Tuesday, August 22, 2023
Birthday salute to Henri Cartier-Bresson
One of the earliest posts I've made in Photo Potpourri was one tipping my hat to Henri Cartier-Bresson, the French photojournalist and painter. I'd composed post after watching him mentioned in an installment of Ovation TV's series The Genius of Photography. Unfortunately, I stumbled upon the series in midstream, so I missed early installments.
He was credited with being one of the earliest photojournalist, for popularizing the art of street photography and for coining what photographers have since referred to as the art of capturing "the decisive moment" in their picture-taking.
The reason I mention this today is that while reading this morning's newspaper, I saw that today would have been his 105th birthday. He died Aug. 3, 2004, a couple weeks shy of his 96th birthday.
A camera-shy individual himself (he was not a publicity seeker), the photo leading off the post is a rare shot of him.
The link I provided in the opening paragraph takes you to that post of mine in February 2009, just two months after I launched Photo Potpourri.
Sunday, August 20, 2023
Scrumptious fare at Chanticleer … if
you can ignore creeping line while dining
Took a trip to Cary, a west major suburb of Raleigh, on Friday right around the noon hour, and we decided to stop for lunch at a place we’d never visited before, Chanticleer Cafe and Bakery.
The eatery at 6490 Tryon Road has an extensive variety of coffees, a nice variety of fresh-baked goods and a varied selection of meals on the menu. The one quirk about the place is that customers stand in line to order and then are given an electronic notification device (compare to Panera Bread) that lets you know when your order is ready for pickup.
Unfortunately, Chanticleer doesn’t have nearly the space and/or partitioning that Panera has, so people waiting in the line to order (see photo at right) are in close proximity to a large percentage of indoor diners. Two tables, in fact, are right next to the line. It was not surprising that they were the last to be taken by customers picking up their orders.Our table was in a booth on the other side of the line, which thankfully had a little more separation than those two less fortunate tables.
I ordered the Reuben sandwich and house-made chips, shown in the photo leading off the post. Lee Ann ordered a spinach quiche (first photo below) and a guava tart (second photo below).
My Reuben was very good — I’d rate it a 7 on a scale of 1-10. Lee Ann liked her quiche but couldn’t finish it, so she took home the leftovers, which include the guava tart.
Question is … will we go back? I’m not sure. We’ll see.
Saturday, August 19, 2023
The story behind the story
I attribute the seed for the project to my attendance at the Sept. 26, 2009, football game between Trine University and Franklin College, the game covered intently in Chapter 12 of the series. Four months before that game, I had purchased my first Canon L series (top-of-the-line) camera lens – an EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS – and I was eager to put it to the test at an action sports competition.
I was living in Indianapolis at the time, so in early autumn, I hunted around to find a nearby small-college football game for which I would have a good chance of getting permission to shoot pictures from the sidelines.
Franklin College was a modest drive from Indianapolis, so I contacted the school’s sports information director, Kevin Elixman, and asked if I needed a sideline credential to photograph the Sept. 26 game. I told him I was employed by The Indianapolis Star and would submit some of my photos to the newspaper to use in its suburban news section circulated in Franklin and the Johnson County area. Both statements were true, by the way. He welcomed me to the game, and the newspaper did use a few of my pictures the following week in the targeted zoned news section for Franklin, Johnson County and vicinity.
A year and a half later, in February 2011, when The Star’s corporate owner, Gannett Corp., required employees to take a mandatory week’s furlough, I decided to spend some of my week off perusing the campus of Hanover College in southern Indiana, where my then-new son-in-law, David, had done his undergraduate work. Knowing that I was a photography enthusiast, David mentioned to me how picturesque the campus was, and how it had a scenic bluff overlooking the Ohio River.
While there, I figured I’d try to photograph another sporting event, this time basketball. I contacted Carter Cloyd, then-sports information director at Hanover, ahead of time to see if I could be on the arena floor and take pictures of a men’s basketball game. He said sure. I got there a couple hours before the game, took some campus photos, including several along the bluff that David had told me about, then shot the men’s basketball team victory over Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
I enjoyed that experience so much, that on the drive home I decided to try and go back to the campus to photograph it in its fall-colors splendor. Then an idea hit me to see if I could shoot a football game there in October 2011, too. Months later, when I asked Carter Cloyd about doing that, he again said yes, and I shot Hanover’s football victory over Manchester University on Oct. 22.
On the drive home, another idea occurred to me -- embarking on a personal project to visit every Indiana small college or university that fielded a football team, shoot a game there and take landscape shots of the campus. I’d use my photos as posts at this photography blog, which I’d been maintaining for about three years at the time.
Howard Hewitt, a former IndyStar newsroom colleague, was working at Wabash College at the time, so not long after I got back from Hanover, I asked Howard if it would be possible to get a sideline credential to shoot the next home football game at Wabash, which was Nov. 5. He said no problem, and he invited me to the campus for the Little Giants’ game against Wittenberg. The contest was a key one — it would decide that season’s champion of the North Coast Athletic Conference (Wabash won).
I knew that the following week, Nov. 12, Wabash would travel to DePauw for the annual renewal of the Monon Bell Classic, a pretty important annual football game in all of Indiana, if not in the whole country. So I called DePauw to see if I could shoot that game, and they said yes.
I enjoyed both shoots, so I checked the schedules of other small colleges in the state, hoping at least one other one had made it to the postseason before the curtain fell on the 2011 football campaign. Indeed, Marian University in Indianapolis was to have an NAIA postseason tournament game at its home stadium in two weeks, on Nov. 26. I ran the usual traps, got into the game versus the University of St. Francis (Joliet, Ill.) and took photos (Marian won). By the end of 2011, I already had checked Franklin, Hanover, Wabash, DePauw and Marian off my list.
At the time, there were 14 Indiana colleges and universities that fell within my target pool of small Indiana schools of higher education that had football programs, so I had just nine more to go. I completed the project in 2016, adding Taylor University, the University of Indianapolis and the University of St. Francis (Fort Wayne) the following year (2012); St. Joseph’s College and Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in ’13; Manchester University in ’14; Trine in ’15; and Earlham College and Anderson University in ’16.
You can find galleries of each of the football games I shot during my “tour” by following the link in this sentence.
Photos from my campus landscapes are in galleries accessible with the link in this sentence, although there also are galleries there of several other Indiana college campuses that were not part of the tour project.
Right around 2013, two years into the football/campus project, which I had branded (thanks Kyle Ray!) “Game Day,” I started asking myself if I should consider doing something with the photos beyond just using them in posts at Photo Potpourri.
The first idea I came up with to market the photos was to find the best “game day” project pictures and meld them with the respective blog post texts into a dual-focus picture compilation – a type of coffee-table size book about football at Indiana small colleges and those schools’ corresponding campuses – and somehow make it saleable. But I dragged my feet and didn’t get started on that until 2019. At that point, I began to work on the idea in earnest.
But while putting it together, I wasn’t happy with the text portions of the original blog posts that I had planned to carry over into the manuscript. Many of the narratives were thin and needed substantial elaboration. So I began doing more research on all the games and campuses to address that shortcoming. In the process, I found that the stuff I’d been learning about the very first stop on the project “tour” – the 2009 Franklin vs. Trine game – was getting more and more interesting.
I had learned that Trine quarterback Eric Watt, with whom I had been impressed after shooting the game in 2009, had won the Gagliardi Trophy in 2010, the year after I attended the school’s game at Franklin. Then I found out that Kyle Ray, the opposing starting quarterback from that game, had been a top-four finalist for the same year’s Gagliardi. I thought to myself, “Two Indiana players among the top four Gagliardi finalists in the same year? How rare is that?”
It turns out ... that specific situation IS unique. It had never happened before, nor has it happened since. I explored that aspect some more and learned that it was pretty rare for Gagliardi finalists (or future finalists) from Indiana schools to compete on the gridiron against other Indiana finalists. It’s happened in only four seasons, although in two of those seasons it happened more than once.
Then the more I looked at the statistics for all of Franklin College’s games in 2009, and saw how quarterbacks Kyle Ray and Nick Purichia went back and forth as the starter in those games, the more I scratched my head, figuring there had to be a story here. And there was a story there, as it turned out, but it was more involved – at least to me – than what I had imagined.
Then I learned that Eric Watt had played a season of pro ball in the Italian Football League in 2012. After that, I learned a few fascinating back stories. For example, I learned that Kyle Ray’s father, Rob, had been a quarterback at Indian Creek High School a generation before Kyle went there. And that Rob Ray also had played at Franklin College and that he did so under legendary coach Stewart “Red” Faught. And that Rob was a highly respected athlete and individual in high school and college. I also learned that he was a member of the Franklin College Athletics Hall of Fame, that he had been diagnosed with cancer in 2005 and that he died halfway through Kyle’s time at Franklin.
And I learned that Nick Purichia’s father had played in an Indiana high school state high school championship game as a quarterback for Ritter High School, the same Catholic school in Indianapolis that Nick had attended. I already knew that Nick’s younger brother, Jake, had played quarterback in a couple state championship games for Ritter as well, so I thought that delineating the family’s incredible football legacy, not to mention spotlighting Nick’s growing up years, would be a great back story in the project. But that was just scratching the surface; there had been many other quarterback-playing Purichias in the Indianapolis metropolitan area dating to the 1940s.
And as for Eric Watt, well, the story about how he grew and developed into the athlete he became in high school and college is a story the South Newton and Trine communities like to talk about. It is one that all Hoosiers can admire, appreciate and salute, too. Plus, he played with some teammates who I learned, as I was conducting my interviews, had the ability to share and articulate a fascinating anecdote or two, or three.
Their insights picked up the slack I experienced initially when talking to Eric, a reticent sort, something his coaches and teammates had warned me about. After doing two telephone interviews with Eric that produced less than ideal material to work with, I turned to emails to ask him follow-up questions. To my surprise and delight, I found him to be pretty articulate — and thoughtful — in his responses. I concluded that that he felt more comfortable and able to compose his thoughts better when he had time to consider questions carefully. Or perhaps he and I had reached a more comfortable place in this still new writer-athlete relationship. Or both.
Kyle Ray was just the opposite. He enthusiastically welcomed my interest in his story. I had some great interviews with Kyle, who treated his life story as an open book, a trait I admired. The sections of the series when he was struggling at Franklin College, contemplating not returning to the school his senior season and all but oblivious to how his relationship with the girl of his dreams was deteriorating — well, it took a lot for him to put all that out there publicly, but he never flinched at any of my questions. To her credit, neither did Claire Freeman, who is now his wife. Interestingly, contrary to Eric, Kyle was not an email person, and I handled that by appreciating his busy school schedule and the fact that he and Claire had three very young ones at home to parent. But fortunately, he gave it his all in our interviews, and for that I was very grateful. His mother, brother and sister were wonderful interviews as well.
And so was Kolby Harrell, the longtime friend of Kyle Ray. He and I talked for a good hour and a half on Friday, July 22, 2022, on his drive from his current home in the Raleigh area of North Carolina to the National Guard Armory in Wilmington, where he had an upcoming National Guard service stint scheduled. It was evident that he appreciated the trip down memory lane with his experiences and anecdotes about growing up with Kyle and Caleb Raley, none better than the one told in Chapter 6’s “A Moonlight Graham Moment.” That story was so compelling that I asked Kyle for another interview to go over his recollections of Kolby in that final high school game (and to review a few other things), and Kyle delivered wonderfully.
At this point, I decided to put the coffee table book idea on the back burner and flesh out a story putting a spotlight on Indiana small-high school and small-college football by using the early-life stories of Watt and Ray – played out along a parallel timeline – as my primary vehicle. It would present a narrative that showed the two quarterbacks’ divergent football paths on the way to going opposite each other in the Sept. 26, 2009, game at Franklin College. And the story would end with triumphant senior seasons for both men, including appearances together at the Gagliardi Trophy award presentation in Salem, Va.
Nick Purichia’s story was a key secondary plot in the series, although in the beginning, I had hoped to make him an equal third primary storyline. In fact, he was my first interview, on Jan. 25, 2022, when I was still looking at this as a three-pronged storyline venture. He did his best to answer my questions, but I wasn’t convinced he was comfortable with the idea, plus his memory of the Sept. 26 game and a lot of the 2009 season at Franklin College was sketchy. So I didn’t bother trying to explore his Ritter High School years in detail at that time. The next day or so, I sent him a follow-up email containing a link to a web page containing the play-by-play of the 2009 Franklin-Trine game and suggested that reviewing that could help jog his memory for a future interview.
Then, in the next few weeks, I encountered obstacles with other aspects of the Purichia portion of the project. The obstacles were serious and formidable enough to give me pause about whether to proceed with the whole project altogether.
After taking a week to ponder the dilemma, I regrouped and continued to pursue the Watt and Ray storylines. From late February to July 2022, I conducted a lot of research and interviews about those two (plus, I talked to Matt Hollowell and Luke Floyd to buttress the Purichia storyline), so I decided not to abandon the project or the Purichia storyline.
Instead, I devised a plan to reduce the Purichia portion to a secondary plot and make the main focus the Watt and Ray stories laid out along a parallel timeline. In fact, I didn't get back to Purichia until late October, when I called him again to try one more time. He seemed more interested in participating at that point, perhaps because after 10 months he knew the project had not been shelved, and that it indicated to him I was serious all along.
We set up a time for a second interview, and it went splendidly. Better than I had expected, in fact. I wondered if visiting the play-by-play account of the 2009 Trine-Franklin game with the link I’d sent him had been helpful. Or perhaps, like Eric Watt, he had gotten access to game tapes to review. Whichever or whatever, in that October interview he shared extraordinary detail of his role in the Sept. 26, 2009, game and offered some great insights, both while with Franklin College and at Ritter. It revived my hope that his storyline would remain the important element that I had envisioned.
There were quite a few people I reached out to — players, family and coaches — who did not respond to my invitations to participate or declined to do so. And there was one player, South Newton High School place-kicker Nelson Orellana, who I tried every which way to find … just short of buying a classified ad in hopes that my plea for help finding him in the media would reach someone who knew where he was or how to get in touch with him. I really did come close to buying that ad, and went as far as getting a price quote before pulling back at the last minute.
As pleased as I was with the way the series turned out, I believe that having all of those additional voices and perspectives — or at least a majority of them — would have made it even better.
I hope you enjoyed this story behind the story … and even more importantly, enjoyed the fun, memories and good times that all “the stars” of On Hoosier Gridirons had to share.
Previously in the series:
Chapter 2: Mastering the Spread
Chapter 3: The Kicker With the Ever-Present Smile
Chapter 4: Like Father, Like Son
Chapter 5: Where Legends Played
Chapter 6: A Moonlight Graham Moment
Chapter 7: 'Clearly the Best' Small-School Teams in Indiana
Chapter 9: Farewell, Levi ... and Welcome, Pup!
Chapter 10: Waiting Their Turns
Chapter 14: A Quarterback's Prayer
Friday, August 18, 2023
Epilogue
and acknowledgments
and acknowledgments
CHRIS BELL – Chris’s last season as head football coach at South Newton High School was 2015. He had taken on the extra jobs of athletics director and dean of students in 2006. As of August 2023, he still held those jobs at the school. Bell left the head coaching job with a record of 118 wins and 100 losses. Bell says the current head football coach still uses remnants of the spread offense that he and offensive coordinator Blaine Durham introduced and implemented in the early 2000s. (Photo by Lori Murphy is used here with permission.)
COTY BRAGDON – Kyle Ray’s roommate at Franklin College from 2008-10 graduated from the school in January 2010 with a degree in recreation. After college, he worked several jobs before serving different electrical apprenticeships with three companies. In March 2022, he landed a fulltime position as an electrician at ERMCO Inc., Indianapolis, one of the places where he had served an apprenticeship. When Kyle Ray was hired to be head coach of the Heritage Christian High School football team in 2016, Ray asked Coty if he would handle team filming chores the first season, and Cody accepted. After that season, Kyle asked Coty to come aboard the team’s staff as an assistant coach, which Coty did for two years before leaving after the 2018 season to better devote time to his family. He is married with two children, and they live in Cumberland, Ind., on the Far-Eastside of Indianapolis. (2008 photo by Ralph Greenslade is used here with permission.)
RYAN CARE – At South Newton High School, Ryan played baseball for four seasons and was a member of the wrestling team for four years, in addition to playing football. After graduating from South Newton High School in 2007, he obtained a business degree from Purdue University.
For the past nine years, he has worked for Renovia, a commercial painting and repair services company. He served as operations manager for the company in Indianapolis and Nashville, and in 2022, he moved to Dallas, where he lives today and continues to work for Renovia. Today, he is regional vice president of operations, covering the Midwest (Dallas, Indianapolis and Nashville offices). (Photo provided by Eric Watt and is used here with permission.)
NICK COCHRAN – Nick graduated Franklin College in 2011 with a degree in journalism, with a concentration on the public relations and advertising track. He has held several jobs over the years. Since January 2020 he has been employed by Hooey Brands, where he served as licensing manager before being promoted in April 2023 to director of licensing and headwear. The company has partnered with 20 colleges and has built a custom headwear program for each. Hooey also has a headwear license deal with the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys. Before that, Nick spent six years as a branded headwear buyer and merchandiser for LIDS Sports Group. He currently lives in Plainfield, where he served as an assistant football coach at Plainfield (Ind.) High School, his alma mater, from 2016-20.
PAUL CURTIS – Before attending Tri-State University in 2007, Paul played quarterback at Ross Beatty High School in Cassopolis, Mich., leading his team through an undefeated season his senior year before losing in the postseason tournament’s district championship game. He played receiver all four years at Tri-State/Trine University and also returned kicks most of those seasons. He graduated in 2011 with a degree in kinesiology and exercise science. For a year and a half after college, he served part time as an assistant coach for the Trine football team. After four years in management at Enterprise travel services in Fort Wayne, Ind., he joined Cintas, also in Fort Wayne, in late 2016. He is a customer service supervisor for Cintas, which designs, manufactures and cleans professional uniforms for more than 1 million businesses in all industries.
BLAINE DURHAM – Blaine’s 9 to 5 job is doing business banking for First Financial Bank in Kentland, Ind., but he has been on the football coaching staff of South Newton High School since the new millennium. To this day, he is still the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.
NATHAN ELLIS – Nathan could have qualified for a medical redshirt because of the ankle injury his freshman year at Franklin College. A medical redshirt would have earned him another year of eligibility to play football for Franklin in 2012, but he elected not to pursue it. Like Matt Zmich, Ellis also played four years of baseball for Franklin College. A pitcher, he capped his career with 9-2 records in his junior and senior years, leading the pitching staff in wins both seasons. He graduated in 2011 with a degree in secondary education and was a speaker at his commencement. He gained some notoriety on YouTube when someone in the audience at the commencement captured video of Nathan singing a few bars of Carly Rae Jepsen’s song “Call Me Maybe” as an introduction to his speech.
He earned his master’s degree in educational leadership from the University of Indianapolis in 2019. Ellis worked a year as a teacher and coach in the Metropolitan School District of Mount Vernon in southern Indiana (Posey County) before coming home to Plainfield, where he has worked ever since. He has taught social studies to seventh- and eighth-graders, served as a coach in football and boys/girls basketball and baseball (middle and high school levels) and today serves as a middle school assistant director of athletics. At Plainfield, he worked briefly with college football teammate Nick Purichia when the latter came there to teach and coach. (Franklin College teammate Nick Cochran, also a PHS alum, also coached football at Plainfield for several years.) Nathan and his wife, Kaitlin, reside in Plainfield with their daughter, Mila. (Photo is self-provided and used here with permission.)
LUKE FLOYD – The 2008 Ritter High School alumnus graduated Franklin College in 2012 with a degree in elementary education and taught for five years at St. Charles Borromeo Elementary School in Bloomington, Ind. He left there to take a job as a firefighter with the White River Township Fire Department in Johnson County, Ind., and he still works there today. He resides with his family in Franklin, Ind., his college town. (Photo by Sam Riche is used with permission from The Indianapolis Star.) MIKE GILLIN – Mike has been coaching football at Indianapolis area high schools since the 1970s and has been a head coach for 44 seasons. Stops have included Monrovia High School (assistant coach, 1977-78); Tri-West in Hendricks County (head coach, 1979-89); Decatur Central High School, his alma mater (head coach, 1990-2000) and Indian Creek High School (head coach, 2001-2016). He currently is head coach of his hometown team, the Mooresville (Ind.) Pioneers. His son Casey helped him at Mooresville, a southwest suburb of Indianapolis, as offensive coordinator, and another son, Carney, helped along the sidelines by relaying signals to the players. Casey later served as head coach at Indian Creek High School for two seasons, resigning in early 2024 to begin another stint as offensive coordinator under his dad at Mooresville. Mike Gillin was inducted into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame on June 12, 2014. His career coaching record is 364-145 (as of the 2023 season), and the 364 wins rank third among active Indiana high school football coaches, behind only Larry “Bud” Wright of Sheridan and Russ Radtke of Knox. He ranks fourth all time in Indiana. (Photo is self-provided and used with permission.)
KOLBY HARRELL – Not mentioned in the meat of this series is that even though Kolby Harrell played only one down in his three years on the Indian Creek High School varsity football team, he also made the school’s swim team and did quite well on it. He once came a couple hundredths of a second from breaking a longstanding school record in the breaststroke, his best event. After high school, Kolby attended Indiana University and graduated in 2011 with a degree in sports communication.
After college, Kolby lived with relatives in Savannah, Ga., for four years and became involved working for non-profit organizations while also attending graduate school at what was then Armstrong State University (it became a campus of Georgia Southern University in 2018). He earned a master’s degree in professional communication and leadership there in 2015. While in Savannah, he met his future wife, Danielle. In 2016, they moved to Ithaca, N.Y., where he got a job as executive director of Golden Opportunity, a non-profit that provides mentoring and tutoring to students of elementary school age through high school. The Harrells moved to Cary, N.C., in 2019 to be close to other family. There, Kolby continues to work with non-profit organizations, serving as a marketing specialist for veterans-founded Stop Solider Suicide. In 2014, he gave a lecture titled “Love and Basic Color Theory” at a “Ted Talk” conference.
In 2019, he enlisted in the Army National Guard and today serves as a military intelligence officer and is based in the Raleigh-Durham area of North Carolina. (Photo was provided by Karen Ray-Thomas and is used here with permission.)
BOBBY HANNA – After graduating from Rensselaer Central High School in 2007, the good friend of Eric Watt, Andy Rodriguez and Ryan Care attended Franklin College for a year and briefly played in the school’s basketball program. In his first semester (2007) at Franklin, he worked the ticket booth for the Grizzlies’ home football games the season Eric left Tri-State University’s game there with an injury and was replaced by Levi Knach. After leaving Franklin College, Bob transferred to Purdue University, where he obtained a degree in technology leadership and innovation. He worked as a commodity buyer of steel for automaker Subaru Indiana in Lafayette for about eight years. In November 2022, he began a position as sourcing manager for the engine and components manufacturer Cummins Inc. and works from his home in Brookston, Ind., about 10 miles north of Lafayette, Ind. (Photo is self-provided and used with permission.)
MATT HOLLOWELL – After graduating from Roncalli High School in Indianapolis in 1999, Matt attended Purdue University and earned a degree in civil engineering. Not long after beginning work for an engineering consulting company in Indianapolis, he realized he did not enjoy the profession as much as he thought he would. A friend found him a teaching job at Indianapolis Cardinal Ritter High School in 2006, and in addition to teaching math and physics there, he coached freshman football and track. He soon enrolled in a Master of Arts teaching program at the University of Indianapolis, where he completed an Educational Leadership program. His coaching gig at Ritter lasted only three years, but he found that he did enjoy teaching, so he stayed at Ritter a total of 12 years. While there, he also served as math department chairman, dean of academics and, in the last year (2016-17), interim principal. He then left Ritter to enroll at Indiana State University to obtain a doctorate degree in Curriculum and Instruction with a concentration on post-secondary teaching and learning. He completed requirements for that degree in 2019. Today, he is an assistant professor of education at Marian University in Indianapolis. (Photo is self-provided and used with permission.)
MATT LAND – Matt’s last season as head football coach at Trine was 2014. His teams won three consecutive Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association championships, and he took his team to the NCAA Division III postseason tournament in 2008-10. He finished coaching at Trine with a record of 63-32. The total wins and .663 winning percentage are school records. He has been Trine’s director of athletics since 2012 and assistant vice president for athletics since 2015. It was during his time as head coach that Trine began its extensive project to improve athletics department facilities, which included converting the Shive Field football turf from grass to artificial; adding football stadium seating capacity; adding media and coaches’ booths and donor guest suites above the grandstands; and building a health and fitness addition that houses weight rooms, locker rooms, meeting rooms, office space and more. (Trine University photo is used with permission.)
MIKE LEONARD – Mike stayed as head coach of Franklin College’s football team through the 2019 season, compiling a record of 129-55 over 17 seasons – winning 70 percent of the team’s total games and 84 percent of the team’s games in the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference. His coaching wins rank second all-time at Franklin College. Leonard’s Grizzlies earned 11 conference championships and 10 NCAA Division III playoff appearances, peaking with a quarterfinals berth in 2008. In 2021, he was selected for induction into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame, and at a Nov. 5, 2022 ceremony, his induction was made official. After leaving coaching, Leonard worked about a year in the college’s office of development and alumni engagement. He is now retired and living in Speedway, Ind. (Photo by Ralph Greenslade is used with permission.)
RICK MINNICH – The longtime head coach of the Adams Central High School Flyin’ Jets, South Newton’s opponent in the 2006 postseason regional championship game, was the school’s head football coach for 32 years and director of athletics for 14 years before stepping down as coach after the 2008 season and as AD several years later. His record as a coach was 235-136. His teams won six Allen County Athletic Conference championships, 15 sectional championships, 10 regional championships, one semistate and one Class A state championship (2000). He is an Adams Central alumnus himself and played running back at Taylor University in Upland, Ind., before graduating in 1974. He is a 2009 football inductee of Taylor University’s Athletics Hall of Fame and a 2010 inductee into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame. In 2017, Adams Central renamed its football field in his honor. In retirement, he lives in Decatur, Ind.
ANDREW PICKFORD – Andrew graduated Trine University in 2011 with a degree in business management, with an emphasis in sports management. He began to work almost immediately for Creek Enterprises, a telecommunications company based in Adrian, Mich., which is a short distance northeast of his hometown of Sand Creek. With Creek Enterprises, he was part of a team that spent five years on assignment in Missouri establishing the company’s presence there. He met his future wife, Sydne, while in Missouri. They moved to Adrian about four years ago. Today, Andrew is Creek Enterprises’ director of safety and in charge of all safety programs and training for the company. The Pickfords have a son, Miles, 2, and welcomed twins Hayes and Shay in November 2022. (Photo is self-provided and used with permission.)
CLAIRE FREEMAN RAY – By the end of her second year at Butler University, Kyle Ray’s girlfriend Claire had become disenchanted with Butler and was not enjoying basketball. She transferred to Indiana Wesleyan, a then-Class 2 NAIA school in Marion, Ind., where she played the final two years of her college basketball eligibility. She helped the Wildcats win the NAIA national championship her senior year, 2012-13. She and Kyle were married June 1, 2012, between her junior and senior years in college, in an outdoor ceremony at BluFalls, an arts and event center in Pendleton, Ind., that is now permanently closed. June 1 also is the wedding anniversary of Kyle’s parents, Rob and Karen, and the birthday of Kyle’s brother, Justin. At Butler, Claire had considered pursuing a course path that would enable her to be a physician’s assistant. After her sophomore season, when she transferred to Indiana Wesleyan, she changed her major to elementary education. She and Kyle lived in married student housing at Indiana Wesleyan her senior year, during which Kyle commuted to Taylor University in Upland, Ind., to complete requirements to earn a second degree, in elementary education, while also serving as a graduate assistant football coach there. After completing their higher education schooling, Claire and Kyle taught for about three years at Pleasant Crossing Elementary School in the Clark-Pleasant school district of Johnson County, Ind. In 2016, after Kyle was hired as head football coach at Heritage Christian High School and fourth-grade teacher at Heritage Christian Academy on the northeast side of Indianapolis, the Rays moved to Fishers, Ind. They have three children, and today Claire devotes her time to being a full-time parent and serves as Kids Director at Hamilton Hills Church in Fishers. (Hamilton Hills Church photo is used here with permission.)
JUSTIN RAY – Kyle Ray’s older brother earned seven athletic letters at Indian Creek High School in football, basketball and golf before graduating in 2005. He briefly attended Ball State University before he followed an itch to continue playing football and transferred to Manchester University in North Manchester, Ind., initially pursuing a degree in accounting. After two semesters, he wanted to be closer to home, so he transferred again, this time to Marian College (it had not yet changed its name to Marian University) in Indianapolis and changed his major to sports management. He did not play football there but did earn a degree in 2009. Two years later, he became director of athletics at Indian Creek Middle School, and a year later he moved up to director of athletics for his alma mater, Indian Creek High School, where he stayed for five years. In April 2017, he took a position as supervisor of grounds, custodians and facilities at Whiteland High School, a job that he said entailed less overtime than the previous administrative jobs and enabled him to get involved in coaching football. In 2022, Justin left Clark-Pleasant Schools to take a job selling insurance for Aflac Inc. in Johnson County. For several years he has served as an assistant football coach for Heritage Christian High School, where brother Kyle is head coach. (Photo provided by Karen Ray-Thomas is used with permission.)
KAREN RAY-THOMAS – Kyle, Justin and Leslie’s mother is a 1978 graduate of Indian Creek High School in Johnson County, Ind. After marrying ICHS Class of ’76 alumnus Rob Ray in 1980, she helped raise their three children. She worked for five years in the office of Indian Creek Intermediate School in Trafalgar in the early 2000s. Her husband, Rob, died in June 2009. In the late 2010s, she met Jim Thomas Jr., and they married in May 2020 and live in Franklin, Ind. (Photo provided by Karen Ray-Thomas and is used with permission.)
In summer 2011, he said, “I asked myself if I wanted to give back.” When the answer was yes, he went to do volunteer work for an Oklahoma church mission camp for underprivileged children, where he realized he could have a greater impact in life by spending time helping youths. “We put together a sports camp for kids with spiritual themes. It was about a week long. … The impact I realized I could have just by being myself and being there in person was amazing to me … (as were) the relationships that were built in a week.” Later, while working as a graduate assistant coach at Taylor University in northern Indiana (which he did while Claire finished her studies and college basketball career at nearby Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion), he earned a teaching degree at Taylor.
While he and Claire taught grade school children in the Clark-Pleasant Community School Corp. in northeastern Johnson County, he served as an assistant coach for Whiteland High School’s football team for three years. When the Heritage Christian High School head football coach’s job opened in 2016, he applied for it on what he termed “a lark” … and was hired. He has been there ever since. For six years, he also taught fourth-graders in Heritage Christian Academy's elementary school, where he became well known for his Bow Tie Wednesdays (see photo below) to build a sense of community and to foster self-esteem within the student community. Kyle left the classroom to become vice principal of the academy's elementary school beginning with the 2023-24 school year. His football team’s records since he became head coach have been 4-5 (2016), 6-4 (2017), 6-5 (2018), 11-2 (2019), 8-3 (2020), 8-1 (2021) and 7-4 (2022 and ‘23). Kyle, Claire and their three children live in Fishers, Ind., a northeast suburb of Indianapolis. (Photos here are courtesy of Heritage Christian Academy and are used with permission.)
ANDY RODRIGUEZ – Eric Watt’s longtime friend and high school and college football teammate and high school basketball teammate earned a varsity letter at Trine University his freshman year. After the injury in preseason camp sophomore year at Trine, he served as a student coach for the next three years. He said he sat in on all the team defense’s meetings and helped coach defensive backs. By the time he was a senior, he found himself coaching all the defensive backs and was participating in the defense’s meetings, day drills, scouting and film sessions. He said he found fulfillment in coaching. “Coaching saved my life at Trine,” he said, and he decided to stick with it after graduating from Trine with a degree in criminal justice in 2011.
JOSIAH SEARS – Franklin College’s offensive coordinator when Kyle Ray played there, Josiah had played prep football at Greenfield (Ind.) Central High School after which he joined the Indiana University football team as a walk-on and later earned a scholarship. At IU, he was a running back and fullback and was a team captain in his senior year. After earning a degree in finance from IU in 2007, he tried out for both the Chicago Bears and Buffalo Bills.
Beginning in 2008, Josiah spent five seasons on the coaching staff at Franklin College, serving in various positions, including running backs and wide receivers coach, quarterbacks coach, offensive line coach and offensive coordinator. Beginning in 2012, he served three seasons as quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator at Wheaton (Ill.) College, after which he was hired as head football coach at Benedictine University in Lisle, Ill. In two seasons at Benedictine, the Eagles had records of 6-4 (4-2 in the Northern Athletics Collegiate Conference) in 2016 and 7-3 (5-1) in 2017. Today, Josiah and his wife, Lyndee, and two children live in Carmel, Ind., a far-north suburb of Indianapolis, and Josiah works as a managing director for Oxford Financial Group. (Photo provided by Leslie Ray is used with permission.)
Dan and his wife still live along a lake near Angola, Ind., a four-minute drive from the Trine University campus. (Trine University photo is used with permission.)
Eric didn’t return to Italy for another season, partly because he wasn’t sure the Warriors wanted him back and partly because he wanted to return to the United States. He found the adjustment to foreign football difficult, mostly because of the communication and language hurdles. He said he tried to learn key conversational Italian via Rosetta Stone instruction before going over there, but it did not go as smoothly as he would have hoped. Fortunately, most of the players on his team had a decent grasp of English, so he could share plays in the huddles. Unfortunately, his coaches were not as good with English; they knew enough to exchange very brief small talk, and that was about it. Asked to say something in Italian, he chuckled … then tried to show how he would order a pizza.
Watt came back to the United States at the end of the Warriors’ 2012 season and initially hoped to explore opportunities in the Canadian Football League. “Coming out of college, I definitely wanted to go pro,” he explained. But he never did explore Canadian pro ball seriously; today, he can’t even remember if he ever hired an agent to help him find a pro team anywhere that would give him a look/see.
So Eric decided to settle into his “real life” and returned to Kentland to help run WTI, which he manages with older brother Keith. Eric said his great-grandfather started the business in the 1930s as a trucking company. Its focus and services have gone through several iterations over the years. The business once fell into the category of the classic trucking industry; today it manufactures fiberglass fenders and steel bracket parts for trucks. (Photo is self-provided and used with permission.)
MICHELLE WATT CLEMENT – After graduating South Newton High School in 2008, Michelle attended and graduated from Indiana University, earning a degree in informatics. Since 2014, she has been a technical consultant for Alithya, a company that assists clients to achieve business objectives through the use of digital technologies. She lives on the Northside of Indianapolis. She and her husband, Bo, have one son, Jimmer. (Photo is self-provided and used with permission.)
LUANNE WATT – Eric and Michelle’s mother technically retired from the family trucking and fiberglass fender business in October 2021, but in summer 2022 she said she occasionally looks in on things at WTI and helps out. For years she had assisted – at various times – in such things as sales, accounting and reconciling bank statements. (Photo is self-provided and used with permission.)
RON WATT – Eric and Michelle’s father retired from the family business several years ago, although he will still take calls from customers who use his phone number, and he occasionally does some fender painting and installation work. He said the family now owns and runs three businesses – Watt Trucking Inc., Lehman Manufacturing and Hoosier Metal Polish.
Lehman makes ceramics slip, casting and other pouring room parts and products. It also is used to operate a lawn care service. Hoosier Metal Polish is a proprietary application used to protect metal and keep it shining even after multiple washings. (2012 family photo used with permission.)
BEN WELSH – One of Eric Watt’s primary receivers and backup quarterback in Watt’s years in high school, Ben also played safety for the Rebels defense throughout high school. After Watt graduated high school in 2007, Welsh took over as starting quarterback for the 2007 Rebels team, which had another great year, going 10-2 (6-1 in the Midwest Conference).
South Newton surrendered the Bull traveling trophy back to Pioneer in 2007, but it took overtime for the Rebels to fall, 30-24, and it took a bizarre and lucky play for the Rebels to tie the score and take the game into overtime. South Newton trailed 24-17 late in the game and faced a fourth-and-20 situation. As Welsh went back to pass, the defensive rush powered past the blocking and was about to pounce on Welsh. At the last moment, he decided to drop the ball – yes, intentionally fumble – and hope for the best. Indeed, one of his blockers spotted the ball, scooped it up and ran it exactly 20 yards to get the first down. South Newton would score on that drive before the clock expired, taking the game into overtime, where Pioneer prevailed.
The 2007 Rebels were ranked seventh when they advanced to the sectional final, where they lost to Triton, 36-21. Welsh was named 2007 team MVP, Midwest Conference player of the year in both football and basketball his senior year, and enjoyed the novelty of throwing passes to his second cousin, Rebels wide receiver Tyler Welsh. Ben also was a member of the National Honor Society and played wide receiver in the 2008 Grange Insurance North-South All-Star game at North Central High School in Indianapolis. He led the losing North squad with seven pass receptions for 45 yards, most of which came on the North’s opening possession.After high school, Ben attended the University of Dayton, where he earned a degree in electrical engineering and played safety for the school’s football team. He was a member of the Pioneer Football League Academic Honor Roll. By the time he got to college, Ben – who as a high school freshman was slight of stature and had difficulty throwing forward passes because football shoulder pads hampered his throwing motion – stood 6-foot-1 and weighed 190 pounds. Today, Ben is manager of business development LTC for AmerisourceBergen Drug Corp. and works out of the corporation’s office in Austin, Texas. (2007 photo by Lori Murphy is used with permission.)
Schools that reached out to him included Trine University – where high school teammates Eric Watt and Andy Rodriguez were playing – and Wabash College. He said he did flirt with the idea of giving Division II or Division III college football a try. He acknowledged that Watt and Rodriguez talked to him a little about coming to Trine. But he said he didn’t feel he was good enough, that the cost of an education at a private school like Trine or Wabash was prohibitive – even if he did feel he could qualify for some aid money – and said he felt he was injury prone.
So in the end, Brice chose to attend Indiana University (he did not play interscholastic sports there), where he said he “stumbled into” a degree in education and obtained a Master of Business Administration. Since his college graduation, he has worked in the Hamilton Southeastern public school district in Fishers, Ind., northeast of Indianapolis, as a teacher, dean of students and, currently, is assistant principal of Sand Creek Intermediate School. (2007 Photo by Lori Murphy is used with permission.)
MAX WOODBURY III – Kyle Ray’s football teammate at Indian Creek High School and Franklin College graduated from the latter in the second decade of the new millennium. Since then, he has worked with the longtime Franklin family accounting, tax preparation and payroll services firm, which today is known as Max Woodbury Group. Max has been its owner since December 2018. He handled punting chores for the college team and punted and did place-kicking for his high school team. He volunteers for the Boys and Girls Clubs of America, the Boy Scouts of America and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
In the realm of newspaper archival clippings, which I researched almost entirely online through newspapers.com, I culled information from the Johnson County Daily Journal in Franklin, Ind.; The Franklin monthly news magazine of Franklin College; the Lafayette (Ind.) Journal & Courier; The Indianapolis Star and The Indianapolis News; the Martinsville Reporter-Times; the Richmond Palladium-Item; the Munster Times; the Logansport Pharos-Tribune; the South Bend Tribune, the Terre Haute Tribune-Star; the Bedford Times-Mail and the Jasper Herald. The Daily Journal, The Star and the Journal & Courier in particular did outstanding jobs with their high school sports coverage and reports in the areas of interest and years for which I conducted research, and for that, I am most appreciative.
I’m particularly grateful to college and university sports information directors, who toil so hard while recording, posting and archiving their schools’ team and individual player statistics for each football game every year – and then making that data accessible online.
Particularly useful for me in my research were the data available at Franklin College and Trine University, especially the play-by-play readouts for games. Many schools, including Franklin and Trine, were in transition with including play-by-play readouts with online game stats in the years for which I was doing research. Hence, play-by-play readouts for some games from 2007-2010 were not available.
But I will vouch for any SIDs out there who might question if that detailed information is useful ... that such data is, at least for researchers, very useful, if not also for nostalgia fanatics. The play-by-play readouts, in fact, proved to be invaluable not only to me, but also to some players and coaches who I interviewed for this project. More than 10 years have passed since the games that are mentioned in this series, and having those readouts handy to jog game participants’ memories was extremely beneficial.
In the realm of sports information directors, I extend a special note of acknowledgment and thanks to Ryan Thomas, assistant athletics director at Franklin College, who today wears many hats, including that of sports information director. Over the course of working on this project, I consulted him multiple times about several stats-related matters as well as with questions about the school’s football program. I caught him at an unenviable point of time; he himself was trying to find, research and/or re-create many years’ worth of Franklin College athletics department data, records and statistics that somehow vanished in the transition following the July 2015 death of former longtime SID Kevin Elixman.
I appreciate Ryan’s patience with me, especially on a couple of occasions when we both experienced frustration while seeking answers to crucial questions. Because of his kindness, I was more than happy to share with him and Franklin College my own research findings in certain areas, hoping that might be of assistance with some of his own difficult data research.
In some instances, coaches I interviewed had access to information such as a school’s career, season and single-game statistics and records and kindly provided those to me. Among those who did so were Mike Gillin (Indian Creek High School, now head coach at of Mooresville High School in Indiana), and Chris Bell and Blaine Durham at South Newton High School (Kentland, Ind.). I wish to thank them, too, for their assistance.
Probably the most critical portion of my “bibliography” were the individuals who agreed to submit to interviews that made the sundry stories in this project come alive. From South Newton High School, I start with former head coach Bell (now the school’s athletics director) and Durham, his longtime assistant coach and offensive coordinator. And there were Rebels players Eric Watt, Andy Rodriguez, Ben Welsh, Ryan Care, Brice Willey and Justin Wentzel. Also interviewed for the South Newton portion of the story were Eric Watt’s good friend Bobby Hanna; Eric’s parents, Ron Watt and Luanne Render Watt; and Eric’s sister, Michelle Watt Clement.
From Trine University, in addition to Watt and Rodriguez, there were fellow players Paul Curtis, Andrew Pickford and Levi Knach; quarterbacks coach Dan Simrell; and head coach Matt Land. From Indian Creek High School, there were then-head coach Gillin as well as Kyle Ray and his older siblings, brother Justin and sister Leslie Ray, and his mother, Karen Ray-Thomas; as well as Kyle’s lifelong friends and ICHS teammates Caleb Raley and Kolby Harrell; and there was a written response to questions from Kyle’s former Indian Creek and Franklin College teammate Max Woodbury III. Also interviewed was Kyle’s wife, Claire Freeman Ray.
From Franklin College, in addition to Kyle and Max Woodbury, there were former head coach Mike Leonard; former offensive coordinator Josiah Sears; and Kyle’s teammates Cody Bragdon, Nick Purichia, Nick Cochran, Nathan Ellis, Luke Floyd, Daymond Reynolds, Jesse Mercer and Matt Zmich. And from Indianapolis Cardinal Ritter High School, in addition to Purichia, there was teammates Luke Floyd and former teacher and administrator Matt Hollowell, who also briefly served at Ritter as an assistant football coach. A significant number of Ritter coaches and players who I wanted to interview did not acknowledge or respond to my reach-outs.
Also agreeing to interviews for this story were Rick Minnich, former Adams Central High School head football coach and director of athletics; former Franklin College President Jay Moseley; Jim Gagliardi, director of marketing for Saint John’s University, Collegeville, Minn.; Matt Hoffman, a final four Gagliardi Trophy finalist in 2010; and Ryan Coleman of d3photography.com..
Aside from the curious lack of responses from Ritter players and personnel to agree to interviews, there were quite a few other people I reached out to and/or invited to participate in this project via interviews who also did not acknowledge or respond. But rather than dwell on the negative, I do want to note that some of the above people who did agree to interviews gave wonderful insights, remembrances and anecdotes, without which I would not have been able to continue pursuing the project’s concept.
I am especially grateful to several people who allowed me to use their photographs to enliven the prose in this series. Among them are South Newton High School art instructor Lori Murphy (her photos of the Rebels’ football teams through the years during Eric Watt’s time at the school were wonderful to have); Ralph Greenslade, whose photos of the Franklin College football teams in the 2010 postseason playoffs especially were excellent “finds” for me.
Also, Ryan Coleman of d3photography.com, whose photos from the 2010 Gagliardi Trophy presentation enlivened the text in that final chapter of the story; The Indianapolis Star, which was gracious in sharing photos of Indianapolis Cardinal Ritter players Nick Purichia, Joey Anderson, Obed Bailey and Luke Floyd; Heritage Christian School for its photos of Kyle Ray and Ray with his students on one of Ray’s many Bow Tie Wednesdays; Ritter High School for use of its photos of the Raiders in the 2006 IHSAA Class A state championship football game; and Trine University for its head shots of coaches Matt Land and Dan Simrell.
Also, Hamilton Hills Church in Fishers, Ind., for its use of the photo of Claire Freeman Ray; artist Luke Buck of Nineveh, Ind., for use of his striking painting of the former Nineveh School; Eric and Luanne Watt; Karen Ray-Thomas and her daughter, Leslie Ray; Franklin College through its Athletics Department; the Indiana Department of Natural Resources; and so many of the main characters in the story, who scrambled to accommodate my requests for personal, family and/or other pertinent images to help illustrate the story, especially the epilogue.
A note of special thanks to former Indianapolis Star newsroom colleagues Carl Sygiel, Brett Halbleib and Kelly Wilkinson; and Mike Fleissner, a high school classmate of mine. Your contributions might seem small in the big picture, but they proved important during the journey. Dean George, a correspondent for The Indianapolis Star with whom I worked for several years in the 1980s when I was the newspaper’s suburban news editor, offered me valuable encouragement to continue pursuing this project at a point when I was giving serious thought to abandoning it. Thank you, Dean.Previously in "On Hoosier Gridirons":
Chapter 2: Mastering the Spread
Chapter 3: The Kicker With the Ever-Present Smile
Chapter 4: Like Father, Like Son
Chapter 5: Where Legends Played
Chapter 6: A Moonlight Graham Moment
Chapter 7: 'Clearly the Best' Small-School Teams in Indiana
Chapter 9: Farewell, Levi ... and Welcome, Pup!
Chapter 10: Waiting Their Turns
Chapter 14: A Quarterback's Prayer