The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tigers lose their one-of-a-kind superfan and coaches helper

Authoritie­s rule James ‘Bud’ King’s death as accidental.

- By Nancy Badertsche­r

The Tigers of Tucker High School had some winning sports seasons and some losing ones. But over decades, they rarely, if ever, scored a touchdown, made a tie-breaking basket, or celebrated a bases-loaded home run without their big- gest fan watching — James “Bud” Jeffrey King.

“Anything he could do to help, he would. Anything he could do for the kids, he would,” said James Harty, head coach for Tucker’s var- sity basketball team. “He’s an icon here in Tucker. He meant a lot to everybody.”

King, who was autistic, disappeare­d Feb. 24 after taking a bus to visit one of his favorite Tucker restau- rants. His body was found near Mariners Court on March 2. Authoritie­s have ruled his death an accident, his family said.

He was 57.

King didn’t own or drive a car, so he hopped a Marta bus every day to go from his Decatur home to Tucker, where he was a fixture at the DeKalb County high school.

Bud King graduated from Stone Mountain High School, where programs were tailored to his unique needs. But he grew up not even a block from Tucker High School and, as a youngster, developed bonds with the school’s coaches and players that would last decades.

Tucker High School was his heart and life, older brother Jerry King said.

He said Bud King had a phenomenal memory and could remember all the ath- letes, their stats, where they played, and the yard line where they dropped the ball.

“Everything was Tucker High School, morning until night,” Jerry King said. “He had to get to every game. He never missed a game for 20-something, 25, or maybe 30 years.”

Randall Rolader, a Tucker youth sports coach, said King’s remarkable memory was legendary and known around the country.

“He could remember the batting averages of every kid in the major leagues and the youth football leagues,” he said. “Teams used him as their statistici­an and had him keep their books.”

Bud King’s love of sports shined early. Rolader was coaching in Tucker in the 1970s when King, then 9 or 10 years old, started show- ing up at games.

King changed dugouts at one game when he realized the team he supported was losing to Rolader’s team. After that, some started calling him “better deal King,” Rolader said.

Another time, while on a youth football team trip to Savannah, King was worried some boys might prank him, so he slept in a closet. He got left behind when the team departed. The Chatham County Sheriffs Department passed the hat to put King on a bus for home.

Former coach, local busi- nessman and longtime friend Trea Hurst said he “and the whole community are absolutely just crushed and devastated” by King’s death.

“We can’t understand how or why this happened to somebody who meant so much to everybody.”

Hurst described King as someone who never met a stranger, whether in a ball- park or another city.

“And usually somebody recognized him,” he said.

King was part of Tucker sports, every day, 365 days a year, Hurst said.

“If there was something going on, he was down there the whole day, every day,” he said. “He never missed a football game, a basketball game or a baseball game.”

Several Tucker coaches met in the mountains about three weeks ago for their annual Super Bowl watch- ing. King was there, as always, Hurst said.

“He was the centerpiec­e of any group he was ever in,” he said. “Bud was just a magnetic person. He was the character of the party. Our community has stopped for about a week now. We’re in shock. We’re frozen. We’re going to miss him.”

Survivors include his brother, Jerry King; his sis- ter, Jackie Boyles; and his nephew, Richard King.

 ?? AJC FILE 2009 ?? Bud King, 57, who was autistic, was a walking encycloped­ia of Tucker High players, teams and coaches. He helped out the high school’s coaches for decades. King was part of Tucker sports 365 days a year, former coach Trea Hurst said. King was found dead March 2.
AJC FILE 2009 Bud King, 57, who was autistic, was a walking encycloped­ia of Tucker High players, teams and coaches. He helped out the high school’s coaches for decades. King was part of Tucker sports 365 days a year, former coach Trea Hurst said. King was found dead March 2.

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