Chattanooga Times Free Press

Opposing coaches Barnes, Bryan good friends

- STAFF REPORTS

Hamilton County’s largest high schools by population will clash on the football field tonight at 7:30 when Soddy-Daisy hosts Ooltewah. Their head coaches have a connection.

Soddy-Daisy’s Justin Barnes was a quarterbac­k at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a from 1999 to 2002 and was a student assistant coach there the next two seasons. Ooltewah coach Mac Bryan is a former college assistant who worked at UTC from 2001 to 2003.

“You can’t find a quarterbac­k to have a better friend than an offensive line coach,” Barnes said.

Barnes said the two stayed in touch even when he was coaching in Georgia and Bryan was coaching in South Carolina. They were hired to take over at their current schools about a month apart early in 2013.

“He’s one of the guys I can ask questions to, or someone I’d call and ask advice about something, especially in my first couple of years,” Barnes said.

The two sat in on many meetings together. Barnes cherishes a picture that both are in that he’s had on a wall for 15 years.

Ringgold win ‘amazing’

There are few firsts for Robert Akins, but the veteran coach experience­d one in last Friday’s 47-42 Ringgold win over Adairsvill­e.

Ringgold fell behind 21-0 with a myriad of mistakes. However, it took only a matter of minutes — and several Adairsvill­e mishaps — for Ringgold to take the lead early in the second quarter on the way to a 40-28 halftime advantage.

“For us to score 40 points in one half is amazing,” Akins said. “I didn’t know if our kids could overcome that, but they scored so fast that I don’t think we realized we were down that much. The great thing is that both groups didn’t give up.

“It was like a heavyweigh­t fight to me. We just took one less blow than they did, I guess. In 40 years of coaching I can’t remember a game that went that way.”

Adairsvill­e rallied for two scores in the third quarter and Ringgold, as it had done earlier in the season, appeared to be wilting late as stars Ty Jones and Andre Tarver were on the sideline with ailments. Sensing impending doom, Akins implored his guys to gut it out.

“Finally, we said if you don’t Ooltewah football coach Mac Bryan watches his team warm up before last season’s game against Soddy-Daisy.

go back out there we’re not going to win,” Akins said of the twoway standouts. “Once they decided to do that, we picked it up and held on. Those two, along with everybody else, didn’t want to lose another one late.”

Watson big for Polk

At 5-foot-9, 150 pounds, Polk County junior Austin Watson is not built like a prototype outside linebacker. But don’t be fooled by his lack of size — Watson is a playmaker on the Wildcats’ defense. He leads the Soddy-Daisy head coach Justin Barnes talks to his players on the bench during a game against Red Bank on Aug. 18.

area with five fumble recoveries, which is also nearly half of Polk County’s team total (11). Polk County is plus-12 in turnover ratio, a big reason for a 3-2 start to the season.

Watson is the team’s leading tackler as well.

“He wasn’t even a starter until the last couple of games last year,” said Wildcats coach Derrick Davis. “He’s undersized, but every time we put him in a game he kept making plays and was just always around the ball. He made the most of his opportunit­y. If you see him lined up with other players you wouldn’t expect he would be our leading tackler, but he hustles every play and is just the type kid you love to coach. He’s made a big difference for us already.”

39 still unbeaten

There are 39 teams still unbeaten in Tennessee, and Meigs County (5-0), the state’s top-ranked Class 2A team, is among those.

Whitwell, ranked No. 5 in 1A, also is 5-0 while South Pittsburg is 4-0 and the state’s top-ranked Class 1A team. The other Chattanoog­a-area unbeaten is Class 4A’s East Ridge (4-0).

On the other hand, there are 40 winless TSSAA teams, including Class 3A’s McMinn Central, Class 4A’s Hixson and Class 5A’s Walker Valley.

Rankin adds a milestone

Already the state’s winningest football coach, Gary Rankin added another milestone to his career last week by earning the 400th win of his career. Rankin began his coaching career in 1982 at Smith County, where he stayed for eight years before taking over at Murfreesbo­ro Riverdale and guiding the Warriors to four state titles in 16 seasons. He has been at Alcoa for 11 years, winning eight state titles with the Tornado.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND STAFF FILE PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Then-UTC offensive line coach Mac Bryan talks with Justin Barnes before a September 2002 game against Tennessee Tech.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND STAFF FILE PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD STAFF FILE PHOTO Then-UTC offensive line coach Mac Bryan talks with Justin Barnes before a September 2002 game against Tennessee Tech.

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