Posts Tagged Memphis High School Football
Tim Thompson Part Two
| Thompson steps toward youth ministry amid off-season football controversy | |||||||
| By Jesse F. McClure | Published 05/29/2008 | Sports | Unrated | |||||||
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Thompson steps toward youth ministry amid off-season football controversy
In the sanctuary of the Cathedral of God Holy Word Temple in North Memphis, Tim Thompson started to talk about doors last week. “As one door closes another one opens,” said Thompson, whose name for years has been associated with the words football and coach. The “old door” was his position as interim – on track to be fulltime – football coach at Ridgeway High School. The “new door” is the one that leads to youth ministry in North Memphis. Thompson believes he can connect with the youngsters in the neighborhoods surrounding Cathedral of God Holy Word Temple and help in reducing drug use, gang membership and criminal activity. He is confident that he has the charisma and coaching skills to turn lives around.” Such work will be much more rewarding than coaching football, said Thompson at a press conference he called to shed light on a predicament that lead to the closing of door number one. Ridgeway Principal Jim Long decided not to let Thompson coach football this fall after an investigation revealed that students from other schools participated in spring football practices. Thompson said he has been “betrayed and misled” by the Ridgeway administration. According to Thompson, an administrator at Ridgeway High School approved letting students who were enrolling at the school in August participate in spring football practice. He said that four students who were not enrolled at Ridgeway practiced with the Roadrunners’ squad during spring practice. Thompson said that he was volunteering his time as coach until August when he expected to join the faculty as a fulltime teacher and coach. He said current Ridgeway staff members were also involved with the off-season football practices and determination of which students were eligible to participate in the spring drills.
“I don’t take the full blame,” he said. Calls to Ridgeway and Memphis City Schools officials had not been returned by press time on Wednesday. Thompson said the loss of the Ridgeway job was tied to his previous problems as head football coach at Melrose High School. In 2001, the Memphis City Schools suspended Thompson for three years for accepting $1,400 from a University of Kentucky assistant football coach. Thompson said Ridgeway administrators at first time told him that letting non-Ridgeway students practice was not a big problem. Principal Long told him “not to worry about it,” he said. Thompson won two state football championships while coaching at Melrose High School, with a number of players going on to the National Football League. Part of the Ridgeway problem was that so many young men wanted to play for him, he said. At his news conference, Thompson said he was unaware that the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is investigating him for financial irregularities while he was coaching at Fayette Ware High School. According to a local news report, a parent of one of Thompson’s football players accused the coach of charging players for athletic equipment and the district Attorney General’s office has confirmed the investigation. Thompson said he did nothing wrong in his three years at Fayette Ware High. Although he said he has not been banned from future coaching positions in the Memphis City Schools, Thompson said he is moving on.
He won’t be alone. His sister, Rev. Libra Mitchell, is the senior pastor of the Cathedral of God Holy Word Temple – the base from which Thompson plans to extend his life into the North Memphis community. |
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Add comment June 1, 2008
Tim Thompson Returns to Memphis High School Football
| A saga of twists & turns | |||||||
| By Jesse F. McClure | Published 4/17/2008 | Sports | |||||||
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A saga of twists & turns
Tim Thompson’s ready to write Ridgeway High School chapter
One of the most successful high school football coaches in Memphis history, Thompson’s Melrose High School teams won two state championships and once finished as the runner-up. The record reads 77 games and only 17 losses in seven years as coach. A Melrose graduate, Thompson takes great pride in his success and readily acknowledges that his life has taken some severe twists and turns in recent years. In 2001, he was suspended for three years from coaching for accepting $1,400 from a coach at the University of Kentucky. No argument from Thompson. What he did was improper he said, noting only that the money was for his assistant coaches who helped him in a summer football camp. He left the Memphis City Schools system and for several years was a motivational speaker and ran football camps.
Thompson also spent time writing. His book, “The Tim Thompson, Story, Winning Against All Odds” details his life as a youngster in Memphis and his coaching career. Some involved in the scenario that led to Thompson’s demise have moved on to positions that have paid them a lot of money. Thompson said he is not bitter about that part, recognizes the mistakes he has made and has learned from them. He said he shares his story with his players so they can learn to rebound from difficult times. A success formula At Ridgeway, Thompson succeeds Joe Lee Dunn, who left to become the key defensive coach at New Mexico State University. For many years, Dunn was an assistant coach at universities such as Ole Miss, Mississippi State and the University of Memphis. He coached Ridgeway one season, with his team notching a five-win, six-loss record. Last year, Thompson coached Fayette Ware High School in rural West Tennessee, where his team finished with 7 wins and five losses. Thompson won 17 games in his three years at Fayette Ware and took his team to the high school play-offs twice. In the three years before Thompson became coach, Fayette Ware had won 1 game and lost 28 straight. Thompson is confident that he has more players in the National Football League than any other high school coach in America. He points to Cedric Wilson, most recently of the Pittsburgh Steelers; Kindal Moorehead of the Carolina Panthers; Dwayne Robertson of the New York Jets; and Andre Lott of the Chicago Bears. He is just as proud of the dozens who earned college scholarships. Thompson’s favorite former player is, Anthony Hall, who now is the new coach at Fayette Ware High School. He said Hall overcame many difficulties and got his degree at Stillman College. He later became one of Thompson’s trusted assistant coaches. A deeply religious man, the most important quality that Thompson said He tries to teach his players is respect for themselves and others. “The mind is often more important than the body in building a winning team (at the high school level),” he said.
Thompson tries to create a feeling of family among members of the team. His other “secret,” he said, is to coach teams to play exciting football. That means a wide-open style that players love to play and fans flock to see. At Ridgeway, Thompson plans to follow the same plan he used at Melrose and Fayette Ware. He points to the small towns in East Tennessee whose teams are often at the top of high school football rankings. In those small towns, he said, there is a strong sense of community with a town full of support. That’s the way it was in Orange Mound for Melrose, he said. He’s out to prove it can happen at Ridgeway. |
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Add comment April 20, 2008










