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Storied past
ell into the second decade of the 21st century, Farragut High School brass came up with an idea that’s caught fire:
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Recognize the school’s “storied” athletic history by creating a Hall of Fame. “I’m not sure why this has taken so long because we have a storied past,” Farragut athletic director Seth Smith said during a February 2013 interview. “[Softball head coach] David Moore and I got together and talked about it and we put together a committee.” The resulting recognition has grown into a special event, as Second Annual FHS Athletic Hall of Fame Banquet and Induction Ceremony for Class of 2014 begins at 6 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 1, in FHS Commons. While Smith said inductees are chosen by a “points system,” as determined by a vote of Hall of Fame Committee members, “Points are gained by their high school career, college career, post college if they played professionally,” he added.
Alan Sloan
Inaugural Farragut High School Hall of Fame Class — the Class of 2013.
Also considered: “Is this a person who represents Farragut High School well?” Smith said. Inaugural FHS Hall of Fame Class of 2013, which was officially inducted March 9 during a similar banquet ceremony, featured 10 athletes and six coaches. Ex-student/athletes inducted were the late Jimmy Elliott (1980, basketball, baseball); Bill Bates (Class of 1979, football), his sister, Rachel Bates Bellefeuille (1989, volleyball, basketball, golf, softball); Neil Clabo (1971, football, basketball, baseball); Beth Willis Dolente (1990, basketball, volleyball); Shannon Simmons (1994, track and field, basketball); Kevin Yeager (2000, track and field, basketball, soccer); Katherine Marshall Moore (1987, track and field, cross country); Tracie Foels (1988, soccer, basket-
ball) and Tyson Clabo (2000, football, basketball). Former coaches elected were the late Jack Carr, the late Bill Clabo, Bill Parker, John Heatherly, Lynn E. Sexton and Lendon Welch. Erik Gerhardt, i105.3 WFIV’s “Radio Voice of Farragut Athletics,” is scheduled to return as emcee Feb. 1, leading a banquet and ceremony honoring eight member from the Class of 2014 (see individual profiles on pages 2D and 3D): former players to be inducted are Pete Billingsley (Class of 1972, basketball, football, baseball); Marvena Almond Ruddy (1992, track and field, basketball); Andy Baksa (2002, cross-country, track); Michael McKenry (2003, baseball); Jenny McGrath Weaver (1988, swimming), and Jenni Miller Metcalf (2000, volleyball). Ex-coaches to be inducted are Scott
McKenzie (track and field, golf, 19812010) and Jerry Cannon (1966-88, basketball). Athletic Service Award will be presented to Doug Horne (FHS Class of 1963), prominent real estate developer and owner of Republic Newspapers, Inc., (parent company of farragutpress) for contributions to Admirals athletics. A Tennessee Volunteers theme remains with the event’s keynote speaker. Tim Priest, Knoxville attorney, former All-SEC defensive back at Tennessee (1968-70) and Vol Network radio commentator for UT Football, is this year’s speaker. Johnny Majors, former UT Football star player and head coach, was 2013 keynote speaker. Tickets are $25 in advance, $30 at the door. To purchase tickets, call 865-9669775 and ask for Smith or Moore.
Priest, former Vol, Farragut resident, keynote speaker ■
ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com
In addition to his professional success as a injury law attorney long after earning All-SEC honors as a Tennessee Volunteers Football defensive back in 1970, Tim Priest’s Farragut roots run deep. A former town of Farragut judge in the early to mid-2000s, Priest is a Town resident whose wife, Betsy, is a former Farragut
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High School guidance counselor. Their children, Laura Morris and Adam Priest, both graduated FHS as honored athletes. Priest, a partner in Priest the downtown Knoxville firm of Pryor Flynn Priest
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and Harber, will serve as keynote speaker during Second Annual Farragut High School Hall of Fame Banquet and Induction Ceremony. “I’m honored to be asked to come as speaker. I hope I can be worthy of that,” Priest, UT Football color analyst on The Vol Network with Bob Kesling the past 15 seasons, said. “I’ve seen a lot of outstanding athletes in a lot of different sports, and a lot of really good coaches
at Farragut. “My children played for some of them,” Priest added. “I’ve got some appreciation for what’s gone on there through the years.” About the Hall of Fame, “I thought it was a great idea when I heard about it last year. Mostly I read about it in your all’s paper [farragutpress], about them starting up a Farragut High School sports Hall of Fame,” he said. “Last year’s
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class and this year’s class are very worthy nominees. … Just a lot of great athletes and an athletic heritage at the school with state championships and all kinds of things.” Going back to one of last year’s inaugural Hall of Fame inductees, “I actually coached Neil Clabo when he was a freshman at UT,” Priest said about graduate assistant coaching he did under then head coach Bill Battle.
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FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME
2014
INDUCTEES Andy Baksa After frosh CC state title, running career takes off For Andy Baksa, competitive running was only an exercise to stay in shape for his real love as a young boy — soccer. Then came the unexpected: Baksa won the TSSAA Class AAA boys cross-country championship as a Farragut High School freshman in fall 1998. “Shocked would be an understatement, I thought I would be top 15 at best. … I had never really been a runBaksa ner before that year,” said Baksa, FHS Class of 2002, who went on to another state title his senior year along with track state titles in 1600 and 3200 meters plus numerous KIL and Region 1-AAA championships. “Winning state as a freshman is, to this day, probably my greatest running moment ever, even through college and post-collegiate running and everything.” Baksa’s success as a college distance runner — All-conference in cross country at Belmont, then All-SEC in 10k with Tennessee track — also helped him earn points toward induction into FHS Athletic Hall of Fame’s 2014 Class. Until that first state title, “I only ran cross country to get in shape for soccer,” Baksa said. “I
didn’t think I was going to run track until the end of my first semester in high school. Winning state was probably the deal-breaker on soccer. … Mostly because I realized I wasn’t that good at soccer, that I was a lot better at running.” With UT cross-country, “I was mostly their second[-ranked] runner,” Baksa, a physical therapist at Results Physiotherapy in Maryville, said. As for lasting friendships begun with FHS athletics, “My best friends to this day are still former Farragut High School cross country teammates,” Baksa said. “… Obviously the coaching there was fantastic. Coach [Kellie] Ivens and coach [Scott] McKenzie did a great job. I don’t keep in touch as much as I’d like to to this day.” Upon hearing the news about his induction, “It was definitely exciting, I was definitely pleased,” Baksa said. “Obviously it’s a huge honor, not only to be selected, but to be selected in the second year, which I think is pretty meaningful. To be put in that early.” Finishing second in 2010 Knoxville Marathon, “I’m still the fastest American ever to run that course,” Baksa said. Earning a doctorate of physical therapy degree at UT Chattanooga, Baksa first earned an exercise science bachelor’s degree at UT Knoxville. Baksa and wife, Jessica, live in Cedar Bluff.
FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME
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Pete Billingsley Billingsley’s life course influenced by FHS, FMS coaches An All-state basketball guard at Farragut High School during his senior season in 1971-72, Pete Billingsley returned to FHS as a football coach in 1977 for three years — only after suggesting that a young Ken Sparks come along as head coach. Billingsley, currently a personal finance teacher and assistant football coach at Rhea County High School in Billingsley Dayton, also has coached and taught in Metro Atlanta and was an assistant football coach on Maryville High School’s 1998 state championship team. Heavily involved in social work and Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Billingsley also started a youth ministry called Youth Quake and served as a youth pastor. A star guard at Carson-Newman College in addition to also winning honors at FHS in football and baseball, Billingsley’s athletic playing and coaching success has added up to earning a place in FHS Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2014. Five of his Farragut coaches “were great role models and probably influenced me to be a teacher and coach myself,” Billingsley said about Lynn E. Sexton, Bobby Henry, Jerry Cannon, the late Bill
Clabo and Lendon Welch. Sexton, his varsity basketball head coach and 2013 FHS Hall of Fame inductee, “Was a tremendous man. … He would just hold you accountable.” Billingsley said. “Coach Henry, who was my [Farragut] Middle School coach, he probably had as big an influence on me up to this day as anybody,” Billingsley added. Henry “was a Godly man, a strong Christian man. I remember, he would always tell us we could do anything, ‘there was no such thing as can’t.’ … He really instilled in me that anything’s possible,” Billingsley said. Cannon, Billingsley’s assistant coach at FHS and one of the other seven 2014 Inductees, was and AllAmerican guard at Carson-Newman College in the mid-1960s. “We’d play a lot of one-on-one … It helped me because he would beat me pretty bad sometimes,” Billingsley said. “He’d beat you like a drum if he could. But he was very positive and a good teacher.” Clabo, then FHS football head coach, and Welch, then assistant football coach among his several coaching positions, “were also big influences in my life,” Billingsley said. Clabo and Welch also were 2013 inductees. Billingsley also became “CAK’s first [boys] soccer and [boys] basketball coach in 1980,” he said.
Jerry Cannon No non-sense, to-the-point coach taught by example A no-nonsense coach who got his point across clearly and directly, Jerry Cannon didn’t just give lip service to his coaching message. Just coming off an AllAmerican career at CarsonNewman College in the mid1960s, Cannon would play Farragut High School players one-on-one — and cut no slack — as an assistant coach. It was how Cannon helped Cannon head coach Lynn E. Sexton win a handful of championships during an 11-year span beginning in fall 1966. Pete Billingsley, former All-state guard at FHS in the early 1970s, admitted he got roughed up. “We were just kind of challenging each other. Neil Clabo [Class of 1971] and I did the same thing,” said Cannon, a 2014 FHS Athletic Hall of Fame Inductee whose 22 years as a Farragut coach included 11 years as Lady Admirals varsity girls basketball head coach (1977-78 through 1987-88). “I wanted to show them a level they could go to to play. … Lynn and I both were disciplinarians. We didn’t put up with any nonsense.” Although the one-on-one stuff ended, “I didn’t need to change my way of coaching because I was coaching girls,” added Cannon, whose 30-year
teaching career at FHS was split between physical education and driver’s education. Cannon took over the Lady Admirals varsity job in fall 1977, winning one district championship during an 11 year run. As for the biggest single win, “We beat the Oak Ridge girls on their home floor, the first time they’d ever been beaten on their home floor,” Cannon said. As for a favorite moment under Sexton, “A victory against Oak Ridge in the region tournament. I can’t recall what year,” Cannon said. “Supposedly we didn’t have a chance.” About his honor of being named one of two coaches in the 2014 Class, “Being in there with [coaches inducted into 2013 Class including Sexton] means as much to me as anything, being alongside the guys I worked with for all those years,” Cannon said. It all began with an interview for a coaching/teaching job in Knox County by then superintendent of school Mildred Doyle. “And she gave me an option to go to Farragut or Gibbs,” Cannon said. “And Mr. [James] Bellamy, I think that was going to be his first year as principal at Farragut, and Mr. Bellamy was my high school history teacher at Powell High School. And also, he helped in athletics.” “I thought, ‘Well, I’ll just take Farragut High School,’” Cannon added.
Michael McKenry Major Leaguer looks back fondly on Pharr, teammates An All-American catcher at Middle Tennessee State University before breaking through as a Major League Baseball starting catcher, Michael McKenry sure hasn’t forgotten his Farragut High School roots. “I’ve got to thank coach [Tommy] Pharr for a lot of different reasons. Not just for the type of coach he was, but for the type of man he was,” said McKenry, an All-state catcher McKenry at Farragut who helped Pharr’s Admirals win a state championship as a senior in 2003. Also building Hall of Fame points while starting much of two seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates (17 home runs, 64 RBI in 193 MLB games, 20102013), McKenry has earned membership in FHS Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2014. “Coach Pharr definitely took a chance with me. He threw me into the mix at a very young age. He helped me start as a freshman [third base], which was not very common at the time at Farragut,” McKenry said. “He really forced the issue about putting me
behind the plate as a junior,” McKenry added. “Kept me sharp by putting back there a little bit early on in my career. That’s ultimately the position that got me to the Major Leagues.” Part of Pharr’s first state title team in 2003 (Pharr won five state crowns at FHS), McKenry recalled claiming Tennessee’s Class AAA crown in Memphis with a shutout victory versus Munford. “My senior year was special. We had a bunch of guys that were completely and utterly for each other,” said McKenry, who currently is in the Colorado Rockies organization. “We were talented, but the thing that made us really special was we were unselfish. Every single day we showed up at the ballpark we tried to make each other better.” Teammates “Craig Cobb and Kyle Waldrop, I still talk to all the time,” he added. “Jimmy Kelly was actually Best Man at my wedding.” As for his Induction, “It’s an honor and a blessing to be named to the Hall of Fame,” said McKenry, adding that such honors are “something you dream about as a little kid.” “To be part of that [athletic] history forever, I mean it’s really special.” Michael and wife, Jaclyn, live in Murfreesboro.
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FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME
Scott McKenzie A mulit-sport coach with five state crowns, McKenzie praises his athletes, mentors Reflecting on his selection into Farragut High School Athletic Hall of Fame’s Class of 2014, Scott McK-enzie praised his mentors and many talented, dedicated athletes. “Obviously I’m honored. I was blessed to be around some great athletes,” said McKenzie, a coach and teacher at FHS for 29 years who skippered Admirals track and field to three consecutive Class AAA McKenzie state titles (1998-2000), then helped FHS boys golf capture back-to-back crowns in 2009-2010. McKenzie also was a trusted assistant under Bill Parker, FHS boys track and field skipper, during a string of four consecutive state titles (199194), seven total including Lady Admirals track and field crowns. That doesn’t even count serving as assistant coach for football, wrestling, baseball and boys basketball teams. “Whatever I did personally, you’ve got to have some good talent” to win big, he said. An All-star honoree in football (receiver/defensive back) and baseball (catcher) who graduated Tullahoma High School in 1970, McKenzie pointed to mentors helping influence his career choice. “My junior high coach in football and basketball, I guess, had a lot of influence,” McKenzie said about
Bobby Newby. “I was fortunate to be around some good people. Coach Newby won a few [high school football] state championships in Nashville. “Another guy who influenced me, too, was Fred Grider,” a former assistant principal at Tullahoma High “who started the first recreation department in the state of Tennessee,” McKenzie said. McKenzie described his coaching style as “old school, that’s just the way I was brought up.” Looking back at his overall experience, “I guess not only having some great athletes, I had some kids with real good work ethic and good character,” McKenzie said. “Kevin Yeager’s a good example,” the coach said about a multi-state champion [Class of 2000} who’s arguably the greatest track athlete in FHS boys history. Yeager was inducted last year in FHS Hall of Fame’s 2013 Class. “And Chris Martland [FHS Class of 2000 track and field]. “I can remember, every day I’d have to tell Chris Martland, ‘hey, let’s go.’ They’d practice until midnight.” About Yeager, “Never did he or his parents question what I put him in,” McKenzie said. “Never missed a practice.” One memorable victory for McKenzie, as an assistant coach under then FHS football skipper Dan Bland, was crushing two-time def-ending state champion Oak Ridge 35-7. “When we beat them in ’81 they had won 29 straight games,” he said.
Jessi Miller Metcalf Metcalf, 2-time state Player of Year, ‘excited’ Twice named Gatorade Tennessee High School Player of the Year for David Moore’s Farragut Lady Admirals volleyball team, Jessi Miller Metcalf helped her teams reach new levels of expectations. “My sophomore and junior years, I think we were kind of the underdogs as far as the district goes, and the region,” said Metcalf (Class of 2000), a setter and outside hitter Metcalf named to FHS Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2014. “There was another team that was expected to win, but we were able to pull off a couple of big wins to be the district champion.” As for being inducted among eight in her Hall of Fame class, “I was very excited and honored to be selected, to be a part of this group at Farragut,” said Metcalf, a project manager of information technology organization at B & W Y12 who lives in Farragut. Though Metcalf also earned All-state honors her junior and senior seasons, in fall 1998 and 1999, her biggest goal of leading Farragut to what would then have been its first-ever Class AAA
state tournament berth was never realized. However, “I was part of an awesome team and an awesome athletic program. … Just my experience with the athletic program was outstanding with coach [David] Moore,” Metcalf said. “I learned a lot of life lessons that have brought me where I am today.” While playing two years of college volleyball at East Tennessee State University in Johnson City, Metcalf earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science. Metcalf and husband, Josh, live in Farragut and have two children: a 4-year-old boy and 10-monthold girl. Living in Town, Metcalf said she’s tried to keep up with Moore’s teams in recent years, several of which have reached the TSSAA Class AAA state tournament. “Through farragutpress I see several things, and we have watched them in the past a couple of times,” she said. “And through coach Moore.” As for keeping in touch with former FHS volleyball teammates, “Jamie Mossberg, I’ve seen her out in Town several times,” Metcalf said. “I see her parents quite a bit, they live close to me.” Overall at FHS, “It was wonderful. I got a great education,” Metcalf said.
Marvena Almond Ruddy Leaving BHS, Almond Ruddy ruled state pentathlon at FHS, SEC heptathlon at Tennessee A two-time pentathlon state champion with Farragut High School track and field, Marvena Almond Ruddy went on to become a track All-American and SEC champion in the heptathlon (seven events) at The University of Tennessee. But not before a fall 1988 “pit stop” at rival Bearden High School as a freshman. “My goal was to get back to Farragut my second semester,” Ruddy Ruddy, a member of FHS Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2014, said about moving to Farragut during her freshman year. “Once I got there that spring [semester 1989] I was eligible to jump right in, and I did, starting with the varsity basketball team,” added Ruddy, also an All-region hoops honoree and team MVP as a shooting guard/small forward (Class of 1992). In track and field, “Coach [Bill] Parker had to instill in me the importance of practice,” Ruddy said. “I realized I was good, but I was not very disciplined at that freshman stage. … He and coach [Scott] McKenzie were the ones that really instilled in me the importance of discipline and dedication.” Parker “put into place, probably because of me, that if you don’t show up to practice you can’t com-
pete in the next meet,” she added. “That got me on board, to practice every day.” Ultimate team success, in the form of Class AAA state track and field championships her final two years at FHS, was realized “because we did have younger, talented athletes coming in the rear,” Ruddy said. “They went on to either compete at UT with me, two of them did, and some at rival schools like Georgia Tech.” Originally a verbal commitment to the University of North Carolina, Ruddy said she eventually decided, “’I want to stay in-state.’” Now a homemaker with husband, Tom, caring for girls ages 4 and 3, Ruddy was a former social worker who started “a homeless shelter for women and children” with Knox Area Rescue Ministries. She also served as a “travel and business management consultant.” Ruddy said basketball “was her first love,” adding that Lady Admirals basketball “was very memorable because of the competition around the region. … Especially rivalries like Bearden. A lot of my teammates, very memorable events and stuff that we did together.” Upon hearing about her induction, “I was very happy about that. I did not know one existed,” Ruddy said. “I have recently, since I got on Facebook, was able to get reconnected with some of the athletes and classmates. Social media has been a good outlet for doing that.”
FARRAGUT SPORTS HALL OF FAME
FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 • 5C
Jenny McGrath Weaver Early ACAC swim practices lead to FHS, UT dominance Getting serious about swimming as a Farragut High School freshman, circa 1984, meant getting up at 4:10 a.m. each weekday morning and traveling to Oak Ridge for practice with Atomic City Aquatic Club. Considering that Jenny McGrath Weaver turned out to be Farragut High School Class of 1988 valedictorian, “It was very rigorous … a two-hour workout before school,” said Weaver Weaver, recently chosen as a member of Farragut High School Athletic Hall of Fame’s Class of 2014. Medical director/bariatric surgeon (to treat obesity) at St. Francis Center For Surgical Weight Loss in Memphis, Weaver added, “I remember many days going to school with wet hair and no makeup, and, of course, being tired.” That didn’t even count going back to Oak Ridge for evening practices Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Weaver’s hard work paid handsomely: a multievent state champion so dominant she finished first in every state meet she swam as a sophomore, junior and senior. Weaver was three-time state champion in 100-breaststroke, 50-freestyle and 200-IM plus breaststroke relays.
A 16-time All-American and three-time All-SEC champ at The University of Tennessee, McGrath went into the 1992 U.S. Olympic Trials as the nation’s top female “short course” seed in 100meter freestyle. “That state high school meet my sophomore year definitely was a tipping point for my career because as a sophomore I came in and won everything,” Weaver said. “That gave me the confidence that, ‘Hey, I can be the best of the best.’ That carried through into my [medical] training.” Weaver led Farragut to the girls state championship her senior season in 1988. “That was a huge win, and we beat some of the big teams you typically think about like Baylor,” she said. “It was a real thrill.” About her induction, “Of course I was very excited. I think everyone has fond memories of their high school days,” Weaver said. “Of course, it really means a lot to my mother as well, who still teaches [math] at Farragut High School,” Weaver added about Brenda McGrath, who also has served as FHS swim and dive team’s faculty sponsor for 31 years. “I think I was just as excited to hear how thrilled she was about the induction.” Weaver and husband, Dr. Jason Weaver, have an 8-year-old daughter and 6-year-old son.
Doug Horne, Athletic Service Award Eager to give, Horne learned value of combining athletics, academics Doug Horne learned the hard way about having to put academics ahead of athletics in high school. It’s all the more reason why Horne, a 1963 graduate of Farragut High School Horne who has become a highly successful real estate developer and owner of Republic News-papers, Inc. (parent company of farragutpress),
wants to support FHS athletics intensely: so Farragut student/athletes don’t have to face his dilemma from the early 60s. Horne’s support for FHS athletics for decades has earned him 2014 Athletic Service Award, as voted on by the school’s Athletic Hall of Fame Committee. “I’ve always supported the athletics programs at Farragut,” Horne said. “When a coach or athletic director from Farragut called me, I’ve done what I could to help them financially or otherwise. … They’ve had some great
principals there [current principal Michael Reynolds] and the teachers at Farragut have always been excellent.” An Admirals basketball player his freshman and sophomore years, Horne said, “I had to thumb home, or walk home nine or 10 miles to Blue Grass after basketball practice,” meaning he wasn’t getting home until late evenings. As a result of missing valuable homework time, Horne said, “I had to drop out of basketball to keep my academics up.” Horne said he graduated with a
3.95 grade point average allowing him to earn the school’s Science Award, and therefore receive a scholarship to attend The University of Tennessee. Horne earned an industrial management degree at UT. Overall, “Kids do better in academics if they have a vigorous sports program,” Horne said. “Sports has a way of giving you a reading on your success or failure real quick. And that’s what life’s all about, is a monitor on whether you’re succeeding or failing.” Joining eight FHS Athletic Hall
of Fame inductees to be recognized during a celebration/ceremony starting at 6 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 1, in FHS Commons, Horne said, “There’s nothing better than for a person to go back to his or her school and get an award at the Farragut Hall of Fame Banquet for past accomplishments, like the inductees we’ll be honoring.” While acknowledging Farragut’s huge statewide and regional success in several sports, “We need to all help and strive for Farragut to be even more successful in sports,” Horne said.
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