Jackets Spoil Maroon Devil’s Homecoming Thanks To Stellar Defensive Play
Team FYN Sports, TeamFYNSports October 17, 2022
Photo courtesy of Brooke Leatherwood
Bryson City, NC- The Hayesville Yellow Jackets took the bus ride over to Bryson City last Friday knowing that this was a pivotal point in their season. Lose, and you’ll find yourself at the bottom of the Smoky Mountain Conference standings. Win, and with a little luck, you could find yourself at the top of the conference with some favorable playoff seeding. The Maroon Devils were in the same boat, looking to end their 3-game-losing skid on homecoming night- in a game where they were 6-point favorites.
Obviously, the Yellow Jackets don’t pay much attention to the spread as they came into Memorial Stadium and whooped the Devils up and down the field. The Yellow Jackets found paydirt in all four quarters on Friday night, and only allowed the Maroon Devils to cross the goal line once in 48 minutes as they spoiled the Swain County homecoming festivities, 27-7.
Taylor McClure was the motor of the Yellow Jacket offense, as he accumulated over 100 yards and 1 score on the ground, and also found himself on the receiving end of a Logan Caldwell touchdown through the air. Caldwell was nearly perfect as well, going 11-12 for 144 yards and 2 touchdowns.
Defensively the Jackets stonewalled the Maroon Devils, allowing only 166 yards of total offense. McClure, Avery Leatherwood, and Kyle Lunsford were the defensive tackle leaders for the Jackets, and Caldwell and Michael Mauney helped get the Jackets D off of the field with 2 interceptions.
The win helped move Hayesville up to number 8 in the NCHSAA RPI rankings, and will go a long way in helping the Jackets secure a first-round home playoff game.
Hayesville will travel to Cherokee to face the 1-win Braves in a rematch of last year’s overtime thriller in which the Jackets were able to come away with a victory. As for Swain, they’ll go on the road to face the Murphy Bulldogs who are coming off a big upset win on the road against Robbinsville.
Pre-season interview with new Hayesville Head Coach Chad McClure
Hayesville High, Sports, TeamFYNSports July 9, 2019
The Hayesville Yellow Jackets are excited about their 2019 football season under their new head coach, Chad McClure.
“I hear a lot of excitement,” said McClure. “They can’t wait to get started, they can’t wait to open up on August 23rd against Towns County.”
This will be McClure’s first season in the head coach position. A Hayesville native himself, he was previously a special teams assistant coach for the Yellow Jackets.
Although football hype can fade, McClure has a plan for building up the confidence among the team.
“The main thing that we’re trying to do is work on the kids [and] the mentality, getting them to believe that they can compete and they can win every game that they go out there,” said McClure.
Watch the rest of the interview below as part of the Team FYN Sports 2019 Western Carolina Coaching Series!
Sports talk Thursday with Lauren Hunter- Thank a coach!
Sports July 25, 2019
Over the last week and a half BKP and I have been going from school to school interviewing head football coaches for our North Georgia Coaching Series. Now if any of y’all know BKP, you’ll know what I mean when I say that he’s been doing most of the talking and I’ve been doing most of the observing. But this doesn’t bother me, it gives me a chance to learn more about the programs I’ll be spending a lot of time with this fall.
With that being said, there’s one thing in particular I’ve been noticing in our interviews, and that’s how much these coaches truly care about their players and their programs.
Now me saying that might make some of y’all think, “Well, duh. That’s what they’re supposed to do.” Well, maybe. But I like to think I’m pretty good at picking up when someone is just putting on an act for appearances. And I can say with all sincerity that none of these coaches are doing that.
Obviously when BKP and I go into these interviews, he asks questions about what the teams have been doing during the summer and how they’re planning to prepare for the regular season. But he also asks the coaches if they can highlight a few players that have really stood out. This point in the interview, I believe, is where a coach who didn’t care would possibly just say a couple names and move on.
But these coaches not only name the players, they tell us about why they stand out. And it’s a sign of the hard work of these athletes, but there’s also a sense of pride from these coaches as they name them. A couple of coaches have mentioned that it’s hard to name just a few, because all of their players have worked hard. And it’s not that the rest of the team doesn’t matter or that they don’t care about them, but the ones that they mention they do so without hesitation because they’ve been there with them through the summer truly coaching them. There’s no so-so about the commitment these coaches make- they’re all in.
Another thing that has amazed me about these coaches, not just in the interviews but learning about them off the field, is how much they care about their community as well. A couple of them, such as Chad Cheatham at Fannin County and Chad McClure at Hayesville, are natives to their communities. It’s home to them, and they’re not going to be just halfway in their commitments to their programs.
When Coach Caleb Sorrells of the Lumpkin County Indians was first named as head coach, the school hosted a meet and greet for him. It was one of the first stories I covered in this position.
In his address to the parents, Sorrells promised to not only invest in the team as players and athletes, but as men who would one day be employees and fathers. I remember being caught off guard at first because I was expecting him to talk about plans for the future of the program, the summer schedule and what not. He did talk about these things, but I believe by telling the parents that he was going to invest in the players as men showed that it was going to be a priority.
Although I know more about the commitment that Sorrells has made because I’m positioned in Lumpkin County, he’s not the only one in the area who gets involved in the community and works to build up the athletes’ character.
Tim Cokely with the White County Warriors has an entire wall of his office decorated with signs of good character qualities to instill in the team. Chad Cheatham, who I mentioned earlier, referees basketball in the football off-season just because, and the community loves him for it. I’m sure that many of the other coaches in the area do similar things and I just don’t know about it yet.
These are commitments that we see played out by coaches in movies and don’t always think to look for in real life. And because I grew up in Gwinnett County, population one million, if there was this sort of commitment by coaches I didn’t always see it because there were so many people. I love living up here in North Georgia in a smaller community where an act of kindness, especially where sports are concerned, rarely goes unnoticed.
We think about football as a sport that instills a since of discipline, but why is that? Because there’s a coach that sets that standard and inspires the team to do the same. As a community we love football and we love our team, and we can thank a coach for that.


