Thirty years ago this month, basketball was in the air, as it always is as winter fades into spring. The last few weeks of the 1982 season were
especially meaningful, since high school basketball as Logan Countians had known it for decades was coming to an end.
This was the final year of existence for Adairville, Auburn, Chandlers, Lewisburg and Olmstead as high schools. They were headed toward middle
school status while the underclassmen were headed for 2200 Bowling Green Road and the new Logan County High School in the late summer.
Beginning in 1951, the district had consisted of the same six schools, all of them from the Land of Logan. Russellville, the lone high school in
its independent school district, and the five Logan schools did battle exclusively. But it was coming to an end.
Making it more interesting was that a multitude of young talent could be found in the county schools. Auburn was loaded with outstanding young
players. Adairville was making a bid to reach the regional tournament for only the fourth time in those 32 seasons. Chandlers was a legitimate
contender in the tournament. No one knew it at the time, but Olmstead was about to make a tournament run.
Added to the mix was the girls side of the tournament. It was only the eighth season of girls ball since it was mandated throughout Kentucky in
the 1974-75 school year. Olmstead had won the first seven district championships. But WKU All-American Lillie Mason was a year removed from her Miss
Kentucky career in West Logan. The Masons, Gracie and Lillie, and their cousins, Nancy and Littie Jones, had been the nucleus of that championship run,
but their young cousins, Theresa and Renee Flowers, and another talented freshman, Sandra Grinter, weren't ready to keep that streak alive despite the
presence of future Lady Cougar standout Kathy Maddox.. Auburn and Russellville were waiting in the wings to dethrone them.
This was just a year before the Lady Cougars reached the regional finals and two years before the Cougars won the state championship. Key players
on that first LCHS girls team—Maddox, Finley Baird, Paula Wells, Lisa Wells, Marty Reeves, Janice Sydnor, Regina Sweatt, Stephanie Malone, Karen Allen
and others—were already in action at their smaller schools. And all the starters on the state championship team—Fred Tisdale, Stacey Mason, Tim Viers,
Karl Wayne Dawson and Tim Thomason—were already standouts on their non-consolidated teams, although key reserves/sometimes starters John Tisdale, Henry
Jones and Gary Barker were not in the picture yet. The emphasis in March 1982, though, was on the here and now, not the future.
It was a sentimental time. Ceremonies were held at each of the schools during their final home games. And, according to Tournament Manager Wayne
Mullen, 6,111 people paid their $2 each in addition to all those who got in free to witness this final all-Logan tournament, even though the OVC
Tournament was going on in Bowling Green and the SEC Tournament in Lexington. Making the tournament crowd even more impressive was that the schools
from three of the county's biggest cities—Russellville, Lewisburg and Adairville—were eliminated early.
History was being made, and Logan Countians wanted to be a part of it.
Final Regular Season Games
Adairville crushed Drakesboro 99-62 in the Cardinals' last home game. Glenn Woodard scored 29. Dickie Richards hit all 10 of his shots (one of
them a free throw) and scored 19. Sophomore Stacey Mason added 18 and senior Andy Anderson 14 for Coach Bill Davis' team. Sid Rose led Drakesboro with
34.
The Cardinals concluded an impressive 19-6 regular season by winning at Potter Christian 78-67. Miles had 21, Anderson 18, Richards 14, and future
Cougar baseball standout Greg Scott 12. Tim Alexander scored 24 for Potter and Jimmy Monk 16.
Coach Mike Haynes' Lady Cardinals beat Potter 41-38. Shelley Kirtley scored 16 and Regina Mason 10.
Olmstead spoiled Chandlers' final home boys game 54-42. Jim Herderhorst had 18 points and Paul Jones 14 for Coach Jack Pack's winning team, which
was still known as the Ramblers.
Coach Gerald Sinclair, who had already been chosen as head coach for the non-existent Cougars, featured on his Chandlers team seven seniors, Wayne
Snell, Junior Miles, Ronnie Estes, Phil Cole, Greg Sydnor, Steve Price and Mike Powell. Sophomore Timmy Thomason led them in scoring in this game with
10 and junior Mike Davenport added 8.
Auburn, the top-ranked team in the region, finished its 21-2 regular season with a 77-68 win at Fort Campbell. Fred Tisdale scored 20, Bruce
Bunton 15, Tyrone 'Ice' Kennedy 14 and Tim Viers 12. Jim Kessinger led the Falcons with 24 and Donald Gayle scored 18.
The Lewisburg Rangerettes' last regular season game was at home, but they lost 56-54 to Hughes-Kirk to finish 11-12. Brenda Barrow and Beth
McKinney each scored 16 for LHS with Lisa Wells adding 14. McKinney, who scored over a thousand points in her career, hit the final basket, which Coach
Martha Carol Elrod called 'appropriate.' Pam McDonald scored 21 and Terry Bowers 15 for H-K.
Coach David Billingsley's Rangers lost their final game at Russellville 83-53. The contest was to have been played earlier in the season at LHS,
but had to be postponed for weather. The officials didn't get the word, and no one was there to call the game. Mullen asked Olmstead principal Bob
Nylin—a former Lewisburg coach—and Russellville music teacher John Chaffin to call the game, and they did.
Seniors led Coach Don Burton's Panthers. John Reeves scored 28, Clay Wren 16 and Tommy Wilkins 7. Clay Parrish added 10 and Louis Klein 8. Terry
Crafton had 15, Teddy Audas 11 and Rocky Cook for the Rangers.
The Auburn Lady Tigers lost their last home game in the Tiger Den 64-51 to Todd Central when point guard Stephanie Malone and leading scorer
Janice Covington both fouled out very early. Coach Tim Owens liked what he saw from his team anyway. Paula Wells hit 7 of 10 shots and finished with 15
points and 14 rebounds. Finley Baird scored 16, Covington 10 and Edwina Hall 8. Monica Glass led the Lady Rebels with 14.
The Olmstead girls experienced their first losing season ever when they dropped their season finale to Gamaliel to fall to 10-11. Maddox scored 21
but then the scoring leaders went down to the Flowers sisters with six points each.
Wade Jones scored the last goal ever for Olmstead in a regular season game and was presented the game ball to keep.
An auction was held for the last game ball used at Lewisburg High. Clacy Hinton bought it for $500 in a spirited bidding war with H.C. 'Doc'
Franklin. Lucien Ward was the auctioneer.
District Tournament
Auburn was the favorite in both gender divisions with Russellville second in both. The Adairville boys and Lewisburg girls were number three. Most
of them drew into the same bracket, which opened the door for the Olmstead teams.
Girls Games
The first game of the tournament had a little tension. The Chandlers girls were coached by Jim Thompson, who had been chosen for what was to be a
marvelous run for him as the Lady Cougar coach. Olmstead coached Lugene Rogers had coached the Ramblerettes to five of their seven championships, and
she had been an applicant for the job. Chandlers school board member J.C. Deberry had fought hard and successfully for both of his coaches to lead the
new school's teams. Both proved to be ultra-successful.
Rogers won this match-up, running the OHS district win streak to 21-0, by a 32-28 count.
Score by Quarters:
1) CHS 11-4, 2) 15-14, 3) OMS 26-21, Final)
Olmstead 32, Chandlers 28
OMS (32)
Kathy Maddox 17, Cindy Gibbs 8, Renee Flowers 4, Crystal Henry 2, Sandra Grinter, Theresa Flowers
CHS (28)
Marty Reeves 12, Georgia Bilyeu 6, Janice Sydnor 6, Karen Allen 2, Darcy Bray 2, Kim Thomas, Cindy Thomas, Pam Davenport, Kim White
The LoJo
Auburn eliminated the Russellville Lady Panthers 45-31. Coach Matt Tipton's home team finished 14-8.
Score by Quarters:
1) Auburn 12-8, 2) 21-20, 3) 34-26, Final)
Auburn 45, Russellville 31
AHS (45)
Janice Covington 12, Paula Wells 12, Stephanie Malone 11. Finley Baird 8, Edwina Hall 2
RHS (31)
Alecia Edmonds 10, Libby Martin 9, Melissa Temple 6, Theresa Halcomb 4, Elisa Wells 2
The LoJo
The Lady Tigers reached the finals by knocking off Lewisburg 64-33 after jumping out to a 16-1 first quarter lead. The Rangerettes were playing
without their all-time leading scorer, Beth McKinney, who was out with an ankle injury. Brenda Barrow and Lisa Wells did all they could, but they
didn't have enough help/
Seniors Janice Covington and Edwina Hall combined for 40 points for Coach Tim Owens' winners.
Score by quarters:
1) AHS 16-1, 2) 40-10, 3) 53-20, Final)
Auburn 64, Lewisburg 33
AHS (64)
Covington 22, Hall 18, Finley Baird 12, Paula Wells 4, Tracy Bunton 3, Michelle White 2, Regina Sweatt 2
LHS (33)
Barrow 14, Wells 11, Tammy Crafton 4, Susan Hendrix 2, Shelly Edwards 2
The LoJo
The Lady Rams kept their undefeated district tournament record intact one more game by edging Adairville 39-36. The Ramblerettes led 22-15, but
Adairville came back. “I wish we'd had a little more time. We were on the verge of going ahead,” said Coach Mike Haynes, who later coached the Lady
Cougars to two regional championships, winning a game at state each time. He also later coached the Logan boys.
Score by Quarters:
1) OMS 12-7, 2) 22-15, 3) 29-23, Final)
Olmstead 39, Adairville 36
OMS (39)
Kathy Maddox 14, Theresa Flowers 8, Sandra Grinter 6, Cindy Gibbs 4, Renee Flowers 4, Crystal Henry 2
AdHS (36)
Shelly Kirtley 11, Bonita Spalding 10, Beth Mann 6, Regina Mason 6, Lisa Gilbert 4
The LoJo
In the girls championship game, Coach Rogers knew the only chance Olmstead had to keep from being blown out was to hold the ball. Point guard
Cindy Gibbs spent much of the game dribbling out front, and Coach Owens chose not to apply the pressure after the Lady Tigers built a comfortable 11-3
first quarter lead.
Auburn took the fourth quarter 15-3 and went on to win the first non-Olmstead girls championship 37-21, ending Olmstead's district win streak at
22 wins and 7 championships. Sixteen of the wins came with Rogers as coach.
Juniors Finley Baird and Paula Wells were both in double figures for Auburn and seniors Edwina Hall and Janice Covington scored the rest of the
points. Maddox topped Olmstead, as always.
Score by quarters:
1) AHS 11-3, 2) 17-9, 3) 22-18, Final)
Auburn 37, Olmstead 21
AuHS (37)
Baird 13, Wells 12, Covington 8, Hall 4, Stephanie Malone, Michelle White, Karla Powell, Regina Sweatt, Tracy Bunton, Janet Head
OHS (21)
Maddox 9, Sandra Grinter 7, Gibbs 3, Renee Flowers 2, Theresa Flowers, Crystal Henry, Alice Scott, Jan Arnold, Debbie McCarley, Jeannette Townsend
Boys Games
Coach Gerald Sinclair's Bears came into the district short-handed. Wayne Snell, who was second in the county in scoring at 15.6 and was a rugged
post player, missed the game with a torn ligament in his ankle, and Junior Miles was out with a broken rib. Mike Davenport, who was an excellent
perimeter player, was mismatched at center against the much taller Olmstead front line. Sophomore shooting star Tim Thomason was the game's leading
scorer with 16. Sinclair was pleased with the play of Steve Price, who had been injured much of the season. Coach Jack Pack's Olmstead team won 50-43
and the future St. Catherine Junior College coach credited Sydnor as being “the difference.”
Bob Birdwhistell, the former Lewisburg coach and future LCHS athletic director who served as public address announcer for the tournament, liked
the effort of some of the players. He said, “Give me three Horses (Ram Jim Herderhorst) and two Mike Powells (of Chandlers), and I'll take on the
world.”
Score by Quarters:
1) CHS 10-4, 21-21, 3) OHS 35-30, Final)
Olmstead 50, Chandlers 43
OHS (50)
Herderhorst 14, Jason Sydnor 12, Paul Jones 9, Wade Jones 8, Karl Wayne Dawson 5
CHS (43)
Thomason 16, Price 9, Powell 6, Todd Parker 6, Davenport 4, Kelly Allen 2
The LoJo
Olmstead's boys then beat Lewisburg 53-45. Coach David Billingsley used a box and one to defend Herderhorst, but he didn't have an answer for Wade
Jones and Karl Dawson. Lewisburg, which won only three games, used better baseball players than basketball in Rocky Cook, twins Stanley and Stewart
Slaton, and Keith McReynolds. The Rangers led at the first three stops, but OHS took the final period 23-10.
Score by Quarters:
1) LHS 14-9, 2) 23-16, 35-30, Final)
Olmstead 53, Lewisburg 45
OHS (53)
W. Jones 16, Dawson 13, Herderhorst 12, Jason Sydnor 6, Paul Jones 4
LHS (45)
Terry Crafton 14, Stewart Slaton 11, Randy DeArmond 8, Cook 8, Teddy Audas, McReynolds, Stanley Slaton
The LoJo
Defending champion Russellville finished 11-15 while Auburn ran its record to 22-2. John Reeves topped the Panthers with 16 points while the
coach's son, Billy Jeff Burton, added 11. A talented point guard who had some memorable battles against Logan County's Tim Viers the next season,
Burton was one of the top tennis players in the state and went on to an excellent career at WKU where he is now associate athletic director.
Seniors Tyrone Kennedy and Bruce Bunton led the Tigers with 16 and 15 points, respectively.
Score by Quarters:
1) AHS 16-12, 2) 33-25, 3) 44-31, Final)
Auburn 57, Russellville 48
AuHS (57)
Kennedy 16, Bunton 15, Fred Tisdale 11, Tim Viers 6, Chuck Allison 5, Danny Summers 4
RHS (48)
Reeves 16, Burton 11, Clay Wren 8, Tommy Wilkins 6, Louis Klein 4, Clay Parris 2
The LoJo
Auburn ended a good Adairville season 82-58 as Coach Barry Reed's team clicked on all cylinders. The front line of Fred Tisdale, Tyrone Kennedy
and Bruce Bunton combined for 56 points, just two fewer than the entire Cardinal team.
Sophomore Stacy Mason, who was to join Tisdale as an all-state tournament performer two years later, topped Coach Bill Davis' team with 18.
Seniors Wayne Miles and Andy Anderson added 13 each in their final games.
Score by Quarters:
1) AuHS 22-10, 2) 43-30, 3) 58-40, Final)
Auburn 82, Adairville 58
AuHS (82)
Tisdale 22, Kennedy 20, Bunton 14, Tim Viers 8, Anthony Baird 6, Danny Summers 6, Chuck Allison 4, Mike Spain 2
AdHS (58)
Mason19, Miles 13, Anderson 13, Dickie Richards 6, Greg Scott 5, Glenn Woodard 3
The LoJo
Olmstead's Jim Herderhorst played one of the greatest individual games in district tournament history. The 6-3 junior scored a championship game
record 31 points. A sportswriter named Jim Turner wrote, “Horse was blocking shots, making steals and sliding over the entire playing surface and most
of the out-of-bounds area for loose balls.” And yet his Ramblers lost to one of the best teams in 13th District history. Auburn won the
championship 69-54.
Ice Kennedy scored 24, Chuck Allison 12, and Fred Tisdale, who suffered an ankle injury early in the third quarter, had 12. Allison was a valuable
player for the Cougars the following year.
Herderhorst broke the finals scoring mark of 29 that had been set by earlier Tigers, outside shooter supreme Mike Barbee and 1970s Dream Team MVP
Kenneth Bunton. Mullen scored 28 for Russellville in 1961. The record for a player on a runner-up team had been set by another Olmstead player, Tyrone
Sydnor, who totaled 24 in 1974.
Score by Quarters:
1) AHS 16-11, 2) 37-19, 3) 51-34, Finals)
Auburn 67, Olmstead 54
AHS (67)
Kennedy 24, Allison 12, Tisdale 10, Bruce Bunton 9, Anthony Baird 6, Danny Summers 5, Tim Viers 3, Mike Spain, Eric Meguiar, Richie Powell, Bryan
Estes, Kenneth Sweatt
OHS (54)
Herderhorst 31, Karl Dawson 8, Wade Jones 6, Jason Sydnor 4, Greg Poore 3, Paul Jones 3, Mark White, Galloway Harper, Henry Jones, Fadell Sydnor,
Sylvester Cage, Bobby Lyne
Regional Tournament
Auburn's teams were the last to play a game as a non-consolidated high school. Coach Tim Owens' Lady Tigers won their regional opener and then
lost to a Warren East team which was led by future WKU Final Four players Kami Thomas and Dana Cunningham. Coach Barry Reed's Tigers won their first
two games at Diddle but were upset in the regional finals—Auburn's fourth appearance in the regional championship game in the school's final 17
seasons.
Girls Games
Coach Vanos Loyd's Warren Central team, which would win the state the following year and included WKU Final Four starters Clemette Haskins and
Melinda Carlson, ended Olmstead's eighth and final trip to region.
Kathy Maddox, who averaged 17 points per game during the regular season, was held to 8. Freshman Sandra Grinter got half of her team's points with
14.
CENTRAL (61)
Haskins 14, Leslie Ford 13, M. Carlson 6, Pearson 6, Knight 6, K. Carlson 4, Reed 4, Schneller 4, Dodson 2, Daimer 2
OMS (28)
Sandra Grinter 14, Kathy Maddox 8, Renee Flowers 3, Theresa Flowers 2, Crystal Henry 2
The LoJo
Former Auburn boys coach Terry Flatt's Glasgow Lady Scotties were crushed 54-28 by the Lady Tigers. Janice Covington, Finley Baird, and Paula
Wells were all in double figures in what was to be the last win for a Logan non-consolidated girls team. Baird returned to The Hill as a member of the
Lady Toppers after two good seasons at Lindsey-Wilson.
Score by Quarters:
1) AHS 14-4, 2) 32-12, 3) 40-20, Final)
Auburn 54, Glasgow 28
AHS (54)
Covington 19, Baird 14, Wells 10, Edwina Hall 8, Stephanie Malone 2, Michelle White 1, Karla Powell
GHS (28)
Esther Buchanan 9, Jane Rutledge 6, Proffitt 5, Hinton 2, K. Buchanan 2, Butler 2, Nunn 2
The LoJo
The last game ever played by a Logan girls team in this format began at 10 a.m. because regional leaders believed Kentucky and Louisville would be
playing in the NCAA Tournament at Vanderbilt later in the day. Middle Tennessee beat Kentucky the night before to thwart that, but the early start
remained intact. Warren East took 13 more shots and had a 33-18 rebound margin over Coach Owens' Lady Tigers. Owens stayed on as the AMS middle school
coach and later became head coach of the LCHS Lady Cougars.
Score by Quarters:
1) East 19-9, 2) 26-20, 3) 36-32, Final)
Warren East 51, Auburn 40
EAST (51)
Pam Belk 22, Kami Thomas 11, Dana Cunningham 8, Hudson 6, Turner 2, Carrier 2, Bledsoe 2
AHS (40)
Covington 12, Hall 10, Baird , Malone 6, Wells 4
Boys Games
Future Cougar starter Karl Dawson led Olmstead with 16 points, but Clinton County eliminated the Ramblers 63-49. Paul Jones and Jim Herderhorst,
who were members of the first LCHS team, added 9 each.
Score by Quarters:
1) CCHS 14-10, 2) 30-20, 3) 43-35, Final)
Clinton County 63, Auburn 49
CCHS (63)
Robbie Storie 21, Robbie Davis 11, Keith Dalton 10, Upchurch 7, Latham 2, Wortham 2
OHS (49)
Dawson 16, P. Jones 9, Jim Herderhorst 9, Jason Sydnor 6, Wade Jones 4, Greg Poore 1
The LoJo
The Tigers had a little more trouble with Cumberland County than expected, but advanced behind the scoring of Fred Tisdale (29). Tyrone 'Ice'
Kennedy was the team's second leading scorer with 21 and had a 14-point average, even though he had only played organized ball a semester.
Score by Quarters:
1) AHS 16-7, 2) 33-27, 3) 44-34, Final)
Auburn 66, Cumberland County 57
AHS (66)
Tisdale 25, Kennedy 21, Tim Viers 10, Chuck Allison 4, Danny Summers 1
CCHS (47)
Steve McDonald 25, Gerald Claywell 14, Carl Spencer 10, Kenny Killman 6, Burbidge 2
The LoJo
Sophomores Fred Tisdale (29) and Tim Viers combined for 41 in the last win by a non-consolidated Logan team. Seniors Tyrone Kennedy (17) and Bruce
Bunton were also in double figures as the Tigers beat East 70-66 in the semifinals Over 6,200 people attended the game at Diddle Arena.
Score by Quarters:
1) East 18-15, 2) AHS 38-35, 3) East 49-48, Final)
Auburn 70, Warren East 66
AHS (70)
Tisdale 29, Kennedy 17, Viers 12, Bunton 10, Danny Summers, Chuck Allison, Anthony Baird
EAST (66)
David Britt 21, Charles Cook 14, Junior Jones 14, Tracy Whitney 9, Ronnie Johnson 8
The LoJo
Auburn had beaten Warren Central during the regular season, but the elusive championship slipped away. Eric Meguiar and Anthony Tisdale, who had
been expected to be big contributors, were injured most of the season, and quick sub Anthony Tisdale was injured the night before celebrating the win
over East. Central was tall with 6'10” Ben Matlock and 6'6” Craig Eversoll negating some of Fred Tisdale's dominance inside. Auburn led 17-10 before
the officials also decided that when Tisdale was being bodied up by Central defenders, he was walking.
The Tigers finished 26-3 as an era ended. Reed returned to the regional finals twice more in the next five years. He was the top assistant on the
LCHS state champion team and head coach on the 1987 runner-up team.
Score by Quarters:
1) AHS 14-8, 2) 23-19, 3) Central 35-33, Final)
Warren Central 52, Auburn 44
CENTRAL (52)
Eversoll 19, JoJo Rich 12, Towe 8, Jimmy Choate 6, Matlock 5, Butler 2
AHS (41)
Tisdale 19, Kennedy 8, Bruce Bunton 7, Chuck Allison 4, Tim Viers 3, Danny Summers
Honors
All-Season Boys, First Team:
Fred Tisdale (MVP) and Tim Viers of Auburn, John Reeves of Russellville, Jim Herderhorst of Olmstead, and Wayne Snell of Chandlers; Second Team: Andy Anderson and Wayne Miles of Adairville, Bruce Bunton of Auburn, Mike Davenport of Chandlers and Clay Wren of Russellville
All-Season Girls, First Team:
Libby Martin (MVP) of RHS, Kathy Maddox of Olmstead, and Finley Baird, Janice Covington and Paula Wells of Auburn; Second Team: Brenda Barrow,
Beth McKinney and Lisa Wells of Lewisburg, Alecia Edmonds of RHS, and Marty Reeves of Chandlers
All-District Tournament Boys:
Bunton, Kennedy, Tisdale and Viers of Auburn, Herderhorst and Wade Jones of Olmstead; B.J. Burton and Reeves of Russellville, Stacy Mason and Anderson
of Adairville, Timmy Thomason of Chandlers and Terry Crafton of Lewisburg
All-District Tournament Girls:
Edwina Hall, Baird, Covington and Wells of Auburn; Maddox of Olmstead, Barrow and Wells of Lewisburg; Shelly Kirtley and Beth Mann of Adairville,
Martin and Edmonds of Russellville, and Reeves of Chandlers
Daily News:
Tisdale was the top vote-getter on the Bowling Green Daily News' ranking of regional boys players. Russellville's Martin and Auburn's Baird were on the
girls first team, joining future college two-time Final Four starters Clemette Haskins and Melinda Carlson of Warren Central and Kami Thomas of Warren
East. Russellville's Reeves and Auburn's Covington were third-team honorees.
Other Notes
Olmstead senior Sheryl Dawson was the official scorer for the girls district tournament, and OHS grad Donald Davis, a WKU sophomore, had the honor
for the boys tournament. Doug Phillips and Leo Duncan were the official timers.
This came at a time that WRUS wasn't broadcasting games, and the Bowling Green Daily News wasn't covering area district tournaments in person. All
the reports were in The News-Democrat and Logan Leader by either that Turner guy or Larry Jordan, who had coached the Tigers to the 1977 regional
finals with Reed as his assistant.
Several of the cheerleaders for the schools continued in the same role at LCHS. These were listed as the cheerleaders in the final season of
non-consolidated high schools:
Adairville:
Laura Scott, Rochelle Groves, Diana Clindard, Tammy Johnson, Lisa McGuire, Becky Taylor, Myra Dorris, Dianna Mimms, Mary Lynn Rouse, Kelly Allen, Rene
Allen, Amy Barker and Parita Nichols
Auburn:
Rhonda Sharp, Jada Bradshaw, Penny Allison, Robin Torrence, Dee Ann Baldwin, Dawn Sams and Debbie Moore
Chandlers:
Kim Parker, Adale Vincent, Christy Woodall, Joni Beliles
Lewisburg:
Lisa Cook, Pam Thomas, Lisa Joe Anderson, Kim Clark, Mariea Harris, Tammy Moore, Angie Pogue, Anita Houchens, Lisa Latham, Kelly Shrull and Veronica
Harris
Olmstead:
Kim Celsor, Machelle Wilson, Sandra Gibbs, Tammy Hines, Greta Poore, Robin Motsinger, Janice Taylor, Laura Batchelor, Missy Brown and Tina Lassiter