Foo tb a l l Fo c u s ‘23 tball Focus ‘23








Campbell County High School drum majors Joann Begley and Jolynn
Phillips are elated to be leading the Campbell County band into the 2023 season. They play an important role in leading the band in performances but also as leaders in everyday activities and practices.
“Ever since I was in seventh-grade, that’s when I started going to football games and seeing the drum majors and stuff,” Phillips said. “I knew that’s what I wanted to be in my high school career. I just always noticed how there was always divisions in the band, and I wanted to fuse them together because I didn’t want anyone to feel alone or separated. I want everybody to feel like we are one unit instead of a bunch of units.”
Both Begley and Phillips know the important role band has played in their lives.
“I just feel really grateful to be in band because when I started my middle school year it was really hard to pick between band and art because most of my friends weren’t in band,” Phillips said. “I am really glad that I stuck with band because I don’t know where else I would be. I would probably be down the wrong path. My life would be completely messed up without band.”
The unifying nature of being in the band is important to Begley.
“For me, being part of the band, all of my friends are in band and I kind of have
grown up with music my whole life,” Begley said. “So, being part of a big community that is so accepting, I have always believed that not everybody is a band person. Band is not for everybody but everybody can be a band person because the community is so accepting as a whole.”
Begley was thankful for her parents for helping her get through the tough times that band presented and helping her persevere to continue her band career that she loves.
Begley talked about the leadership of Campbell County band director Adam Wright and how he has always helped lead in the best ways possible.
Phillips noted the important role that Emily Ayers, a former drum major, played in her development and growth.
Begley hopes more people will take a chance and try band.
“When I was in eighth grade, I actually had to give a speech about this for fifth-grade night, encouraging kids to join band,” Begley said. “Basically, my main point was that band is not for everybody but everybody can be in band because even if you’re not musically inclined, we have color guard members this year who’ve never been in band before and are picking it up just great. We have dance members joining band. We have people in percussion who have no idea what they’re doing and they’re just picking it up. Everybody loves it so much because we are all together. If you’re in band, you’re going to have friends. There is no way around
it; it’s guaranteed to have lifelong friends because we are together Monday through Friday. We are on buses together. We are at competitions all day on Saturdays. We are at band camp together for three weeks straight. You build these bonds. Even at lunch at band camp, we are having a blast in the band room. Someone that is thinking about doing band, I would do at least a year of it. If you’re in middle school it’s a little different, but as far as high school band, at least try it. At least stick out one semester of it because if I wouldn’t have done it I don’t know where I would be because all of my friends are in band. Everything I do is around band. I am in other sports and I do other things, but it all wraps back to band.”
Phillips is preparing for her senior year of band.
“I didn’t know that my senior year would come to me so fast,” Phillips said. “It feels like yesterday I was in eighth-grade marching, and now I’m waving hands at everybody. One of the best moments I ever had was Friday when me and some of my friends were in the band room, and we were just listening to music and dancing. It just all connected. Larry and Noah have been through this since eighth-grade and now we are all in this position. Larry is the percussion captain and Noah is a trumpet section leader, and now I’m the drum major. I just think it’s crazy because we were in eighth-grade, and now we are leaders.”
The Campbell County High School football team will be led by a youth movement in 2023.
“First off offensively having Hensley back, one of the top quarterbacks in East Tennessee if not the state of Tennessee,” Campbell County football head coach Justin Price said. “We are fortunate to have him. Even for him to see how much he’s improved even since last year gives
our football program a lot of confidence. Obviously, with the offensive line, having several players back up front that have played a lot of football. At the end of the day, you win football games up front. I think our ability to control the game up front from an offensive line standpoint is going to be huge for us. The question mark going into the season for the offense is our receivers. We are younger and inexperienced out there with the loss of the players we had last season. The one thing I have noticed about that
group is that they’re working hard to reach their potential. We are excited about what I think they can become as the season progresses.”
Landen Hensley will go into his second season as the starting quarterback at CCHS. In his first season as starter, Hensley relied on senior receivers Devon Jones, Mason Shanks, Peyton Ferguson and Ethan Miller.
Campbell County will have a youthful group of receivers in 2023 that will be COUGARS » 5 »
led by talented sophomores Timmy Gibson, Gabe St. John and Luke Lindsay.
Gavin Owens will also play an important role in the passing game.
Price believes the reps Hensley has gotten with his young receiving core and will get early in the season will help the group continue to gain tremendous amounts of confidence together.
Campbell County will be changing things up on the defensive side of the ball after the additions of Shaun Cross as co-defensive coordinator and linebackers coach as well
as Zack Shelley as the new defensive line coach.
“We are probably going to be more of an even front, a four-man front on defense,” Price said. “Historically we have been an odd front defense. Cross and Matt have done a good job implementing some new things. A lot of defense is just your fundamentals, lining up right, playing with great effort, being a great tackler. The fundamentals haven’t changed but maybe some philosophy is going to be a little bit different than it was in the past. Whether that is
certain games us being a little more aggressive in blitzing and trying to put pressure on the offense. I think it’s exciting. We are going to have the ability to be a little multiple on defense. I am excited about that. Coach Cross and Coach Shelley, the D-line coach, those guys are helping to make our defense reach its potential. We are excited to have those guys on our staff and about what our defense is going to be able to do this season.”
Despite a young core, Price wants his group to shock opponents on Friday nights
Aug. 17 at Halls
Aug. 25 Fulton
Sept. 1 at King’s Academy*
Sept. 8 Clinton
Sept. 15 at Lenoir City
Sept. 22 Daniel Boone (Homecoming)
Sept. 29 Gibbs
Oct. 6 Karns (Senior Night)
Oct. 20 at Morristown East
Oct. 26 at Oak Ridge
Most kickoffs are at 7 p.m. *denotes a 7:30 p.m. kickoff
with its ability.
“I think we can,” Price said. “Landen Hensley is well known. I think our offensive line as a unit, we have a lot of confidence in. I think you’re going to see some younger, inexperienced players fill some voids that we have from last year, but I think they are going to do it at a very high level. When you look at the way our players have prepared for this season and the investment they’ve made, I am just excited to see the return that they get once we kick this thing off against Halls.”
Campbell County High School cheerleader Bella Fleming is ready for everything her senior cheer season has to offer.
“It has been the best thing in the world,” Fleming said. “I am so thankful that God has given me the opportunity to cheer for this great community. It is something I am truly going to miss when I’m gone. I am definitely going to have to take in all of the memories I can this year because it has been the biggest blessing of my life getting to cheer for Campbell County.”
Fleming has cheered since she was 3 years old.
“Cara Beth was a big influential FLEMING » 9 »
Campbell County High School dance team captains Savannah Brooks and Eden Elkins are ready.
Brooks is going into her senior year having been on the dance team for all four years and danced for seven years.
“It has meant a lot to me,” Brooks said. “I have made some friends that will forever go down in history with me. I was co-captain last year and captain this year. It has really meant a lot to me to be in that leadership role and to be able to help these girls as they grow and continue their dance career, their school DANCE » 9 »
Landen Hensley is preparing for his second year as the starting QB of the CCHS football team.
“The experience has definitely helped me,” Hensley said. “It has helped a lot with the younger guys too, they can really follow me a lot better this year as opposed to last year. If I tried to help out, they probably wouldn’t listen as well, but my name is kind of more out there now. Especially kids on my team, I can mentor them and help them get better.”
this year, repetition, throwing the football,” he said. “It’s just different throws that I can make this year that I couldn’t make last year.”
Hensley noted that it’s awesome to have a majority of his offensive line back for this season, and he is excited to see them continue to grow.
In his sophomore year and first year as starting QB, Hensley put up video game-type numbers.
Hensley threw for seven touchdowns in games against Heritage and Sevier County, while also throwing for 488 yards in the Sevier County game.
In his second year at starting quarterback, he knows his advanced knowledge of the playbook will allow head coach Justin Price to let him do even more.
“He’s definitely giving me a lot more options than what I had last year going into the season,” Hensley said. “My understanding of the offense is way more complex than it was last year. Last year it was just a simple read. This year I can look around and I can have the ability to throw it almost anywhere.”
While Hensley and the Cougars are young in 2023, he expects CCHS to shock many opponents this year.
“Absolutely, it definitely will be a shocker team,” Hensley said. “Younger, but they’ve improved a lot over the offseason, like a lot of the younger guys have never played. They lack in experience, but they are going to go out, show up and show out.”
career and wherever they choose to go.”
Brooks is thankful for her family, coaches and friends who have helped her get to this point and achieve the goals she has wanted to reach.
part of my life,” Fleming said. “Bri has been a very big influential part of my life. When I was younger at Magic, I had a coach named Jordan, and I always looked up to him. He got me over my fears of tumbling and flying. He was a really big part of making me the cheerleader I am. Obviously, I look up to Bri and Haley. They are the best coaches, and I couldn’t ask for any better.”
Fleming has made a lot of memories in her first three years cheering at CCHS.
“The Thursday night rivalry game against Clinton, I will remember that for the rest of my life,” Fleming said. “I
Elkins has danced for over 10 years and will enter her junior year at CCHS. “It has been wonderful,” Elkins said. “The experience has been awesome. It has honestly been such a good experience to be able to grow with other people and be able to participate in the football games and go on the sidelines. It honestly feels like being in a movie.” Elkins’ parents and coaches have played an influential role in helping her get to where she is today. Elkins is also thankful for Brooks showing her how to be a captain and leader for the rest of the team. With only a few more football and basketball games left in her high school career, Brooks is thankful for the memories she has made and will make this year.
“It has been amazing,” Brooks said. “We started football my second year. The first year, it was just basketball, but it was still like a dream. Then we started football, and everything just became a lot more fun. We got to do sidelines, and it’s just all been a really wonderful experience.”
love running the flags during football games. The routines during basketball season, those are always so awesome and just getting to cheer with my best friends. That is the biggest memory of all, I think.”
Fleming hopes she can continue to lead young cheerleaders in Campbell County.
“Don’t wish your time away,” Fleming said. “It goes by a lot faster than it seems. Take in every moment, even if you’re like ‘oh, I wish I didn’t have to cheer tonight,’ always be so excited to be there, you are going to really miss it once you realize it’s your last year.”
Ballard,
Jefferson,
Gavin Padgett,
Aug. 18 at Lynn Camp
Aug. 25 Oakdale
Sept. 1 at North Greene
Sept. 8 Tri Cities Christian
BY J.T. RUSSELL jtrussell@lafollettepress.comZack Lay,
Kyle Strange,
Samuel Proffitt, #23 Bobby Watson, #24 Jadon Reno, #32 Waylon Orrick, #34 Dawson Warren, #42 Carter Terry, #50 Ewan Deane, #51 Tytan Mills, #56 Ethan Sowders, #60 Isaiah Hopson, #62 Jake Waldrop, #70 Happy Campbell, #74 Jacob Jones. Not Pictured: Logan Henderson, Mason Dople, Tristan Long.
Sept. 15 Unaka
Sept. 22 at Midway
Sept. 29 Cosby (Homecoming)
Oct. 6 at Cloudland
Oct. 20 Jackson Co. (Senior Night)
Oct. 26 at Hancock Co. * Most kickoffs are at 7:30 p.m. *denotes a 7 p.m. kickoff
www.tommysmotorsports.com
The Jellico High School football team is ready to make a statement in 2023 after a winless season in 2022.
“Definitely, we want some wins,” Jellico football head coach Brent Peel said. ‘We have a lot of kids back; we’ve added
a couple of kids too. So, we feel good about that, feel good about having a lot of kids back. The one key issue is starting a freshman at quarterback. Whenever you start a freshman at any position, much less at quarterback, there is going to be some growing pains. He has done well so far. Hopefully he can continue to grow and get better like he has so far, and things will work out good for us.”
Freshman quarterback Owen Morgan will have a lot of help offensively this year as Jellico will rely on Caden Rose, Tray Jefferson, Samuel Proffitt and Dustin Lewallen to carry the load running the ball.
“It’s all up to them,” Peel said. “We are going to go as that group goes is how it is. Them being a good group and a talented group put a little competition in there, pushing each one of them to do a little better too. Hopefully that helps them along the way.”
The quartet in the backfield are a great mix of power and speed that provides a lot of diversity to the Jellico offense and helps Morgan manage the load at quarterback.
“That definitely helps,” Peel said. “It’s not so much pressure on him. He just has to get the ball to people who can do something with it. He is one of them, too. We expect him to do some things too. Definitely having those guys is a little weight off of his shoulders.”
Peel expects big things from his offensive and defensive lines this year, which return a majority of the starters from last year.
Jellico has put in a lot of work in the offseason and is motivated to turn the page on what happened in 2022.
“It was a big motivating factor,” Peel said. “They’ve got a bad taste in their mouth, and they don’t want to have to go through that again.”
Jellico High School football player Caden Rose is ready to roll in 2023 after transferring to JHS near the end of the 2022 season from Whitley County.
“The three games I was there and practiced for, we worked our butts off every day and played our best in games,” Rose said. “Seeing my teammates down after those three losses was very sad. Nobody wants to feel that way again.”
Rose will enter his senior year and wants to help flip the script for Jellico after a winless 2022.
“The sky is the limit for me,” he said. “I just hope to win games and always try to break records. My team and me plan on winning every single game we go into. That’s what we’re expecting.”
Rose wants to help set the tone for his team this year and will be part of an extremely talented skill group that features himself, Tray Jefferson, Samuel Proffitt, along with a deep group of seniors that have played a lot of football at Jellico.
“It’s very important,” Rose said. “Us seniors are going to have to make plays and lead our young freshman quarterback and keep him up in a positive way no matter the outcome of every snap.”
Rose credited his teammates for the hard work they have put in during the offseason and knows it has helped Jellico become stronger and faster.
“Very excited,” Rose said. “I can’t wait to play a full season with my guys and build off these upcoming scrimmages through playoff
Rose is excited for what the next season holds and is ready to make the most of his final year of high school football.
“Yes, it’s very surreal to be playing in my
Jellico High
and LaFollette native Lauren Tompkins is ready for her final season as Jellico High School cheer captain.
“It is something special for me since I’m not from here and I got the opportunity to come here and then be captain for two years,” Tompkins said. “It’s important to me.”
Tompkins knows the importance of being a leader and the significance of being a team captain.
“Being a leader means to be there for somebody,” Tompkins said. “I feel like it’s really important for me to be there for the other girls since I have had situations where no one has been there for me. I would like to be there for them, and I feel like that’s an important part of being a captain.”
Tompkins is thankful for the time she has gotten to spend at Jellico High School cheering and has been able to make a lot of memories as well as lifelong friendships.
“The friendships I made during cheer are really special to me since that’s what brought us together,” Tompkins said. “Seeing them each practice makes the experience a whole lot better. During school with sports as a whole, Kelly Bolton has been one of the best friends I’ve had.”
Tompkins said she was thankful for Jellico High School cheer coach Amanda Terry for always being there when she has needed her and former cheer coach Amy Long for being her first cheer coach and helping her through high school.
The realization that her final year of high school and high school cheer is about to begin has started to sink in for Tompkins.
“It is,” Tompkins said. “It’s kind of hitting that it’s getting ready to be over and it’s going to fly by and I am just trying to prolong it.”
Tompkins hopes her teammates won’t take any of the moments of their high school cheer career for granted and remember what they have.
Football Schedule:
Aug. 17 Horace Maynard
Aug. 24 Cumberland Gap
Aug. 31 Oneida (Homecoming)
Sept. 7 Lake City (Eighth-grade night)
Sept. 14 at Harriman
Sept. 21 at Wartburg
Sept. 28 Jacksboro (at CCHS)
Oct. 5 at Coalfield
All kickoffs are at 7 p.m.
BY J.T. RUSSELL jtrussell@lafollettepress.comThe LaFollette Middle School football team is ready to leave the 2022 season in the past and find success in 2023.
Head coach Garrison Hayes has already noticed a change in his team in the offseason.
“The biggest thing,” Hayes said. “Being
a team. I jump on them all the time and they like to pinpoint each other’s mistakes out too. This year’s group has been good with if one is down or doesn’t understand something they jump in before I can even say something on this is why or this and that, they are willing to help out. I think we have some good leaders on this team. I think we have roughly 10 eighth-graders, but we also have 10 sixth-graders. The
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biggest goal for us this year is continuing that foundation that we have built. The eighth-graders are mostly three-year players. They have been through the Noah Smith years. They went through last year and know what to expect and what us coaches expect.”
Hayes praised the coachability of his team and their eagerness to learn and help each other get better.
LaFollette is expecting to play full-throttle on offense this year.
“I really think, on the offensive side of the ball, we’ll be pretty deadly,” Hayes said. “With Cupp as our quarterback, he’s big, he’s tall and he can see the field. You sprinkle in Cain Lowe as our big time running back, he’s big, he’s a hoss when he gets moving. We are going to be able to rely on that. You have Alex Daniel who I think the last time we timed his 40-yard dash was like a 4.9 or something. He is the fastest on the team so to have him and then someone like Smiddy as our other slot that’s bigger and aggressive, it allows us to go to either side. When it’s 50/50, we are going to get it. Just to be able to do that and rely on those skill players we have out
there is really going to go great for us.”
Hayes knows his team is ready to respond after struggling in 2022.
“Coming in it’s really just looking back and saying OK, this is last year, this is where we ended and no one was satisfied,” Hayes said. “The ones that were coming back had more of a chip on their shoulder because they knew they were talented enough and knew that we could come out here and compete and it just didn’t happen. Whether that be whatever it could’ve been in that year, they just knew coming in that they didn’t want to feel that way again. We have really stressed too, let’s not dwell on it. It’s the past for a reason, you learn from it but it shouldn’t be your main focus. You know how you felt when you went 1-8. You know how you felt when you lost in the first round of the playoffs. This year they’ve come in and really stepped it up. You can hear it on the field where someone says we did this last year and someone else says, well, this isn’t last year. We don’t want to go 1-8 again. Just to have that mentality and that chip of, we learned from the past, we had these high expectations and it didn’t go our way but now we know what to correct to get there. For them, however the records end up turning out, I know they are going to fight 100% until the end.”
Christian, #30 Easton Ayers, #31 Braxton Mcendree, #32 Jordan Perkins,
Goins, #41 Landon Wyrick, #42 Bentlee Goins, #43 Aiden Tinch,
Braden Brown, #51 Jackson Noe, #52 Thomas Wilson, #53 Gavin Berry, #54 Will Goins, #55 David Wilson, #56 Jackson Swann, #57 Jack Stooksbury, #58 Jacob Lee, #59 Mason Wilson, #60 Braxton Russ, #61 Justice Evans, #62 Emily Ballard, #65 Bentley Fontana, #70 Kadyn Ball, #72 Peyton Rice, #74 Morgan Alexander, #75 James Walker, #81 Braden Arnheart.
Football Schedule:
Aug. 15 Jellico
Aug. 24 Grace Christian
Aug. 29 at Jefferson
Sept. 7 at Cumberland Gap
Sept. 14 at Lake City
Sept. 21 Huntsville
Sept. 28 LaFollette
Oct. 5 Horace Maynard
All kickoffs are at 7 p.m.
BY J.T. RUSSELL jtrussell@lafollettepress.comThe Jacksboro Middle School football team will rely on a massive eighthgrade class to lead the way in its 2023 season.
“It has been great so far,”
Jacksboro football head coach Cody Parker said. “Our practices are intense. There is not a whole lot of ‘hey, can you slow that down for me.’ They know what we are talking about. They’re speaking the same language as our coaches. Them having already been
here and a lot of them already having that experience has just been a great experience of their leadership. It’s not a group you have to get on to a lot. They show up, do what they’re supposed to do and then they go home. It has been a joy
to coach through this part of the season. Ultimately, it’s only going to matter when we start Aug. 15 and moving forward.”
Jacksboro will turn to first-year starting QB Cooper Brayman to open the season. “His expectations are high,” Parker said. “I think he’s very accurate with the football. We kind of sold out to him in the offseason as being our quarterback after some of the things we saw from him last year. He’s a really good athlete. He’s super savvy, sometimes he wants to Patrick Mahomes it or do something and I’m like ‘no, just play quarterback.’ On the flip side of that, he’s going to make a play or two where, I didn’t coach him to do that, he just did it. He has high expectations and we believe in him.”
Brayman will have reliable pieces in Jordan Perkins and Braydon Graham to get the ball
to this season and make plays on offense, along with other talented players on Jacksboro.
Parker said the experience and maturity showed by Graham and Perkins last year in big games will be invaluable.
Jacksboro is not going to back away from expectations it has.
“We have a chance to be really good and do a lot of good things,” he said. “Obviously, staying healthy is a big part of that. I do think we have some depth at receiver. I think we have some depth on the offensive and defensive lines. With the eighth-grade class as large as what we have, the expectation is to be good. I think our kids understand, hey, we can be good. Now we just have to keep working and meet that expectation and do what we can all the way through the season to make sure we are continuing to get better and never getting satisfied.”
jtrussell@lafollettepress.com
The Jellico Middle School football team is looking to build off of the success it had in 2022 when it won a regular-season district championship and hosted a playoff game.
“We’re basically a brand new team this year and can have the same skill as last year,” Jellico head coach Hunter Chadwell said. “I plan on trying to win the district again.”
Chadwell expects his team to have a size advantage on the line of scrimmage and he also expects to rely on his team’s speed at the skill positions.
Jellico will look to replace star players Owen Morgan and Gavin Padgett, along with key pieces across the roster that graduated and went to high school.
“I just have to change their mindset and let them know yeah, we lost a lot from last year but we also gained a lot from last
year and let them know we have a chance to defend a district championship title when that hasn’t been done in Jellico,” Chadwell said.
Despite the big names not returning, Jellico will have a lot of familiar faces to rely on in 2023, along with a few new names. “I expect to rely first off on my linemen Hayden O’Hara and Mitchell Anderson that were with me last year,” Chadwell said. “My eighth-grade skill players this year Peyton Orrick, Caydon and Clayton Hamblin, they’re new to this team but incredible athletes, and I’m excited to see what they accomplish. Also one that’s stepped up a lot this year from last year is Kaien Depuy. He may be smaller, but I see so much potential with him and all my skill players and linemen this year.”
Jellico will have a lot of new faces on the field in 2023 but the expectations of a district championship will stay the same.
Schedule:
Aug. 10 Cumberland Gap
Aug. 15 at Jacksboro
Aug. 17 Lake City
Aug. 24 at Burchfield
Aug. 31 Sunbright
Sept. 7 at Huntsville
Sept. 21 at Robbins
Oct. 5 Oakdale
Home games at 7 p.m. at Jellico High School.
Cutter Football: 1 Aiden Wallace, 2 Austin Smith, 3 Xavier Longmire, 5 Jeriah Meadows, 9 Hayden Simmons, 10 Branson Smiddy, 12 Deagan Conrad, 24 Mason Lawson, 30 Mason Click, 35 Lennon Phillips, 54 Kaleb Blanton, 64 Hayden Jones.
JV
Alivia Phillips, Aliyah Livingstone, Amelia Marshall, Aura Sewell, Bella Campbell, Eden Humfleet, Everleigh Jeffers, Harper Chapman, Jayleigh Knight, Jaylynn Knight, Kynlee Ranta, Landree Jo Hicks, Maya Tindell, Melee Boshears, Torrance Wilson, Tylee Bruce and Winnifred North.
JV Hopper football: 0 Lylah Decker, 1 Zeelan Bray, 2 Adrian Kitts, 3 Hunter Wallace, 4 Mia McCullah, 5 Elijah Humfleet, 6 Greyson Smith, 7 Tyberius Julian, 8 Bruce Teague, 10 Jacob Harrison, 11 Colton Humphrey, 12 Braxton Smith, 13 Brayden Moore, 15 Ryder Leach, 16 Cohen McCullah, 17 Andryk Nash, 20 Finnley Ames, 21 Connor Hutson, 22 Jessie Moore, 23 Linton McGaha, 24 Kaiden Smith, 27 Kahner Cupp, 37 Cohen Wessel, 47 Theo Chapman, 55 Brody Pennell, 69 Cash Harmon, 76 Cash Tackett and 87 Paxton Carroll.
Hopper Cheer: Amariah Smith, AnnaBella Allen, Ava Green, Brynlee Cotton, Danica Keith, Dayzie Robbins, Dixie Robbins, Emma Smith, Emerie Humfleet, Farrah Raines, Jordyn Morris, Kaydence Keith, Kinley Street, Lilly Wright, Macie Hutson, Makynzlie Click, McKinley Marlow, Sadie Ward, Shaylie Wagers, Violet Hutson and Zaylee Meadows.
Hopper Football: 1 Samson Evans, 2 Eli Bray, 3 Harley Hutson, 4 Haytham Spangler, 5 Braxton Elkins, 6 Elijah Evans, 7 Aaron Smith, 8 Gannon Summers, 9 Cole Phillips, 10 Carter Rumsey, 11 Michael Reneman, 12 Hunter Bowlin, 13 Jamie Keith, 15 Keadyn Floris, 17 Trenton Daugherty, 18 Oliver Fletcher, 20 Crosby Phillips, 22 Kanaan Leavitt, 23 Streator Wessel, 24 Mariah Whiley, 33 Kamden McNeely, 34 Jace Petree, 42 Travis Nash, 64 Easton Gary, 76 Ryker Tackett and 75 Leonidas Julian.