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Presented by Volunteer Pharmacy FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 2015 • 1C

2015

class Eight former FHS athletes, two coaches set to be inducted Saturday, Jan. 31

ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

A Major League Baseball firstround draft choice and a state championship coach in two sports, two of 10 former Farragut High School athletes and coaches nominated for induction into the school’s Athletic Hall of Fame. An eight-person Farragut High School Hall of Fame Committee recently released its selections pointing toward Third Annual Farragut High School Athletic Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, making it all official, beginning at 6 p.m., Saturday, Jan. 31, in FHS Commons. Nominees are Kyle Waldrop

(Class of 2004, baseball); Kellie Ivens (track and field and cross country coach, 1996-97 through 2006 cross country season); Jim Cates (former wrestling head coach, 1992-93 through 1998-99); Jason Price (1992, football, basketball and baseball); Eric Bell (1998, cross country and track and field); Mike Carpenter (1983, basketball); Tyler Cornaby (1995, wrestling); Lynn Houston Moore (1994, track and field and basketball) Giovanni Price (2000, basketball) and Leah Seffernick Bucklen (1999, softball). “We’ve got a real good class coming in that represents the whole sports community at Farragut,” Donald Dodgen, FHS

Alan Sloan

Farragut High School Hall of Fame Class of 2014 paves way for 2015.

athletic director, said. “I’m excited about it.” Dr. Paul Becker, team sports physician, orthopedic surgeon and FHS alumnus, has been chosen for 2015 Hall of Fame Service Award. Tickets are $30 in advance (call 865-671-7126 and ask for Kim Gray, Dodgen or Dave Moore or email Wilma.capehart@knoxschools.org or cindy.lindsey@knoxscho-ols.org) or $35 at the door Jan. 31. For those wishing to sponsor a table of eight, cost is

$200 (RSVP through contacts listed above). For more information, call Moore at 865-274-5257. Featured speaker is Josh Ward, Knoxville sports radio show cohost and a 2003 FHS alumnus. “He played basketball for me as a freshman. We thought he’d be a good one,” Dodgen, a former Admirals varsity boys basketball head coach, said about Ward. Erik Gerhardt, the Voice of Admirals football and basketball on WFIV i105.3 FM, returns

as emcee. Nominees will be recognized during the Farragut home basketball games versus rival Bearden Friday evening, Jan. 30. “It’s probably be in-between [girls and boys varsity] games,” Dodgen said. This follows an inductees’ reception — which will include families of inductees, Hall of Fame Committee members and other FHS coaches, staff and teachers — to be held in the school’s library Friday evening (not open to the public).

Ward, FHS grad, radio sports talk host, keynote speaker ■

ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

Closely monitoring and reporting on Tennessee Volunteers and SEC football recruiting among his duties, Josh Ward has been one of East Tennessee’s top sports talk show personalities this decade. His rise actually began as a Farragut High School junior in 2001. “I started interning and working part time at the radio station and worked here through college,” said Ward, a 2003 FHS graduate whose mother, Beverly

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Ward, was a language arts teacher at Farragut Middle School before retiring in 2014. “I helped produce [sports shows]. … I would help them Ward with really anything,” he added. “Go to Tennessee Football practices and basketball practices. As time went on I go

some on-air time as well.” In keeping with his Farragut ties, and his continuous support of FHS athletics, Ward is scheduled as featured speaker during 2015 Farragut High School Athletic Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in the school’s commons. Festivities begin at 6 p.m. “I was proud to go to Farragut, and it’s been a program in all different types of sports that has really done well. From fall through the spring they’ve had a lot of success,” Ward said. “They asked me to come to the

Hall of Fame banquet; I thought that was really cool. I was excited and honored. I thought that was great that they would think of me,” he added. “… People are proud they come from Farragut High School for a reason. When I talked to Eddie Courtney [FHS varsity football head coach] and he mentioned the idea, I was really excited. “The Hall of Fame’s a big deal because they’ve had a lot of great athletes come through there. Great coaches have been a part of it.”

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Athletically at FHS, Ward said he played basketball “briefly … but I stopped playing before varsity level.” His duties have included freelance writing with Knoxville News Sentinel, USA Today and MrSEC.com Ward, 29, attended and graduated from The University of Tennessee in 2007 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and electronic media. Ward’s immediate family features his wife, Kellie.


2C • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 2015

FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME

2015 INDUCTEES

Eric Bell

‘Special moments’ highlight championship running career

Eric Bell narrows his highly successful running career at Farragut High School, which includes a state championship, down to a pair of “special moments.” A former champion triathlete, Bell was 1600-meter state champion his senior season with FHS track and field in 1998. Along with his second-place state finish in the 3200 at the state meet, Bell help his FHS boys team win the 1998 TSSAA Class AAA state title. A 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee, Bell also was state runner-

up in cross-country and in the1600, both as a junior. He went on to run both cross-country and track at The University of Tennessee, where he was named to the All-SEC Academic Honor Roll. A medical device sales representative living in Knoxville, Bell, 35, recalled in detail what he labeled “probably the turning point in my career.” “My sophomore year heading to the KIL [track and field] meet, I remember being on the bus riding up to [Karns High School], coach [Bill] Parker and coach [Scott] McKenzie

told me, ‘You’re going to win this mile [1600 meters] today and here’s how you’re going to do it,” Bell said. “I looked at them like, ‘Are you guys crazy?’ I was only a sophomore, my fastest time was 4:31. And they just said, ‘Trust us, do what we tell you to do and you’ll [win] it.’ “And I went out and ran 4:20 that day,” Bell added about winning the meet. “… That’s when the dominos fell and the rest turned to history.” Bell’s “second biggest moment” came at the state meet in 1998 after his second-place 3200 finish “in the

Mike Carpenter Mike Carpenter, Farragut High School basketball’s human flyswatter as a 7-foot star post, was grateful yet modest about being selected as a Class of 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee. “It’s an honor. It’s a very humbling experience to be remembered,” Carpenter, 50, the school’s all-time blocked shots leader (402/3.9 per game) and All-state honoree his senior season in 1983, said. “He had a single game of 12 [blocks] one time,” Lynn Sexton, Carpenter’s head coach at FHS and

Jim Cates Who better than a champion at the highest level of high school athletics, two-time Farragut High School state championship wrestler Tyler Cornaby, to illuminate the virtues of his high school head coach, Jim Cates. “Coach Cates is an inspiration on many levels — some that I recognized when I wrestled for him and others that I only now can identify with more life experience,” Cornaby said about Cates, one of two coaches nominated in 2015 for induction into FHS

morning.” Ironically, “I felt terrible, I had a terrible race. And I remember coach McKenzie looking at me, and he told me, ‘Go back to the hotel and get it together because you’re going to come back and win [the 1600] tonight,’” Bell said. “That’s exactly what happened. “… I doubted myself a lot, and I just remember coach McKenzie kind of always being there for me. … He’s always just said, ‘You’ve got to trust yourself.’ That’s probably my biggest lesson.”

Shot-blocking record holder honored

a fellow FHS Hall of Fame inductee, said. “Quite frankly I didn’t really think what I did was all that big of a deal, but apparently some people do,” Carpenter added. In his three years as starter, Carpenter helped lead the Admirals to a 97-8 overall record plus a trip to the 1983 Class AAA state tournament (14.11 poi-nts/9.14 rebounds per game as a senior). “That’s the most significant part about his value to the team. I don’t think we would have been 97-8

without him,” Sexton said. “… The defensive situation was, people tended to think, ‘We’ll go at him to get him in foul trouble.’ But he didn’t foul very much. He ended up blocking shots, but in a little bit softer manner and not hitting the guy when he did it.” On top of reaching the state tournament as a senior with only one loss, “Another memorable moment was beating Austin-East in the city championship our senior year, in a real close game,” Carpenter, who grew to 7-foot-2

while playing at the University of Minnesota before transferring to the University of Arkansas, said. Getting to play in Memorial Gymnasium in Nashville, home of Vanderbilt University, during the state tournament “was pretty exciting, except for getting beat by two points by Nashville Northside,” Carpenter said. “We had a great team and everybody got along great. Jack [Williams] and Bo [Creech] and Danny [Martin] and me.”

‘Sturdiness, strength’ illuminate wrestling coach Athletic Hall of Fame. “I noticed back then that he gave the impression of sturdiness and strength. “I was always pushing myself to be stronger and I looked to Coach Cates for inspiration — his example and my impression of him made coach Cates a carrot, not a stick — I wanted to be like him not because of what he said to me, but because of what I perceived in him as strength,” Cornaby added. “Even now, I’m still impressed with him.” A two-time TSSAA Region-2 Coach

of the Year during his seven seasons at FHS (1992-93 through 1998-99), Cates started wrestling programs at three different high schools (1959, 1967 and 1978) during a 40-year career, 34 as a head coach. Cates led the Admirals to a thirdplace finish in the 1999 TSSAA Duals state meet, along with Region 2 individual tournament championships in 1997 and 1999. In addition to Cornaby, Cates coached six state champion wrestlers at FHS. “Coach Cates struck the balance

between work, discipline and fun,” said Cornaby, also a 2015 FHS Hall of Fame nominee (Class of 1995). “He didn’t let us slack off, but at the same time, he wasn’t the type of coach that would yell at his athletes. At least not that I remember. … He was always organized in practices, he had hand written notes of everything he wanted to cover. It was this regularity, even predictability, that helped form my impression of coach Cates as sturdy and helped me focus on getting better during each practice.”

Congratulations to

DR. PAUL BECKER for his 2015 Induction into the Farragut Athletic Hall of Fame. Dr. Becker is the recipient of the prestigious FHS Athletic Services Award.

Dr. Becker began his practice at KOC in 2000. He is a native of Knoxville and a graduate of Farragut High School, where he was a student athlete and where he now serves as Team Physician. He specializes in all forms of shoulder and knee surgery ranging from arthroscopic rotator cuff repair and arthroscopic ACL reconstruction . A member of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and the American Orthopaedic Society of Sports Medicine, Dr. Becker is also Board Certified and Fellowship trained in Sports Medicine. Dr. Becker continues his support of KOC's sports medicine outreach program. This outreach endeavor allows coaches and students the benefit of having a certified athletic trainer (ATC) available at the school, practices, and on the sidelines of games. This convenience, paired with the established relationships and a collaborative effort among the student athlete, parents, physicians, and coaches, serves to help student-athletes return to participation as quickly and safely as possible.

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FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME

Tyler Cornaby State wrestling champion in the 112-pound class as a junior in 1994, and 119 state champ as a senior in 1995, Tyler Cornaby almost didn’t become a high school wrestler. Reflecting back to middle school, “About two weeks after starting wrestling in the eighth grade I wanted to quit,” Cornaby, a 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee, said. “The push-ups and sweating and running and ‘uncomfortableness’ of it all had gotten to me. But my

FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 2015 • 3C

State Champion that almost wasn’t

mom [Linda] wouldn’t let me,” he added. “Her reasoning was pretty simple. … She didn’t want me to quit because she had just bought me a pair of wrestling shoes and I had only begun to really use them. Thank goodness for those shoes and a mom that knew what she was doing.” Before his state championships, however, Cornaby had to learn a lesson in sportsmanship. Easily beating an opponent during his sophomore season, “I decided to lift my opponent up off

the mat where he was lying on his stomach and walk him back to the center of the mat where I could continue to score points and eventually win,” Cornaby said. “When I got off the mat, coach [Jim] Cates pulled me aside and said simply, ‘Tyler, you know how I feel about that,’ I immediately knew what he meant — that I had crossed the line of sportsmanship and had used my superior skills to dishearten and seemingly demean my opponent,” he added. “… It was also the most pene-

trating, yet quietest, lecture of my wrestling career. Coach Cates taught me more in that moment about sportsmanship than I think I had learned in all my life prior and since.” A wrestler at The University of Tennessee, Chattanooga where he finished second in the Southern Conference tournament his freshman year, Cornaby also was a student-wrestler at Brigham Young University. He received a Masters of Business Administration degree at BYU in 2014.

Lynn Houston Moore Coming from a family known for its basketball skills and knowledge, Lynn Houston Moore made quite a name for herself jumping and running without a ball. Moore also matched her track and field success academically “as one of the Valedictorians of Farragut High School’s Class of 1994,” she recalled via e-mail. Moore is one of 10 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominees for 2015. A two-time high jump state champ and 4-by-100 relay team

state champ at FHS who helped the Lady Admirals win four straight Class AAA state crowns, Moore’s athletic and academic success followed her to Georgia Tech in Atlanta. A four-time Atlantic Coast Conference Women’s High Jump champion, Moore also grabbed AllAmerica honors by placing fourth at the 1999 NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships. “I thought Lynn was an excellent high jumper,” Bill Parker, former

Major success without a ball

FHS track and field head coach and FHS Hall of Fame member, said. “Lynn also was a hurdler [100-, 300-meters]; she would have been in the top four, top five in the state. … She finished third in the state pentathlon in ’94 and fourth in ’93. And she was third place in the long jump [at state] in 1994. “She and Shannon [Simmons/FHS Hall of Fame sprinter] just happened to be along at the same time, and they were both so competitive. I think they pushed

Kellie Ivens Credits coaches, mother, athletes for her success Kellie Ivens credits two track and field coaching predecessors for helping her achieve success. Two of Ivens’ former athletes credit her motivational skills and caring nature. Winning three state titles as Farragut High School head coach of boys cross country (1997 and 2001) and FHS Lady Admirals track and field (2000), Ivens has been named a 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee. Her 2001 state champs also finished with a No. 5 national ranking. Head coach of cross country

from 1996-97 through 2006-07 school years, Ivens also had three state runners-up girls cross country teams and one runner-up boys state finish. Coaching girls track and field from ’96-97 through the 2002-03 school year, Ivens also had one state runner-up finish. However, all of her track teams reached the state tournament and none finished lower than fifth. Andy Baksa, individual cross country state champion in 1998 as a freshman who went on to run at The University of Tennessee,

said Ivens “had that ability to bring out a little bit more than you thought you had as a runner. “I didn’t think I was going to win state, but her motivation and her inspiration plants that seed, and that’s all you needed. That kind of gets you all the way there,” he added. Mandy Newman Watson was a Lady Admirals state champion discus thrower, a three-time pentathlon state runner-up and hurdles specialist who helped FHS win the 2000 track state tile. “She was such a motivational

coach. She’s probably the best motivational coach I’ve ever had my entire life,” Watson said. “She’s encouraging and she cares so deeply about her athletes. I think that’s the quality who made us who we are because she believed in us.” “It’s a huge honor being inducted,” said Ivens, an assistant principal in her 25th year at FHS who also was an assistant coach for boys and girls track and crosscountry teams from the 1991-92 school year through ’95-96.

one another quite a bit,” Parker added. Moore and Simmons were among “four sprinters; they were pretty much trying to get the bragging rights every day as to who was the best of the group. And several of them were pentathletes as well.” Earning a place on ACC Honor Roll from 1994 through 1999, Moore graduated with Highest Honors while earning a Bachelor’s Degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering.


FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME

4C • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 2015

Giovanni Price Giovanni Price brought Farragut Lady Admirals basketball into the 21st Century as a record-breaking star post. A 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee from the Class of 2000, “She’s still the all-time [FHS] leading scorer as far as I know,” said Mike Driver, who coached Price for three years as a Lady Admirals assistant before taking over as head coach (2001-02 through 2007-08). “… She was always our leading scorer. She was our best player when I was an assistant coach.”

Record-breaking star post

An All-District 4-AAA and AllRegion 2-AAA honoree who went on to play major college basketball at Samford University in Birmingham, Ala., Price “was a really good scorer, especially elbow, short corner and inside,” Driver, now a teacher/assistant girls basketball coach at Maryville High School, said. “She was also a very good rebounder. If things haven’t changed she’s second behind Alex Munday [all-time FHS girls rebounding]. … Giovanni got a lot of points on the offensive boards. Putbacks and stuff like that.”

Price was good enough quick enough to be named All-KIL as a freshman in 1997. One year later she earned KIL “Sophomore of the Year” honors. Driver said Price helped the Lady Admirals break down a program post-season barrier. In the late 1990s, “The big goal for us was to make it to the region tournament,” Driver said. “The Farragut girls [program] was down. You had to finish top four in the district tournament, and one year we made it. And that was a big

Jason Price A 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee, Jason Price idolized Farragut High School football dating back to when he moved here in the fifth grade. “All I wanted to do was play quarterback for the Admirals,” said Price, an All-state and AllSoutheast Region FHS quarterback who earned a scholarship to North Carolina State University in 1992. He passed for 3,300 career yards and 36 touchdown while rushing for another 2,100 and 26

Dream that turned reality for star QB

more TDs. While it’s been rare for a freshman to start for the Admirals’ varsity team, Price started at two positions, wide receiver and free safety, as a freshman in 1988. Moreover, “I returned punts and kickoffs. I did a lot as a freshman,” said Price, who would move to quarterback as a sophomore and eventually own 22 school records. “We’ve only had a handful of those guys start as a freshman,” said FHS head coach Eddie

Leah Seffernick Bucklen Helping Farragut High School softball end the 20th Century with consecutive Class AAA state playoff appearances, pitcher Leah Seffernick Bucklen “held almost every pitching record,” head coach David Moore said about this 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee. “Records still held are 94 wins, 987 [strikeouts] and 879 innings pitched.” A star pitcher at Western Michigan University where she led the Broncos to the NCAA Tournament, Bucklen’s senior stats at FHS in 1999 were eight shutouts in 39 games (30- 8 record) with one save,

an 0.79 earned run average and 255 strikeouts versus just 33 walks in 247 innings. She also hit .308 that year with 21 RBI and seven triples. “She came in and kind of changed our program a little bit,” Moore said about this District 4AAA Most Val-uable Player and KIL Player of the Year in 1999, a threetime All-district honoree. “She was a great competitor all four years. … One of those special players. “Probably in high school her curve was her best pitch,” Moore added. “And she threw pretty hard. She would hit 60 [mph] with her fastball. Mostly movement.

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Courtney, then an assistant who has been with the FHS program for more than 30 years. Remaining as a free safety while quarterbacking as a sophomore, Price also was the team’s punter his final three seasons at Farragut, earning All-state honors as a junior. “I was very fortunate to get a lot of attention punting the ball,” Price, who went to N.C. State as a quarterback and punter, said. Courtney said Price “was a team

leader, he was very unselfish and he inspired those around him to up their game, their level of play. “And he had good ball skills, he threw the ball real well,” Courtney added. “He could run the option. He was a pretty complete dual threat type of quarterback. We didn’t have a lot of that back then.” Also a stellar baseball and basketball player at FHS (1988-92), “The thing about Jason, he always worked hard. He always wanted to get better,” Courtney said.

Performance unmatched

“Her freshman year she had a really good change-up that kept people off balance.” “My greatest accomplishment is making all KIL Player of the Year, and leading in district stats for pitching my sophomore [through] senior year,” Bucklen said. “Leading in hitting stats my senior year for triples. “Some things I remember of my teammates is having a family community,” she added. “We accepted nothing less than perfect effort. We had a mission to get to the state tournament and start a tradition at Farragut for the softball program.”

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accomplishment.” Mandy Newman Watson, a former shooting guard teammate of Price’s with the Lady Admirals (Class of 2001), remembers a lighter side. “She was so much fun. She had a way to make you laugh and to smile.” In terms of winning basketball games, however, “Just her determination, her spirit on the court led us to victory I can’t tell you how many times,” Watson added. “Without her, I don’t know where we would have been.”

A four-year starting pitcher, “Leah was all we had her sophomore year after another pitcher went down and [Leah] pitched all but nine innings that year,” Moore said. “She also pitched with a rotator cuff injury and just had to make all her throws underhand in the infield. Two of the most memorable games were an extra inning district game at Maryville which we won in 10 innings and Leah had 20 strikeouts, and the win over Halls in the state tournament in extra innings. Leah pitched every inning and also had a big triple to lead us to the win.”

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FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME

FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 2015 • 5C

Kyle Waldrop High School All-American, MLB pitcher A first-round Major League Baseball Draft selection in 2004, Kyle Waldrop was straight out of Farragut High School where, as a high school All-American pitcher/first baseman, helped lead the Admirals to back-to-back Class AAA state tiles. A two-time All-state selection, Waldrop was a perfect 22-0 on the mound combining those state title seasons (118 strikeouts, just seven walks and a 0.15 earned run average as a senior). He batted .503 as a junior (10 home runs, 67 RBI) and .493 as a senior (16 home runs, 67 RBI).

For all of his superstar talent, however, “The first word that comes to mind when I think of Kyle is humility,” former Admirals skipper Tommy Pharr said about this 2015 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame nominee. “Kyle is one of the most humble persons that I have been around.” For example, “Going into his senior year I was talking to Kyle’s dad, Steve, about how to inform scouts about dates that Kyle would pitch. Scouts always wanted to know in advance so they could plan. My suggestion was to post it on our baseball website,” Pharr said. “Steve told me that he had suggest-

ed that to Kyle and that Kyle said that he didn’t want to do it because ‘he didn’t want it to be about him.’ That is a very humble and mature thought for a high school senior. That is who Kyle was and is.” Ascending to the Minnesota Twins pitching staff in 2011, Waldrop’s MLB career has been derailed by an elbow injury (Tommy John surgery in 2013 followed by extensive rehab). When notified by phone about his nomination, Waldrop said, “It just brought back a lot of good memories, and a lot of the times that we were able to go through. It’s kind of

hard to believe it’s been more than 10 years since high school.” “It’s really an honor. … There are just so many guys that are worthy,” Waldrop added. “Another quality of Kyle was his work ethic,” Pharr said. “He was an extremely hard worker. He knew what he wanted to accomplish and that it would require a great amount of work. He once came up to me as we were finishing our conditioning and said ‘we need to keep going we’ve got some guys not pushing it.’ He told it off to the side as he didn’t want to make a big deal about it but wanted me to know.”

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