The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

After 20 seasons, three titles, Calhoun coach Lamb retires

- By Todd Holcomb For the AJC

Hal Lamb, who won three state championsh­ips and 18 region titles in his 20 seasons as Calhoun’s football coach, announced his retirement on Thursday.

“Me and my wife had prayed about it for two or three years now and had decided that this was probably the year I’d do it, and I felt it was time,” Lamb told AJC.com after meeting with his players. “I’ve coached a lot of football in my days. As a family, I felt it was time to do something different.”

Lamb steps down with the most victories of any Georgia high school football coach this century. His record is 231-29 since 2000 and 23852 overall.

Lamb will remain parttime at the northwest Georgia school as director of athletic facilities and events coordinato­r.

Clay Stephenson, a 12-year assistant coach at Calhoun, will be the Yellow Jackets’ new head coach.

When Lamb came to Calhoun in 1999, the football program had won only one playoff game and one region title since 1953.

After 2-8 and 7-4 finishes in Lamb’s first two seasons, Calhoun reeled off 18 straight 10-win campaigns, each resulting in region championsh­ips, and 118 straight victories in games that counted in region standings. All three streaks are state records.

Calhoun won state championsh­ips in 2011, 2014 and 2017.

Among Calhoun’s star players were NFL wide receivers Da’Rick Rogers and Kris Durham. Eight of his quarterbac­ks got all-state recognitio­n include son Tre Lamb and nephew Taylor Lamb, who went on to become outstandin­g college quarterbac­ks.

Tre Lamb is now the offensive coordinato­r at Tennessee Tech. Taylor is a graduate assistant coach at South Carolina.

“I think it takes a lot to be able to turn a program around,” Lamb said. “Our administra­tion bought in and I was able to hire good assistants and we were all on the same page. Then the kids worked extremely hard. We had some breaks early and won some big games, and they learned how to win. Then every new class that came in and every new team fed off the others and we just kept winning.”

Lamb is part of one of Georgia’s most successful coaching families. His father, Ray, was a long-time head coach at Warrenton and Commerce. Hal was a wide receiver on Ray’s 1981 Commerce team that won a state title.

Hal’s brother Bobby was the starting quarterbac­k. Bobby Lamb is now head coach at Mercer.

Hal said retirement plans included watching his family coach on Saturdays, traveling with his wife and playing more golf. Asked if he might consider a college job himself, or any coaching position again, Lamb said he didn’t think so.

“That’s not the plan at this point,” Lamb said. “I don’t think I’ll coach again. I’m not saying I won’t. I might take a year or two off and see that I miss it, but at this time, I don’t think I’ll coach again.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Hal Lamb has the most wins of any Georgia high school coach this century with 231 since 2000.
CONTRIBUTE­D Hal Lamb has the most wins of any Georgia high school coach this century with 231 since 2000.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States