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March 26, 2021

March 26, 2021

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GOD BLESS

Our thoughts and prayers go out to everyone adversely effected by Hurricane Delta… and My heart goes out to my friends in the Lake Area who endured major destruction at the hands of Hurricane Laura and Hurricane Delta. My thoughts and prayers are with you. We strongly urge readers of this newsletter to donate to a worthwhile Hurricane oriented charity in the Lake Area.


TODAY’S COLUMNS:

Scott dissects March Madness

Dennis does a Q & A

Please scroll down below.


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THE WIZARDRY OF OS

Has there ever been a bigger flop than the Big 10 in the NCAA Tournament this year? 9 teams out of 68, and after the first weekend, only Michigan remains.

The more you look at it the worst it gets. The Big 10 had two #1, two #2, and a four seed. Ohio State (2 seed) and Purdue (4 seed) were upset on day one. Then, Iowa and Illinois lost in the round of 32.

Ohio State made 5 of 23 three point attempts (21.7%) and 9 out of 18 FTs. Purdue made 9 of 30 threes (30%). While Luke Garza was 3 out of 4 and scored 36 points, the rest of the team for Iowa was 5 out of 21. The Hawkeyes made 32% of their threes. Illinois was 4 of 14 from three point land for 28.6%.

Michigan, on the other hand, was 10-25 (40%) from beyond the arc against LSU. It is not a coincidence that Michigan is the only team from the Big 10 to make the Sweet Sixteen.

LSU did almost everything they needed to in order to pull the upset. Three turnovers is a ridiculously low number of turnovers. Keep in mind, LSU would regularly commit around 20 turnovers a game at the beginning of the year. Rebounding was also a huge concern entering the game, and LSU only gave up 5 offensive rebounds.

The reality is that LSU had to go to extremes to keep Michigan from scoring at will inside and the natural result was open shots from the outside. LSU did what they needed to do and Michigan was up to the challenge. The terrible charge call on Cam Thomas will stick in my mind as the margin of error for LSU was tiny and that was too much to overcome late. The disappointing part is that LSU just so happened to be paired with the one Big 10 team that was up to the challenge from the perimeter.

The final evaluation of the 2020-21 LSU basketball team should be that it improved over the course of the year. There is no doubt that LSU let some games get away at the end, but there is also no doubt that LSU did a much better job closing out games at the end of the season.

Where does LSU basketball go from here? The Tigers will certainly lose Smart, Watford, and Thomas. Most people think that Days will not return as well. The returners that Tiger fans should first expect to contribute are Cook, Gaines, Hyatt, Wilkinson, Leblanc, O´Neal, and Gray. That is a solid core that will need help scoring.

As of now, LSU´s signing class is led by Jerrell Colbert, a 6´9¨ forward. He is a mix of Leblanc and Watford. Though not quite as skilled as Watford, he plays with the effort and athleticism of Leblanc with better size. He will certainly contribute next year.

Coach Wade has already made it clear that LSU is in the market for experienced transfers. While he has not said it, I am sure he is looking for one player with size and another that scores.

Even if LSU is able to add players that fit this mold, next year's team will be much different from this team. Wade has shown the ability to adapt to his teams. With the addition of a few quality transfers and the development of players already on the roster (which this staff does very well), LSU can be right back in the NCAA Tournament next year.


HEY REF

No, it isn’t a mistake since this week I’m turning the tables on myself so to speak and will try to answer your questions, it’s only fair. So this week I relent to those very people that read my column. So now you know why for this week I’ve renamed this space “Ask the REF”! I know some will agree with my answers and some, maybe all, will disagree with me. But I don’t do this each week to make friends. And I’m not going to make friends with some because of my views so I’ll ask you to respect what I write as I respect your views, questions and opinions.

I promise to answer all of them, the easy ones and the tough ones with as much candor as I can. So with that out of the way let me pass along a quick reminder that all suspects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. And with that the first answer comes from a question I was asked not long ago about the number of players being arrested, jailed and kicked out of school. The question asked had something to do with what should be the first thing any recruit is told when a school comes a calling for their services. I didn’t try to be funny as the continued number of players being arrested for all sorts of crimes seems to be taking off again. To be brutally honest more and more schools have to retain the services of attorneys to represent players that find themselves in deep trouble with the law and the money has to come from somewhere. I think it’s very sad to see so many schools having to put aside huge amounts of cash to defend their athletes.

Another question that I seem to get more often than others has to do with comparing players from my playing days to today’s PERFORMERS! And as words have meanings when I was in school, graduated West Monroe H. S. in 1974, we had PLAYERS while today teams are made up with HIGHLY PAID PERFORMERS! Let me explain, back in my day we PLAYED the game whereas today PERFORMERS are all the rage. That’s about the best way I can describe the circus they put on every Sunday afternoons and Monday nights. Sure they train year round getting bigger, stronger, and faster all the while mastering the latest dance crazes. Their diets are basically scientific regimes intended to produce muscle while lifting weights maximizes those new muscles, but keeping them light on their feet to entertain the fans. I’m sorry but what I see on the field and in the stands today looks like four year olds trying to be fancy while taking every piece of candy you give them.

Back in the early 70’s we would spend 6th period in the weight room before practice as the basics of lifting weights, etc. was just beginning to take shape kinda like being in its infancy. Today’s athletes continue working hard over 12 months and not just during that sport’s regular season. So, today you don’t have kids on a high school or college field you’ve got rock solid men. And it has to be that since missing a game or a season will cost players MILLIONS of dollars.

But the down side to what today’s PERFORMERS must endure is the unrelenting pressure. It’s a sad thing to watch grown men have their lives and future destroyed by that unrelenting pressure of today’s games. And it’s doubly sad to realize so many never recover from the game. They eat, drink and sleep THE GAME! It’s all consuming and it destroys not only the player but his family, his relations with his spouse and children. And for what? To hear crowds roar at their every move? The message they live with day after day is they aren’t big enough, strong enough or fast enough. So the pressure to continue without ever getting to the apex of strength and speed consumes so many.

The constant pressure put upon professional PERFORMERS is just too much for many to handle. And of course this causes many of them to resort to cheating and turning to science (drugs) to get them where they need or want to be simply because they won’t make the MILLION DOLLAR roster. It’s not rocket science to see that today’s PERFORMERS are without a doubt much bigger, stronger, faster and quicker but getting that way causes too many of them to consume massive amounts of drugs. But in the end their bodies begin to self-destruct. I will not blame the sporting world entirely because drugs and drug use has always been a huge part of daily life and athletics in our country.

It’s a fact that far too many kids are getting hooked on some very serious drugs before they ever walk onto a playing field. But my number one “BITCH” is the fact that schools put their bottom lines above their player’s health simply because they need those money makers. Then schools decide to cut loose players that’ve used up all their eligibility. It’s not uncommon for schools to say “TO HELL WITH THEM AFTER 3 OR 4 YEARS”!

And on the flip side of this issue is the fact that many kids aren’t attending a university to learn a profession or get an education. So many feel their only hope in life is to become a professional athlete. So, instead of getting a degree they then drop out of school to make their mark in the “real” world. We only hear about those that’ve made it to the NFL or the NBA. But what about the vast number of those that don’t get drafted or make a roster? Simply put they are soon forgotten. Players have gotten a little smarter so to speak and have started forgoing a bowl game, one that’s branded as meaningless, to give them more options when the draft rolls around. I can’t blame them for doing it because one wrong turn and they’ve sustained an injury that causes them to lose out on a multi-million dollar career.

Don’t get me wrong when I say a “meaningless game” I’m not referring to an SEC Title game or National Championship game. The old way of thinking about bowl games they were considered kind of a reward for a successful season. At least that’s what they were before TV contracts and sponsors poured billions of dollars into the numerous conferences across the country hoping to land “THE” game. And of course that’ll do nothing for the players but will continue what I say is modern day slavery by not giving the players the biggest piece of the money pie.

In the wild world of billion dollar sports a player must be the one to make the final decision on how he’ll insure his health and ability to make a living. Many players have families, children and many more come from poor families. Being able to garner a professional contract worth millions is the culmination of a lifelong plan that’s years in the making to this new generation of million dollar athletes. I have to agree 1,000% with any player that decides to opt out of bowl games to protect a very valuable asset and that is a healthy, uninjured body.

Like so many things in this money hungry world the only thing that matters is “What can you do for me today”? So I say with all my support that I hope many more players will not suit up for one last game. To the player it’s as certain as death and taxes; a bowl game is not worth losing a career over or one’s health. I say more power to those guys that know what they want and have a plan on being able to be self-sufficient. I raise my glass to those players who’ll be able give back to the ones that sacrificed so much for them.

I’ll wrap this up by THANKING all those that say they enjoy my column. Please send in more questions as I sometime get to writing too much and can’t fit in more of the questions you want me to answer.

Till next week…


Press Release

by

Jim Spring

The year 2020 marked the tenth anniversary of the Denham Springs High School Athletic Hall of Fame (HOF) since its inception in 2011, though celebration of this feat was postponed until now due to the Corona virus pandemic. Then school Principal Kelly Jones and Athletic Director Dru Nettles tasked J. W. “Pee Wee” Day, Butch Wax, Robert Graves, and Jim Spring—all DSHS alumni and former Yellow Jacket athletes—to form a Steering Committee to establish criteria, procedures, and a timeline that would bring into existence the Hall of Fame.

The Steering Committee believed that such an elite athletic fraternity could become a community treasure. The city has only one high school, thus enabling the public to rally around its flagship scholastic institution. Community support for the organization has been outstanding, benefited by generous exposure in The Livingston Parish News through the years.

The Committee embraced the notion of hosting a formal HOF induction banquet each year instead of pursuing a more minimalist approach that would involve little fanfare, such as the informal introduction of members during a sporting event. Held annually at Forrest Grove Plantation each September, the popular banquet has become one of the most anticipated events on the city’s social calendar. The affair is made possible through the gracious support of title sponsor Hood Dental Care and, before that, Sport-N-Center.

In 2011, one hundred and fourteen years after the school’s founding, leaders created this prestigious Hall of Fame—now a decade old—to celebrate its rich sports tradition and to honor its many sports heroes.

The four-member Steering Committee, which provided structure and gave birth to the institution, was then absorbed by an 11-member Selection Committee that meets each spring to review nominations and vote on that year’s class by secret ballot. School officials have striven to protect the integrity of the selection process, understanding that holding the community’s trust is essential to the credibility and long-term success of the Hall of Fame. To that end, DSHS relies solely upon the public to submit all nominations.

Though DSHS has become the second largest high school in the state since its founding in 1897, for the most part it was considered a small country school. Thus, all the more remarkable that it has produced such a surprising number of heralded sports figures. Among its alumni are five prep All-Americans, seven collegiate All-Americans, four professional athletes, an Olympian, an NFL team president, and a Golden Spikes Award winner (college baseball’s equivalent to the Heisman Trophy).

Notable athletic achievements are state championships in baseball, boys and girls basketball, boys and girls softball, and girls bowling. The 1972 Yellow Jacket football team came close to a state title, earning runner-up laurels in a fierce match versus Hahnville that ended in a 26-26 tie, losing the game–-and the title—on first downs in an era before overtime play was part of the game.

One additional achievement, evidence of its solid reputation built over the past decade, is the HOF’s assistance to six other high schools seeking guidance in establishing such an institution on their campuses.

Member Demographics

Currently the Hall of Fame has enshrined 73 sports greats, an average of eight per class, with pending inductions of another six whose installations were delayed until September of 2021 due to the pandemic. Another such postponement occurred when The Great Flood of 2016 caused a deferment that year as well. In an effort to jumpstart the long overdue recognition of Yellow Jacket greats, the first two classes (2011, 2012) were expanded to no more than 15 each. Subsequent classes are limited to no more than eight each, although depending upon the size and quality of the nominee pool, the number varies from year to year.

Of the total membership, 20 are deceased including 11 whose inductions were posthumous. Though all the inductees lived in Denham Springs during their high school years, their life journeys have taken some to other states—Texas, Mississippi, South Carolina, Virginia, New York, Arizona, and Washington—and one to a foreign country. Katrina Hibbert, an exchange student from Australia who led the Lady Jackets basketball team to a storybook 37-0 season and a Class 5A state title in 1996, has since returned to live Down Under.

Fifty-four of the 58 members inducted thus far in the “Athlete” category earned All State honors or were State Champions in individual sports such as tennis or track and field. Some received this distinction more than once and some in more than one sport. Ten coaches and only five supporters have been so honored, rounding out the 73 members. The Yellow Jackets’ only three-sport, first team All State honoree—and thus considered the most well-rounded athlete in school history—is Cecil Harris who was lauded in basketball, baseball, and track and field during the 1960s.

While Cecil Harris may have been our most well rounded athlete, Ben McDonald is arguably the most celebrated and well known as a two-sport, two-time prep All State selection, a two-time collegiate All-American at LSU, winner of the prestigious NCAA Golden Spikes Award, a #1 draft pick in Major League Baseball, a gold medal Olympian, and an ESPN sports analyst.

On the other hand, Tasmin Mitchell is arguably the most heralded and decorated, having been a rare four-time prep All State choice (three-time MVP), a two-time prep All-American on three different teams (Parade, McDonald’s, EA Sports), the Grasshoops National Prep Freshman Player of the Year, a Louisiana Mr. Basketball selectee, Louisiana Gatorade Player of the Year, a collegiate Freshman All-American at LSU, and a current LSU men’s assistant basketball coach.

Not to be overshadowed in state and national honors is 2006 DSHS graduate Regena Jackson, easily the most decorated female athlete in school history. A two-time prep All State basketball star for the Lady Jackets, she became a two-time NAIA All-American at Belhaven College where she was one of three NAIA National Player of the Year finalists her senior year. Averaging 24 points per game, Jackson led the nation as the NAIA National Scoring Leader as a senior. Her jersey is prominently displayed in the Ring of Honor at the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in Knoxville, Tennessee.

In addition to their athletic achievements, many Hall of Fame members were campus leaders as well. All State basketball stars Donald Ray Hood and Eddie Joe Jones, the latter who went on to become an NFL President with the New Orleans Saints and Miami Dolphins, displayed exceptional leadership ability by serving as DSHS Class Presidents all four years of high school. Selected as Mr. DSHS during their senior years were Hall of Famers Pee Wee Day, Butch Wax, Jim Kemp, Sam Digirolamo, and Jeff Harris. Honored as Miss DSHS was All State basketball and track star, Nancy Davis McConnell.

The many family ties represented among HOF members may suggest that good genes play a role in creating great athletes. Fathers and sons Cecil and Jeff Harris, along with Van Foster Jr. and Van Foster III echo that sentiment, as do fathers and daughters George Meadors and Sarah Meadors Mestepey, plus Tony and Lisa Dugas. All State basketball players Sammy Dixon Hannaman and Nikki Dixon Leader are sisters, while Joey Chustz and Jamie Chustz-Felder are brother and sister. Brothers Cecil and Raymond Harris, A. E. and Lathan Sutton, and Rogers and Randy Pope are further examples. Prep football All-American Kelvin Robinson and his basketball star cousin, Drexel Robinson, also share family bonds.

Of all those inducted into the Hall of Fame, only two athletes have been honored to perform in the prestigious LHSAA All Star Game in two different sports. All State football and baseball great, Glenn Glass, participated in those two sports. All State basketball and softball star, Lisa Dugas, displayed her talent on the court and on the diamond. At the collegiate level, the only Yellow Jackets to earn All SEC laurels are Katrina Hibbert, Russ Johnson, Ben McDonald, Tasmin Mitchell, and Shannon Roubique. Hibbert was a three-time, first team All SEC basketball player at LSU. Roubique was a three-time, first team All SEC football player at Auburn.

Dual HOF Members

Before the DSHS Athletic Hall of Fame was established, the school was represented in the LHSAA Sports Hall of Fame by three legendary coaches and one legendary athlete. Louis “Loodie” Carlisle was the first successful Jacket football coach of the modern era, enjoying a 66-31-9 record. Having won a Class 2A state championship in 1964 while coaching at Assumption High of Napoleonville, he led DSHS to a Class 3A state runner-up finish to Hahnville in 1972. His teams won three district titles and made 11 playoff appearances. Carlisle was named District Coach of the Year four times.

Former DSHS student-athlete-coach-athletic director-principal Butch Wax was the winningest football coach in school annals with a 152-84-2 career record, earning five district titles and making 19 post season appearances with four quarterfinal finishes. He coached regular season undefeated teams in 1978 and 1983, plus one 12-win season, two 11-win seasons, and five 9-win seasons. Wax was selected District Coach of the Year five times.

Basketball mentor, Alton Leggette, was a fiery coach and masterful tactician who brought excellence to the DSHS boys basketball program after winning the Class C State Championship at Holden in 1963, building a remarkable 251-44 record in six seasons with the Rockets. His Jacket teams enjoyed a 247-111 record, winning one district title and making three playoff appearances. Widely respected within the coaching community, he was named Mr. Louisiana Basketball in 1990 and received the SLU Legends in Coaching Award in 1999. During his career, Leggette was selected District Coach of the Year four times, Parish Coach of the Year six times, and Class C State Coach of the Year in 1963.

The Jackets’ final member and only athlete in the LHSAA Sports Hall of Fame is Ben McDonald—superstar athlete at the high school, collegiate, professional, and Olympic levels. In addition to receiving college baseball’s equivalent of the Heisman Trophy as a senior at LSU, he was also named National College Player of the Year by Sporting News, Baseball America, and ESPN in his junior year. He was a major league pitcher with the Baltimore Orioles for seven seasons and the Milwaukee Brewers for two before retiring after three shoulder surgeries. McDonald is also a member of the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame in Natchitoches and the National College Baseball Hall of Fame located on the Texas Tech campus in Lubbock, Texas.

Two-time National Prep All-American tennis sensation, Jana Garrison Orillion, and National Prep All-American football star, Kelvin Robinson, have been nominated to the LHSAA Sports Hall of Fame but not yet selected. Robinson was the first high school All-American at DSHS in any sport.

Community Support

Throughout the HOF’s ten years as the seat of athletic excellence in the community, local businesses and individual Jacket fans have been charitable with their support. During the first year when the annual banquet, though well attended, lost about $300 because of associated expenses, Pee Wee Day recommended that local sponsors be solicited to underwrite the cost of plaques. It is the custom to present inductees with a handsome keepsake plaque made of walnut with an 8X10 space to insert a photograph of the individual. A separate metal and acrylic plaque bearing an etched likeness of the inductee is displayed in the Hall of Fame. The two plaques, which cost a total of $400 annually are made by A-1 Awards, Inc. in Indianapolis. Thus, they represent an expense of $3,200 for, say, an eight member Hall of Fame class. The goodwill of local sponsors now absorbs this significant expense.

In 2014 Stacy Phipps of Sport-N-Center was approached about becoming the first HOF title sponsor that would largely underwrite the expense of the catered banquet. Following a generous five-year run as title sponsor, Sport-N-Center handed the mantle to Dr. Ed Hood of Hood Dental Care which is beginning its third year in that distinguished role. The benevolent spirit of these two community leaders and former DSHS student-athletes cannot be overstated.

The Great Flood of 2016 caused the postponement of the annual banquet that year as well as the relocation of the Hall of Fame itself. When floodwaters wrecked the former display area in Hornsby gym, Big Mike’s Sports Bar & Grill became the new home in 2019. The former site at DSHS offered limited public access since it was located on a closed campus. The new site offered by Mike O’Neal provides unlimited access seven days a week during restaurant hours. Local carpenter and handyman John Olivier created the handsome display, while local painter Lionel Kabel provided the attractive signage.

Yellow Jacket Firsts

A number of Hall of Fame members were groundbreaking pioneers in DSHS athletics and the first to achieve some sports-related milestone. Rex Wilkinson is believed to be the first All State athlete on the first state championship team in school history (1923). He is also believed to be the first to play men’s basketball at LSU. Longtime DSHS principal of 35 years, Grady Hornsby, changed the school’s mascot from Tomcats to Yellow Jackets and adopted purple and gold as the school colors in 1930. He also coached the first 11-man football team from 1930-1933.

Bert Barnett, a two-sport All State honoree in basketball and track (1946), was the first to receive a full athletic scholarship in these sports at LSU. Universally considered the Yellow Jackets’ first great football player, Randy Rushing was a two-time All State running back (1957, 1958), boasting a 13-yards per carry average with 1,873 yards as a junior and 1,862 yards as a senior. He was also the first DSHS thinclad to break the 10-second barrier in the 100-yard dash with a 9.9 second record that still stands.

Tom Kelly is believed to be the first to play football at LSU, as a walk-on freshman quarterback in 1960, and also the first to play four years of college football (LSU, USL). Les O’Neal, an All State pitcher, was the first to sign a four-year athletic scholarship to play baseball at the college level (USL) in 1961, eventually earning All Gulf States Conference selection (twice) and Conference Player of the Year. In 1963 Jim Spring became the first to receive a four-year athletic scholarship to play football at an SEC university (Tulane). Slammin’ Sam Digirolamo was a 1968 All State linebacker and the first to sign a four-year athletic scholarship to play football at LSU.

During the era of school integration, Drexel Robinson was the first black athlete at DSHS to earn a four-year athletic scholarship in any sport at the collegiate level. In 1973 he signed to play basketball at Louisiana College where he was honored as team captain three times and MVP twice. He would later be inducted into the Louisiana College Sports Hall of Fame. Rene Moseley Severio, a two-sport All State choice in basketball and track, was the first female athlete to receive an athletic scholarship in any sport to a four-year college (Northeast Louisiana) in 1980. She was also the first to win an individual State Championship in track in any event, as a record-setting long distance runner with a time of 5:14 in the mile.

Jana Garrison Orillion shocked the tennis world as the first girl in Louisiana to win four consecutive high school State Championships (1983-1986). She became a tennis superstar as the first two-time National Prep All-American (1985, 1986) in school history, boasting a career record of 65-1. Considered the first great female softball player at DSHS, Shannon Covington Fuentes was a two-time All State pitcher with a 78-3 career record and a 50-game winning streak. She led the Lady Jackets to state titles in 1986 and 1987.

A two-sport All State star in football (1985) and baseball (1986), Glenn Glass was the first running back to break the single season rushing mark of 2,000 yards (2,036) and the first to rush for over 4,000 career yards (4,016), along with 39 career touchdowns. Laurin Byars Garrison is the only DSHS coach in any sport to be directly involved in winning four state championships (1986, 1987, 1998, 2000), while also securing four state runner-up finishes. As an assistant coach and co-head coach, her softball teams amassed a superb 479-123 career record.

Nikki Dixon Leader is the only Yellow Jacket in school history with the distinction of being an All State athlete (basketball/1964) and a two-time State Championship coach (softball/1986,1987). She was also named District Coach of the Year in girls basketball eight consecutive seasons. One-year Australian exchange student and All State basketball player, Katrina Hibbert, led the Lady Jackets to a state title in 1996 and, after a sterling career at LSU, became the first (and only) DSHS female athlete drafted into the WNBA (Seattle Storm) to play professional basketball. In 1999 Joey Chustz became the first (and only) Jacket in school history to be drafted into the NFL (Jacksonville Jaguars) and play professional football, having been an All State pick at DSHS and All-America honoree at Louisiana Tech.

HOF Banquet

The annual banquet at Forrest Grove is a dignified yet fun event that is well supported by the community. Crowds typically exceed 200 attendees with a record turnout of 276 in 2017. Shortly before the new members are introduced, deceased members are acknowledged individually with the clanging of a bell as their name is announced and their photo displayed. The most anticipated happening of the banquet is the videotaped interview of each inductee, displayed on three large screens. The interviews provide a delightful mix of humor, nostalgia, little-known sports tales, and great storytelling.

Orchestrating all the moving parts of the banquet agenda is the Emcee who must be organized, likeable, verbally facile, and sometimes humorous. During the past decade, Hall of Fame emcees have included these local personalities—Pee Wee Day, Randy Smith, Doug Hughes, and Kelly Jones—all DSHS alumni who have each made the event memorable. Only once has the banquet been headlined by a guest speaker, in 2018, when popular LSU men’s basketball coach Will Wade filled the room with laughter, inside basketball nuggets, and colorful recruiting stories.

Perhaps a bit old fashioned—yet jubilant in this setting on this nostalgic evening—the banquet concludes as the crowd is invited to give a rousing, pride-filled rendition of the school’s alma mater.

The DSHS Athletic Hall of Fame has earned a reputation for integrity, for being well organized, for its classy banquet. Thanks to the support of the Denham Springs community, the dedication of volunteers, and a pool of quality nominees, your Hall of Fame is well positioned for continued excellence in future decades.

Prep All-Americans Collegiate All-Americans Professional Athletes

Kelvin Robinson Ben McDonald Ben McDonald

Jana Garrison Orillion Russ Johnson Russ Johnson

Ryan Byrd Joey Chustz Katrina Hibbert

Tasmin Mitchell Tasmin Mitchell Joey Chustz

Cade Doughty Regena Jackson

Travis Swaggerty

Abby O’Donohgue


-DENHAM SPRINGS HS FOOTBALL RADIO BROADCASTS ARE A JON FINE PRODUCTION ON FAMILY RADIO, 91.9 FM, BATON ROUGE and JonFineProductions.com.

JON IS THE OWNER OF AN EBAY STORE. ArrestedDevelopmentMediaGuides, SELLS SPORTS PUBLICATIONS. YOU CAN LINK TO IT BY VISITING JonFineProductions.com.

JON IS PROUD TO WORK AS A MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE FOR SPORTSRADIO-1310-KEZM-SULPHUR/LAKE CHARLES.


JON IS PROUD TO WORK FOR PAYJUNCTION AS A MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE.


FOR MORE INFO, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE: JONFINEPRODUCTIONS. COM


DENHAM SPRINGS HS FOOTBALL RADIO BROADCASTS ARE A JON FINE PRODUCTION ON FAMILY RADIO, 91.9 FM, BATON ROUGE and JonFineProductions.com.

JON IS THE OWNER OF AN EBAY STORE. ArrestedDevelopmentMediaGuides, SELLS SPORTS PUBLICATIONS. YOU CAN LINK TO IT BY VISITING JonFineProductions.com.

JON IS PROUD TO WORK AS A MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE FOR SPORTSRADIO-1310-KEZM-SULPHUR/LAKE CHARLES.


JON IS PROUD TO WORK FOR PAYJUNCTION AS A MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE.


FOR MORE INFO, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE: JONFINEPRODUCTIONS. COM