost four decades as commissioner, alongside his friend Ted Hagler, before his retirement in 2018.
Tim Meehan, who has served as commissioner since Akins retired, said, “We’re very grateful for people like Perry Akins and Bob Smith, whose effort and dedication made Joy League Baseball what it is today. We’re also thankful for our players, families, coaches, umpires and sponsors, who are helping to grow the league while remaining faithful to our founding principles.
John Carroll coaches settled on what they termed the “CAV WAY,” an acronym for “Commitment, Attitude, Valor … We Are You.” It signifies togetherness, putting others first and being accountable to each other.Senior quarterback-safety Carson McFadden, abvove, believes the lessons from the handbook are making a difference among the players. Journal file photo by Jordan Wald
A Smashing Success
BumperNets Owner Drives Straight Path to Growth
By Solomon CrenShaw Jr.Some people will turn if a black cat crosses their path and some will avoid staying on the 13th floor of a high-rise hotel.
Homer Brown didn’t let the superstition of Friday the 13th keep him from starting his table tennis store at Brookwood Village.
“I don’t think I thought about it,” Brown said of that day in 1999. “I was excited and I wanted to get open. That was the first day we could get open so I grabbed it. It was a Friday and I figured Friday would be a good day to be open.”
Sunday, Aug. 13 of this year, Brown began the 25th year of his business, BumperNets. It is a commercial operation that has outlived the mall in which it began and the anchor of another mall – the Riverchase Galleria – where it has flourished.
BumperNets was at Brookwood Village for about a year and a half before moving to the Galleria in March 2001.
“We started out in the food court,” he recalled. “They didn’t have a place in the mall because it was so filled up so they started me out in the food court where Starbucks was down there.”
Brown did business there for six months before he moved to a bigger location in the Galleria, albeit still
smaller than his initial operation at Brookwood.
“We were in there six months and then they moved us to a bigger store,” the entrepreneur said.
After “kicking off the brand,” the store moved to a few locations at the Hoover mall before winding up next to the Sears department store. Brown admits now he was somewhat anxious when the mall anchor shut down.
“I was concerned but I said to myself, this will be a real chance to see how good that BumperNets brand really is,” he said. “Clearly the good Lord has kept us in business.”
It didn’t hurt that his store had a door that provided direct access for patrons from the nearby parking lot.
“If I hadn’t had that, I might have thought a little bit differently about staying in here,” he said. “But (Sears) has been gone for 3½ years.”
Now, with three storefronts, Brown and some others call that area the BumperNets wing of the Galleria.
Lifelong PursuitHabit Activity
Brown’s love of table tennis dates back to his play with his father as he grew up in St. Louis.
“We used to go down in the basement and play and have some good times,” he recalled. “That was another reason why I really wanted to have a place to go to encourage more of that father and son time together.”
Brown got into table tennis on a
From page 20
of playing professionally.
But that dream was short-lived, fading away early in his freshman season.
“It took me about three games to realize, there ain’t no way,” he laughed. “These dudes are good, man. But yeah, absolutely. Like every kid, I thought I was gonna play in the league.”
The finance major would go on to take his love of basketball to jobs with Nike and Converse until the grind of travel became more than he could bear.
“I loved what I did with Nike and Converse and, quite frankly, just got tired of being on an airplane every week,” he said. “I didn’t really envision myself as an AD and I don’t know that I would have tried to have done it anywhere else but my alma mater.
“I just think this is a special place and, quite frankly, (it) was an opportunity for me to give back to a place that gave me a lot.”
Samford has former football star Jeremy Towns to thank for Newton finding a collegiate home on the Lakeshore Drive campus in Homewood.
“When I met Jeremy Towns on my
bigger scale when he enrolled at Covenant College in Lookout Mountain, Georgia. He set up and played in tournaments against other Christian colleges.
His love of the sport continued beyond his college days. He achieved major success as a 50-year-old at the National Senior Olympics.
“That’s when I won the men’s sin-
gles, doubles and mixed doubles,” he said. “That was back a few years ago.”
It was the same year – 1999 – that he opened his first BumperNets store. So what’s next?
“We’ll find out what the good Lord has for me,” Brown said. “My wife tells me I’m not getting any younger, so she doesn’t want me to
“When I met Jeremy Towns, it changed my whole perspective of this place,” he said. “I couldn’t wait to get back.”
And now as an adult, he has come back to lead the Bulldog athletic program to unprecedented success. Samford has garnered 69 sports championships on Newton’s watch.
Samford’s men’s and women’s programs have won the races for the Southern Conference’s all-sport trophies. In the 2022-23 school year, Samford set a SoCon record with 11 championships, the most in school history and the most in the conference.
Real Student-Athletes
But he is at least as proud of the academic successes of the studentathletes, saying that they live up to that label, which can be a misnomer in other places. For the second consecutive year, Samford had the high-
get another store anywhere.”
But he hasn’t stopped competing. He took sixth place at the National Senior Olympics in the 75-and-older division recently in Pittsburgh.
“I just felt this is something I could do for a lifetime, where I could keep playing into my 90s,” he said. “Here I am, 75 and still going after it.”
est graduation success rate in the SoCon, graduating student-athletes at a 97% to 98% rate.
“They are students first and foremost,” said Newton, who sees himself as a parent away from home to the student-athletes under his charge.
“They don’t get everything they want,” Newton explained. “We’ve got to make sure we hold them accountable. We’ve got to make sure that they’re doing the right things.
“When they don’t go to class, when they’re typical 18- to 22-yearolds, we’ve got to kick them in the butt a little bit,” he said. “That’s what my role is. Quite frankly, it’s to make sure that when they leave this place, they’ve had a great experience – not perfect, but a great experience – and that they want to come back and be a part of things in the future.”
Bluff Park WindoW Works
interview, I was hooked,” Newton said of the former Bulldog defensive lineman who played for the NFL’s Buffalo Bills before becoming an
emergency medicine resident physician at UAB Medicine. “I wasn’t going to come. I was just, ‘I’ll go interview, but that’s it.’
A Smashing Success: BumperNets owner drives straight path to growth Page 19
❖ OVER THE MOUNTAIN
‘SPECIAL PLAYER’
Homewood’s Mira McCool Looking Forward to Her Senior Season
By ruBin e. Grant
MJournal photo by Solomon Crenshaw Jr.
Like Father Like Son
Martin Newton Followed His Celebrated Father Onto the Court
By Solomon CrenShaw Jr.Martin Newton is named after his father, Charles Martin Newton. You just wouldn’t know it.
“For whatever reason, they called me Martin when I was a little kid,” the Samford University athletics director said. “That’s my middle name.”
And not the name he would have preferred.
“I would have much rather been Charlie or Charles than Martin,” he acknowledged. “In fact, I’ve got a son named Charles and a grandson named Charlie. I don’t know why they did that. I got on him and my mom both about that a lot.”
Maybe Charles Martin Newton and his wife, Evelyn, were giving their son the gift of individuality. Maybe they wanted to spare him the weight of being the next C.M. Newton, the former Alabama men’s basketball coach whose career climbed well beyond the Capstone.
If the intent was to set their son on a different path, it didn’t work. The apple wound up landing very near the tree as Martin Newton followed his father into the family business of athletics.
C.M. Newton compiled a record of 509–375 in leading the men’s basket-
ball programs at Transylvania University, Alabama and Vanderbilt. He was chairman of the NCAA Rules Committee from 1979 to 1985 and was the president of USA Basketball, a nonprofit organization and the governing body for basketball in the United States, from 1992 to 1996.
After working on the corporate
particular team into the tournament.
“I thought I knew basketball,” he told his audience. But father knew best.
“He goes, ‘Did you watch games all season long?’”
“No, sir.”
“Did you look at the analytics?”
“No, sir.”
“Were you in the room?”
“No sir.”
“I’m excited to see what she does her senior year.”
ira McCool was always the tallest person in her class when she was in elementary school and even when she reached middle school.As a junior in 2022, McCool recorded 382 kills, 128 digs, 35 blocks, 24 aces and six assists, earning All-OTM and Alabama High School Volleyball Coaches Association Class 6A All-State honors.
McCool
She and her younger sister, Ellis, played basketball with their dad, Dr. Brian McCool, as their coach, but Mira McCool wasn’t all that interested in volleyball. She had friends on the team at Homewood Middle School, so she decided to attend tryouts. In the process, McCool discovered she had a talent for volleyball.
“I realized I had some potential and I needed to play,” she said.
When she reached her freshman year at Homewood High School, McCool also started playing for Alabama Performance Volleyball Club.
Now a 6-foot-3 senior, McCool is one of the top volleyball players in the state.
She is hoping her senior year will be even better, but she has mixed feelings about her high school career nearing an end.
“It’s super exciting to be a senior, but it’s kind of sad, too,” McCool said. “I don’t feel like it should be my senior year.”
McCool continues to play basketball and has a close bond with fellow seniors Kayla Warren and Susie Whitsett on the Patriots’ girls basketball team, as well as her sister Ellis.
But McCool’s athletic future is in volleyball. See didn’t play AAU basketball during the spring and summer so she could focus on volleyball.
Like
his father, Martin Newton played collegiate basketball. The elder laced them up at Kentucky and the younger at Samford.
end of athletics, Martin Newton came home to his college alma mater as the director of athletics. Coincidentally, his father had a stint as AD at his alma mater, Kentucky.
During the August meeting of the Homewood Chamber of Commerce, Newton talked about being on the Selection Committee for the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, a role his father previously had filled. In those days, the younger Newton thought the task was easy.
Newton recalled questioning his father about the committee putting a
“Then shut up.”
That gentle rebuke aside, Newton relished the counsel he received from his father, who passed away in June 2018.
“He and I spoke every day when he was alive and I never made a decision that I did and say, ‘What do you think about this?’” the son said. “I would make my own decision.
“Now that I don’t have him, I find myself often wondering, What would Dad say about this? We talked about NIL (name, image and likeness) today. What would his take be on NIL?” Newton said. “I still talk to him. It’s just not face to face.”
Coming Home
Like his father, Martin Newton played collegiate basketball. The elder laced them up at Kentucky and the younger at Samford. Like so many college players, he entertained visions
McCool is a gifted student with a 4.3 grade-point average who scored 34 on the ACT. She plans to play volleyball in college.
“Mira is a very special volleyball player,” Homewood coach Andie Freedman said. “Obviously, her height stands out, but she’s got a lot of natural athletic ability, a great work ethic and a wealth of volleyball knowledge. And she’s a leader.
Journal photo by Jordan Wald
McCool is a gifted student with a 4.3 grade-point average who scored 34 on the ACT. She plans to play volleyball in college. Among the schools she’s presently considering are Georgia Tech, North
See McCOOL, page 18
recorded 382 kills, 128 digs, 35 blocks, 24 aces and six assists.2023 Over the Mountain High School Football Preview Special Section INSIDE