Double No-No’s

(#20) In a 1994 doubleheader at Wesson, Copiah-Lincoln's hard throwing right-hander Chris Weekly pitched a no-hitter against the Eagles in game 1. In game 2, Hinds' hard throwing right-hander David Townsend returned the favor and pitched a no-hitter of his own against the Wolfpack. That's something you don't see every day. In the post-season that … Continue reading Double No-No’s

Season of a Lifetime

(#19) During the 1989 season at Hinds, a converted side-winding closer named Mark Anders from Ouachita Christian High School in Monroe, Louisiana, pitched in 35 of our 54 games, won eleven games (11 wins and 2 losses), saved a HCC record nine games (a record broken by my son Josh twenty years later), had an … Continue reading Season of a Lifetime

The Great Do-Over

(#18) Hinds was hosting South Division rival Pearl River in the first game of a double header during the 1994 season. In the bottom of the second with the bases loaded, our leadoff hitter Andre Thompson hit a line drive down the right field line which landed about a foot foul; clearly foul, to everybody … Continue reading The Great Do-Over

Who’s on First

(#17) When my son Jake was a kid, he came up with a funny spin on the famous Abbott and Costello routine, Who's on First. His cousin, Tyler Weir (pronounced "Where") was a senior catcher for Jackson Academy during the 2007 season. One of the Raider's top pitchers was a hard throwing right-hander named Brent … Continue reading Who’s on First

Bo and Sam

(#16) We were in the Superdome in New Orleans years ago, watching an exhibition game between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox. My friends, George McQuitter and Richard Kelly, were having a friendly argument about whether or not Bo Jackson could hit the video screen on the wall in the third deck … Continue reading Bo and Sam

Carrying the Torch

(#15) In our opening game in the 1994 NJCAA Division II World Series at USA Stadium in Millington, Tennessee, Hinds catcher Curtis Jones from Brandon High School, hit a home run to right center field that landed in the Olympic Torch behind the outfield wall. What are the odds of doing that? Olympic Torch in … Continue reading Carrying the Torch

The Longest Home Run

(#14) Hinds was playing national powerhouse Middle Georgia in the Delgado Community College Invitational Tournament in February of 1999 at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium, an old city park with a pulse in New Orleans. This was before the field was named for long-time coaching legend Louis "Rags" Scheuermann. It is now "Rags" Scheuermann Field at Kirsch-Rooney Stadium. … Continue reading The Longest Home Run

Yodel-ay-hee-hoo!

(#13) It was the comeback that made the yodeling stop. During Spring Break of 2006, about a month before I would be suspended and stripped of my coaching duties by Pearl High School, officially for insubordination, but really because I was the new guy who got caught up in somebody else's politics and ongoing drama. … Continue reading Yodel-ay-hee-hoo!

My Mentor, Bill Marchant

(#12) I got a newspaper clipping from Bill Marchant a few years before he passed away. He was making fun of the time I got run over at home plate by Meridian High School’s Mike Boyd in a game between his Wildcats and the Forest Hill Rebels on March 24, 1971. "In the bottom of … Continue reading My Mentor, Bill Marchant

Baseball Lessons from the Great Joe McCaskill

(#11) Joe McCaskill pitched for Willis Steenhuis at Jackson Central in the early 1970s. He also was a star two-way player at Belhaven College, a Mississippi Semi-Pro Baseball legend, a loving husband and father, a successful businessman and an awesome person. He was my favorite player to watch when I was growing up. He had … Continue reading Baseball Lessons from the Great Joe McCaskill