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Showing posts with label greg williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greg williams. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

This Had To Be The Game, September 17, 1969


Daily Commercial
September 17, 1969

Great games were the rule especially last year. But a Brownie Scout, a stray dog, Bud Wilkinson even a computer with a short fuse could have picked The Best, Hands down, the greatest show of the greatest year came in the season's fourth week, when Leesburg High paused in its march to the State Class A finals to lock horns with the Wildwood Wildcats.

Leesburg entered the game with a 3-0 record, the last victory the biggest for the Jackets' fine offense, a 32-12 defeat of Kissimmee in which Mike Napier passed for 330 yards and three touchdowns and Greg Williams caught 12 for 186 yards and a score. But Kissimmee had been a slip up for the Jackets' defense- though Kissimmee got only 71 total yards, two Kowboy runners invaded Jacket goal line territory, the first TDs given up by the Jackets all year.

Wildwood, on the other hand, busy building a team that would run away from all comers after the Leesburg game, had just lost big in Tallahassee, 38-12 to Florida High a puzzler, even weeks later, to Coach Dub Palmer, who characteristically took the blame himself: "I just didn't get them ready for it," he said. Wildwood was 2-1 and beginning to feel its chance of getting into the State Class B playoffs slipping away in the hot competition of Class B football, Palmer pointed out, one loss can be the loss of a season.

Wildwood, then, was mad maybe a little desperate. Leesburg was riding the crest of the long wave that broke, two months later, in the Championship game in Tampa. The two teams squared off for this traditional rivalry which for reasons officially unrelated to this game will not be played this year.

Then Sports Editor Mike Fowler wrote this account of the big game:

WILDWOOD _ As a football game, it was nuclear parity, a whale vs. an elephant, a tornado meeting a hurricane. Wildwood's Wildcats, sky-high, floated onto the field a couple of feet above the ground, and Leesburg's Yellow Jackets floated out to meet them. It was the annual grudge match, in which season's records meant nothing. One school could have fielded the NFL All-Stars, the other then donkeys and a parrot, and it still would have been a battle.

Wildwood won every static except luck and the final score, which was 7-2 Leesburg -a 57-yard TD pass from Mike Napier to Greg Williams beating a safety forced by Wildcats Vaughn Black and Wayne Allen, who blocked a punt in the end zone.

A rash of mistakes, made in the fourth quarter, hurt Wildwood, which outrushed and outpassed the Jackets and held their smooth offense to only five first downs. Leesburg, stymied on offense, hurled all its defensive force at the Wildcats, capitalized on their mistakes and used one big play to win.

But the game was defense, as the Wildcats held the Yellow Jackets-who entered averaging 378 total yards a game to just 149, and held quarterback Napier to just four completions in 13 attempts and 81 yards one of them that 57-yarder to Williams for the winning touchdown.

And the Jackets' defense which allowed the Wildcats almost as many yards as they had allowed their previous three opponents combined (243 to 317) dug in everytime Wildwood threatened--outstanding especially in the closing minutes of the fourth quarter when the Cats were moving easily and desperately, and Tony Hart intercepted two passes and Sherrill Lackey one to end the game with reserve quarterback Andy Carlton falling on the ball three times as the clock ran to zero.

It left Jacket Coach Wilbur Lofton leaning against a car conceding, "We were just lucky to get out of it," and Wildcat Coach Dub Palmer regretting the interceptions, the fumbles, and one play in particular, a bad mistake certain he'd just lost a game he should have won.

Leesburg spent most of the first half backing up.

Wildwood roared out from their 3-0 to open the game, behind running back Wayne Allen who carried a total of 18 times for 97 yards, caught three passes from Dale Nichols for 35 yards and threw one pass himself to Elijah Jackson for 15 yards. With Allen carrying the first four plays, the Wildcats reached Leesburg's 46 before punting, pushing the Jackets to their own 26, where Mike Chatman got one yard, Napier missed one pass to Williams and completed another which was nullified by a holding penalty. The Jackets found themselves on their 12, forced to punt.

Larry Humes dropped into the end zone and kicked, but Allen and Black charged through, blocked it, and nearly recovered for a touchdown. In fact, six points had gone on the scoreboard by the time the pileup disentangled to reveal Humes hugging the ball, a safety not TD.

The teams treaded defensive heroics then, as Wildwood held the Jackets on the Cat 18, forcing a futile field goal attempt, then the Jacket defensive line stopped Wildwood's four tries from the Jacket six. The half ended on this note.)

Leesburg's vein of luck grew deeper and richer shortly into the second half, after a short punt gave the Jackets the ball on their own 43.

On the first play, Napier and Williams teamed up on the play that was to be the Jackets biggest al

The rest of the game was Wildwood errors killing Wildwood opportunities.

Two passes from Nichols to Jackson took the Wildcats from their 40 to the Leesburg 27 after the kickoff, but Leesburg's Mike Chatman recovered a fumbled pitchout to end that.

Leesburg punted to Watkins at the Wildwood 15, Watkins just touched the ball, and Andy Carlton scooped it up-missing a touchdown by a rule which prohibits running a fumbled punt. A pass interference call moved Leesburg to the six as the fourth quarter began, but Wildcat Bruce Johnson intercepted a Napier pass at the one and the Wildcats moved out on Nichols arm completions this drive went to Allen twice and to Jackson once.

But with five minutes remaining and the Wildcats in Jacket territory, Tony Hart began an eleventh-hour pattern which would prove fatal to Wildcat hopes when he intercepted a Nicholas pass on his own 42.

Wildwood got two more opportunities, and both ended the same way. Leesburg punted,, but Bruce Johnson, in at quarterback lobbed a pass into Sherrill Lackey's hands on the Cats' second play. Then Chatman fumbled, Wildcat Dennis Wallace recovered, Nichols passed to Johnson and Hart intercepted again at the Leesburg 45 with a minute left, and Carlton ran out the clock.

The second interception was a mistake, nothing else. Wildwood carries two quarterbacks Nichols for passing and Johnson, a fine runner, for moments when a run is imperative. But in the fourth quarter, with Johnson directing the team, Wildwood called a pass play. Johnson lobbed one end over end that came near nobody but Sherrill Lackey, who intercepted looking surprised.

"It was my fault," said Palmer afterwards.  "I forgot the boy was in there and called the pass. I guess he figured, well, I'll give it a try. But that's what happened."

Resources
Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club
1986 Varsity Jackets Football Lettermen #82
Class of 1988 Leesburg High School
leesburgyellowjacketsfootball@yahoo.com
www.leesburgyellowjacketsfootball.com






















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Williams signs scholarship to Southern, May 14, 1970



By Sports Section
Daily Commercial
Thursday May 14, 1970

LEESBURG - Greg Williams son of Mr. and Mrs. James Williams of Leesburg, signed a scholarship with Southern University, Baton Rouge, La.

He will be eligible for Varsity play in his freshman year. Greg will travel with Southern's team to its opener in Philadelphia and to the closing game in Oakland.

Greg was signed by chief recruiter for Southern University, Coach Brown. Jim Dupre Sr. cost analyst for Boise-Cascade in Leesburg, Scouted Greg out for the University. Dupre is a former Southern pitching great.

Southern is one of the top football colleges in the United States with Alvin Tabor as head coach. The School, which has an enrollment of 8500, has turned out many great pros.

It plays such teams as Grambling, Alcorn A and M, Texas Southern, Prairie View, and Tennessee A and I.
James Mackey will be signed by Southern next year at the end of the school year.

Resources 
Sports Section
Daily Commercial
May 14, 1970

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club


















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Jackets - - Both Teams Explode in 2nd Half, Sunday, September 14, 1969




1969 Leesburg Yellow Jackets Football Archives, Coach Wilbur Lofton gave some advice to his quarterback Mike Napier during a timeout in last night's Orange and Black Game. Napier apparently took the advice to heart as he led the Orange to a high scoring victory. Leesburg High School, Leesburg, Florida

MIKE FOWLER
Commercial Sports Editor

The Daily Commercial
Sunday, September 14, 1969


A warning to Leesburg Yellow Jacket fans: leave early. Forget about traffic. Forget about the crowds in the exit. Forget about catching the last half of some other game on TV. Forget about anything but watching the Jackets until the clock runs out.

For if last night's Orange & Black intra-squad game is any indication, things will happen late that would scare any self respecting witch.

Here's why.

The first half was - well,
Coach Wilbur Lofton had the wraps on his team. "We don't want any injuries," he said, and though Sam Rixie dashed 70 yards to a TD on the first play of the game to start everything off excitingly, the first half was played with that warning very much in mind. At halftime Rixie's run, a two point conversion, a white touchdown and a safety were the scoreboard totals.





1969 Leesburg Yellow Jackets Football Archives, 1969 Jackets Supporter Burger Chef, 755, N. 14th Street, Leesburg, Florida, Leesburg High School, Leesburg, Florida


"Well, after halftime we opened up a a bit," said Lofton.

And how.

Quarterback Mike Napier threw touchdown passes, end Greg Williams caught touchdown passes, Mike Chatman ran for two touchdowns at the Varsity Orange offense opened up. And for the Junior Varsity white offense, Tim Wesley caught two touchdown passes from Ken Nappi and Steve Ezell caught one from Jeff Hancock, and the only possible injury was to the scoreboard operator's nerves, trying to keep up with it all.

Final score was 52-30 in favor of the Orange.


1969 Leesburg Yellow Jackets Football Archives, 1969 Jackets Supporter Shelfer Ford Tractor Co, Leesburg, Florida, Leesburg High School, Leesburg, Florida
 It pleased the crowd, and it pleased Lofton and to make it a pleasing day all around the size of the crowd pleased the Dad's Club, sponsors of the game, by being maybe the largest ever to show up for an Orange and Black game.

Afterwards, Lofton summed up, a checklist of pleasing points:

"Mike (Napier) threw well, Chatman and Rixie both ran well - we were working on our running game, concentrating on it in the first half. And I'd say we still have a good way to go with it, still have a long way to go." "but all the slotbacks ran well, passed well, caught well. I'd say
Tommy Ryan, a slotback, had the best day he's had with us. The offensive line did a good job. I'd say I was pleased."

RESOURCES
MIKE FOWLER
Commercial Sports Editor
September 14, 1969

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club




















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand  

 

Jackets Face Each Other Friday Night, Thursday, September 11, 1969




Sports Staff
Daily Commercial
Thursday September 11, 1969

If predictions and forecasts and previews and practices are correct, Leesburg High's Yellow Jackets face some of the toughest competition Friday night that they'll face all year-themselves.

It's the Orange & Black Game, staged by the Dad's Club, in which Varsity Jackets are combined
with the Junior Varsity Jackets into two teams for a gladiator-display at Memorial Field.

Game time is 7:30 and tickets are one dollar for adults, fifty cents for students. All proceeds go to the Dad's Club to finance the various projects they sponsor for the team.





It should be an offensive duel extraordinaire with at least three fine quarterbacks looking for place to play Mike Napier, varsity backup Andy Carlton and Jayvee's Kenny Nappi.

Look also in the first appearance of the Yellow Jackets at home, for ends
Greg Williams and Sherrill Lackey and Ricky Bosanquet of the JV.

The Junior Jackets include several boys who played on the fine Leesburg Junior High team last year, when it posted a 6-1 record.

RESOURCES
September 11, 1969

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club




















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.
  
 

Jackets Impressive In Eustis Jamboree, Sunday, September 7, 1969




GREG WILLIAMS trots off the field after taking a touchdown pass from Leesburg quarterback Mike Napier on the first play against Groveland in the second quarter of last night's Jamboree.


Mike Fowler
Commercial Sports Editor
September 7, 1969


If the rest of the season follows the pattern of the first two offensive plays, then Leesburg High's Yellow Jackets could end up in the Super bowl against the Jets. If the rest of the season follows the pattern of the two quarters Leesburg played last night in the Jamboree at Eustis, then Yellow Jacket fans will see some of the best Class A football possible - a smooth, potent, often devastating offense, a rock-hard defense, a team murder against weaker opponents and sturdy against tough ones.

That was the pattern of the night, a night which left
coach Wilbur Lofton jovial and pleased and Jacket fans in the Eustis bleachers talking excitedly.


The Jackets made their first at the ball a memorable one in the opening minutes of the second quarter, in which they faced Groveland, With the ball at it's own forty. quarterback Mike Napier faded back, threw long to Greg Williams, hooking to the right, and laid the ball in his hands,Williams, dodging one tackler, hit the goal line untouched, and the first ten seconds of the 1969 season had produced the first six points - and the first bit of glory for the Napier-Williams passing combination which is already an area legend.

Then only a couple of minutes later - minutes in which the defense held Groveland to no gain in three tries - Tony Hart dropped back, to receive a punt, took it once at his 25, found a fifty-yard return nullified by a penalty, took the second kick at the 32 and skipped through Grovelanders 68 yards for the Jackets second touchdown.

That left Jacket fans yelling, the stands buzzing, Groveland stunned. The first quarter produced nothing else but more things for the Jackets to smile about. The defense stopped Groveland's runners dead in the middle and around the ends, the swarming pass defense let virtually no Groveland receiver into the clear.

Napier left midway through the quarter without completing another pass, but the three he missed were smooth near-misses, no cause for shame in the first game of the season. His replacement,
sophomore Andy Carlton, completed two passes, a 65-yarder to Sherrill Lackey and a twenty-five yarder to Sam Rixie, who struggled through a swarm of Grovelanders for the Jackets third touchdown.

Meanwhile Jacket runners Rixie and
Mike Chatman were grinding out steady yardage to give Coach Lofton his most pleasant surprise of the evening. "I was afraid we wouldn't have a ground games at all, 'he said. "We do."  Final score for the quarter Leesburg 18, Groveland 0.


The third quarter was tougher, possibly more satisfying. The rival was Eustis, the Jackets grudge rival, last year's Area Champ, and this year's version of the Panthers is the same Eustis junior varsity that went undefeated and unscored-upon last year.

People were wondering if the Napier-Williams passing team could be the first to score on these Panthers. The answer they got was yes - it came late in the quarter, after nine minutes of virtual standstill football, Napier hit Lackey, ran 23 yards himself, and after a penalty, found the ball on the Jacket 30.

He hit Williams at the 50. Next, boxed in trying to pass he struggled to the Panthers 42. Two passes to Williams fell short. Only 1:33 remained on the clock when he hit Williams for a first down at the thirty, Lackey for another at the ten, and finally Williams, who took the ball at the five and danced through Panthers for the score.

Leesburg 6, Eustis 0, and time ran out with Eustis doggedly but far too slowly moving into Leesburg territory.

In the first quarter Eustis, plagued by slippery fingers, fumbled three times, losing two, to spoil a good performance by back Rick Day, and tied Umatilla scoreless. Umatilla end a bad night by losing the last quarter to Groveland, when Otis Evans, a bull of a fullback, plunged over from one yard out then kicked the extra point for Groveland's 7-o victory.


RESOURCES
Mike Fowler
Commercial Sports Editor
 

DAILY COMMERCIAL 
September 7, 1969




Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club
www.leesburgyellowjacketsfootball.com




















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.

 

Jackets on Display In Jamboree Friday, September 3, 1969



By Sports Staff
Daily Commercial
September 3, 1969

The new model Yellow Jackets - rugged as  a Jeep on defense, flashy as a Ferrari on offense - will be unveiled in Eustis Friday night, along with three other Area football teams in the second big pre-season Jamboree, a free-wheeling affair in which each team plays two quarters against different opponents.

Leesburg, Eustis, Umatilla and Groveland are the high schools which will take the Eustis High field at 7:30 p.m. to preview their 1969 models in a show Ford, Chevy and Plymouth would envy. Leesburg's Yellow Jackets meet grudge-rival Eustis Panthers in the second quarter, a potentially explosive twelve minutes with the Jackets, led by quarterback Mike Napier colliding head-on with last year's Area champions.

Leesburg will play the third quarter against Groveland.

It'll be the year's first look at
Coach Wilbur Lofton's potentially fine offense, based on the passing of Napier, whose folder of letters from interested colleges already looks like the manuscript of a thick novel. On the receiving end of Napier's tosses will be such as all-state candidate Greg Williams and wideouts Tommy Ryan, Theodis Williams, Sherrill Lackey and Danny Bradford. The Jackets' defense, led by linebacker Sam Rixie, is expected to be rugged. But Eustis should provide a rough test, with Coach Tommy Comer bringing a strong line and big backs.

Wildwood High will host another Jamboree Friday at 8 p.m. South Sumter, North Marion, Hernando of Brooksville and Wildwood will participate.

The schedule pits the South Sumter Rebels against North Marion in the first quarter, Wildwood's Wildcats against the big Hernando Leopards in the second, the Wildcats and Rebels in the third and Hernando against North Marion in the finale.

Admission at Carter Field in Wildwood is $1.50 for adults and $1 for students.

RESOURCES
September 3, 1969

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club




















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.
  

Jackets Face Each other Friday Night, September 11, 1969

H.O. DABNEY STADIUM, HOME OF THE LEESBURG YELLOW JACKETS

Daily Commercial
Thursday September 11, 1969

If predictions and forecasts and previews and practices are correct, Leesburg High's Yellow Jackets face some of the toughest competition Friday night that they'll face all year-themselves.

It's the Orange & Black Game, staged by the Dad's Club, in which Varsity Jackets are combined with the Junior Varsity Jackets into two teams for a gladiator-display at Memorial Field.

Game time is 7:30 and tickets are one dollar for adults, fifty cents for students. All proceeds go to the Dad's Club to finance the various projects they sponsor for the team.

It should be an offensive duel extraordinaire with at least three fine quarterbacks looking for place to play
Mike Napier, varsity backup Andy Carlton and Jayvee's Kenny Nappi.

Look also in the first appearance of the Yellow Jackets at home, for ends
Greg Williams and Sherrill Lackey and Ricky  Bosanquet of the JV.

The Junior Jackets include several boys who played on the fine Leesburg Junior High team last  year, when it posted a 6-1 record.

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club




















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.

 

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Jackets Passing Too Much

Best In The State?
September 24, 1969

Jackets Passing Too Much
Ask Wilbur Lofton and he'll tell you his Leesburg High Yellow Jackets will be lucky to win five games. Ask a Yellow Jacket fan and he'll tell you they'll win them all.

Which of the two is right? Only time will tell, But one thing is for sure, the Yellow Jackets could go all the way.

The size, depth and experience is there at all the key spots - quarterback, wideouts, tackles, linebacking, In fact, the only key spot that remains a question mark is at running back, but that position may take care of itself.

"We could end up with a fine ballclub," remarks Lofton. We'll have as fine a Class A team as anybody, but you have to take into consideration our schedule. It's loaded with tough games."

A quick look at the schedule indicates such. It's dotted with two Class AA schools, four Class A schools and three Class Bs. It's about as varied a schedule as you can get

How can they be that tough with three Class B schools on the slate? It's simple ... the Class B teams are Eustis, Winter Garden Lakeview and Wildwood. Any of the three make a formidable opponent for any Class A school. Eustis has enough boys to be a Class A, But managed to stay in Class B one more year.

Winter Garden was a class A last year, went 8-2 against a predominately Class A schedule, but lacked two boys  of having enough this year. Wildwood, though small even for a Class B, won the 1965 state Class A football championship.

The Class AA schools are Deland and Ocala. DeLand has 736 boys in its top three grades, Ocala 1080. Leesburg has 471.

But, despite the awesome foes, there were many schools that dared not even schedule the Yellow Jackets this year, so feared were they of the passing of
Mike Napier, the catching of Greg Williams, the defensive play of Greg Johnson, Sam  Rixie and Mike Chatman.

Basically, this Leesburg team could be the finest in the school's history, and it has the potential to win the 13 games necessary for a state Class A football title.

Lofton considers Napier the finest all-around quarterback he has ever coached. The 6-1, 185 pound senior has college scouts drooling with a passing arm that accounted for nearly 1,500 yards last season and legs that ran for nearly 600 more.

He is an odds-on favorite for All-State honors and a major college scholarship. Lofton also plans to use him as much as possible. When he's not on offense, he'll be a safety on defense and a fine one. He also will handle the punting chores.

Leesburg will go to the air much more than last year, Lofton promises, Napier's aerials will be directed primarily at
Greg Williams, a 185-pound speedster who caught 51 last year for 973 yards and 11 scores. He, too, is all-state material.

But Williams isn't the only Napier target. Williams demands double (and sometimes triple) coverage with his speed, sure hands and quick moves. So Napier may go more to a capable crop that includes wideouts
Tommy Ryan (190), Theodis Williams (160), Sherrill Lackey (165) AND Denny Bradford (160).

Napier may also be used as a wideout at times, with
sophomore Andy Carlton: Destined to become as fine - if not finer - than Napier, at the quarterback slot, Carlton threw a 49-yard touchdown pass in the spring game and hit on four of five as a freshman last year.

Lackey, who played defense lat year, could become the pair's prime target. He caught both touchdown passes through in the spring game and has the speed to get open quick.

We may have to pass a little more than I like," cautions Lofton, "unless we can find ourselves a running game."

Sam Rixie, who doubles as an outstanding linebacker, will be the key. The 170-pounder will
run from the fullback spot and could be a fine one, though the lacks experience at that
position. Ryan,
Anthony Hart (160), James Hulsh (175), Henry Kerrison (180) and Napier are
also expected to  handle the running chores.

Weakest places along the line are right in the heart - at guard and center, Isaac Williams, a
monster at 235-pounder, was lost in the spring by grades and would have been the starting
center.

But the tackle position is so well stocked that Lofton decided over the summer to move
Rocky Norris, all 270-pounds of him, to offensive center.

The tackles may be the strongest point on the team.
Greg Johnson, a starter as a freshman
last year, will go both ways, as will newcomer
James Mackey. Johnson is 6-4 225.... Mackey
6-3, 205. Both have exceptional speed and have all-star credentials.

Mark Sneed, if he doesn't play guard, is big at 205, and will see a lot of action.

RESOURCES 
September 24, 1969

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club
www.leesburgyellowjacketsfootball.com




















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.

John Bowman Sports Editor, July 25, 1969

July 25, 1969
DAILY COMMERCIAL

Believe it or not, right here in the middle of summer, spring football begins for area high schools in just three weeks.

As hard to comprehend as that is, let me pass along this bit of very important information that involves just about every decent Class A football team in the state, and any team in the area who hopes to make a run for the area title.

There will be no Leesburg-Lyman Rick Browne game this year. Lyman, which moved up to Class AA this year and whose weapon is Rick Browne, possibly the most formidable weapon in Florida high schools this year, will not play Leesburg. Get that?

"We just could not come to agreement with them on a contract," said Leesburg pricipal Buford Robinson. "We tried our best, but we could get no satisfaction, so they will not be on our schedule this fall."

Whew! That's good news.
Leesburg coach Wilbur Lofton seems like a different man since he found out he doesn't have to prepare for the likes of Browne. He only ran the  the ball 38 times against the Yellow jackets last fall in 20-7 Lyman victory.

Browne is probably the finest college prospect in the state this year, as evidenced by the hordes of college coaches and scouts that attended the Greyhounds spring pratice. Brown, plus the fact that Lyman is so much bigger and has so many moretochoosenfrom, not being on the schedule is a welcome relief.

He'll be missed about as much as a sore tooth, claims Lofton.

With Lyman off the schedule, It brings up an interesting question? Will Leesburg now be able to make a run at the district championship?

Lofton keeps saying if the Yellow Jackets win four or five he'll be happy, but you know he's got to be kidding. No team with the likes of
Mike Napier, Andy Carlton, Greg Williams, Greg Johnson (at 15, 6-4 and 220) will be a loser. There's just no way, Wilbur, just no way.

RESOURCES
John Bowman
Sports Editor
 
DAILY COMMERCIAL
July 25, 1969

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club
www.leesburgyellowjacketsfootball.com




















Gerald is a professional Internet marketer and social media marketing expert. His online business ventures and websites generate multiple streams of income annually. His consulting clients include best selling authors and international speakers.

Gerald is the CEO/President of Lacey LLC and OmariWholesale, Inc. He runs his entire business from his home where he is able to spend quality time with his family and friends. He is passionate about helping individuals to build and monetize their personal brand online.

Jacket Super-End Williams Signs Bethune-Cookman Grant, December 1969

GREG WILLIAMS, who has just climaxed a brilliant career as split end for Leesburg High School. has signed a full four year grant-in-aid scholarship at Bethune-Cookman College of Daytona Beach. Bud Asher, head offensive coach of the college, who called Williams "not only a outstanding player but an outstanding man. He has the potential to move into pro football ranks as a wide receiver." Asher feels that Leesburg Coach Wilbur Lofton has done and excellent job in developing players, some of whom he (Asher) hopes to sign up in the future

December 1969
By CLAY HARTSOE
Commercial Sports Editor
Leesburg High School Men's Rapid Dry T-Shirt - K450

Greg Williams, Leesburg's All Everything, super receiver, signed a grant-in-aid with Bethune-Cookman College yesterday.

Williams just finished a record breaking tenure as split-end for the Leesburg Yellow Jackets. He scored at least one touchdown per game in every game he played this year, with the exception of the Championship Game against Blake. Leesburg's whole offense was built around the passing of
Mike Napier and the receiving of Greg Williams.

Bethune-Cookman's Head Offensive Coach Bud Asher, who signed Williams, said, "We feel that we're getting the best receiver in the State bar none. He will probably start for us in his Freshman Year. He has the potential to move into pro football ranks as a wide receiver."

Coach Asher is planning to make Behtune-Cookman a football power. On this trip he signed (besides Williams); (Ken Graham QB Jacksonville Gilbert 6'3 1/2" 185.) Leopold Sterling (All Southern HB Pahokee 5' 11" 185 lbs.) Henry Lewis (Clewiston DT 6' 2" 260 lbs.) Charles Anderson (Tackle Miami, Jackson 6' 2" 225 lbs.), Mosser Burke (DT Sanford Crooms, 6' 4" 260 lbs.) Myron Davis DE Sarasota, 6' 2" 240 lbs.) Arthur Jackson (Tackle Miami Jackson 6' "3 210 lbs). Howard Clark (LB Jax Stanton 6' 2" 215 lbs.) and Kenny Williams (Guard Jacksonville, Gilbert 6' 2 1/2"228 lbs.)

Coach Asher complimented
Leesburg's Head Coach, Wilbur Lofton, on the excellent job he has done in developing players. Some of whom he (Asher) hopes to sign up in the future.

Williams runs the forty yard dash in 4.7 seconds, but speed is not his main forte. The way he can fake is his strongest asset. Many are the defenders he has left clutching thin air. He is also extremely hard to bring down when tackled.

Resources
By CLAY HARTSOE
Commercial Sports Editor
DAILY COMMERCIAL

Article provided by:
Gerald Lacey
Staff Writer
Carver Heights Quarterback Club




















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