AteUp
02-27-2009, 02:33 PM
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=forde_pat&id=3927967&sportCat=highschool
I've never been anywhere near Elliott Co, but I'm rooting for these boys.
Updated: February 24, 2009, 9:44 PM ET
Daring to dream
Tiny Elliott County takes on the big boys in Kentucky's one-division basketball tourney
Forde By Pat Forde
ESPN.com
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_trio_576.jpg
Evan Faulkner, Jonathan Ferguson and Ethan FaulknerRandy EvansEvan Faulkner, Jonathan Ferguson and Ethan Faulkner in Elliott County, Ky.
SANDY HOOK, Ky. -- With another 100-point night in the books, the Elliott County Lions have adjourned to the Penny Mart ("Deli-Propane-Lotto" reads the sign). Here, playing rook amid the motor oil and fishing hooks and canned goods, they are rural royalty.
The chicken wings, cheeseburgers and slushies are free for the boys after every game, enthusiastically provided by proprietor Bobbie Howard.
"Nobody really done anything special for them," she said. "A lot of them I've known since they were babies. They make us proud. This is a town a lot of people thought nobody would ever come from."
The Lions have come roaring out of this rugged, remote Appalachian hamlet of roughly 700 people along the Little Sandy River to capture the imagination of a state that cherishes high school basketball. They have rekindled memories of the glory days of mountain ball, when tiny communities like Carr Creek or players like King Kelly Coleman and Richie Farmer wandered out of Eastern Kentucky to become folk heroes memorialized in books.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_pennymart_300.jpg
Randy EvansThe Penny Mart is the postgame hangout of choice for the Lions.
The two-time defending regional champion Lions are 25-2 and ranked No. 1 in the Lexington Herald-Leader computer ratings, No. 2 in The (Louisville) Courier-Journal computer ratings and No. 4 in the state AP poll.
They have made believers out of esteemed basketball minds like former national championship-winning Kentucky coach Joe B. Hall, who declared on his radio show that the running, pressing Lions are his all-time favorite high school team.
And they've made believers out of less-famous hoops fanatics like Jim McGuire, who drives 254 miles round-trip from Bryantsville, Ky., for every game -- not because the grocery store owner and retired Army man has a relative on the team, or any other connection to Elliott County. Just because of the way the Lions play -- leading the state in scoring (86.3 points per game) and victory margin (31.4 points). The Lions have maxed out at 132 points in a game and have topped 100 five times.
"I started watching them last year and fell in love with them," McGuire said, red slushie in his hand at the Penny Mart after watching Elliott County crush Fleming County 105-60 on Feb. 12. "They're more fun than any team I've ever watched.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_ethan_200.jpg
Randy EvansEthan Faulkner helps trigger a high-powered offense.
"I have visions of '54 when I see these guys."
McGuire showed his basketball knowledge there, and in doing so alluded to the romantic notion that hovers over this team: with a little luck come March, the Lions could be modern-day "Hoosiers."
It was 1954 when the Milan Miracle took place, Bobby Plump making the last-second shot that beat Muncie Central, and became the signature small-school triumph in Indiana high school basketball history. Three decades later, they filmed "Hoosiers," and the legend went nationwide.
Indiana has since forfeited any chance to replicate the Milan Miracle, shamefully scrapping its single-class state tournament in favor of four champions from four classifications. That leaves Kentucky and Delaware as the only remaining states to play an all-comers tournament that crowns a single champion -- and Delaware doesn't do it like Kentucky, which every March brings 16 regional winners to the state's cathedral of basketball, Rupp Arena in Lexington.
Elliott County, the only high school in a poor, obscure county of about 7,000, would qualify as a modern-day Milan. The school with only 325 students in grades 9-12, ranking 211th in enrollment of the 279 schools listed on the Kentucky High School Athletic Association Web site, will battle next month for the state title against the big boys from Louisville, Lexington and greater Cincinnati.
Only 38 public schools are smaller than Elliott County. The school's senior class numbers 74, with 42 of them boys.
And in a state notorious for illegal recruiting, this is an organic power. The nucleus of this team grew up playing together and turning down whispered offers to leave for more attention at bigger schools. They've been nurtured for years by a taciturn old coach until they're now poised to defy the long odds against how far a small school can go.
"This team is homegrown," said local photographer Randy Evans. "That's what's so special about it. This is true-blood basketball in Sandy Hook, now."
To find Sandy Hook, you get off Interstate 64 at Morehead. From there, turn onto serpentine, two-lane Highway 32 and leave the modern world behind.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0223/espn_elliott_300.jpg
Elliott County, KY
ESPNElliott County is home to fewer than 7,000 residents.
Wind past the small family cemeteries dug into rocky hilltops. Take note of the caution signs for farm tractors on the road. And if you drive too fast, you'll miss the turn for Main Street, which cuts through what passes for downtown.
"Don't bat your eyes," said Rick Mays, in his 28th year as coach of the Lions. "The whole town's the school, now. We do have half a McDonald's, at least."
McDonald's moved in last year and does indeed share building space with a gas station. There is a Subway in town, too. But for the most part, you're much closer to map dots like Ordinary, Moon, Blaze, Dewdrop and Relief, Ky., than you are to contemporary convenience.
The nearest shopping mall is about an hour away, along the West Virginia border. The nearest supermarket is a 30-minute drive. Same with the nearest movie theater.
Many of the jobs are far away, too. Elliott County sits just outside of Kentucky's coal belt, and the land isn't flat or fertile enough for large-scale farming. So the people here work as pipe fitters and boilermakers in Ashland, or at the Little Sandy Correctional Complex state prison, or for the local school district.
Follow Elliott County
Every Elliott County boys' basketball game is live online, courtesy of WLKS Kick 102.9. Listen here.http://www.elliott.k12.ky.us/Elliott_County_Board_of_Education/Basketball_Online.html
Tentative schedule:
# Feb. 24: def. East Carter 73-68
# Feb. 27: District final vs. winner of West Carter-Morgan County semifinal (both winner and loser advance to Region 16 tournament)
Region 16 tourney (single elim.):
# March 7: Region 16 quarterfinals at Morehead State University
# March 9: Region 16 semifinals at Morehead
# March 10: Region 16 final at Morehead
Sweet 16 (at Rupp Arena -- single elim.):
# March 19 vs. Region 8 winner (8 p.m. ET)
# March 20 vs. Region 10/15 winner (8 p.m. ET)
# March 21: Semifinals (11:30 a.m. ET)
# March 21: Finals (8 p.m. ET)
Elliott County produced the late country music star Keith Whitley and the current Kentucky House Democratic floor leader Rocky Adkins (a former Lions basketball player), but this lily-white, dry county is no font of prosperity. The median household income in 2007 for Sandy Hook was $18,323, far less than half the national average of $50,233. About 40 percent of Elliott County's children live in poverty, which is 17 percent more than the state average. Local school revenue per pupil in the county is about one-third of the state average.
Despite the difficulties inherent in living here, there is a paucity of self-pity and a surplus of pride. Retired teacher Frank Olson moved here from California in the 1960s with his wife, who was an AmeriCorps VISTA volunteer helping fight Appalachian poverty. They never left, sending two sons through Elliott County High School, because they love the people.
Asked what it would mean for the Lions to win the state title, Olson said, "Everyone would be really happy, but we are anyway. It's not the end of things or the beginning of things."
It would, actually, be the culmination of a few things: Mays' decades-long tenure as coach, as he gives way to assistant Greg Adkins next year, and the high school careers of the greatest basketball class Elliott County has ever known.
And truth be told, not everyone shares Olson's measured perspective on the societal impact of this team.
"This is a once-in-a-lifetime adventure for all of us," Elliott County school superintendent John Williams said. "Not if, but when we make it all the way, it will be the greatest thing to happen to this community."
Senior Night has been a success, playing out before another near-capacity audience in the Lions' 1,150-seat gym. (On some nights, an overflow crowd is seated in the school's Performing Arts Center and watches the game on closed-circuit TV, with radio play-by-play piped in.) Framed jerseys have been bestowed and a video tribute has been shown, complete with a musical accompaniment that included a country song written and sung by Dale Ferguson, the father of leading scorer Jonathan Ferguson.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_cknipp_200.jpg
Randy EvansChris Knipp has been steady as a Lions' starting forward for three seasons.
"They play the D
Shoot the three
Make them ol' ball nets sing"
I've never been anywhere near Elliott Co, but I'm rooting for these boys.
Updated: February 24, 2009, 9:44 PM ET
Daring to dream
Tiny Elliott County takes on the big boys in Kentucky's one-division basketball tourney
Forde By Pat Forde
ESPN.com
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_trio_576.jpg
Evan Faulkner, Jonathan Ferguson and Ethan FaulknerRandy EvansEvan Faulkner, Jonathan Ferguson and Ethan Faulkner in Elliott County, Ky.
SANDY HOOK, Ky. -- With another 100-point night in the books, the Elliott County Lions have adjourned to the Penny Mart ("Deli-Propane-Lotto" reads the sign). Here, playing rook amid the motor oil and fishing hooks and canned goods, they are rural royalty.
The chicken wings, cheeseburgers and slushies are free for the boys after every game, enthusiastically provided by proprietor Bobbie Howard.
"Nobody really done anything special for them," she said. "A lot of them I've known since they were babies. They make us proud. This is a town a lot of people thought nobody would ever come from."
The Lions have come roaring out of this rugged, remote Appalachian hamlet of roughly 700 people along the Little Sandy River to capture the imagination of a state that cherishes high school basketball. They have rekindled memories of the glory days of mountain ball, when tiny communities like Carr Creek or players like King Kelly Coleman and Richie Farmer wandered out of Eastern Kentucky to become folk heroes memorialized in books.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_pennymart_300.jpg
Randy EvansThe Penny Mart is the postgame hangout of choice for the Lions.
The two-time defending regional champion Lions are 25-2 and ranked No. 1 in the Lexington Herald-Leader computer ratings, No. 2 in The (Louisville) Courier-Journal computer ratings and No. 4 in the state AP poll.
They have made believers out of esteemed basketball minds like former national championship-winning Kentucky coach Joe B. Hall, who declared on his radio show that the running, pressing Lions are his all-time favorite high school team.
And they've made believers out of less-famous hoops fanatics like Jim McGuire, who drives 254 miles round-trip from Bryantsville, Ky., for every game -- not because the grocery store owner and retired Army man has a relative on the team, or any other connection to Elliott County. Just because of the way the Lions play -- leading the state in scoring (86.3 points per game) and victory margin (31.4 points). The Lions have maxed out at 132 points in a game and have topped 100 five times.
"I started watching them last year and fell in love with them," McGuire said, red slushie in his hand at the Penny Mart after watching Elliott County crush Fleming County 105-60 on Feb. 12. "They're more fun than any team I've ever watched.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_ethan_200.jpg
Randy EvansEthan Faulkner helps trigger a high-powered offense.
"I have visions of '54 when I see these guys."
McGuire showed his basketball knowledge there, and in doing so alluded to the romantic notion that hovers over this team: with a little luck come March, the Lions could be modern-day "Hoosiers."
It was 1954 when the Milan Miracle took place, Bobby Plump making the last-second shot that beat Muncie Central, and became the signature small-school triumph in Indiana high school basketball history. Three decades later, they filmed "Hoosiers," and the legend went nationwide.
Indiana has since forfeited any chance to replicate the Milan Miracle, shamefully scrapping its single-class state tournament in favor of four champions from four classifications. That leaves Kentucky and Delaware as the only remaining states to play an all-comers tournament that crowns a single champion -- and Delaware doesn't do it like Kentucky, which every March brings 16 regional winners to the state's cathedral of basketball, Rupp Arena in Lexington.
Elliott County, the only high school in a poor, obscure county of about 7,000, would qualify as a modern-day Milan. The school with only 325 students in grades 9-12, ranking 211th in enrollment of the 279 schools listed on the Kentucky High School Athletic Association Web site, will battle next month for the state title against the big boys from Louisville, Lexington and greater Cincinnati.
Only 38 public schools are smaller than Elliott County. The school's senior class numbers 74, with 42 of them boys.
And in a state notorious for illegal recruiting, this is an organic power. The nucleus of this team grew up playing together and turning down whispered offers to leave for more attention at bigger schools. They've been nurtured for years by a taciturn old coach until they're now poised to defy the long odds against how far a small school can go.
"This team is homegrown," said local photographer Randy Evans. "That's what's so special about it. This is true-blood basketball in Sandy Hook, now."
To find Sandy Hook, you get off Interstate 64 at Morehead. From there, turn onto serpentine, two-lane Highway 32 and leave the modern world behind.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0223/espn_elliott_300.jpg
Elliott County, KY
ESPNElliott County is home to fewer than 7,000 residents.
Wind past the small family cemeteries dug into rocky hilltops. Take note of the caution signs for farm tractors on the road. And if you drive too fast, you'll miss the turn for Main Street, which cuts through what passes for downtown.
"Don't bat your eyes," said Rick Mays, in his 28th year as coach of the Lions. "The whole town's the school, now. We do have half a McDonald's, at least."
McDonald's moved in last year and does indeed share building space with a gas station. There is a Subway in town, too. But for the most part, you're much closer to map dots like Ordinary, Moon, Blaze, Dewdrop and Relief, Ky., than you are to contemporary convenience.
The nearest shopping mall is about an hour away, along the West Virginia border. The nearest supermarket is a 30-minute drive. Same with the nearest movie theater.
Many of the jobs are far away, too. Elliott County sits just outside of Kentucky's coal belt, and the land isn't flat or fertile enough for large-scale farming. So the people here work as pipe fitters and boilermakers in Ashland, or at the Little Sandy Correctional Complex state prison, or for the local school district.
Follow Elliott County
Every Elliott County boys' basketball game is live online, courtesy of WLKS Kick 102.9. Listen here.http://www.elliott.k12.ky.us/Elliott_County_Board_of_Education/Basketball_Online.html
Tentative schedule:
# Feb. 24: def. East Carter 73-68
# Feb. 27: District final vs. winner of West Carter-Morgan County semifinal (both winner and loser advance to Region 16 tournament)
Region 16 tourney (single elim.):
# March 7: Region 16 quarterfinals at Morehead State University
# March 9: Region 16 semifinals at Morehead
# March 10: Region 16 final at Morehead
Sweet 16 (at Rupp Arena -- single elim.):
# March 19 vs. Region 8 winner (8 p.m. ET)
# March 20 vs. Region 10/15 winner (8 p.m. ET)
# March 21: Semifinals (11:30 a.m. ET)
# March 21: Finals (8 p.m. ET)
Elliott County produced the late country music star Keith Whitley and the current Kentucky House Democratic floor leader Rocky Adkins (a former Lions basketball player), but this lily-white, dry county is no font of prosperity. The median household income in 2007 for Sandy Hook was $18,323, far less than half the national average of $50,233. About 40 percent of Elliott County's children live in poverty, which is 17 percent more than the state average. Local school revenue per pupil in the county is about one-third of the state average.
Despite the difficulties inherent in living here, there is a paucity of self-pity and a surplus of pride. Retired teacher Frank Olson moved here from California in the 1960s with his wife, who was an AmeriCorps VISTA volunteer helping fight Appalachian poverty. They never left, sending two sons through Elliott County High School, because they love the people.
Asked what it would mean for the Lions to win the state title, Olson said, "Everyone would be really happy, but we are anyway. It's not the end of things or the beginning of things."
It would, actually, be the culmination of a few things: Mays' decades-long tenure as coach, as he gives way to assistant Greg Adkins next year, and the high school careers of the greatest basketball class Elliott County has ever known.
And truth be told, not everyone shares Olson's measured perspective on the societal impact of this team.
"This is a once-in-a-lifetime adventure for all of us," Elliott County school superintendent John Williams said. "Not if, but when we make it all the way, it will be the greatest thing to happen to this community."
Senior Night has been a success, playing out before another near-capacity audience in the Lions' 1,150-seat gym. (On some nights, an overflow crowd is seated in the school's Performing Arts Center and watches the game on closed-circuit TV, with radio play-by-play piped in.) Framed jerseys have been bestowed and a video tribute has been shown, complete with a musical accompaniment that included a country song written and sung by Dale Ferguson, the father of leading scorer Jonathan Ferguson.
http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2009/0224/espn_re_cknipp_200.jpg
Randy EvansChris Knipp has been steady as a Lions' starting forward for three seasons.
"They play the D
Shoot the three
Make them ol' ball nets sing"