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Former Troup star ready for more
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 20, 2013 | 50 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Shamiya Brooks is ready for more. Brooks, a Troup High graduate, was a freshman on the Prairie View A&M basketball team that won a conference championship and made it to the NCAA tournament last season. The 6-foot-4 Brooks was a reserve player on that team, and she played in nine games, including the NCAA tournament game against Baylor. Now with a year’s worth of experience under her belt, Brooks is looking to returning for her sophomore season which she believes will yield bigger and better things. “I’ve seen how everything goes,” Brooks said on Wednesday during a break in the action at a youth basketball camp in West Point. “The college game is way different from the high-school game. I had to get adjusted to that. I enjoyed it, and I learned a lot. My sophomore year will be even better.” Brooks played in 17 games last season and averaged close to two points per game. She attempted just 20 shots during the season and she made 12 of them, and she converted three of her four free-throw attempts. Brooks helped the team win a third consecutive Southwestern Athletic Conference championship. That win put Prairie View into the NCAA tournament, and its reward was a matchup with defending national-champion Baylor and its dominant post player, Brittney Griner. The season, Brooks said, “was more than I expected. I knew coming in that I was coming into a winning program. They had already won SWAC championships back-to-back, and then we won it a third year and had a chance to play in the tournament, play on ESPN and play against Baylor.” Baylor won the game 82-40, and Griner dominated with 33 points, 10 rebounds and six blocks, and she had a dunk. Still, Brooks said it was a “great experience” being a part of that game. “It was loud, the game was very intense,” she said. “I enjoyed it a lot. It was a great experience for me as a freshmen.” When a new season begins, Prairie View will be favored to win the conference title again, but Brooks said actually making it happen will be difficult. “It makes it even harder to win a fourth one, because everyone wants to knock you off,” she said. In high school, Brooks was a dominant player, and she helped lead Troup to a region championship and a berth in the state quarterfinals as a senior.
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Troup coach enjoys camp
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 20, 2013 | 25 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It’s a nice change of pace for Troup High basketball coach Carla Thornton. For most of the year, Thornton’s coaching duties consist of trying to teach high-school players the finer points of the game. This week, Thornton is still teaching the game, but her students are a whole lot younger. Thornton is leading a youth basketball camp in the West Point gymnasium, and she’s having a great time. “They don’t know everything like the older kids,” Thornton said with a grin. “These kids, they want to learn, and they’re going to give you everything they’ve got. You always know what you’re going to get from them.” The week-long camp kicked off on Monday and runs through Friday, and the players get about three hours of instruction time each day before ending the way with lunch. “You want to have fun, but you do a little skill work also, and you make it competitive,” Thornton said. “They love to compete. Even those 4 and 5-year-olds, they want to win. They’ll have a temper tantrum when they lose.” Thornton is being helped by a staff that includes former Troup players Shamiya Brooks and Demetrius Jones. Brooks recently completed her freshman season at Prairie View A&M, and Jones has graduated from Albany State where he played for four seasons. Thornton said it’s important to give the young people some positive role models, and Brooks and Jones fit that bill. “They’re from this area. They see we all made it, and you can make it, too,” Thornton said. “They love having role models like that, someone they can look up to.” Jones brings a lot energy to the court, and Thornton said the campers respond to that. “They love him,” Thornton said. “He’s a fan favorite.” This is fourth year Thornton has done the camp in West Point, and this year’s camp has had more than 20 young people each day. “We had a good turnout this year,” said Thornton, who grew up in West Point. “We had a lot of help. I’m enjoying it, and I think the kids are, too.”
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Kelton tabbed as new coach
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 20, 2013 | 93 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
For the past three years, David Kelton has been Kevin Howard’s right-hand man on the LaGrange College baseball team. Now, with Howard’s departure, Kelton will get the chance to call the shots. Kelton is set to become the head baseball coach at LaGrange College with Howard taking over the baseball program at Reinhardt University. Howard has no doubt Kelton is the right man for the job. “David Kelton, I think the world of him,” Howard said. “He’s been a great assistant coach. He’s been with me, side-by-side in everything for the last three years. He’s been involved in everything about the program.” Kelton, a Troup High graduate, made the transition to coaching after his professional baseball career ended. Kelton was drafted in the second round by the Chicago Cubs in 1998, and he played for nine seasons, mostly in the minor leagues although he did spend parts of two seasons in the major leagues with the Cubs. Kelton’s career ended in 2006 when he was in the Atlanta Braves’ organization. In 2007, Kelton was the head coach at Springwood School in Lanett, and for the past three seasons he has been Howard’s top assistant. “David is just as passionate as I am,” Howard said. “He’s a worker. His family, his home is here. David is going to do a fantastic job.”
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Panthers' coach takes new position
by Kevin Eckleberry
Jun 20, 2013 | 71 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
For Kevin Howard, saying goodbye to so many special people is the hardest part. For 14 seasons, Howard has been the head baseball coach at LaGrange College, and he has enjoyed tremendous success during that time. Howard is ready for a new challenge, though, so he has decided to accept a position as the head baseball coach at Reinhardt University in Waleska. “It’s a great opportunity career-wise, but it’s a tough decision to make,” Howard said. For Howard, the tough part is leaving a school and a community that has meant so much to him and his family. Howard has been the Panthers’ head coach since 2000 after he was hired by then athletic director Phil Williamson, who was also a former baseball coach at the school. “The college has been wonderful,” Howard said. “I’ve got to say a huge thank you to coach Williamson for hiring me and giving me the opportunity to be a coach at LaGrange. Coach Williamson is a great man to work for and to be mentored by.” Howard said it has “been a blessing” to be a part of the LaGrange community for nearly 15 years, and that includes his church home at First Baptist Church “The community of LaGrange has been amazing,” Howard said. Howard was the head baseball coach at Emory for six years before coming to LaGrange. During his 13 seasons as the head coach of the Panthers, Howard’s teams went 372-266, and he has an overall record of 549-358. The Panthers won the United States Collegiate Athletic Association national championship in 2003, and they qualified for the NCAA Division III national tournament in 2010. The Panthers won either nine regular-season or tournament conference championships under Howard, and they were second a few other times. Howard stresses to his players the importance of playing the game the right way, and he figures the wins will come as a result. “I want my guys to always strive to win, to put your best effort forward,” he said. “You get enough guys doing the right things, and those things take care of themselves.” Howard said the relationships he formed with the hundreds of players over the years has also helped make his time here special. “I was looking in the locker room today, and you see all the pictures of the players who have ever played for me,” Howard said. “And I’m looking at those pictures, and I reflect back on how lucky I was to develop all of those relationships with all of those kids, and see them graduate. “I may have had an impact on their lives, but they don’t realize what an impact they had on my life as well.” Howard was also an active youth-baseball coach in Troup County, and he said those are special memories as well. “I think back to the memories and how much fun I had in Troup County parks and recreation and being a part of four World Series teams,” Howard said. “It’s not about the World Series. It’s the relationships with those young kids, the relationships I’ve had with them.” Howard and his wife Lisa have two children, a son, Jake, and a daughter, Madison. Jake is a rising sophomore, and he was a member of the LaGrange High baseball team, and Madison was a cheerleader at Gardner Newman. Howard said he spent a lot of time talking to his family before deciding to make the move. “It’s a tough decision, but it’s the right decision,” Howard said. “I’m excited for the opportunity.”
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