토토사이트 검증



David Claybourn: Sports Views: Young Athletes Carry On; Goodbye To Joe 

One of the most awesome aspects of my work is watching youthful competitors grow up into people and afterward having the chance to see their children and little girls and nieces and nephews and even grandchildren contend in sports. 토토사이트 검증

Take Robert Lewis for instance. He played running back in the principal Greenville Lions' football match-up that I shrouded back in 1979 at Rose Stadium in Tyler. Lewis had a major event in that one, a 40-20 triumph for the Lions over Tyler Legacy and proceeded to scramble for in excess of 1,000 yards in the two his lesser and senior seasons for the Lions. 

Then, at that point, he ran for 1,706 yards and 10 scores in four seasons at Texas Tech when the Red Raiders' offense wasn't close to however useful as it seems to be currently. 

Lewis' nephew Miles Denson was the Lions' enormous play fellow last season in football, averaging 8.1 yards per convey and 14 yards for each gathering as the Lions arrived at the end of the season games for the subsequent straight season. 

Denson, who is presently at Pitt State in Kansas, was likewise the nephew of one more top rusher for the Lions in 1980-81, Terry Hall. 

Junior Mason was the quarterback of the Lions in 1979 during that game in Tyler. He was likewise a champion guarded back and baseball player, who wound up playing in the outfield for the Nebraska Cornhuskers and in the Toronto Blue Jays association. 

Last week Mason's child Ja'Juan Mason got two passes for 38 yards in Midwestern State's 31-30 football triumph over Texas A&M University-Commerce in a major event at the recently named Choctaw Stadium in Arlington. 

Ja'Juan played secondary school football for the consistently extreme Allen Eagles and ran track for the M&M Track Club instructed by his dad. 

Henry Neal was an unparalleled runner for the Greenville Lions who won four state titles in secondary school, seven public junior school titles with Blinn College and eight Mobil Grand Prix races on the indoor circuit. 

Last week Neal's child Kamron Neal ran 41 yards for a score during the Greenville Lions' 59-0 triumph over Carrollton Ranchview. 

Neal's more seasoned child Henry Josey experienced childhood in Angleton. Josey beat the 1,000-yard hurrying imprint in two seasons as a running back at Angleton and ran a leg on the Wildcats' state champion 4x100-meter hand-off group. Josey proceeded to run for in excess of 1,000 yards in two distinct seasons for the Missouri Tigers and played a season in the Canadian Football League. 

Back in 1980 I watched previous Greenville Lion Mike Thomas run the football for the San Diego Chargers in a game against the Dallas Cowboys at Texas Stadium. 

Presently 41 years after the fact his grandson Spencer Gilbert II is an associate mentor with the Lions' soccer program and his child Spencer Gilbert is the head football trainer at Dallas Carter. 

Nathan Jeffery was a state champion for the Caddo Mills Foxes in the 400-meter run in 1984. 

His child Nathan Jeffery was a champion competitor for the Caddo Mills Foxes and afterward played from 2011-2014 as a running back at Texas-El Paso, scrambling for 2,126 yards and 18 scores, getting 27 passes for 257 yards and three TDs and returning 16 opening shots for a normal of 22.4 yards per return. 

Presently Jeffery is an associate mentor at El Paso Eastwood. 

In 1981 I covered a Class 4A state elimination round football match-up pitting the Rockwall Yellowjackets against the Brownwood Lions. Brownwood won 19-13 and the following week won the state title. One of Rockwall's top players in that game was tight end-linebacker Alex Hoover. Hoover proceeded to play football at Colorado State. 

His child Josh Hoover is currently a big deal passer in the football crew at Rockwall-Heath. Heading into this end of the week Josh had tossed for 7,453 yards and 79 scores in a three-year vocation as a starter for the Hawks. 

Josh and his more youthful sibling Caleb additionally played in a state title ball club this previous spring at Heath. 

It's been a rush watching the more youthful competitors carry on the family custom. — Condolences to the group of long-lasting Greenville financier Joe Winniford, who kicked the bucket this week. Winniford's administration is made arrangements for the following week. 

However Joe filled in as president and VP at a few Greenville banks, he generally behaved like a customary Joe. So cordial. So wonderful to be near. Regularly asking me how the Greenville Lions were examining whatever sport they were playing at that point. 

I saw Joe a great deal on the fairway, frequently playing in competitions with his child John. What's more, I made some photographs of Joe in move in golf. 

Nowadays the world could utilize more Joe Winnifords. He was a good power who had a skill for causing individuals around him to feel better. 

I will miss him. 

David Claybourn is sports supervisor of the Herald-Banner.