Mountain Brook girls, Hoover boys win titles
Transcription
Mountain Brook girls, Hoover boys win titles
SPORTS DOUG SEGREST Cribbs: Spring football will fly in Birmingham hen Joe Cribbs shuffled out of Buffalo and straight into the USFL, more than a few people questioned his sanity. The year was 1984. And Cribbs had to get out of Buffalo, because he felt he was under an Orwellian thumb. ‘‘When I came over I really had no other options,” Cribbs said. ‘‘There was no free agency, so I either had to play with Buffalo under their terms or go to the USFL.” So he headed home, joining the Birmingham Stallions for a bigger paycheck and a chance to reconnect with friends and family, who saw him play professionally for the first time. Bottom line, ‘‘it was a good move for me. I love this state. I could live anywhere I wanted to, but I chose to raise my family here in Alabama.” The 1980 AFC Rookie of the Year, Cribbs returned to Buffalo for the 1985 season, with a nice salary bump to boot, and finished his eight-year NFL career in 1988 with Miami. Now Cribbs is back in football as president of the upstart Team Alabama franchise in the new All America Football League. Wednesday, in a press conference announcement at Legion Field, Cribbs will announce the team’s first head coach. As previously reported here, former Pittsburgh, Texas A&M and Mississippi State coach Jackie Sherrill is a candidate. Also in the mix is former Alabama and Auburn defensive coordinator Bill Oliver. The surprise candidate may be NFL Europa veteran Mike Jones, but Cribbs isn’t ready to announce a decision. ‘‘It will be someone the fans will identify immediately,’’ Cribbs said, ‘‘someone who will unquestionably be recognized as a winner.’’ The AAFL begins play in April with six franchises — Birmingham, Arkansas, Florida, Michigan, Tennessee and Texas — playing a round-robin schedule. All players will be college graduates. Early signees for the league include 2006 University of Florida quarterback Chris Leak, 2001 Heisman Trophy winner Eric Crouch of Nebraska and locals Reggie Myles, Rudy Griffin and Freddie Milons of Alabama and Jake Arians of UAB. Each team can protect as many players from its state as it wishes, with the rest of the team selected in a late-January draft. Tryouts have been held nationally for the past four months, but Cribbs is keeping a close eye on the conclusion of the 2007 college season. ‘‘I’m very interested in the guys who will be available after the season is over,” Cribbs said. ‘‘Let’s say someone has a shot, but a long shot, at making the NFL. They could pick up $50,000 to $100,000 for four or five months with us and still have the opportunity to play in the NFL.” Brandon Cox, are you listening? While the AAFL concept has drawn rave reviews from national media outlets, let’s face it: This is Birmingham. The grim reaper of off-brand football lives at Legion Field. Cribbs, however, is undeterred. ‘‘There’s a market for football in the spring. People came out and supported the Stallions. We were well supported even though we were on a suicide mission. ‘‘I love Birmingham. We’re a city that has been stagnant for a while, but we’re poised to explode. I believe this team has the ability to be a catalyst for something positive.” W E-MAIL: [email protected] Sunday, November 11, 2007 COLLEGE BASKETBALL 20C BIRMINGHAM NBA 20C OUTDOORS 21C [ 15C ] GOLF 22C AT A CROSSROADS ON THE FIELD, AN ATHLETIC DIVIDE Faced with lack of money and low participation, Birmingham high school sports programs struggle to produce winning teams and college opportunities. It’s a lot easier in the suburbs, where many top athletes prefer to play. By SOLOMON CRENSHAW JR. and JON SOLOMON News staff writers he scoreboard told only part of the story. Bessemer’s Jess Lanier High beat Birmingham’s West End 45-19 in a Thursday night football game at Lawson Field in September. Lanier fans crammed their side of the stadium. On the other side, fewer than 200 people showed up, including the band. The meager following for West End is just one sign of where high school athletics stand in Birmingham City Schools. The system that decades ago set the pace for athletic success in the state is more likely to lose than win when its teams face schools from surrounding suburbs. Beyond victories and defeats, the current state of Birmingham prep athletics is costing its residents opportunities and hope. Some coaches and parents assert that college athletic scholarships are less likely to go to Birmingham students than their suburban counterparts because of the city’s reputation of poorer academics, training and resources. Also missing are the positive feelings and unifying bond that athletic success can bring to a school and community. Low morale can prompt athletes to leave the system, and as the enrollment drops, funding for the school system falls, as well. Birmingham school board member W.J. Maye, the chairman of the school system’s athletics committee, spoke bluntly about city teams on the field: “We are terrible. There was a time we were the system people didn’t want to play. Now everybody puts us on the schedule so they can have a win.” The city’s only state titles in the past 14 years — nine of them — have come in boys and girls basketball. During that period, teams in the growing Birmingham suburbs — where the city’s nine high schools are outnumbered more than 3-to-1 — have captured 193 state titles in 21 sports. T SPECIAL/RICK ZERBY NEWS STAFF/FRANK COUCH Birmingham city school teams don’t get the fan and booster support that suburban teams do. In top photo, the West End stands are sparse before a September football game at Lawson Field. Below, Hoover vs. Vestavia Hills at Regions Park packed ’em in. ABOUT THE SERIES INSIDE This is the seventh in a series of special reports exploring challenges that face the Birmingham-Hoover metropolitan area. Today, The Birmingham News looks at education and athletics. y A city team struggles / 17C ONLINE y A city team succeeds / 17C y Coaches turn to Birmingham Athletic Partnership / 17C ELSEWHERE Join the conversation at al.com, the online home of The Birmingham News, at blog.al.com/bn/ crossroads, where you can also find previous installments of this series. y Inequities show in classrooms too / 1A y Ideas from other urban school districts / 7A See ATHLETICS y Good schools drive real estate market / 7A CLASS 6A CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIP NEXTEL CUP SERIES Page 18C CHECKER AUTO PARTS 500 Mountain Brook girls, Johnson, Gordon are fast friends, in Hoover boys win titles more ways than one McGregor, Dunn top individuals That won’t stop teammates from battling for Cup title By WESLEY HALLMAN News staff writer By JENNA FRYER For The Birmingham News OAKVILLE — Patrick McGregor and the Hoover High School boys cross country team had revenge on their minds entering the 2007 Cl a ss 6 A c h a mpi o ns h ip meet. The Associated Press Mountain Brook won the Class 6A boys title in 2006, NEWS STAFF/JEFF ROBERTS and McGregor and his teammates decided they weren’t Hoover’s Patrick McGregor, left, wins the 6A boys’ going to let the Spartans division while Austin’s Jennifer Dunn wins the girls’ 6A claim back-to-back champi- title at Indian Mounds Park in Oakville on Saturday. onships. McGregor posted the top time to win the indiHayes came in 14th and JusINSIDE vidual championship as the tin Rogers finished 16th. VesBucs claimed the team title y Results / 14C tavia Hills came in second, Saturday at Indian Mounds Smiths Station finished third, y More cross country / 14C Park in Oakville. Auburn came in fourth and Mountain Brook missed out on the boys title, but the Spartans did earn the 6A girls title. Hoover finished first in the team standings due to three runners claiming spots in the top 20. McGregor won, Nick Mo u n t a i n fifth. Brook See RUNNING c l a i me d Page 22C AVONDALE, Ariz. — Searching for an escape from their race to the Nextel Cup title, teammates Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon separately headed to Mexico for a little rest and relaxation. Both championship contenders planned to use their short vacations to recharge before heading to Phoenix International Raceway to resume the title chase today. Racing and the tense battle between two good friends were the farthest things from their minds. They never expected to run into each other, but did when Gordon, traveling with his wife, spotted Johnson having lunch. Traveling with his wife and infant daughter, Gordon pulled the car over for a brief visit with Johnson and his wife. “We’re sitting at a beach bar, relaxing and having a fun lunch and in the door walk Ingrid and Jeff,” said Johnson, who was coming off of last Sunday’s win at Texas. See PHOENIX Page 19C Jimmie Johnson “With the few races that we have left, I think it’s better to be on top and trying to control it if at all possible. Right now I’m glad to be leading. There’s not a lot of time left.” INSIDE y Bump and Run / 19C SPORTS Sunday, November 11, 2007 BIRMINGHAM The Birmingham News j 17C AT A CROSSROADS NEWS STAFF/LINDA STELTER NEWS STAFF/MICHELLE WILLIAMS A Ramsay High School cheerleader celebrates after the Ramsay girls score during the game against Fairfield last Tuesday. While Carver’s enrollment ranks third-highest among city high schools with just under 1,000, about 30 players dressed out for preseason football practice. RAMSAY HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL CARVER HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL A city team succeeds A city team struggles Rams continue to hit goals on, off court By RAY MELICK News staff writer The gym looks like every other high school gym around the city of Birmingham, with its well-worn hardwood floor surrounded by creaky, fold-up bleachers and its thick, stale air. Yet this gym differs from the others because it is home to the Ramsay Rams, winners of the past four Class 5A girls basketball championships. In a city whose sports teams often lag behind in finances, facilities, equipment, support and coaches, basketball is a near-perfect sport. All a school needs is a gym, a ball, and one coach, unlike sports such as football that require special equipment and huge fields and large coaching staffs. And kids can play basketball year-round, anywhere they can find a hoop. Ramsay’s facilities are not better than at other schools, and the coaches are not better paid. The athletics budget comes entirely from ticket sales and concessions. So why the success? Wenonah girls coach Emanuel “Tub” Bell, whose teams dominated girls basketball in the city until four years ago, says it’s the coach, Robert Mosley. “He turned that program around,” Bell said. “He knows what he’s doing. He runs a tight, disciplined ship. . . . Sure, he got a couple of really good players. But he made them successful with his discipline, his tactics, and having smart kids.” Magnet school The 32-year-old Mosley played high school basketball at Leflore, under legendary coach J.D. Shelwood. He studies the game constantly, working camps in the summer and “borrowing” from other coaches. “I don’t have a lot of interests,” Mosley said. “I’m married, I go to church, and basketball — that’s all I do.” Good players certainly help. Samone Kennedy and Katherine Graham, who arrived at Ramsay at the same time as Mosley five years ago, led the Rams to a four-year 128-13 record, and have now taken their games to the University of South Carolina and LSU, respectively. Kennedy was zoned for Woodlawn. Graham lived in the Huffman zone. Both could go to Ramsay because Ramsay is a “magnet” school, open to about 160 freshmen a year from the Birmingham school district who can pass the entrance requirements. “If you give me the pick of all the students in the city of Birmingham, I would win 20-plus games every year,” said Birmingham City Schools Athletics Director George Moore. “. . . That’s no slight on the coaches. The coaches are doing an excellent job. But for the most part, they get to pick and choose and all those other schools don’t.” But, said Mosley, “the school takes the first 160 that qualify, and then those 160 have to maintain a 2.5 grade point average while they are here or they have to go back to the school where they are zoned. The truth is, good athletes don’t always excel in the classroom. And a lot of very good athletes want to come here but don’t qualify. “And even if we do get them, the curriculum is all honors or AP (advanced placement). You can’t hide kids in classes where you know they can pass.” Ramsay Principal Jeanette Watters said, “I don’t recruit athletes. I recruit students. There are no exceptions.” Ramsay, which does not have a football team, has a parent booster club that works basketball games and concession stands. The parents are typically more involved — in athletics and academics — because they consider education a priority and they value having their children at Ramsay. “When you get that kind of talent, plus smart kids who come from good backgrounds — that’s a winning combination,” Bell said. Demanding accountability Knowing the pressure his players are under to stay at Ramsay allows Mosley to establish what he sees as the foundation to his team’s success: accountability. “I’m accountable,” Mosley said. “The assistants are accountable. The kids are accountable, not just on the court but in the classroom. We hold them accountable for everything: the way they carry themselves, the way they dress, their grade point average. “And about the only reason we allow a kid to miss practice is for tutoring.” The Ramsay team learned Mosley was serious his first year, when he benched his team’s best player, Rutgers University signee Sammeika Thrash, for the first three games of her senior season for missing three practices. “You don’t miss practice,” said Kennedy. “We knew that. That wasn’t true everywhere. I had a friend at Woodlawn. I asked her, ‘Why aren’t you at practice?’ She said she didn’t feel like going to practice.” Mosley can demand because his players are used to meeting demands. “These kids are accustomed to achieving, or they wouldn’t be here,” he said. “Our kids are, by nature, competitive in everything they do — academically as well as athletically. “The big thing is, we don’t make excuses. We can’t give our kids a reason not to succeed. So we take care of what we’ve got, instill pride in what we have, and try to take advantage of what we have instead of worrying about what we don’t have.” E-MAIL: [email protected] No wins, but players never quit trying By ANDREW GRIBBLE News staff writer Carver High School Athletics Director Alvin Moore watches his 11 a.m. gym class walk laps around one of the school’s two gymnasiums. It’s midway through August and the Carver football team has yet to play a game, but the 33-year veteran of Birmingham City Schools knows it’s going to be a tough year. The 50 or so kids walking around him this day are nearly twice as many as the squad that took the field for its 42-0 season-opening loss to Wenonah and wrapped up its season with a 47-0 loss to Parker. At Carver, playing football ranks behind other interests. “You see that kid over there,” Moore said, pointing toward a student large enough to play nose tackle. “He’s in the band.” In between the bookend losses to its innercity rivals, Carver faced some of the best teams in Alabama week after week in Class 6A, Region 6. Composed mostly of affluent Birmingham suburbs, Region 6 has been dubbed by many fans and writers as the toughest football region in the state. Some teams in the region, such as Vestavia Hills, are forced to dole out duplicate numbers because their roster size cracks the century mark. “When you pull up in one bus and the other team pulls up in four,” Moore said, “that’s a problem.” Tough to watch Interim coach BeShaw Smith sums up the biggest problem with Carver’s football team matter-of-factly. “Who wants to be surrounded by losers?” Smith said. “Not saying that we are losers, but who is going to say “They lost all their games, so I want to play for them?’ ” It’s been decades since Carver ranked among the elite in high school football, but the problems began to mount in 2004 when the school was bumped up from 5A to 6A, the state’s largest classification, and were compounded two years later when the school moved to Region 6. The Rams have gone 2-18 since joining Region 6. Their lone win in the region, and only one this season, came from a forfeit victory over Hoover. Excluding the Hoover forfeit, opponents outscored the Rams 487 to 10 this season. “We’ll start a game out all right,” junior safety Jeremy Howard said, “but having everybody playing both ways (offense and defense) kills us.” Senior quarterback Ashton Gaither said that kids in the school “don’t have as much inter- est in football as they do other sports,” such as basketball, which will draw more than 50 boys to tryouts. That’s even though Carver’s enrollment ranks third-highest among city high schools with just under 1,000. Joe Nash was a member of the Carver football team that played Dothan’s Northview in the 1981 Class 4A championship game at Legion Field. Nowadays he sits in the stands as his son Joseph plays for the current Rams squad. He admits it can be tough to watch. “Kids love to be with a winner,” the elder Nash said. “If they ain’t with a winner, they’ll move on. They’ll move on to Hoover, to Erwin, to Huffman. It’s happening right now.” Tedarius Brown, for instance, led the Rams in 2006 as a promising freshman quarterback, but transferred to Erwin before the start of the season. Coaching carousel Carver was handicapped this season in ways other than numbers. While players at Spain Park and Hoover participated in 7-on-7 passing camps this summer, the players at Carver still didn’t know who would coach them. Coach Jackie Hurst had been fired after spring practice earlier in the year; Moore cited a 49-point loss to Bessemer’s Jess Lanier in the spring game and a lack of “preparedness.” In August, when schools all across the state were in the thick of two-a-days, interim coach Phillip King took a leave of absence after the death of his brother. Smith took over as interim coach and King never returned. By season’s end, Carver still didn’t have an official permanent coach. Principal Darrell Hudson said his search has been delayed and limited because he has been allowed to search only within the system due to a systemwide reduction-in-force plan. When he can, Hudson said, he will launch a “nationwide search. “We’re looking for a coach to completely rebuild the program,” Hudson said. Including King, the Rams have had four head coaches since 2004. Mike Vest of the Birmingham Athletic Partnership said that despite many obstacles, he sees a lot of pride within the football team. “I see these kids coming back every Friday night trying to play, trying to win, trying to run the plays and trying to score,” Vest said. “These kids are going to look back and be proud that they didn’t quit.” Even in their final game of the season, midway through the fourth quarter and down by 47, the Rams mounted a drive deep into Parker territory before stalling. “The group I got here considers themselves winners,” Smith said, “because they’re still here.” E-MAIL: [email protected] BIRMINGHAM ATHLETIC PARTNERSHIP City coaches often turn to main corporate donor System AD wants more self-reliance By JON SOLOMON and SOLOMON CRENSHAW JR. News staff writers The Birmingham City Schools athletics department wants its major donor to take a lesser role in funding daily operations and focus on paying for larger projects. Birmingham Athletics Director George Moore wants the Birmingham Athletic Partnership (BAP), a nonprofit corporation that has helped fund city athletics since 2002, to change its focus to allow the city to become more financially self-reliant. BAP is willing to do that, but for now it often is the first option for coaches seeking equipment or supplies due to the school system’s bureaucracy and reduced funding. BAP is also the first option for many corporations that want to donate to city athletics. Edgar Welden, the founder and president of BAP, acknowledged that corporations which donate money to BAP do so partly because of media reports that many state audits have found problems in the school system’s bookkeeping. A 2005 audit, for instance, showed unaccounted gate receipts. “This isn’t about lack of trust,” Welden said. “This is about the difference between business and government. They would like to give money to a business person as opposed to a faceless government agency.” Moore said that while he appreciates donations to and from BAP, “before BAP was ever in existence, we had athletics in the city of Birmingham.” BAP officials and Moore say their comments should not be interpreted as criticism of the other. Both sides say they need to maintain their relationship to help students. BAP has purchased more than $350,000 worth of equipment and other items for city schools since its inception. NEWS STAFF/BEVERLY TAYLOR Edgar Welden, founder and president of the Birmingham Athletic Partnership, and Mike Vest, BAP executive director, pose at Ramsay High School with a new soccer goal purchased by BAP. The old one is behind them at left. BAP also pays for camps, clinics and media events. Without BAP, Birmingham athletics “probably would have folded a long time ago,” said Shades Valley football coach Curtis Coleman, Huffman’s former coach. “They’re providing not only the financial support, but the moral support.” Huffman baseball coach Demetrius Mitchell said he wishes BAP Executive Director Mike Vest or Welden was the city’s athletics director. “What’s the point of even having an athletic director if BAP is doing what it’s doing?” Mitchell said. Vest and Welden said they have no interest, nor the capability, to run the athletics department. But Mitchell’s question raises an issue Moore has been fighting: Some coaches simply bypass the athletics director’s office and go directly to BAP. “Sometimes we get so many coaches’ requests, it’s overwhelming,” Vest said. Ten corporations are donating $25,000 a year for four years to BAP, which then purchases items for schools based on requests. The requests from coaches are supposed to be approved by their principal and Moore, but that doesn’t always happen, Moore said. “We need to look at our resources first at the school level, then look at the district, and then after that, we can look at BAP,” he said. Vest said BAP used to be the last resort for coaches seeking help, but now seems to be the first. He instructs coaches to have their requests properly approved. The system is improving, he added. In essence, Vest said, coaches rely on BAP because it has become the booster club for all city schools. “You go to Hayes High School and you try to go fundraise across the street at the hair shop, or go down to the little gas station down the street — nobody gives them anything,” Vest said. BAP had a surplus of $173,741 in 2006, with $340,590 in revenue and $166,849 in expenses, according to its most recent 990 form. In the future, Moore said, he would like BAP to renovate the track at Lawson Field and help to one day create an athletic complex. Welden is concerned about future giving to Birmingham athletics, especially as current donors get older. “We tell these kids, ‘The main reason we’re doing what we’re doing is somebody cares about you and wants to give you all these opportunities. We want you to remember when you go to college, don’t forget about the kids you left behind.’ ” E-MAIL: [email protected] 18C j SPORTS The Birmingham News BIRMINGHAM Sunday, November 11, 2007 AT A CROSSROADS A glaring divide on the field ATHLETICS: From Page 15C Coaches, parents and administrators point to several obstacles facing Birmingham’s high school athletics program, especially in comparison to suburban systems: y Lack of resources, such as money, facilities and large booster clubs. y Low morale, lack of fan support in some cases, and a perceived lack of cooperation from administrators. y Lack of a good feeder program from middle schools. y Lower quality of coaching in several sports. y The flight of quality athletes to suburban systems. y Low student participation on teams. “It’s on the bottom,” retired Ramsay boys basketball coach Willie Scoggins said of the state of Birmingham athletics. “It was better in the ‘60s than it is now and you didn’t have as much to work with (then).” “We ain’t got nothing but football and basketball,” Parker fan Carlton Woods said. “Baseball, we get slaughtered in that. We ain’t got the batting machines and all that kind of stuff the county schools have.” Th e city ’ s i s su es have reached the point where “it’s not a question of why kids run away,” said Gene Edelman, a retired Birmingham teacher and member of the system’s athletics committee, “it’s why don’t more run away?” Athlete exodus Dennis King began his high school football career at Birmingham’s Huffman High. He ended it at Hoover High, a nationally-recognized program that has won five of the past seven 6A state championships and has sent many students to c o l l e ge o n a t h l e t i c s c h o l arships. Dennis Davis, King’s father, said his son transferred in part because the family saw differences between the schools in academics and athletics. “He liked the way the (athletics) program was run at Hoover over Huffman High School,” Davis said. “Huffman didn’t have the facilities that Hoover has. Really, none of the city schools have the facilities that Hoover and Spain Park have.” George Moore, the Birmingham school system’s athletics director, said part of the city’s challenge stems from its loss of athletes to the suburbs. The exodus is prompted by better environments for athletics, academics and safety, he said. “If we had all these key athletes who are going to some of the outlying school districts, you would see that our program would look a lot better,” Moore said. He and others raised questions about whether departing athletes are legally transferring. Some city coaches, parents and administrators say they believe their athletes are being illegally recruited away by people in other communities. “That’s what they do,” said Maye, the athletics committee chairman. “They recruit them in the seventh and eighth grade so they have them in high school.” Some athletes leave because they think the suburbs will provide them with a better stage for getting an athletic scholarship to college. Birmingham has recently produced some elite college football players, such as Alabama’s Andre Smith and Vanderbilt’s Earl Bennett, but there aren’t large numbers. Dabo Swinney, an assistant football coach at Clemson who recruits the state of Alabama, said he has seen fewer city players that he wants to sign in the past few years. Swinney, who comes from the Birmingham area and played and coached at the University of Alabama, said the city’s facilities and the academic resumes for individual players fall behind other urban cities. “I think they’ve made some imp rovements , bu t th ere should be more,” Swinney said. “I look at some of the schools there and what they have, and it’s just a shame. Those kids deserve better. There are some very prideful schools within the city that have done a tremendous job without as much.” It’s not just football where city athletes are losing opportunities. Edgar Welden, the founder and president of the Birmingham Athletic Partnership, said city athletes in many sports are missing out on college scholarships because they don’t have the same resources and opportunities to learn fundamentals and get seen by recruiters. BAP, a nonprofit corporate foundation created in 2002 to aid city athletics, is trying to create better exposure for athletes by staging clinics and purchasing video equipment to send footage of athletes to college recruiters. “Basketball has the AAU system, but the system is not there in other sports where we should be excelling, track, volleyball, softball and baseball,” Welden said. “We’ve got the athletes who could excel, but they have not had enough extra opportunities.” Inability to even offer some sports adds to the missed opportunities. In the Birmingham system, Huffman and Ramsay provide the most sports, with 10 each. Twelve of the 13 high schools in the Jefferson County system offer more than 10 sports, including Clay-Chalkville and Gardendale with 19 each. In sports that do exist, a lot of college coaches “won’t recruit certain kids because they weren’t taught it a certain way,” Moore said. Some Birmingham coaches say they don’t have the tools — in particular, weight equipment — to train their athletes. They also complain that they aren’t afforded the time in their schedules to sufficiently prepare for practices and games as coaches at suburban schools do. Many of Birmingham’s high schools are housed in buildings that are several decades old and lack amenities that newer suburban schools have. “It’s not a matter that we don’t have as much as other people. It’s that our money doesn’t go anywhere,” said Edelman , wh o frequ entl y points out athletic shortcomings at board of education meetings. “Have you seen the weight room out there at Jackson-Olin? That’s why (football coach Michael) Clisby takes his team to Ensley to do his workouts. It’s minuscule.” Ensley High stopped operating two years ago. Wenonah High, which opened this year, has no weight room. B i r mi n gh a m S u p er i n t e n dent Stan Mims says the difference begins with dollars. “They have more money,” said Mims, who recently completed his first year. “We just don’t have the funds. The suburban districts usually find people who come and sponsor them.” Boosters less help The base supplemental pay that coaches receive is comparable between the Birmingham and Jefferson County systems. A Jefferson County high school head football coach with 12 or more years of experience, for instance, gets $7,171. A Birmingham high school head football coach gets $6,500 for 15 or more years. One major difference: Jefferson County schools typicall y can better rew ard coaches through supplements from their booster clubs. Moore said each Birmingham high school has an athletics booster club, but not all function as well as he would like. The most participation comes from Jackson-Olin and Huffman, he said. Basketball is the biggest draw and most successful sport in the city, and it shows in the coaches’ pay. Birmingham head basketball coaches’ supplements range from $5,000 to $6,500, more than Jef f er so n Co u nty ’ s, w hi c h range from $4,000 to $5,800. Birmingham awards an additional $4,000 to coaches in any sport who win a state championship, and $2,000 for state runner-up finishes. Lately, however, city coaches have felt anything but rewarded. All high school and middle school coaching positions were vacated during the summer and coaches had to reapply. With the basketball season starting last week, Birmingham does not have its fulltime coaches under contract yet. A number of basketball coaches declined to coach their teams without a contract. “It’s a shame for the second time this year (including the fall season) the actions of the athletic director and others have put the sports program in turmoil,” Edelman said. In an interview this fall, Mo o r e a c k n o wl ed ged th e mass coaching removals and rehires can “destroy a coach’s morale” but believes coaches should not feel threatened. “Our coaches would be the first to say certain schools are not doing what they need to do in order to be winning,” Moore said. “I think non-renewals can be a positive. We need to have something out there where we keep our coaches accountable.” Moore said the timing of the non-renewals last summer was not good and won’t happen again. Most coaches, with the exception of some spring sports, will know their status by April of each year, he said. Principals hire their own coaches, and sometimes they make those hires based on classroom abilities without c o ns id era ti o n o f c o a c h in g knowledge, Moore said. The motivation to coach merely for extra money is a “big problem” in some sports, Moore added. As an example, he recalled a woman hired by a principal as a middle school baseball coach who explained she would learn about the sport on the Internet. Since Birmingham’s most recent state title in baseball, by Huffman in 1982, six suburban schools have combined to win 17 state baseball titles. Hu f f ma n b a seb a l l c o a c h Demetrius Mitchell expressed exasperation at the lack of fundamental skills taught in the city. One team, he said, once recorded 39 stolen bases in one game. “Some teams don’t record 39 stolen bases in one year,” Mitchell said. “They’re stealing with no thought of strategy.” Mitchell’s complaints go beyond the lack of fundamentals. Mitchell, who has been suspended by Moore in the past, said he would grade the city athletics department’s support as a D or D-minus due to a lack of stability and cooperation. “Because some people have been in the system 15, 20 years, they’re not doing anything,” Mitchell said. “They want other people that are young, energetic, enthusiastic about their craft to do nothing, as well.” Former Wenonah Athletics Director Henry Pope said Moore is doing the best he can, considering he must yield most of his authority to the school board. Middle school Birmingham’s issues start well before the athletes reach high school. Mims, the superintendent, said the key to improving the city’s athletic fortunes is to improve middleschool sports. So m e c o a c h e s s ay t h e teaching process is hurt by the feeder system that brings athletes from middle schools. The enrollment zones of middle schools are fragmented, sending teammates from one middle school team to as many as three high schools. “If you’ve got a middle school that’s going to Spain Park, everything that they’ve got on that football team goes to Spain Park,” West End football coach Jim Holifield said. “Over here, I might get two players, Parker gets three or four and Wenonah gets three or four. You’re diluting everything.” Moore said he has at- tempted to hold clinics at middle schools to improve the fundamentals, but high school coaches want no part of it. The coaches don’t want to teach an athlete who one day beats their team on a Friday night, he said. Carolyn Cobb, the president of the Birmingham school board, said coaches shouldn’t blame the feeder system. “Whatever school they’re coming from, they (coaches) still have a responsibility of teaching and training,” Cobb said. Mims said the issue of feeder patterns is a problem and the system’s athletics committee will study it. Several coaches say they are further handicapped by low athletic participation, particularly compared to the schools they compete against. A survey by The Birmingham News found that on average Birmingham high schools have 192 athletes and a student body of 902, while Jefferson County averages 278 athletes and a student body of 998. Students who play multiple sports were counted more than once. About three years ago, Holifield wrote a message to himself on the blackboard in the coaches’ office: “Against All Odds.” “Even though we don’t have all the things that all the other schools have, we’re still gonna fight, we’re still gonna struggle, we’re never gonna give up,” he said. “We’re gonna fight against all odds.” E-MAIL: [email protected]
Similar documents
CLICK ME TO SEE the arts world tour in PDF
of musicians, dancers and other arts professionals and students every summer is driven by the September-to-May season, which comes to a screeching halt when temperatures start climbing. Where do th...
More information