Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ALMA — Louis Wayne Whorton,

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70, of Alma, passed away on Sunday, December 5, at Washington Regional Hospital in Fayettevil­le. A Celebratio­n of Life will be held at 11 a.m., on Thursday, Dec. 9, at Heritage Methodist Church in Van Buren under the direction of Edwards Funeral Home. A private family burial will be at the Fort Smith National Cemetery.

Born in Clarksvill­e, he was a 1970 graduate of Hartford High School. He proudly served his country in the Navy Reserve and was a Vietnam War veteran. He went on to earn college degrees at the University of the Ozarks and Arkansas Tech University. Raised in a coaching family, he embarked on a lifelong journey following in the footsteps of his parents, the late Ernie and JoAnn Whorton, who were both high school coaches and teachers. He became a legendary basketball coach with a successful career that spanned the high school and collegiate levels, including Hector, Hoxie, Blythevill­e, Subiaco, and County Line high schools, and the University of Arkansas-Fort Smith, formerly Westark College.

A passionate coach with a knack for entertaini­ng theatrics, he and his Lady Lions teams played their way into the hearts of fans throughout the area, state, region, and nation with their up-tempo offensive style and renowned smothering, pressure man-toman defense. During 23 seasons of competitio­n at the junior college level, he compiled an impressive 538-195 record — an average of 23 wins per season. His junior college teams posted 16 20-win seasons and six 30-win seasons. In that span, he guided the Lady Lions to one Arkansas JUCO Conference championsh­ip, three Arkansas State Tournament championsh­ips, seven Bi-State East Conference championsh­ips and seven Region II championsh­ips. His teams also were Region II runners-up six times.

He was NJCAA National Coach of the Year in 1994-95, leading the Lady Lions to a national championsh­ip and an undefeated season (35-0). His team placed second in the NJCAA national tournament in 1993-94. In their 1997-98 and 2005-2006 national tournament appearance­s, the Lady Lions finished seventh.

In 2003-04, they finished in fourth, and in 2004-05 and 2007-08, they finished third. His junior college teams produced four WNBA draft picks. During seven seasons of NCAA Division II competitio­n, he guided the Lady Lions to a 110-82 record and a Heartland Conference championsh­ip, a conference tournament championsh­ip, a runner- up finish in the conference tournament and a berth in the NCAA Division II South Central Region Tournament. He was inducted into the NJCAA Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2010 and also is a member of the University of the Ozarks Eagles Athletics Hall of Fame and the UAFS Athletics Hall of Fame. Throughout his coaching and teaching career, he was a mentor to countless student- athletes, many of whom went on to successful coaching careers or careers in their chosen profession­s. He was well-respected by his coaching colleagues across the nation as well as his fellow athletic department colleagues and was loved by all those who came to call him a “pal”.

He was preceded in death by his parents, JoAnn and Ernie Whorton, and his motherin-law and father-in-law, Suda and Junior Floyd.

He is survived by his wife of 51 years, Pat of the home, son, Jeremy (Jennie) of Fort Smith, grandchild­ren, Blake Payson and Ashlynn Sigler of Hackett and Mollie Whorton, Aiden Farrar and Austin Farrar of Fort Smith, sister-inlaw, Jean Metcalf of Menifee, Calif., numerous nieces and nephews and hundreds of Lady Lions players and assistant coaches whom he loved like daughters.

Memorials may be sent to: UAFS Women’s Basketball, P.O. Box 3649, Fort Smith, Ark., 72913, or Alma Arts and Education Foundation, P.O. Box 2359, Alma, Ark., 72921. Online condolence­s may be sent to: www.edwardsfun­eralhome.com

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