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Chamber honors small businesses & private school teachers of the year
by Barbara Henigin
Staff Writer

The LaGrange-Troup County Chamber of Commerce recognized small businesses and private school teachers in ceremonies Tuesday during its monthly breakfast.

“Each year, the chamber has recognized outstanding teachers from our public system. However, we have not extended the same recognition to our private school partners, that is until this morning,” said Dave Marler, the chamber’s vice-chairman for community development. He and Opal Hogg, chairwoman of the chamber’s education committee, recognized the following educators from LaGrange Academy and Lafayette Christian School:

LaGrange Academy: Gail Rachmuth (art teacher)

Lafayette Christian School: Lower School - Amanda Jordan (Kindergarten-4th grade teacher); Upper School - Cindy Cofield (math teacher)

Chamber board chairman Scott Landa and and Amy Warren, vice chairman for business retention, recognized the winners of the annual Small Business Awards.

Category I (0-5 employees): Capital Investment Services, accepted by Bobby Lumpkin

Category II (6-10 employees): Stephens Printing Company, accepted by Roger and Darlene Stephens and Adam Garrett

Category III (11-25 employees): Vernon Woods Retirement Community, accepted by Susan Burdick, Kathy Howard and Josh O’Neal.

Chamber members also heard from Troup County Commission Chairman Ricky Wolfe about the proposed College and Career Academy. The academy is meant to prepare Troup County students to meet the demands of future employers.

Wolfe said that the first step in the creation of such an academy had to be understanding what the needs of businesses are. A questionnaire was put out to employers of which 58 percent of the industries have returned them. This information is being analyzed and this phase of the project will be completed by the end of May. John Asbell of Georgia Power is taking responsibility for this process.

The second phase of the project is to build the curriculum. Retired Superintendent Roy Nichols is taking on this responsibility and plans to have this phase completed by the end of July.

The additional pieces that must be in place in order for the academy to open for its projected 2014 school year are being attended to on a ongoing basis. Key people have been positioned to make the development of the College and Career Academy a reality for the students of Troup County.

“Public education is my business and it is your business…in a healthy community there must be mutual responsibility to help,” Wolfe said.

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Busy summer for football teams
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 1940 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Opening night may be more than two months away, but that doesn’t mean the county’s football teams are sitting on their hands waiting for the season to get here. As the days start to heat up, the football teams from Callaway, LaGrange and Troup are in the heart of their summer programs that include a conditioning program, as well as numerous camps and seven-on-seven competitions. The summer programs for the schools will continue through the start of preseason practice, with teams able to put the pads for the first time on Aug. 1. Teams can practice one week before that without pads. There will be what the Georgia High School Association calls a “dead week” where teams aren’t allowed to hold organized activities. That will be the week of July 4th. Other than that, it’s full-steam ahead. “It’s been going really good,” LaGrange head coach Donnie Branch said of the summer program. “The kids are doing a good job with that. We’ll go hard until dead week, and then really go hard after dead week.” Like most teams, a lot of what the Grangers do during the summer consists of seven-on-seven competitions where teams can work on their plays in a non-tackling situation. “We went over to Auburn and did pretty well, and we’re going to Griffin Thursday,” Branch said. “That’s a big tournament over there.” Last week, LaGrange hosted a linemen competition hosted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A number of area schools participated, and Branch said it was fun for the linemen to take center stage. “It was good for the linemen,” Branch said. “Everything is kind of about the skill kids in the summer in seven-on-seven stuff.” The Grangers are coming off a 6-6 season that included a playoff victory, the program’s first since 2008. Callaway stays busy during the summer with seven-on-seven competitions, as well as numerous camps for players at every position. Players from Callaway have been to Cochran and Auburn, Ala. this summer for camps, and there will be plenty of other events before the summer is over. Beyond the football field, Callaway held a major fund-raiser at The Fields Golf Club earlier this month that helps pay for the summer trips. “We do a lot of camps, so you have to come up with ways to pay for them,” Callaway coach Pete Wiggins said. “We are constantly doing fundraising.” The Cavaliers continued their run of success last season by going 10-2, winning a region championship and capturing a victory in the state playoffs. The Cavaliers have won at least one playoff game in four of the past five years, and three times during that span they’ve won 10 games. Wiggins said putting together a program that consistent is a team effort. “I’ve got a great staff, and great administration, and a lot of good kids,” Wiggins said. “Callaway High School, we get better every day. I’m very blessed to be in the position I am. There’s a lot of great people that make it all happen.” Troup participates in a number of camps and seven-on-seven competitions as well, and the team also stays busy with daily activities at the school. Head coach Lynn Kendall said those activities involve “strength training, agility, conditioning, a number of other conditioning type activities. We also get some field work in as well, working on footwork and some other types of drills. It’s a pretty full day, and we do that four days a week every morning from Monday through Thursday.” The Tigers, who went 3-7 last season, are having to replace a number of departed seniors, and Kendall said the summer gives the coaches a good idea of who will be able to step up and fill those holes. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Kendall said. “We’re going to see between now and the first kickoff who’s going to step up and take those slots.”
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All-star tournament on tap
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 179 views | 0 0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print
They’ve practiced, they’ve drilled, they’ve talked strategy, and they’ve played a bunch of scrimmage games. Now it’s time to play for keeps. The Troup County 7-8-year-old all-star team will be one of four teams competing in the double-elimination Dixie Youth Baseball District 1 tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Harris Baseball Complex. Two of the four teams will advance to the state tournament in Fort Oglethorpe, and the state champion will move on to the World Series. The other three teams competing are Hogansville, Thomaston and Manchester. After a month’s worth of practices, Troup head coach Chad Bolding said the team is ready. “I practice them hard,” Boling said. “I gave them a break for a few days. I could tell we were kind of going down a little bit. You give them a break, let them refresh a little while, and then we got back at it, and we play this weekend.” All of the players on the team participated in the Troup County Parks and Recreation Commission spring league, and a lot of them are also are a part of a travel-ball team that Bolding coaches. “The baseball knowledge out here is pretty good,” Bolding said. “They’ve had a lot of coaching, a lot of instruction. They’ve all come together and blended real well.” Bolding said at this age, it’s all about teaching, of giving the players a firm foundation in the fundamentals. “My goal is, win or lose, I want them to learn,” Bolding said. “I want them to have fun, but I wan them to be disciplined and learn.” Troup County will open its tournament stay on Saturday against Manchester at 10 a.m. Also at 10 a.m., Thomaston and Hogansville will play. At noon, the winners of the early games will face off, and the two losers will also play at noon. At 2 p.m., the two remaining one-loss teams will meet in an elimination game. The two surviving teams will play at 4 p.m. on Sunday, and if needed, a final game would be played at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Bolding said he appreciates the different sponsors who have helped out financially. He said they’ve helped with “uniforms, equipment, travel, everything. They’ve really helped.” OF NOTE: The Dixie Boys Baseball 11-12-year-old tournament gets under way on Saturday in Thomaston, and the Dixie Youth Baseball 9-10-year-old tournament begins June 29 in Manchester. Troup County will have two teams in each tournament.
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Watts shines in all-star game
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 149 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Daniel Watts made the most of his one inning of work in Tuesday’s Midwest League all-star game featuring the best players from the Eastern division and the Western division. Watts, a Troup High graduate and a pitcher for the South Bend (Ind.) Silver Hawks, was named the starting pitcher for the Eastern division all-stars after a terrific first half of the season. Watts showed he was worthy of that starting assignment by throwing a perfect first inning with two strikeouts. After retiring the first batter he faced on a flyout, Watts struck out the next two hitters, and his night was done. More than 20 pitchers were used on the night, and no one threw more than one inning. The Western all-stars struck first with two runs in the top of the second, but the Eastern all-stars rallied for four runs in the fifth to take the lead. After falling behind 5-2, the Western all-stars scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie it, but the Eastern All-stars pushed a run across in the bottom of the ninth to win it 6-5. Watts earned his starting nod by going 8-3 in the first half of the season for the Silver Hawks, a single A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Watts, who is in second season in the Diamondbacks’ organization after he was drafted last year, has more wins than any other pitcher in the Midwest League.
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Grangers' Tucker heading to Point
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 89 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was an easy decision. Shortly after participating in a football workout at Point University, former LaGrange High offensive lineman Jacob Tucker was offered an athletic scholarships, and he readily accepted. “They offered him, and faxed up a letter of intent, and he signed it and sent it back quick,” said Davis Russell, the offensive-line coach at LaGrange. Tucker said he’s thrilled to get this chance. “Even though it’s not one of the big SEC schools, it’s giving me the opportunity to go play ball and do something I love,” Tucker said. “I’m excited about that.” Tucker was invited to participate in the workout for Point’s coaches, and Russell said he put on a show. “He had a great workout,” Russell said. “His 40, his run blocking and his pass blocking were all really good.” Tucker said “everything was really good. I’d been training for it ever since the coaches told me about it three weeks in advance. All my hard work paid off.” Russell believes Point is getting a fine player who is still getting better. “He’s a guy with a ton of potential,” Russell said. “He’s got a great frame. He’s probably 6-2, 230 pounds. His frame is big enough where he’ll be able to grow some. I think they’re expecting him to come down there and play tackle, and get down there and play.” Tucker was not only a football standout at LaGrange, but he also excelled in track and field, and he won a region championship in the discus during the spring. Russell said no matter the sport, Tucker gives it his all. “It’s good to see a guy who works hard get repaid,” Russell said. “He’s absolutely worked his butt off to get where he is. And he’s going to be successful. There’s no doubt in my mind.”
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Sports
Busy summer for football teams
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 1940 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Opening night may be more than two months away, but that doesn’t mean the county’s football teams are sitting on their hands waiting for the season to get here. As the days start to heat up, the football teams from Callaway, LaGrange and Troup are in the heart of their summer programs that include a conditioning program, as well as numerous camps and seven-on-seven competitions. The summer programs for the schools will continue through the start of preseason practice, with teams able to put the pads for the first time on Aug. 1. Teams can practice one week before that without pads. There will be what the Georgia High School Association calls a “dead week” where teams aren’t allowed to hold organized activities. That will be the week of July 4th. Other than that, it’s full-steam ahead. “It’s been going really good,” LaGrange head coach Donnie Branch said of the summer program. “The kids are doing a good job with that. We’ll go hard until dead week, and then really go hard after dead week.” Like most teams, a lot of what the Grangers do during the summer consists of seven-on-seven competitions where teams can work on their plays in a non-tackling situation. “We went over to Auburn and did pretty well, and we’re going to Griffin Thursday,” Branch said. “That’s a big tournament over there.” Last week, LaGrange hosted a linemen competition hosted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A number of area schools participated, and Branch said it was fun for the linemen to take center stage. “It was good for the linemen,” Branch said. “Everything is kind of about the skill kids in the summer in seven-on-seven stuff.” The Grangers are coming off a 6-6 season that included a playoff victory, the program’s first since 2008. Callaway stays busy during the summer with seven-on-seven competitions, as well as numerous camps for players at every position. Players from Callaway have been to Cochran and Auburn, Ala. this summer for camps, and there will be plenty of other events before the summer is over. Beyond the football field, Callaway held a major fund-raiser at The Fields Golf Club earlier this month that helps pay for the summer trips. “We do a lot of camps, so you have to come up with ways to pay for them,” Callaway coach Pete Wiggins said. “We are constantly doing fundraising.” The Cavaliers continued their run of success last season by going 10-2, winning a region championship and capturing a victory in the state playoffs. The Cavaliers have won at least one playoff game in four of the past five years, and three times during that span they’ve won 10 games. Wiggins said putting together a program that consistent is a team effort. “I’ve got a great staff, and great administration, and a lot of good kids,” Wiggins said. “Callaway High School, we get better every day. I’m very blessed to be in the position I am. There’s a lot of great people that make it all happen.” Troup participates in a number of camps and seven-on-seven competitions as well, and the team also stays busy with daily activities at the school. Head coach Lynn Kendall said those activities involve “strength training, agility, conditioning, a number of other conditioning type activities. We also get some field work in as well, working on footwork and some other types of drills. It’s a pretty full day, and we do that four days a week every morning from Monday through Thursday.” The Tigers, who went 3-7 last season, are having to replace a number of departed seniors, and Kendall said the summer gives the coaches a good idea of who will be able to step up and fill those holes. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Kendall said. “We’re going to see between now and the first kickoff who’s going to step up and take those slots.”
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All-star tournament on tap
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 179 views | 0 0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print
They’ve practiced, they’ve drilled, they’ve talked strategy, and they’ve played a bunch of scrimmage games. Now it’s time to play for keeps. The Troup County 7-8-year-old all-star team will be one of four teams competing in the double-elimination Dixie Youth Baseball District 1 tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Harris Baseball Complex. Two of the four teams will advance to the state tournament in Fort Oglethorpe, and the state champion will move on to the World Series. The other three teams competing are Hogansville, Thomaston and Manchester. After a month’s worth of practices, Troup head coach Chad Bolding said the team is ready. “I practice them hard,” Boling said. “I gave them a break for a few days. I could tell we were kind of going down a little bit. You give them a break, let them refresh a little while, and then we got back at it, and we play this weekend.” All of the players on the team participated in the Troup County Parks and Recreation Commission spring league, and a lot of them are also are a part of a travel-ball team that Bolding coaches. “The baseball knowledge out here is pretty good,” Bolding said. “They’ve had a lot of coaching, a lot of instruction. They’ve all come together and blended real well.” Bolding said at this age, it’s all about teaching, of giving the players a firm foundation in the fundamentals. “My goal is, win or lose, I want them to learn,” Bolding said. “I want them to have fun, but I wan them to be disciplined and learn.” Troup County will open its tournament stay on Saturday against Manchester at 10 a.m. Also at 10 a.m., Thomaston and Hogansville will play. At noon, the winners of the early games will face off, and the two losers will also play at noon. At 2 p.m., the two remaining one-loss teams will meet in an elimination game. The two surviving teams will play at 4 p.m. on Sunday, and if needed, a final game would be played at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Bolding said he appreciates the different sponsors who have helped out financially. He said they’ve helped with “uniforms, equipment, travel, everything. They’ve really helped.” OF NOTE: The Dixie Boys Baseball 11-12-year-old tournament gets under way on Saturday in Thomaston, and the Dixie Youth Baseball 9-10-year-old tournament begins June 29 in Manchester. Troup County will have two teams in each tournament.
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Watts shines in all-star game
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 149 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Daniel Watts made the most of his one inning of work in Tuesday’s Midwest League all-star game featuring the best players from the Eastern division and the Western division. Watts, a Troup High graduate and a pitcher for the South Bend (Ind.) Silver Hawks, was named the starting pitcher for the Eastern division all-stars after a terrific first half of the season. Watts showed he was worthy of that starting assignment by throwing a perfect first inning with two strikeouts. After retiring the first batter he faced on a flyout, Watts struck out the next two hitters, and his night was done. More than 20 pitchers were used on the night, and no one threw more than one inning. The Western all-stars struck first with two runs in the top of the second, but the Eastern all-stars rallied for four runs in the fifth to take the lead. After falling behind 5-2, the Western all-stars scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie it, but the Eastern All-stars pushed a run across in the bottom of the ninth to win it 6-5. Watts earned his starting nod by going 8-3 in the first half of the season for the Silver Hawks, a single A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Watts, who is in second season in the Diamondbacks’ organization after he was drafted last year, has more wins than any other pitcher in the Midwest League.
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Grangers' Tucker heading to Point
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 89 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was an easy decision. Shortly after participating in a football workout at Point University, former LaGrange High offensive lineman Jacob Tucker was offered an athletic scholarships, and he readily accepted. “They offered him, and faxed up a letter of intent, and he signed it and sent it back quick,” said Davis Russell, the offensive-line coach at LaGrange. Tucker said he’s thrilled to get this chance. “Even though it’s not one of the big SEC schools, it’s giving me the opportunity to go play ball and do something I love,” Tucker said. “I’m excited about that.” Tucker was invited to participate in the workout for Point’s coaches, and Russell said he put on a show. “He had a great workout,” Russell said. “His 40, his run blocking and his pass blocking were all really good.” Tucker said “everything was really good. I’d been training for it ever since the coaches told me about it three weeks in advance. All my hard work paid off.” Russell believes Point is getting a fine player who is still getting better. “He’s a guy with a ton of potential,” Russell said. “He’s got a great frame. He’s probably 6-2, 230 pounds. His frame is big enough where he’ll be able to grow some. I think they’re expecting him to come down there and play tackle, and get down there and play.” Tucker was not only a football standout at LaGrange, but he also excelled in track and field, and he won a region championship in the discus during the spring. Russell said no matter the sport, Tucker gives it his all. “It’s good to see a guy who works hard get repaid,” Russell said. “He’s absolutely worked his butt off to get where he is. And he’s going to be successful. There’s no doubt in my mind.”
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Opinion
Busy summer for football teams
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 1940 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Opening night may be more than two months away, but that doesn’t mean the county’s football teams are sitting on their hands waiting for the season to get here. As the days start to heat up, the football teams from Callaway, LaGrange and Troup are in the heart of their summer programs that include a conditioning program, as well as numerous camps and seven-on-seven competitions. The summer programs for the schools will continue through the start of preseason practice, with teams able to put the pads for the first time on Aug. 1. Teams can practice one week before that without pads. There will be what the Georgia High School Association calls a “dead week” where teams aren’t allowed to hold organized activities. That will be the week of July 4th. Other than that, it’s full-steam ahead. “It’s been going really good,” LaGrange head coach Donnie Branch said of the summer program. “The kids are doing a good job with that. We’ll go hard until dead week, and then really go hard after dead week.” Like most teams, a lot of what the Grangers do during the summer consists of seven-on-seven competitions where teams can work on their plays in a non-tackling situation. “We went over to Auburn and did pretty well, and we’re going to Griffin Thursday,” Branch said. “That’s a big tournament over there.” Last week, LaGrange hosted a linemen competition hosted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A number of area schools participated, and Branch said it was fun for the linemen to take center stage. “It was good for the linemen,” Branch said. “Everything is kind of about the skill kids in the summer in seven-on-seven stuff.” The Grangers are coming off a 6-6 season that included a playoff victory, the program’s first since 2008. Callaway stays busy during the summer with seven-on-seven competitions, as well as numerous camps for players at every position. Players from Callaway have been to Cochran and Auburn, Ala. this summer for camps, and there will be plenty of other events before the summer is over. Beyond the football field, Callaway held a major fund-raiser at The Fields Golf Club earlier this month that helps pay for the summer trips. “We do a lot of camps, so you have to come up with ways to pay for them,” Callaway coach Pete Wiggins said. “We are constantly doing fundraising.” The Cavaliers continued their run of success last season by going 10-2, winning a region championship and capturing a victory in the state playoffs. The Cavaliers have won at least one playoff game in four of the past five years, and three times during that span they’ve won 10 games. Wiggins said putting together a program that consistent is a team effort. “I’ve got a great staff, and great administration, and a lot of good kids,” Wiggins said. “Callaway High School, we get better every day. I’m very blessed to be in the position I am. There’s a lot of great people that make it all happen.” Troup participates in a number of camps and seven-on-seven competitions as well, and the team also stays busy with daily activities at the school. Head coach Lynn Kendall said those activities involve “strength training, agility, conditioning, a number of other conditioning type activities. We also get some field work in as well, working on footwork and some other types of drills. It’s a pretty full day, and we do that four days a week every morning from Monday through Thursday.” The Tigers, who went 3-7 last season, are having to replace a number of departed seniors, and Kendall said the summer gives the coaches a good idea of who will be able to step up and fill those holes. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Kendall said. “We’re going to see between now and the first kickoff who’s going to step up and take those slots.”
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All-star tournament on tap
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 179 views | 0 0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print
They’ve practiced, they’ve drilled, they’ve talked strategy, and they’ve played a bunch of scrimmage games. Now it’s time to play for keeps. The Troup County 7-8-year-old all-star team will be one of four teams competing in the double-elimination Dixie Youth Baseball District 1 tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Harris Baseball Complex. Two of the four teams will advance to the state tournament in Fort Oglethorpe, and the state champion will move on to the World Series. The other three teams competing are Hogansville, Thomaston and Manchester. After a month’s worth of practices, Troup head coach Chad Bolding said the team is ready. “I practice them hard,” Boling said. “I gave them a break for a few days. I could tell we were kind of going down a little bit. You give them a break, let them refresh a little while, and then we got back at it, and we play this weekend.” All of the players on the team participated in the Troup County Parks and Recreation Commission spring league, and a lot of them are also are a part of a travel-ball team that Bolding coaches. “The baseball knowledge out here is pretty good,” Bolding said. “They’ve had a lot of coaching, a lot of instruction. They’ve all come together and blended real well.” Bolding said at this age, it’s all about teaching, of giving the players a firm foundation in the fundamentals. “My goal is, win or lose, I want them to learn,” Bolding said. “I want them to have fun, but I wan them to be disciplined and learn.” Troup County will open its tournament stay on Saturday against Manchester at 10 a.m. Also at 10 a.m., Thomaston and Hogansville will play. At noon, the winners of the early games will face off, and the two losers will also play at noon. At 2 p.m., the two remaining one-loss teams will meet in an elimination game. The two surviving teams will play at 4 p.m. on Sunday, and if needed, a final game would be played at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Bolding said he appreciates the different sponsors who have helped out financially. He said they’ve helped with “uniforms, equipment, travel, everything. They’ve really helped.” OF NOTE: The Dixie Boys Baseball 11-12-year-old tournament gets under way on Saturday in Thomaston, and the Dixie Youth Baseball 9-10-year-old tournament begins June 29 in Manchester. Troup County will have two teams in each tournament.
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Watts shines in all-star game
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 149 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Daniel Watts made the most of his one inning of work in Tuesday’s Midwest League all-star game featuring the best players from the Eastern division and the Western division. Watts, a Troup High graduate and a pitcher for the South Bend (Ind.) Silver Hawks, was named the starting pitcher for the Eastern division all-stars after a terrific first half of the season. Watts showed he was worthy of that starting assignment by throwing a perfect first inning with two strikeouts. After retiring the first batter he faced on a flyout, Watts struck out the next two hitters, and his night was done. More than 20 pitchers were used on the night, and no one threw more than one inning. The Western all-stars struck first with two runs in the top of the second, but the Eastern all-stars rallied for four runs in the fifth to take the lead. After falling behind 5-2, the Western all-stars scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie it, but the Eastern All-stars pushed a run across in the bottom of the ninth to win it 6-5. Watts earned his starting nod by going 8-3 in the first half of the season for the Silver Hawks, a single A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Watts, who is in second season in the Diamondbacks’ organization after he was drafted last year, has more wins than any other pitcher in the Midwest League.
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Kevin Eckleberry sports editor

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Articles

Grangers' Tucker heading to Point
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 89 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was an easy decision. Shortly after participating in a football workout at Point University, former LaGrange High offensive lineman Jacob Tucker was offered an athletic scholarships, and he readily accepted. “They offered him, and faxed up a letter of intent, and he signed it and sent it back quick,” said Davis Russell, the offensive-line coach at LaGrange. Tucker said he’s thrilled to get this chance. “Even though it’s not one of the big SEC schools, it’s giving me the opportunity to go play ball and do something I love,” Tucker said. “I’m excited about that.” Tucker was invited to participate in the workout for Point’s coaches, and Russell said he put on a show. “He had a great workout,” Russell said. “His 40, his run blocking and his pass blocking were all really good.” Tucker said “everything was really good. I’d been training for it ever since the coaches told me about it three weeks in advance. All my hard work paid off.” Russell believes Point is getting a fine player who is still getting better. “He’s a guy with a ton of potential,” Russell said. “He’s got a great frame. He’s probably 6-2, 230 pounds. His frame is big enough where he’ll be able to grow some. I think they’re expecting him to come down there and play tackle, and get down there and play.” Tucker was not only a football standout at LaGrange, but he also excelled in track and field, and he won a region championship in the discus during the spring. Russell said no matter the sport, Tucker gives it his all. “It’s good to see a guy who works hard get repaid,” Russell said. “He’s absolutely worked his butt off to get where he is. And he’s going to be successful. There’s no doubt in my mind.”
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Busy summer for football teams
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 1940 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Opening night may be more than two months away, but that doesn’t mean the county’s football teams are sitting on their hands waiting for the season to get here. As the days start to heat up, the football teams from Callaway, LaGrange and Troup are in the heart of their summer programs that include a conditioning program, as well as numerous camps and seven-on-seven competitions. The summer programs for the schools will continue through the start of preseason practice, with teams able to put the pads for the first time on Aug. 1. Teams can practice one week before that without pads. There will be what the Georgia High School Association calls a “dead week” where teams aren’t allowed to hold organized activities. That will be the week of July 4th. Other than that, it’s full-steam ahead. “It’s been going really good,” LaGrange head coach Donnie Branch said of the summer program. “The kids are doing a good job with that. We’ll go hard until dead week, and then really go hard after dead week.” Like most teams, a lot of what the Grangers do during the summer consists of seven-on-seven competitions where teams can work on their plays in a non-tackling situation. “We went over to Auburn and did pretty well, and we’re going to Griffin Thursday,” Branch said. “That’s a big tournament over there.” Last week, LaGrange hosted a linemen competition hosted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A number of area schools participated, and Branch said it was fun for the linemen to take center stage. “It was good for the linemen,” Branch said. “Everything is kind of about the skill kids in the summer in seven-on-seven stuff.” The Grangers are coming off a 6-6 season that included a playoff victory, the program’s first since 2008. Callaway stays busy during the summer with seven-on-seven competitions, as well as numerous camps for players at every position. Players from Callaway have been to Cochran and Auburn, Ala. this summer for camps, and there will be plenty of other events before the summer is over. Beyond the football field, Callaway held a major fund-raiser at The Fields Golf Club earlier this month that helps pay for the summer trips. “We do a lot of camps, so you have to come up with ways to pay for them,” Callaway coach Pete Wiggins said. “We are constantly doing fundraising.” The Cavaliers continued their run of success last season by going 10-2, winning a region championship and capturing a victory in the state playoffs. The Cavaliers have won at least one playoff game in four of the past five years, and three times during that span they’ve won 10 games. Wiggins said putting together a program that consistent is a team effort. “I’ve got a great staff, and great administration, and a lot of good kids,” Wiggins said. “Callaway High School, we get better every day. I’m very blessed to be in the position I am. There’s a lot of great people that make it all happen.” Troup participates in a number of camps and seven-on-seven competitions as well, and the team also stays busy with daily activities at the school. Head coach Lynn Kendall said those activities involve “strength training, agility, conditioning, a number of other conditioning type activities. We also get some field work in as well, working on footwork and some other types of drills. It’s a pretty full day, and we do that four days a week every morning from Monday through Thursday.” The Tigers, who went 3-7 last season, are having to replace a number of departed seniors, and Kendall said the summer gives the coaches a good idea of who will be able to step up and fill those holes. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Kendall said. “We’re going to see between now and the first kickoff who’s going to step up and take those slots.”
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All-star tournament on tap
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 179 views | 0 0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print
They’ve practiced, they’ve drilled, they’ve talked strategy, and they’ve played a bunch of scrimmage games. Now it’s time to play for keeps. The Troup County 7-8-year-old all-star team will be one of four teams competing in the double-elimination Dixie Youth Baseball District 1 tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Harris Baseball Complex. Two of the four teams will advance to the state tournament in Fort Oglethorpe, and the state champion will move on to the World Series. The other three teams competing are Hogansville, Thomaston and Manchester. After a month’s worth of practices, Troup head coach Chad Bolding said the team is ready. “I practice them hard,” Boling said. “I gave them a break for a few days. I could tell we were kind of going down a little bit. You give them a break, let them refresh a little while, and then we got back at it, and we play this weekend.” All of the players on the team participated in the Troup County Parks and Recreation Commission spring league, and a lot of them are also are a part of a travel-ball team that Bolding coaches. “The baseball knowledge out here is pretty good,” Bolding said. “They’ve had a lot of coaching, a lot of instruction. They’ve all come together and blended real well.” Bolding said at this age, it’s all about teaching, of giving the players a firm foundation in the fundamentals. “My goal is, win or lose, I want them to learn,” Bolding said. “I want them to have fun, but I wan them to be disciplined and learn.” Troup County will open its tournament stay on Saturday against Manchester at 10 a.m. Also at 10 a.m., Thomaston and Hogansville will play. At noon, the winners of the early games will face off, and the two losers will also play at noon. At 2 p.m., the two remaining one-loss teams will meet in an elimination game. The two surviving teams will play at 4 p.m. on Sunday, and if needed, a final game would be played at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Bolding said he appreciates the different sponsors who have helped out financially. He said they’ve helped with “uniforms, equipment, travel, everything. They’ve really helped.” OF NOTE: The Dixie Boys Baseball 11-12-year-old tournament gets under way on Saturday in Thomaston, and the Dixie Youth Baseball 9-10-year-old tournament begins June 29 in Manchester. Troup County will have two teams in each tournament.
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Watts shines in all-star game
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 149 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Daniel Watts made the most of his one inning of work in Tuesday’s Midwest League all-star game featuring the best players from the Eastern division and the Western division. Watts, a Troup High graduate and a pitcher for the South Bend (Ind.) Silver Hawks, was named the starting pitcher for the Eastern division all-stars after a terrific first half of the season. Watts showed he was worthy of that starting assignment by throwing a perfect first inning with two strikeouts. After retiring the first batter he faced on a flyout, Watts struck out the next two hitters, and his night was done. More than 20 pitchers were used on the night, and no one threw more than one inning. The Western all-stars struck first with two runs in the top of the second, but the Eastern all-stars rallied for four runs in the fifth to take the lead. After falling behind 5-2, the Western all-stars scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie it, but the Eastern All-stars pushed a run across in the bottom of the ninth to win it 6-5. Watts earned his starting nod by going 8-3 in the first half of the season for the Silver Hawks, a single A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Watts, who is in second season in the Diamondbacks’ organization after he was drafted last year, has more wins than any other pitcher in the Midwest League.
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Grangers' Tucker heading to Point
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 89 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was an easy decision. Shortly after participating in a football workout at Point University, former LaGrange High offensive lineman Jacob Tucker was offered an athletic scholarships, and he readily accepted. “They offered him, and faxed up a letter of intent, and he signed it and sent it back quick,” said Davis Russell, the offensive-line coach at LaGrange. Tucker said he’s thrilled to get this chance. “Even though it’s not one of the big SEC schools, it’s giving me the opportunity to go play ball and do something I love,” Tucker said. “I’m excited about that.” Tucker was invited to participate in the workout for Point’s coaches, and Russell said he put on a show. “He had a great workout,” Russell said. “His 40, his run blocking and his pass blocking were all really good.” Tucker said “everything was really good. I’d been training for it ever since the coaches told me about it three weeks in advance. All my hard work paid off.” Russell believes Point is getting a fine player who is still getting better. “He’s a guy with a ton of potential,” Russell said. “He’s got a great frame. He’s probably 6-2, 230 pounds. His frame is big enough where he’ll be able to grow some. I think they’re expecting him to come down there and play tackle, and get down there and play.” Tucker was not only a football standout at LaGrange, but he also excelled in track and field, and he won a region championship in the discus during the spring. Russell said no matter the sport, Tucker gives it his all. “It’s good to see a guy who works hard get repaid,” Russell said. “He’s absolutely worked his butt off to get where he is. And he’s going to be successful. There’s no doubt in my mind.”
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Busy summer for football teams
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 1940 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Opening night may be more than two months away, but that doesn’t mean the county’s football teams are sitting on their hands waiting for the season to get here. As the days start to heat up, the football teams from Callaway, LaGrange and Troup are in the heart of their summer programs that include a conditioning program, as well as numerous camps and seven-on-seven competitions. The summer programs for the schools will continue through the start of preseason practice, with teams able to put the pads for the first time on Aug. 1. Teams can practice one week before that without pads. There will be what the Georgia High School Association calls a “dead week” where teams aren’t allowed to hold organized activities. That will be the week of July 4th. Other than that, it’s full-steam ahead. “It’s been going really good,” LaGrange head coach Donnie Branch said of the summer program. “The kids are doing a good job with that. We’ll go hard until dead week, and then really go hard after dead week.” Like most teams, a lot of what the Grangers do during the summer consists of seven-on-seven competitions where teams can work on their plays in a non-tackling situation. “We went over to Auburn and did pretty well, and we’re going to Griffin Thursday,” Branch said. “That’s a big tournament over there.” Last week, LaGrange hosted a linemen competition hosted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A number of area schools participated, and Branch said it was fun for the linemen to take center stage. “It was good for the linemen,” Branch said. “Everything is kind of about the skill kids in the summer in seven-on-seven stuff.” The Grangers are coming off a 6-6 season that included a playoff victory, the program’s first since 2008. Callaway stays busy during the summer with seven-on-seven competitions, as well as numerous camps for players at every position. Players from Callaway have been to Cochran and Auburn, Ala. this summer for camps, and there will be plenty of other events before the summer is over. Beyond the football field, Callaway held a major fund-raiser at The Fields Golf Club earlier this month that helps pay for the summer trips. “We do a lot of camps, so you have to come up with ways to pay for them,” Callaway coach Pete Wiggins said. “We are constantly doing fundraising.” The Cavaliers continued their run of success last season by going 10-2, winning a region championship and capturing a victory in the state playoffs. The Cavaliers have won at least one playoff game in four of the past five years, and three times during that span they’ve won 10 games. Wiggins said putting together a program that consistent is a team effort. “I’ve got a great staff, and great administration, and a lot of good kids,” Wiggins said. “Callaway High School, we get better every day. I’m very blessed to be in the position I am. There’s a lot of great people that make it all happen.” Troup participates in a number of camps and seven-on-seven competitions as well, and the team also stays busy with daily activities at the school. Head coach Lynn Kendall said those activities involve “strength training, agility, conditioning, a number of other conditioning type activities. We also get some field work in as well, working on footwork and some other types of drills. It’s a pretty full day, and we do that four days a week every morning from Monday through Thursday.” The Tigers, who went 3-7 last season, are having to replace a number of departed seniors, and Kendall said the summer gives the coaches a good idea of who will be able to step up and fill those holes. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Kendall said. “We’re going to see between now and the first kickoff who’s going to step up and take those slots.”
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All-star tournament on tap
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 179 views | 0 0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print
They’ve practiced, they’ve drilled, they’ve talked strategy, and they’ve played a bunch of scrimmage games. Now it’s time to play for keeps. The Troup County 7-8-year-old all-star team will be one of four teams competing in the double-elimination Dixie Youth Baseball District 1 tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Harris Baseball Complex. Two of the four teams will advance to the state tournament in Fort Oglethorpe, and the state champion will move on to the World Series. The other three teams competing are Hogansville, Thomaston and Manchester. After a month’s worth of practices, Troup head coach Chad Bolding said the team is ready. “I practice them hard,” Boling said. “I gave them a break for a few days. I could tell we were kind of going down a little bit. You give them a break, let them refresh a little while, and then we got back at it, and we play this weekend.” All of the players on the team participated in the Troup County Parks and Recreation Commission spring league, and a lot of them are also are a part of a travel-ball team that Bolding coaches. “The baseball knowledge out here is pretty good,” Bolding said. “They’ve had a lot of coaching, a lot of instruction. They’ve all come together and blended real well.” Bolding said at this age, it’s all about teaching, of giving the players a firm foundation in the fundamentals. “My goal is, win or lose, I want them to learn,” Bolding said. “I want them to have fun, but I wan them to be disciplined and learn.” Troup County will open its tournament stay on Saturday against Manchester at 10 a.m. Also at 10 a.m., Thomaston and Hogansville will play. At noon, the winners of the early games will face off, and the two losers will also play at noon. At 2 p.m., the two remaining one-loss teams will meet in an elimination game. The two surviving teams will play at 4 p.m. on Sunday, and if needed, a final game would be played at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Bolding said he appreciates the different sponsors who have helped out financially. He said they’ve helped with “uniforms, equipment, travel, everything. They’ve really helped.” OF NOTE: The Dixie Boys Baseball 11-12-year-old tournament gets under way on Saturday in Thomaston, and the Dixie Youth Baseball 9-10-year-old tournament begins June 29 in Manchester. Troup County will have two teams in each tournament.
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Watts shines in all-star game
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 149 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Daniel Watts made the most of his one inning of work in Tuesday’s Midwest League all-star game featuring the best players from the Eastern division and the Western division. Watts, a Troup High graduate and a pitcher for the South Bend (Ind.) Silver Hawks, was named the starting pitcher for the Eastern division all-stars after a terrific first half of the season. Watts showed he was worthy of that starting assignment by throwing a perfect first inning with two strikeouts. After retiring the first batter he faced on a flyout, Watts struck out the next two hitters, and his night was done. More than 20 pitchers were used on the night, and no one threw more than one inning. The Western all-stars struck first with two runs in the top of the second, but the Eastern all-stars rallied for four runs in the fifth to take the lead. After falling behind 5-2, the Western all-stars scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie it, but the Eastern All-stars pushed a run across in the bottom of the ninth to win it 6-5. Watts earned his starting nod by going 8-3 in the first half of the season for the Silver Hawks, a single A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Watts, who is in second season in the Diamondbacks’ organization after he was drafted last year, has more wins than any other pitcher in the Midwest League.
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Grangers' Tucker heading to Point
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 89 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was an easy decision. Shortly after participating in a football workout at Point University, former LaGrange High offensive lineman Jacob Tucker was offered an athletic scholarships, and he readily accepted. “They offered him, and faxed up a letter of intent, and he signed it and sent it back quick,” said Davis Russell, the offensive-line coach at LaGrange. Tucker said he’s thrilled to get this chance. “Even though it’s not one of the big SEC schools, it’s giving me the opportunity to go play ball and do something I love,” Tucker said. “I’m excited about that.” Tucker was invited to participate in the workout for Point’s coaches, and Russell said he put on a show. “He had a great workout,” Russell said. “His 40, his run blocking and his pass blocking were all really good.” Tucker said “everything was really good. I’d been training for it ever since the coaches told me about it three weeks in advance. All my hard work paid off.” Russell believes Point is getting a fine player who is still getting better. “He’s a guy with a ton of potential,” Russell said. “He’s got a great frame. He’s probably 6-2, 230 pounds. His frame is big enough where he’ll be able to grow some. I think they’re expecting him to come down there and play tackle, and get down there and play.” Tucker was not only a football standout at LaGrange, but he also excelled in track and field, and he won a region championship in the discus during the spring. Russell said no matter the sport, Tucker gives it his all. “It’s good to see a guy who works hard get repaid,” Russell said. “He’s absolutely worked his butt off to get where he is. And he’s going to be successful. There’s no doubt in my mind.”
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Busy summer for football teams
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 1940 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Opening night may be more than two months away, but that doesn’t mean the county’s football teams are sitting on their hands waiting for the season to get here. As the days start to heat up, the football teams from Callaway, LaGrange and Troup are in the heart of their summer programs that include a conditioning program, as well as numerous camps and seven-on-seven competitions. The summer programs for the schools will continue through the start of preseason practice, with teams able to put the pads for the first time on Aug. 1. Teams can practice one week before that without pads. There will be what the Georgia High School Association calls a “dead week” where teams aren’t allowed to hold organized activities. That will be the week of July 4th. Other than that, it’s full-steam ahead. “It’s been going really good,” LaGrange head coach Donnie Branch said of the summer program. “The kids are doing a good job with that. We’ll go hard until dead week, and then really go hard after dead week.” Like most teams, a lot of what the Grangers do during the summer consists of seven-on-seven competitions where teams can work on their plays in a non-tackling situation. “We went over to Auburn and did pretty well, and we’re going to Griffin Thursday,” Branch said. “That’s a big tournament over there.” Last week, LaGrange hosted a linemen competition hosted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A number of area schools participated, and Branch said it was fun for the linemen to take center stage. “It was good for the linemen,” Branch said. “Everything is kind of about the skill kids in the summer in seven-on-seven stuff.” The Grangers are coming off a 6-6 season that included a playoff victory, the program’s first since 2008. Callaway stays busy during the summer with seven-on-seven competitions, as well as numerous camps for players at every position. Players from Callaway have been to Cochran and Auburn, Ala. this summer for camps, and there will be plenty of other events before the summer is over. Beyond the football field, Callaway held a major fund-raiser at The Fields Golf Club earlier this month that helps pay for the summer trips. “We do a lot of camps, so you have to come up with ways to pay for them,” Callaway coach Pete Wiggins said. “We are constantly doing fundraising.” The Cavaliers continued their run of success last season by going 10-2, winning a region championship and capturing a victory in the state playoffs. The Cavaliers have won at least one playoff game in four of the past five years, and three times during that span they’ve won 10 games. Wiggins said putting together a program that consistent is a team effort. “I’ve got a great staff, and great administration, and a lot of good kids,” Wiggins said. “Callaway High School, we get better every day. I’m very blessed to be in the position I am. There’s a lot of great people that make it all happen.” Troup participates in a number of camps and seven-on-seven competitions as well, and the team also stays busy with daily activities at the school. Head coach Lynn Kendall said those activities involve “strength training, agility, conditioning, a number of other conditioning type activities. We also get some field work in as well, working on footwork and some other types of drills. It’s a pretty full day, and we do that four days a week every morning from Monday through Thursday.” The Tigers, who went 3-7 last season, are having to replace a number of departed seniors, and Kendall said the summer gives the coaches a good idea of who will be able to step up and fill those holes. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Kendall said. “We’re going to see between now and the first kickoff who’s going to step up and take those slots.”
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All-star tournament on tap
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 179 views | 0 0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print
They’ve practiced, they’ve drilled, they’ve talked strategy, and they’ve played a bunch of scrimmage games. Now it’s time to play for keeps. The Troup County 7-8-year-old all-star team will be one of four teams competing in the double-elimination Dixie Youth Baseball District 1 tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Harris Baseball Complex. Two of the four teams will advance to the state tournament in Fort Oglethorpe, and the state champion will move on to the World Series. The other three teams competing are Hogansville, Thomaston and Manchester. After a month’s worth of practices, Troup head coach Chad Bolding said the team is ready. “I practice them hard,” Boling said. “I gave them a break for a few days. I could tell we were kind of going down a little bit. You give them a break, let them refresh a little while, and then we got back at it, and we play this weekend.” All of the players on the team participated in the Troup County Parks and Recreation Commission spring league, and a lot of them are also are a part of a travel-ball team that Bolding coaches. “The baseball knowledge out here is pretty good,” Bolding said. “They’ve had a lot of coaching, a lot of instruction. They’ve all come together and blended real well.” Bolding said at this age, it’s all about teaching, of giving the players a firm foundation in the fundamentals. “My goal is, win or lose, I want them to learn,” Bolding said. “I want them to have fun, but I wan them to be disciplined and learn.” Troup County will open its tournament stay on Saturday against Manchester at 10 a.m. Also at 10 a.m., Thomaston and Hogansville will play. At noon, the winners of the early games will face off, and the two losers will also play at noon. At 2 p.m., the two remaining one-loss teams will meet in an elimination game. The two surviving teams will play at 4 p.m. on Sunday, and if needed, a final game would be played at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Bolding said he appreciates the different sponsors who have helped out financially. He said they’ve helped with “uniforms, equipment, travel, everything. They’ve really helped.” OF NOTE: The Dixie Boys Baseball 11-12-year-old tournament gets under way on Saturday in Thomaston, and the Dixie Youth Baseball 9-10-year-old tournament begins June 29 in Manchester. Troup County will have two teams in each tournament.
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Watts shines in all-star game
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 149 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Daniel Watts made the most of his one inning of work in Tuesday’s Midwest League all-star game featuring the best players from the Eastern division and the Western division. Watts, a Troup High graduate and a pitcher for the South Bend (Ind.) Silver Hawks, was named the starting pitcher for the Eastern division all-stars after a terrific first half of the season. Watts showed he was worthy of that starting assignment by throwing a perfect first inning with two strikeouts. After retiring the first batter he faced on a flyout, Watts struck out the next two hitters, and his night was done. More than 20 pitchers were used on the night, and no one threw more than one inning. The Western all-stars struck first with two runs in the top of the second, but the Eastern all-stars rallied for four runs in the fifth to take the lead. After falling behind 5-2, the Western all-stars scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie it, but the Eastern All-stars pushed a run across in the bottom of the ninth to win it 6-5. Watts earned his starting nod by going 8-3 in the first half of the season for the Silver Hawks, a single A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Watts, who is in second season in the Diamondbacks’ organization after he was drafted last year, has more wins than any other pitcher in the Midwest League.
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Grangers' Tucker heading to Point
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 89 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was an easy decision. Shortly after participating in a football workout at Point University, former LaGrange High offensive lineman Jacob Tucker was offered an athletic scholarships, and he readily accepted. “They offered him, and faxed up a letter of intent, and he signed it and sent it back quick,” said Davis Russell, the offensive-line coach at LaGrange. Tucker said he’s thrilled to get this chance. “Even though it’s not one of the big SEC schools, it’s giving me the opportunity to go play ball and do something I love,” Tucker said. “I’m excited about that.” Tucker was invited to participate in the workout for Point’s coaches, and Russell said he put on a show. “He had a great workout,” Russell said. “His 40, his run blocking and his pass blocking were all really good.” Tucker said “everything was really good. I’d been training for it ever since the coaches told me about it three weeks in advance. All my hard work paid off.” Russell believes Point is getting a fine player who is still getting better. “He’s a guy with a ton of potential,” Russell said. “He’s got a great frame. He’s probably 6-2, 230 pounds. His frame is big enough where he’ll be able to grow some. I think they’re expecting him to come down there and play tackle, and get down there and play.” Tucker was not only a football standout at LaGrange, but he also excelled in track and field, and he won a region championship in the discus during the spring. Russell said no matter the sport, Tucker gives it his all. “It’s good to see a guy who works hard get repaid,” Russell said. “He’s absolutely worked his butt off to get where he is. And he’s going to be successful. There’s no doubt in my mind.”
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Busy summer for football teams
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 1940 views | 0 0 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Opening night may be more than two months away, but that doesn’t mean the county’s football teams are sitting on their hands waiting for the season to get here. As the days start to heat up, the football teams from Callaway, LaGrange and Troup are in the heart of their summer programs that include a conditioning program, as well as numerous camps and seven-on-seven competitions. The summer programs for the schools will continue through the start of preseason practice, with teams able to put the pads for the first time on Aug. 1. Teams can practice one week before that without pads. There will be what the Georgia High School Association calls a “dead week” where teams aren’t allowed to hold organized activities. That will be the week of July 4th. Other than that, it’s full-steam ahead. “It’s been going really good,” LaGrange head coach Donnie Branch said of the summer program. “The kids are doing a good job with that. We’ll go hard until dead week, and then really go hard after dead week.” Like most teams, a lot of what the Grangers do during the summer consists of seven-on-seven competitions where teams can work on their plays in a non-tackling situation. “We went over to Auburn and did pretty well, and we’re going to Griffin Thursday,” Branch said. “That’s a big tournament over there.” Last week, LaGrange hosted a linemen competition hosted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A number of area schools participated, and Branch said it was fun for the linemen to take center stage. “It was good for the linemen,” Branch said. “Everything is kind of about the skill kids in the summer in seven-on-seven stuff.” The Grangers are coming off a 6-6 season that included a playoff victory, the program’s first since 2008. Callaway stays busy during the summer with seven-on-seven competitions, as well as numerous camps for players at every position. Players from Callaway have been to Cochran and Auburn, Ala. this summer for camps, and there will be plenty of other events before the summer is over. Beyond the football field, Callaway held a major fund-raiser at The Fields Golf Club earlier this month that helps pay for the summer trips. “We do a lot of camps, so you have to come up with ways to pay for them,” Callaway coach Pete Wiggins said. “We are constantly doing fundraising.” The Cavaliers continued their run of success last season by going 10-2, winning a region championship and capturing a victory in the state playoffs. The Cavaliers have won at least one playoff game in four of the past five years, and three times during that span they’ve won 10 games. Wiggins said putting together a program that consistent is a team effort. “I’ve got a great staff, and great administration, and a lot of good kids,” Wiggins said. “Callaway High School, we get better every day. I’m very blessed to be in the position I am. There’s a lot of great people that make it all happen.” Troup participates in a number of camps and seven-on-seven competitions as well, and the team also stays busy with daily activities at the school. Head coach Lynn Kendall said those activities involve “strength training, agility, conditioning, a number of other conditioning type activities. We also get some field work in as well, working on footwork and some other types of drills. It’s a pretty full day, and we do that four days a week every morning from Monday through Thursday.” The Tigers, who went 3-7 last season, are having to replace a number of departed seniors, and Kendall said the summer gives the coaches a good idea of who will be able to step up and fill those holes. “There are a lot of opportunities,” Kendall said. “We’re going to see between now and the first kickoff who’s going to step up and take those slots.”
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All-star tournament on tap
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 179 views | 0 0 comments | 19 19 recommendations | email to a friend | print
They’ve practiced, they’ve drilled, they’ve talked strategy, and they’ve played a bunch of scrimmage games. Now it’s time to play for keeps. The Troup County 7-8-year-old all-star team will be one of four teams competing in the double-elimination Dixie Youth Baseball District 1 tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Harris Baseball Complex. Two of the four teams will advance to the state tournament in Fort Oglethorpe, and the state champion will move on to the World Series. The other three teams competing are Hogansville, Thomaston and Manchester. After a month’s worth of practices, Troup head coach Chad Bolding said the team is ready. “I practice them hard,” Boling said. “I gave them a break for a few days. I could tell we were kind of going down a little bit. You give them a break, let them refresh a little while, and then we got back at it, and we play this weekend.” All of the players on the team participated in the Troup County Parks and Recreation Commission spring league, and a lot of them are also are a part of a travel-ball team that Bolding coaches. “The baseball knowledge out here is pretty good,” Bolding said. “They’ve had a lot of coaching, a lot of instruction. They’ve all come together and blended real well.” Bolding said at this age, it’s all about teaching, of giving the players a firm foundation in the fundamentals. “My goal is, win or lose, I want them to learn,” Bolding said. “I want them to have fun, but I wan them to be disciplined and learn.” Troup County will open its tournament stay on Saturday against Manchester at 10 a.m. Also at 10 a.m., Thomaston and Hogansville will play. At noon, the winners of the early games will face off, and the two losers will also play at noon. At 2 p.m., the two remaining one-loss teams will meet in an elimination game. The two surviving teams will play at 4 p.m. on Sunday, and if needed, a final game would be played at 6 p.m. on Sunday. Bolding said he appreciates the different sponsors who have helped out financially. He said they’ve helped with “uniforms, equipment, travel, everything. They’ve really helped.” OF NOTE: The Dixie Boys Baseball 11-12-year-old tournament gets under way on Saturday in Thomaston, and the Dixie Youth Baseball 9-10-year-old tournament begins June 29 in Manchester. Troup County will have two teams in each tournament.
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Watts shines in all-star game
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 149 views | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Daniel Watts made the most of his one inning of work in Tuesday’s Midwest League all-star game featuring the best players from the Eastern division and the Western division. Watts, a Troup High graduate and a pitcher for the South Bend (Ind.) Silver Hawks, was named the starting pitcher for the Eastern division all-stars after a terrific first half of the season. Watts showed he was worthy of that starting assignment by throwing a perfect first inning with two strikeouts. After retiring the first batter he faced on a flyout, Watts struck out the next two hitters, and his night was done. More than 20 pitchers were used on the night, and no one threw more than one inning. The Western all-stars struck first with two runs in the top of the second, but the Eastern all-stars rallied for four runs in the fifth to take the lead. After falling behind 5-2, the Western all-stars scored three runs in the top of the ninth to tie it, but the Eastern All-stars pushed a run across in the bottom of the ninth to win it 6-5. Watts earned his starting nod by going 8-3 in the first half of the season for the Silver Hawks, a single A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Watts, who is in second season in the Diamondbacks’ organization after he was drafted last year, has more wins than any other pitcher in the Midwest League.
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Grangers' Tucker heading to Point
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 19, 2013 | 89 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was an easy decision. Shortly after participating in a football workout at Point University, former LaGrange High offensive lineman Jacob Tucker was offered an athletic scholarships, and he readily accepted. “They offered him, and faxed up a letter of intent, and he signed it and sent it back quick,” said Davis Russell, the offensive-line coach at LaGrange. Tucker said he’s thrilled to get this chance. “Even though it’s not one of the big SEC schools, it’s giving me the opportunity to go play ball and do something I love,” Tucker said. “I’m excited about that.” Tucker was invited to participate in the workout for Point’s coaches, and Russell said he put on a show. “He had a great workout,” Russell said. “His 40, his run blocking and his pass blocking were all really good.” Tucker said “everything was really good. I’d been training for it ever since the coaches told me about it three weeks in advance. All my hard work paid off.” Russell believes Point is getting a fine player who is still getting better. “He’s a guy with a ton of potential,” Russell said. “He’s got a great frame. He’s probably 6-2, 230 pounds. His frame is big enough where he’ll be able to grow some. I think they’re expecting him to come down there and play tackle, and get down there and play.” Tucker was not only a football standout at LaGrange, but he also excelled in track and field, and he won a region championship in the discus during the spring. Russell said no matter the sport, Tucker gives it his all. “It’s good to see a guy who works hard get repaid,” Russell said. “He’s absolutely worked his butt off to get where he is. And he’s going to be successful. There’s no doubt in my mind.”
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