Former Red Tornado star Rashaud Mungro (Class of '04) has been named the Spotlight Athlete of the Week by the official Eastern Kentucky athletics website. Mungro (6'5" 278) is a 5th-year senior for the Colonels and will be fighting for a starting position on the offensive line in pre-season practice after a couple of years as a backup. The Colonels swept the Ohio Valley Conference in 2007 with an 8-0 record before falling to Richmond in the first round of the FCS playoffs. Richmond was eventually ousted by Appalachian State.
Rashaud was asked five random questions including this one: "Five years from now, I will remember this from my EKU football experience..."
Rashaud answered this way: "Change is good. Most people get worried and doubtful when change happens, but I think that it always works out for the best."
One example of change for Rashaud and the Colonels was the loss of head coach Danny Hope in the off-season. Hope left to join the staff at Purdue as the offensive line coach. Current Purdue skipper Joe Tiller will retire after the 2008 season and has named Hope as his successor.
According to Rashaud's roster bio he had a solid off-season this past spring and his coaches expect big things from him in fall camp. Rashaud has the ability to compete for playing time at both guard and tackle in 2008.
Rashaud was a 2-time All-Conference player in high school and helped lead the Tornadoes to a 10-3 record in his senior season.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Tradition Never Graduates
We are just days away from the start of pre-season practice. On August 29th the Red Tornadoes will kickoff Hickory High's 86th football season with a trip to Statesville. The clash with the Greyhounds will be the 46th meeting between the two schools in one of North Carolina's oldest high school rivalries. The series dates back to 1924.
With this in mind I encourage everybody to check out the Tornado History page on TornadoPride.com because it has grown into an absorbing visual record of Hickory's long athletic history. Hickory alumnus Bob Duckworth, a longtime supporter of Red Tornado athletics, has done an outstanding job of gathering and scanning all the photographs you will see on the History page. And, of course, it is my pleasure to provide the forum with which to make these treasures accessible to all visitors to the site.
One of my original motivations for creating TornadoPride.com in 2002 was to make current Red Tornadoes aware of the long-standing tradition to which they contribute when they put on the garnet and gold colors of Hickory High. I felt at the time that not enough was being done to "bring to life" Hickory High's sports tradition and make it real for the players and fans. It's an ongoing process which, fortunately, is my great hobby and passion.
On the Tornado History page you will also see some photographs from the days of Ridgeview High School, which was the traditional African-American high school in Hickory prior to integration. Gathering additional information and pictorial mementos from Ridgeview's impressive sports history is also an ongoing process to which I look forward as time goes by. The grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Ridgeview's Panthers now proudly wear the colors of Hickory High but they are also heirs to a tradition that produced the likes of Coach Samuel W. Davis, Sr.
Coach Davis was the longtime Panther football and basketball coach as well as Ridgeview's athletic director. He did it all for many years. His Panther football teams in the 1950s and 1960s still hold the North Carolina records for consecutive regular-season wins (74, from 1957-1965) and consecutive shutouts (14, from 1964-1965). His 1964 Panthers had the ultimate perfect season, compiling a 12-0 record and outscoring the opposition by 446-0. That's right...unbeaten and unscored upon. Did Zero Bars exist back then?
Just two years later the Red Tornadoes and Panthers were finally united into one single football juggernaut that also went 12-0 and won a state championship. I'd love to see a movie called Remember the Tornadoes of 1966!
Learning more about Hickory High's football traditions will introduce you to men like Carl "Willie" Wakefield.
Wakefield was once described as a hustler of the "rock 'em, sock 'em" type and was a terrific lineman for the Lenoir-Rhyne Bears back in the late 1940s. He was a standout on the undefeated Red Tornado squad of 1943 that won the Western Conference championship.
After his high school playing days were over Wakefield's life took a fascinating but not unfamiliar turn for kids of his generation. The world was at war and like so many others Wakefield joined the military. He signed up with the Air Corps, ending up in Okinawa. He survived the fighting and at war's end a service football league was organized on the island. Wakefield was a key member of a team known as the "Okinawa Flyboys." The Flyboys eventually won the South Pacific Air Force championship.
Wakefield returned to Hickory and entered Lenoir-Rhyne in 1947 on the GI Bill and, of course, continued to play football. He earned a letter his first season as a 2nd-string guard. The 1st-stringer ahead of him was a senior and fellow war veteran by the name of Frank Barger. Wakefield became a starter himself on Clarence Stasavich's 1948 and 1949 Bear teams.
This is just a small sample of Hickory's football tradition. Like they say, it never graduates.
It's that time of year again...
With this in mind I encourage everybody to check out the Tornado History page on TornadoPride.com because it has grown into an absorbing visual record of Hickory's long athletic history. Hickory alumnus Bob Duckworth, a longtime supporter of Red Tornado athletics, has done an outstanding job of gathering and scanning all the photographs you will see on the History page. And, of course, it is my pleasure to provide the forum with which to make these treasures accessible to all visitors to the site.
One of my original motivations for creating TornadoPride.com in 2002 was to make current Red Tornadoes aware of the long-standing tradition to which they contribute when they put on the garnet and gold colors of Hickory High. I felt at the time that not enough was being done to "bring to life" Hickory High's sports tradition and make it real for the players and fans. It's an ongoing process which, fortunately, is my great hobby and passion.
On the Tornado History page you will also see some photographs from the days of Ridgeview High School, which was the traditional African-American high school in Hickory prior to integration. Gathering additional information and pictorial mementos from Ridgeview's impressive sports history is also an ongoing process to which I look forward as time goes by. The grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Ridgeview's Panthers now proudly wear the colors of Hickory High but they are also heirs to a tradition that produced the likes of Coach Samuel W. Davis, Sr.
Coach Davis was the longtime Panther football and basketball coach as well as Ridgeview's athletic director. He did it all for many years. His Panther football teams in the 1950s and 1960s still hold the North Carolina records for consecutive regular-season wins (74, from 1957-1965) and consecutive shutouts (14, from 1964-1965). His 1964 Panthers had the ultimate perfect season, compiling a 12-0 record and outscoring the opposition by 446-0. That's right...unbeaten and unscored upon. Did Zero Bars exist back then?
Just two years later the Red Tornadoes and Panthers were finally united into one single football juggernaut that also went 12-0 and won a state championship. I'd love to see a movie called Remember the Tornadoes of 1966!
Learning more about Hickory High's football traditions will introduce you to men like Carl "Willie" Wakefield.
Wakefield was once described as a hustler of the "rock 'em, sock 'em" type and was a terrific lineman for the Lenoir-Rhyne Bears back in the late 1940s. He was a standout on the undefeated Red Tornado squad of 1943 that won the Western Conference championship.
After his high school playing days were over Wakefield's life took a fascinating but not unfamiliar turn for kids of his generation. The world was at war and like so many others Wakefield joined the military. He signed up with the Air Corps, ending up in Okinawa. He survived the fighting and at war's end a service football league was organized on the island. Wakefield was a key member of a team known as the "Okinawa Flyboys." The Flyboys eventually won the South Pacific Air Force championship.
Wakefield returned to Hickory and entered Lenoir-Rhyne in 1947 on the GI Bill and, of course, continued to play football. He earned a letter his first season as a 2nd-string guard. The 1st-stringer ahead of him was a senior and fellow war veteran by the name of Frank Barger. Wakefield became a starter himself on Clarence Stasavich's 1948 and 1949 Bear teams.
This is just a small sample of Hickory's football tradition. Like they say, it never graduates.
It's that time of year again...
Monday, July 28, 2008
Kevin Shelton video highlights
As we look forward to the start of pre-season practice on Friday here are some pleasant moments from last season. In his first year as a varsity starter Shelton compiled some very healthy numbers: 90-166-8 (54.2%) for 1,317 yards and 13 touchdowns. His 101.3 yards-per-game average help provide crucial offensive balance that helped lead the Tornadoes to a 13-1 record in 2007 and another CVAC title.
Keep an eye open for "the bomb" that Kevin served up to Trevin Parks against Glenn in the second round...
Saturday, July 19, 2008
Border Bash II: Video Highlights of Fulton's 2006 season
Here are the highlights of Fulton's 2006 run to the Tennessee Class 3A state championship. As mentioned previously, the 2006 title was Fulton's third in four years.
PART 1: THE BEGINNING
The first minute will be familiar as it is basically the same as the intro video that I have posted previously. But keep watching because the last 8 minutes are very interesting. The first game shown is against Fulton's crosstown rival, Austin-East High. That was the team that played Independence back in 2001 (Chris Leak's junior year) and lost 77-13.
PART 2: SEASON HIGHLIGHTS
PART 3: SEASON HIGHLIGHTS
PART 4: PLAYOFFS
PART 5: THE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
PART 1: THE BEGINNING
The first minute will be familiar as it is basically the same as the intro video that I have posted previously. But keep watching because the last 8 minutes are very interesting. The first game shown is against Fulton's crosstown rival, Austin-East High. That was the team that played Independence back in 2001 (Chris Leak's junior year) and lost 77-13.
PART 2: SEASON HIGHLIGHTS
PART 3: SEASON HIGHLIGHTS
PART 4: PLAYOFFS
PART 5: THE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
Monday, July 14, 2008
HHS Alumni Update #1: RYAN SUCCOP
From the 2008 University of South Carolina spring media guide...
"The Gamecocks have one of the nation's top returning placekickers in senior Ryan Succop. Succop, who has been blessed with a strong leg, was an honorable mention All-SEC pick in 2007 after earning second team honors in 2006. A candidate for the Lou Groza Award, which recognizes the nation's top placekicker, Succop is 16-for-17 in his career from inside 40 yards and owns two field goals of 50-plus yards. His career best was a 55-yarder against Vanderbilt in 2006. That is also the second-longest in school history. Succop has handled the punting chores in addition to the placekicking duties for the past two seasons and could do both again this season. Succop's average was down a bit last fall to 41.6 yards per punt after averaging 43.7 yards in 2006, but he also logged twice as many punts (56) in 2007 as he did in '06 (29)."
This will be Ryan's third season as the kicking specialist for the Gamecocks. After handling mainly kick-offs in his freshman year he won the starting job as both placekicker and punter for South Carolina during pre-season practice in 2006. His first game that season, against Mississippi State, was a memorable after he nailed three field goals, averaged nearly 49 yards per punt, and even showed his athleticism when he avoided a potential blocked punt by rushing for 16 yards and a crucial 1st down.
Later in the season he came agonizingly close to personally derailing Florida's national championship run in 2006 when Jarvis Moss blocked his 48-yard field goal attempt in the final seconds to preserve a 17-16 Gator victory in Gainesville. Florida had already lost once and a second loss, especially an upset at home, would have ended any chance of reaching the BCS championship game. Earlier in the contest Ryan had nailed a 55-yard field goal which might also have provided the winning margin for the Gamecocks but it was waved off due to a procedure penalty against South Carolina.
Moss was able to block the final kick after defensive tackles Ray McDonald and Steve Harris pushed the South Carolina line back, allowing Moss to see the ball as it was being kicked.
“Steve and Ray did all the work, and I just jumped my highest,” Moss said. “That was the biggest play of my career.”
Ryan scored 85 points for the Gamecocks in 2006, which made him the team's scoring leader. The 85 points was also the third-highest single-season total in school history.
Ryan was a semi-finalist for the Lou Groza Award in 2006 and is a strong candidate for that award again this season. He has also been named to Lindy's 2008 first team pre-season All-SEC team. He currently projects as a 6th-round NFL draft choice but that certainly could go higher with another great season.
Ryan graduated from Hickory High in 2005. During his four years as Hickory's varsity kicking specialist Succop played in games against fellow SEC stars such as Florida's starting middle linebacker, Brandon Spikes (Crest '05) and Tennessee's starting wide receiver Josh Briscoe (Burns '05) as well as Clemson starting cornerback Crezdon Butler (Asheville '06).
Friday, July 11, 2008
Border Bash II: Falcons have size to spare!
To say that the Fulton Falcons are blessed with both speed and size would be putting is mildly. I have already touched briefly on the great tradition of running backs at Fulton, particularly current Tennessee Volunteer Dennis Rogan. Now I want to take a quick glance at the Fulton line.
When the Falcons won the Tennessee Class 3A state championship in 2006, their roster included these senior linemen:
Chase Kennedy (6'3" 221)
Mark Brown (6'3" 239)
Raymond Johnson (6'1" 276)
Ryan Gould (6'1" 223)
Sean Reilly (6'6" 308)
James Higgins (6'3" 298)
Rodney Sims (6'2" 275)
Charles Wiley-Gatewood (6'6" 311)
Antonio Hamilton (6'1" 294)
These were just some of the roadgraders paving the way for Dennis Rogan and Terrence Cobb. But surely this was a uniquely oversized class of linemen that couldn't possibly be replaced in a year's time...right?
In a way, yes. The 2007 Falcons only listed two senior linemen:
Gary Gamble (6'1" 237)
Ricky Hensley (6'2" 297)
The rest of the 2007 Falcon linemen on the roster were as follows:
Hakeem Gray (6'0" 209, 9th)
Adam Bowman (5'10" 218, 10th)
Tony Hendricks (5'10" 198, 10th)
Mychal Cason (6'1" 229, 9th)
Aaron Miller (5'10" 212, 9th)
Jarius Johnson (6'2" 263, 10th)
Christian Clark (6'0" 236, 10th)
Cardeem Brown (5'11" 245, 10th)
Michael Miller (5'11" 248, 11th)
Caleb Garrett (5'10" 215, 10th)
Jake Reilly (5'10" 235, 10th)
T.J. Miller (5'11" 206, 9th)
Kadeem Blair (6'3" 348, 11th)
Vincent Johnson (6'7" 251, 11th)
Jarvis Drew (5'11" 311, 10th)
Matthew Blasco (6'0" 276, 11th)
Jordan Phillips (6'3" 320, 11th)
The hot topic of discussion this time last year for the Falcons and their fans was the remarkable inexperience of the linemen. Well, one year and another trip to the state championship game later, the Falcons won't have that problem to worry about.
Of course size isn't everything. The biggest team Hickory faced all year in terms of raw size was undoubtedly Hunter Huss. But that didn't prevent the Red Tornadoes from administering a stunning 63-0 smackdown on the Huskies. But rest assured that Fulton is nothing like Huss - the Falcons won't lay down after getting smacked in the mouth. You do not want to miss this, folks!
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Day 2 of Lenoir-Rhyne 7-on-7 rained out
Severe thunderstorms that rolled through the area yesterday afternoon forced the cancellation of the second and final evening of competition at Lenoir-Rhyne. This is certainly a shame since the Red Tornadoes were looking as sharp as any team in the competition. We are now just three weeks away from the official start of pre-season practice on August 1st. Football season can't get here fast enough, brothers and sisters. Stay tuned!
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Day 1 at the Lenoir-Rhyne 7-on-7 competition
The Red Tornadoes performed very well yesterday in the first day of the 7-on-7s, racking up wins over Ashbrook and Burns. Play will continue this evening at 6:00.
Returning starter Kevin Shelton looked sharp. He passed for a total of six touchdowns in the two games and showed nice touch on some difficult throws.
Kevin Shelton
The receivers, particularly senior Michael Shook and junior Anthony Wilson, also impressed. The secondary, missing a couple of returning starters, showed definite signs being an effective and deep unit this season.
In the first contest, Shelton's two touchdown passes were enough to beat the Ashbrook Green Wave, 13-7, thanks to three timely interceptions by the Tornado secondary. Michael Shook picked off a couple of Ashbrook passes. Marcus Sims got his hand on another Ashbrook ball and tipped it into the hands of fellow junior Tyler Barnette.
After sitting out the next contest, Hickory took the field again, this time to play an old rival, the Burns Bulldogs. The Red Tornadoes struck quickly as Shelton connected with Shook for an impressive touchdown. Anthony Wilson caught the extra point and Hickory went up 7-0. Cole Smithey, a junior, intercepted a Bulldog pass to end one Burns threat. But the Bulldogs did eventually find the end zone to tie the game at 7-7.
Both sides played good defense and Burns did intercept Hickory three times. But Hickory forced the Bulldogs to turn the ball over on downs three times.
When the game was still tied after the regulation 20 minutes, the teams each were given four plays to score from the 10-yard line. Burns struck first and took a 14-7 lead. Anthony Wilson then made a leaping catch for Hickory's touchdown and junior tight end D.J. Holloway caught the conversion pass to make the score 14-14.
In the second overtime round, Burns needed all four plays to get the needed touchdown but they were successful and re-took the lead at 21-14. Again it was Shelton hooking up with Wilson for a touchdown. There was some mild controversy on the conversion attempt as Shook literally went horizontal and stretched to catch Shelton's pass successfully. Burns players insisted that Shelton had not got the pass off in time but this claim was denied by Lenoir-Rhyne coach who was supervising the game. So it was 21-21 after the overtime periods. This resulted in a "Texas Shootout" scenario to break the tie.
Now it was each team getting one shot at the end until a winner was determined. After neither team scored initially in the shootout, Shelton finally found Wilson in the end zone for the game-winning touchdown. Final score: 27-21.
Additional photographs can be seen in the Albums page of TornadoPride.com.
Returning starter Kevin Shelton looked sharp. He passed for a total of six touchdowns in the two games and showed nice touch on some difficult throws.
Kevin Shelton
The receivers, particularly senior Michael Shook and junior Anthony Wilson, also impressed. The secondary, missing a couple of returning starters, showed definite signs being an effective and deep unit this season.
In the first contest, Shelton's two touchdown passes were enough to beat the Ashbrook Green Wave, 13-7, thanks to three timely interceptions by the Tornado secondary. Michael Shook picked off a couple of Ashbrook passes. Marcus Sims got his hand on another Ashbrook ball and tipped it into the hands of fellow junior Tyler Barnette.
After sitting out the next contest, Hickory took the field again, this time to play an old rival, the Burns Bulldogs. The Red Tornadoes struck quickly as Shelton connected with Shook for an impressive touchdown. Anthony Wilson caught the extra point and Hickory went up 7-0. Cole Smithey, a junior, intercepted a Bulldog pass to end one Burns threat. But the Bulldogs did eventually find the end zone to tie the game at 7-7.
Both sides played good defense and Burns did intercept Hickory three times. But Hickory forced the Bulldogs to turn the ball over on downs three times.
When the game was still tied after the regulation 20 minutes, the teams each were given four plays to score from the 10-yard line. Burns struck first and took a 14-7 lead. Anthony Wilson then made a leaping catch for Hickory's touchdown and junior tight end D.J. Holloway caught the conversion pass to make the score 14-14.
In the second overtime round, Burns needed all four plays to get the needed touchdown but they were successful and re-took the lead at 21-14. Again it was Shelton hooking up with Wilson for a touchdown. There was some mild controversy on the conversion attempt as Shook literally went horizontal and stretched to catch Shelton's pass successfully. Burns players insisted that Shelton had not got the pass off in time but this claim was denied by Lenoir-Rhyne coach who was supervising the game. So it was 21-21 after the overtime periods. This resulted in a "Texas Shootout" scenario to break the tie.
Now it was each team getting one shot at the end until a winner was determined. After neither team scored initially in the shootout, Shelton finally found Wilson in the end zone for the game-winning touchdown. Final score: 27-21.
Additional photographs can be seen in the Albums page of TornadoPride.com.
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
The seeds of Tornado greatness were planted in the 1940s
Another season of Red Tornado football is almost upon us and that is guaranteed to put smiles on the faces of Hickory High fans everywhere. This is a period of great anticipation and high expectations, especially for the seniors, who will wear the garnet and gold for the last time this season.
Former Red Tornado star Bob Reed knows the feeling. He played his final game as a Tornado back in 1947, but remembers it all as if it happened only last year. For former players like Reed, this time of year is also one for reflecting on the past. Like so many others, he has experienced Red Tornado football as a player, as a player’s father, and as a fan. Two of his sons, Dana and Kyle, played for legendary Tornado head coach Frank Barger in the 1970s.
"It was different when I was growing up," said Reed, "there was no organized football for kids before they reached the eighth grade. We just played sandlot ball all the time. We were just a bunch of country boys playing the game."
When Bob Reed went out for the Hickory varsity squad in the fall of 1944 the world was literally turned upside down due to the world war still raging in Europe and the Pacific. The Red Tornadoes had a new head coach that season, Doc Kanupp, who replaced Bill Scarborough, who had joined the war effort. Reed and his classmates could not know at the time that Kanupp would be just one of three different head coaches to guide the team in the next four years.
Personnel turnover like that has always been rare at Hickory High and the situation definitely had an impact on the fortunes of the team. The Red Tornadoes went from an 8-0-1 championship campaign in 1943 to a dismal three-year run of bad luck and losing records, including back-to-back losses to archrival Newton-Conover. After two years of Kanupp, the team was taken over by the basketball coach, Lloyd Coley, whose 1946 squad stumbled to a 3-6-1 record.
That’s when former Duke star Buddy Luper stepped in.
"Luper was very strict," Reed remembered. "The first thing he ever said to us was ‘I’m Coach. I’m not Buddy to you. I’m Coach Luper.’ And boy none of us ever called him Buddy. Luper didn’t run a lot of elaborate drills. We would just run and run and then run some more."
Luper and his assistant, Troy Washam, quickly whipped the 1947 Tornadoes into shape. But Luper and Washam also had plenty of talent on that squad. In addition to Reed, who was the starting fullback, the senior group included husky Lamar Dowda, a bruising lineman, along with top backfield men Paul "Cooter" Jones and Glenn Ray Yoder, better known as "Lefty." The starting lineup also included a ferocious sophomore center/linebacker by the name of Gene Frye.
Lamar Dowda
"Lamar was a big old boy," remembered Reed. "He made the varsity team as an eighth grader, which was perfectly within the rules back then. He was probably the toughest guy on the team. Right there with him, though, was Gene Frye. He was just mean. We used to get into fights all the time when we were younger. We were all a little afraid of him, actually. But he was a great player and we were happy that he was on our side."
Both Dowda and Frye would eventually be selected to play in the Shrine Bowl: Dowda in 1947 and Frye in 1949.
"Our first game in 1947 was against Forest City," said Reed. "That was the game when Cooter Jones got his leg broken returning a punt early in the game. His season was over just like that. Fred Lail came in for him. I scored the only touchdown and we beat them 6-0."
The second game of the season was against Statesville and Reed still winces at the memory of it. Over 3,000 fans were on hand at College Field to witness the contest between the two old rivals.
"I never will forget that game," said Reed. "Gene Smith played for Statesville. And I was on defense, playing right corner. I got crossed up and Smith went down the sideline behind me and caught the pass that put them ahead for good. Oh, I was sick about that."
The following week saw the Red Tornadoes battle conference rival Lenoir to a 6-6 tie. Fred Lail scored Hickory touchdown on an eight-yard run, helped along by the fine blocking of Lamar Dowda and Harold Deal. Dowda’s potential game-winning extra point attempt was wide to the right.
A 13-0 victory over Charlotte Tech in the season’s fourth contest marked the debut of Glenn Ray "Lefty" Yoder, who came off the bench in the second quarter of his first varsity game and rushed for 105 yards, including a sparkling 10-yard touchdown run. The Red Tornado victory set up a confrontation with the Newton-Conover Red Devils, who were looking for a third consecutive win over Hickory.
When asked how Hickory and Newton-Conover fans got along in those day, Reed just shook his head and chuckled.
The Tornadoes were especially keyed up for the contest and they literally exploded on the Red Devils immediately. Lefty Yoder returned the opening kickoff to the Hickory 26-yard line. On the first play from scrimmage he scooted around right end and broke loose on a 74-yard touchdown jaunt, with Reed, Dowda, and Bobby Shores providing an escort of blockers. That play set the tone for the game as Yoder ran wild, scoring two more touchdowns before it was over. Thanks to Yoder’s heroics and a brutal defense led by Dowda and Frye, Hickory rolled to a very satisfying 20-2 victory.
"Fred Lail got hurt," Reed recalled, "and Glenn Ray came in at tailback in the old single wing formation. We beat them 20-2 and put five of them in the hospital. They were laid out all over the field. Those guys were just not in shape."
The brutal loss at the hands of their archrivals was seared into the minds of Newton fans. It would take another 30 years before the Red Devils could once again claim victory in the bitter rivalry.
If the Red Devils were out of shape and unprepared to face the Red Tornadoes, the same could not be said of Hickory’s next opponent, undefeated Shelby. The Golden Lions, led by running back Billy Meggison, slipped past the Tornadoes, 13-0.
The following week Hickory was its own worst enemy, fumbling away an opportunity to defeat the Lincolnton Wolves on the road. The hometown Wolves won the hard-hitting contest by a score of 13-7. It was Bob Reed who scored Hickory’s lone touchdown.
Hickory closed out the 1947 season with victories over Marion and the NC School for the Deaf. The Marion Rippers came to Hickory and brought their usual brutal style of football with them, but the Red Tornadoes beat them at their own game, 13-7, in what came to be known as the "Mud Bowl."
"It rained three days and three nights before that game," remembered Reed. "It was the only game my mother ever saw me play in was that Marion game and I was covered in mud. She could hardly tell which one was me. I will never forget that game."
The season finale against N.C.S.D. was played up in Morganton and was another important game to the Hickory boys. It was usually no picnic playing the Bears of N.C.S.D. and Hickory had lost to the Bears in 1945 and 1946. But the 1947 game was a memorable one for Red Tornado players and fans alike. The team put it all together that day and rolled to a most satisfying 54-6 victory, the most lopsided Hickory victory in nearly 20 years. Joe Shook was the star of the day, racking up over 100 yards in pass receptions. Reed scored two touchdowns in his final high school game.
"That was a sweet victory," said Reed. "We had lost to them two years in a row and we wanted that game. It was a road game and for road trips one of the school janitors would drive the old bus that we had. We got a meal after the game on road trips. I don’t think we ever had a meal before the games like they do now. But I remember they gave us each 50 cents on trips. But you could get yourself a pretty good meal for 50 cents back then. You could get a hamburger and a drink with that, easily."
For his consistently excellent and dependable play throughout the season, Reed was honored to receive a new award, instituted by Coach Luper: the team’s Most Outstanding Player trophy.
"Well, I did pretty well that season," Reed recalled. "We had a play called the Reed Special. It’d be a very simple play now. I was the fullback in the single wing. I’d run up to the line and turn around, the halfback would hand it off to me and then I’d lateral the ball to someone coming around the end. We did well with that play.
"Also, I was fortunate to get through the season without any real injuries. I don’t know I managed that because back then you could hit a man pretty much however you wanted to. With no facemasks and little pads, people got hurt all the time.
"With all the talent we had on that team, I was very proud of winning that award. I’m still proud of it because that was a great bunch of guys that I played with then. And I still have that trophy.”
That is what it’s all about. A football game lasts 48 minutes on the scoreboard, but the memories last a lifetime.
Former Red Tornado star Bob Reed knows the feeling. He played his final game as a Tornado back in 1947, but remembers it all as if it happened only last year. For former players like Reed, this time of year is also one for reflecting on the past. Like so many others, he has experienced Red Tornado football as a player, as a player’s father, and as a fan. Two of his sons, Dana and Kyle, played for legendary Tornado head coach Frank Barger in the 1970s.
"It was different when I was growing up," said Reed, "there was no organized football for kids before they reached the eighth grade. We just played sandlot ball all the time. We were just a bunch of country boys playing the game."
When Bob Reed went out for the Hickory varsity squad in the fall of 1944 the world was literally turned upside down due to the world war still raging in Europe and the Pacific. The Red Tornadoes had a new head coach that season, Doc Kanupp, who replaced Bill Scarborough, who had joined the war effort. Reed and his classmates could not know at the time that Kanupp would be just one of three different head coaches to guide the team in the next four years.
Personnel turnover like that has always been rare at Hickory High and the situation definitely had an impact on the fortunes of the team. The Red Tornadoes went from an 8-0-1 championship campaign in 1943 to a dismal three-year run of bad luck and losing records, including back-to-back losses to archrival Newton-Conover. After two years of Kanupp, the team was taken over by the basketball coach, Lloyd Coley, whose 1946 squad stumbled to a 3-6-1 record.
That’s when former Duke star Buddy Luper stepped in.
"Luper was very strict," Reed remembered. "The first thing he ever said to us was ‘I’m Coach. I’m not Buddy to you. I’m Coach Luper.’ And boy none of us ever called him Buddy. Luper didn’t run a lot of elaborate drills. We would just run and run and then run some more."
Luper and his assistant, Troy Washam, quickly whipped the 1947 Tornadoes into shape. But Luper and Washam also had plenty of talent on that squad. In addition to Reed, who was the starting fullback, the senior group included husky Lamar Dowda, a bruising lineman, along with top backfield men Paul "Cooter" Jones and Glenn Ray Yoder, better known as "Lefty." The starting lineup also included a ferocious sophomore center/linebacker by the name of Gene Frye.
Lamar Dowda
"Lamar was a big old boy," remembered Reed. "He made the varsity team as an eighth grader, which was perfectly within the rules back then. He was probably the toughest guy on the team. Right there with him, though, was Gene Frye. He was just mean. We used to get into fights all the time when we were younger. We were all a little afraid of him, actually. But he was a great player and we were happy that he was on our side."
Both Dowda and Frye would eventually be selected to play in the Shrine Bowl: Dowda in 1947 and Frye in 1949.
"Our first game in 1947 was against Forest City," said Reed. "That was the game when Cooter Jones got his leg broken returning a punt early in the game. His season was over just like that. Fred Lail came in for him. I scored the only touchdown and we beat them 6-0."
The second game of the season was against Statesville and Reed still winces at the memory of it. Over 3,000 fans were on hand at College Field to witness the contest between the two old rivals.
"I never will forget that game," said Reed. "Gene Smith played for Statesville. And I was on defense, playing right corner. I got crossed up and Smith went down the sideline behind me and caught the pass that put them ahead for good. Oh, I was sick about that."
The following week saw the Red Tornadoes battle conference rival Lenoir to a 6-6 tie. Fred Lail scored Hickory touchdown on an eight-yard run, helped along by the fine blocking of Lamar Dowda and Harold Deal. Dowda’s potential game-winning extra point attempt was wide to the right.
A 13-0 victory over Charlotte Tech in the season’s fourth contest marked the debut of Glenn Ray "Lefty" Yoder, who came off the bench in the second quarter of his first varsity game and rushed for 105 yards, including a sparkling 10-yard touchdown run. The Red Tornado victory set up a confrontation with the Newton-Conover Red Devils, who were looking for a third consecutive win over Hickory.
When asked how Hickory and Newton-Conover fans got along in those day, Reed just shook his head and chuckled.
The Tornadoes were especially keyed up for the contest and they literally exploded on the Red Devils immediately. Lefty Yoder returned the opening kickoff to the Hickory 26-yard line. On the first play from scrimmage he scooted around right end and broke loose on a 74-yard touchdown jaunt, with Reed, Dowda, and Bobby Shores providing an escort of blockers. That play set the tone for the game as Yoder ran wild, scoring two more touchdowns before it was over. Thanks to Yoder’s heroics and a brutal defense led by Dowda and Frye, Hickory rolled to a very satisfying 20-2 victory.
"Fred Lail got hurt," Reed recalled, "and Glenn Ray came in at tailback in the old single wing formation. We beat them 20-2 and put five of them in the hospital. They were laid out all over the field. Those guys were just not in shape."
The brutal loss at the hands of their archrivals was seared into the minds of Newton fans. It would take another 30 years before the Red Devils could once again claim victory in the bitter rivalry.
If the Red Devils were out of shape and unprepared to face the Red Tornadoes, the same could not be said of Hickory’s next opponent, undefeated Shelby. The Golden Lions, led by running back Billy Meggison, slipped past the Tornadoes, 13-0.
The following week Hickory was its own worst enemy, fumbling away an opportunity to defeat the Lincolnton Wolves on the road. The hometown Wolves won the hard-hitting contest by a score of 13-7. It was Bob Reed who scored Hickory’s lone touchdown.
Hickory closed out the 1947 season with victories over Marion and the NC School for the Deaf. The Marion Rippers came to Hickory and brought their usual brutal style of football with them, but the Red Tornadoes beat them at their own game, 13-7, in what came to be known as the "Mud Bowl."
"It rained three days and three nights before that game," remembered Reed. "It was the only game my mother ever saw me play in was that Marion game and I was covered in mud. She could hardly tell which one was me. I will never forget that game."
The season finale against N.C.S.D. was played up in Morganton and was another important game to the Hickory boys. It was usually no picnic playing the Bears of N.C.S.D. and Hickory had lost to the Bears in 1945 and 1946. But the 1947 game was a memorable one for Red Tornado players and fans alike. The team put it all together that day and rolled to a most satisfying 54-6 victory, the most lopsided Hickory victory in nearly 20 years. Joe Shook was the star of the day, racking up over 100 yards in pass receptions. Reed scored two touchdowns in his final high school game.
"That was a sweet victory," said Reed. "We had lost to them two years in a row and we wanted that game. It was a road game and for road trips one of the school janitors would drive the old bus that we had. We got a meal after the game on road trips. I don’t think we ever had a meal before the games like they do now. But I remember they gave us each 50 cents on trips. But you could get yourself a pretty good meal for 50 cents back then. You could get a hamburger and a drink with that, easily."
For his consistently excellent and dependable play throughout the season, Reed was honored to receive a new award, instituted by Coach Luper: the team’s Most Outstanding Player trophy.
"Well, I did pretty well that season," Reed recalled. "We had a play called the Reed Special. It’d be a very simple play now. I was the fullback in the single wing. I’d run up to the line and turn around, the halfback would hand it off to me and then I’d lateral the ball to someone coming around the end. We did well with that play.
"Also, I was fortunate to get through the season without any real injuries. I don’t know I managed that because back then you could hit a man pretty much however you wanted to. With no facemasks and little pads, people got hurt all the time.
"With all the talent we had on that team, I was very proud of winning that award. I’m still proud of it because that was a great bunch of guys that I played with then. And I still have that trophy.”
That is what it’s all about. A football game lasts 48 minutes on the scoreboard, but the memories last a lifetime.
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