Jump to content

Maryville vs Maplewood


jrlcm
 Share

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 409
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

according to the coacht website Maplewood is Maplewood Comprehensive School not Maplewood High School-GO MHS RED REBELS!!!!!! i think murvil's special teams et offense is gonna be the difference makers-can't wait til saturday-Move them Chains!!!!!!!!

 

 

 

HEY SPANKY? ARE YOU THE MAN WHO SETS BEHIND ME (WITH YOUR WIFE) AT THE HOME GAMES YELLING MOVE THOSE CHAINS?

 

SURE HOPE SO. HOPE TO SEE YOU ALL AT THE GAME SAT.

 

GO MARYVILLE

GO ALCOA

GO FULTON

 

AND YEAH, WHAT SPANKY SAYS...................MOVE THOSE CHAINS................

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They have gangstas on their team? From what I witnessed at a Maplewood game, that team is full of nothing but ghetto thugs with no class at all, including the coaches.

 

man get out of here ...this has nothing to do with HCHS ... so C your way over to "MAYBE next year HCHS" forum ..if you cant find it then start it up ..im sure you and a few others have plenty to talk about .. you have no internet class ..youre a cyber bum!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HEY SPANKY? ARE YOU THE MAN WHO SETS BEHIND ME (WITH YOUR WIFE) AT THE HOME GAMES YELLING MOVE THOSE CHAINS?

 

SURE HOPE SO. HOPE TO SEE YOU ALL AT THE GAME SAT.

 

GO MARYVILLE

GO ALCOA

GO FULTON

 

AND YEAH, WHAT SPANKY SAYS...................MOVE THOSE CHAINS................

 

 

im going to make sure i sit next to him at the game ..and if he makes one sound ... /dry.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid="

Link to comment
Share on other sites

man get out of here ...this has nothing to do with HCHS ... so C your way over to "MAYBE next year HCHS" forum ..if you cant find it then start it up ..im sure you and a few others have plenty to talk about .. you have no internet class ..youre a cyber bum!!

 

Call me what you want, but Maplewood is filled with poor morons with very small IQ's. That doesn't mean that all are that way, but the ones there Friday sure were.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I haven't posted anything all year but I am just tired to all these crybabies complaining about maryville recruiting kids. As a former student and player, I can honestly say that I have not met one single player who said the only reason he came to maryville was because of football. I have also done a research project for my college business class which required me to interview some members/faculty of MHS and I was told that maryville only accepts ONE (rarely more than one) tuition student per year. Their list is HUGE with kids (only a hand full of whom are athelets) who would like to attend but only the ones with the best grades get in. Because the maryville school system wants to be know for its academics and not athletics, they only accept the best of the best. ALSO, their grades (tuition students) get reviewed every single year and only once did a tuition paying student get rejected for another year at maryville because of his/her grades were bad. You wanna play football for maryville??? you better be smart. plain and simple. Unless you know anything about Maryville City Schools, have talked to the faculty, or are a member of the community, please keep your comments about our tuition students to yourself. As stated by another person on here, only about 5 kids do not actually live inside maryville city limits. One last comment, IF we do recruit players, I will be the first person to sign a petition to fire the person who recruits these undersized players. You can go back to whatever year you want to....lets say 1998 for arguments sake and compare weight, height, bench, squat,...whatever else you want to compare, and you will see that the #s have (overall) gone down. Maryville has a great "team" every single year because the players buy into the system that GQ and his assistants present to them. GQ can make any team a champion he wants to, right now...its the maryville high school rebels but hopefully someday it will be ______ University and I say hopefully because he deserves more than anyone to coach college football.

 

looks like you the only one ..who has seen this "research" that you made up ..where is the proof ... idont see it ...anyone else see it? nope ....how are people going to trust what you say when you come from the problem..its all a scam and your are part of it ...how much did they pay you to say that stuff? ..and thats 5 kids to many ...who do you think you are .. Brentwood Acad ...MBA ..you guys need to be in DIV I OR II ... and im sure its a huge list of kids ..and if you thought you could could get away with more ..you would try it...

 

 

MHS PUBLIC vs MHS PRIVATE in the 2007 High School Championship!!! WoW!!! thats hot right there!! ...im sellling T -Shirts at the game $9.99!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

you obviously have computers w/ internet access so find it yourself.

Historical Background

 

Maplewood High School opened its doors in 1956 to a community that had a long-standing desire for a school. It is located barely one-fourth mile east of Nashville??™s historic Dickerson Road and borders on Ellington Parkway on the west. The school faces Maplewood Lane from which it derived its name and sits on land once owned by Jere Baxter (1852-1904), a prominent Nashvillian who was both a strong supporter of public education and an entrepreneur. Where horse-drawn surreys and carriages once traveled down the lane to the home Maplewood, today, shiny automobiles and yellow school buses make their way on the same lane to Maplewood Comprehensive High School.

 

 

Maplewood originally opened with 13 teachers and 404 students enrolled in grades 7 and 8 and continued to increase with a grade each year. By 1961-62 the enrollment had reached 1468; that spring 84 students comprised of 51 girls and 33 boys were in the first graduation. The school grew rapidly because of the development of residential subdivisions including Gra-Mar, Hillhurst, Bellshire, Oak Valley, Shepherdwood, Kemper Heights, Haynes Heights, Haynes Manor, Parkwood, and Trinity Hills. In the meantime, zone changes and the construction of Ewing Park School also influenced enrollment. Another transition occurred when East High School was closed. In the spring of 2003, enrollment increased at Maplewood by nearly 300 students as a result of re-zoning two feeder schools. This re-zoning pattern still remains. In addition, a small English Language Learner student population was transferred from Maplewood to another high school.

 

 

At the beginning of 2005-2006, a guidance counselor, an attendance officer, and a social worker were new personnel additions. Other changes included a new head coach, a librarian, and two new assistant principals, one of whom had been a teacher at the school. Significantly, a new executive principal was welcomed, the eighth person to serve in this position in half a century had been assigned to Maplewood. The number and variety of trophies on display, the students who have received outstanding and unique recognitions as identified in the yearbooks, and the success of many of its graduates reflect a school environment that has enriched the lives of many students. More recently Maplewood has faced challenges, especially the graduation rate, not uncommon to some public high schools across the nation and will require much effort to overcome. Test scores indicate in some areas that progress is being made as the school moves forward and expects to show continued improvement.

 

 

 

Facilities

 

Maplewood High School is situated on nearly 47 (46.98) acres of gently rolling pristine acres and the close surroundings appear more rural than urban. Presently the two-story building with a lower floor (basement) underneath one wing has 566,280 square feet of floor area. Additions were made to the original building in 1959, 1960, 1970, and 1988. The second building, which is connected by a breezeway and referred to as the vocational addition, was built in 1978. This addition includes 55,505 square feet, and it was at this time that Maplewood High School became Maplewood Comprehensive High School. During the summer of 2006, extensive carpentry, masonry, and plumbing work has been done for the building to be in compliance with the American Disabilities Act.

 

 

Other characteristics of the building are a concrete foundation, flat roof, gas-fired heating, and fluorescent lighting. The walls, both exterior and interior, are primarily brick, concrete blocks, and some tiles. The total student capacity is 1500+, and the buildings have 33 restrooms, 25 water fountains, 54 classrooms, two gymnasia, cafeteria seating for 250, and auditorium seating for 450. The classrooms used for laboratories and/or work areas are designed to promote student hands-on activities and creative learning experiences. An inviting entrance, comfortable halls, a well-equipped clinic, adequate office space, a user-friendly spacious library housing an average of about 12 books per student, computer centers with 1 computer for every 4 students, and adequate parking facilities are among other amenities. During the spring and summer of 2004, a 3-COM NBX voice over Internet Protocol [telephone] system and Chancery, a student information system [computer] were installed. The main objectives are to improve and enhance school-wide communication, and to provide efficient parental access to pertinent information and student progress. Painting, some new carpeting, and cosmetic work have been done which greatly enhance the appearance of the facility. A new wall has been constructed between two classrooms that teachers believe to be most beneficial.

 

I almost forgot: GO RED REBELS

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To paraphrase the late Lloyd Bentsen, I know Knoxville West. Boski, your Nashville team is not the calibre of West, much less Maryville.

To paraphrase the still living Mac Boski, I know Maplewood. Divercity, your Knox West team is not the calibre of Maryville, much less Maplewood.

Historical BackgroundMaplewood High School opened its doors in 1956 to a community that had a long-standing desire for a school. It is located barely one-fourth mile east of Nashville??™s historic Dickerson Road and borders on Ellington Parkway on the west. The school faces Maplewood Lane from which it derived its name and sits on land once owned by Jere Baxter (1852-1904), a prominent Nashvillian who was both a strong supporter of public education and an entrepreneur. Where horse-drawn surreys and carriages once traveled down the lane to the home Maplewood, today, shiny automobiles and yellow school buses make their way on the same lane to Maplewood Comprehensive High School.Maplewood originally opened with 13 teachers and 404 students enrolled in grades 7 and 8 and continued to increase with a grade each year. By 1961-62 the enrollment had reached 1468; that spring 84 students comprised of 51 girls and 33 boys were in the first graduation. The school grew rapidly because of the development of residential subdivisions including Gra-Mar, Hillhurst, Bellshire, Oak Valley, Shepherdwood, Kemper Heights, Haynes Heights, Haynes Manor, Parkwood, and Trinity Hills. In the meantime, zone changes and the construction of Ewing Park School also influenced enrollment. Another transition occurred when East High School was closed. In the spring of 2003, enrollment increased at Maplewood by nearly 300 students as a result of re-zoning two feeder schools. This re-zoning pattern still remains. In addition, a small English Language Learner student population was transferred from Maplewood to another high school. At the beginning of 2005-2006, a guidance counselor, an attendance officer, and a social worker were new personnel additions. Other changes included a new head coach, a librarian, and two new assistant principals, one of whom had been a teacher at the school. Significantly, a new executive principal was welcomed, the eighth person to serve in this position in half a century had been assigned to Maplewood. The number and variety of trophies on display, the students who have received outstanding and unique recognitions as identified in the yearbooks, and the success of many of its graduates reflect a school environment that has enriched the lives of many students. More recently Maplewood has faced challenges, especially the graduation rate, not uncommon to some public high schools across the nation and will require much effort to overcome. Test scores indicate in some areas that progress is being made as the school moves forward and expects to show continued improvement.FacilitiesMaplewood High School is situated on nearly 47 (46.98) acres of gently rolling pristine acres and the close surroundings appear more rural than urban. Presently the two-story building with a lower floor (basement) underneath one wing has 566,280 square feet of floor area. Additions were made to the original building in 1959, 1960, 1970, and 1988. The second building, which is connected by a breezeway and referred to as the vocational addition, was built in 1978. This addition includes 55,505 square feet, and it was at this time that Maplewood High School became Maplewood Comprehensive High School. During the summer of 2006, extensive carpentry, masonry, and plumbing work has been done for the building to be in compliance with the American Disabilities Act.Other characteristics of the building are a concrete foundation, flat roof, gas-fired heating, and fluorescent lighting. The walls, both exterior and interior, are primarily brick, concrete blocks, and some tiles. The total student capacity is 1500+, and the buildings have 33 restrooms, 25 water fountains, 54 classrooms, two gymnasia, cafeteria seating for 250, and auditorium seating for 450. The classrooms used for laboratories and/or work areas are designed to promote student hands-on activities and creative learning experiences. An inviting entrance, comfortable halls, a well-equipped clinic, adequate office space, a user-friendly spacious library housing an average of about 12 books per student, computer centers with 1 computer for every 4 students, and adequate parking facilities are among other amenities. During the spring and summer of 2004, a 3-COM NBX voice over Internet Protocol [telephone] system and Chancery, a student information system [computer] were installed. The main objectives are to improve and enhance school-wide communication, and to provide efficient parental access to pertinent information and student progress. Painting, some new carpeting, and cosmetic work have been done which greatly enhance the appearance of the facility. A new wall has been constructed between two classrooms that teachers believe to be most beneficial.I almost forgot: GO RED REBELS

Great job!!! thats a real public school ..does not say one word about kids having to pay to attend.. great school!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Call me what you want, but Maplewood is filled with poor morons with very small IQ's. That doesn't mean that all are that way, but the ones there Friday sure were.

 

 

You my friend are a poor human being. I'm not going to result to name calling, but I will say that it is sad that you come on a message board and say things about kids you've never met in your life. So, let's chill with the insults and the name calling because in actuality, you wouldn't say any of that crap if you were in their presence. I won't use the broadbrush, as you have, and call all of the HC fans idiots. I've got a little more class than that. I hope one day you decide to grow up, for your sake.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To paraphrase the still living Mac Boski, I know Maplewood. Divercity, your Knox West team is not the calibre of Maryville, much less Maplewood.Great job!!!

 

 

Just another in a long line of pretenders, not contenders, is Maplewood. After Saturday evening, I'll be here waiting for the inevitable crow-eating fest.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

Announcements


  • Recent Posts

    • I've always been a football fan first and then if you have a band that's awesome.No question that DB has one of the best bands in the country and the whole region should attend at least one DB game just to see their band. I don't know if Nick Saban could come to Kingsport and build a football program that could match the Dobyns Bennett band's success.That said,as mentioned before, a couple of things would have to change in order for the Tribe to just win a state championship on the field.Besides a program that starts from the peewee teams and goes all the way to J Fred with all coaches and weight training { in time }on the same page. Sometimes it also takes a little luck like the 1998 Vols .There are a lot of great athletes at a lot of big schools around the state and just because you want something doesn't mean your going to build a program like Alcoa has. Yes,start at the bottom and have guys that are quality coaches teaching at every level is 100% the first step. Parents can make it a lot easier by getting their young athletes into an early start with conditioning and weights as well when they are old enough to lift.If your son is a man in the weight room before he gets to DB , then it won't take a "Dobbs" coach to make him competitive against other schools athletes when it comes to strength.
    • Dyersburg scrimmaged South Gibson last week
    • A complete cultural change happened at Greeneville and the administration and community opened up their checkbooks.  What a lot of people don't know is Ballard was Zeller's OC for many years and stopped coaching for two years because Zeller and Ballard didn't see eye to eye on some things.  Zeller lead Greeneville to it's first ever Semi Final appearance in 2000 and lost 28-12 at Maryville and had them in the Quarter Finals in 2002 and 2003.  Z was a great coach but lost some control when it came to making workouts mandatory. (He learned from that Mistake and it was at LC when i coached with him.).  Z was let go going into my Senior Year and was replaced by Steve McCurry who was the one that turned the program around.  Steve had won a 4a state championship at AC Reynolds in Asheville and made the administration completely redo the weight room with new equipment, had a football period at the end of the school day to lift, started devil camp, and brought in coaches like Danny Bentley (Still the OL coach), Ballard as the OC, Cody Baugh (QB coach and still there), and even Spradlen who is Greeneville's head coach now as the DB's Coach.  McCurry only coached for two seasons at Greeneville and took a team that had a losing record the year before and finished my Senior Year making it to the Quarters and having a 10-3 record and then followed it up with a Semi Final appearance the next year with an 11-3 record and back to back conference championships.  Loved McCurry to death but the recession hit and the story i heard was he was still buying new equipment for the team that the Principal didn't authorize and his response was "I don't answer to you and only to Niswonger and Bewley" (Two huge donors).  That was it for him and they Promoted Ballard shortly after that.   Greeneville had always been relevant ever since the the late 70's under Coach Fred Sorrell's.  Since Sorrell's took over in 1977 Greeneville overall winning percentage is over 76%.  The biggest reason people might not have thought Greeneville was "Good" until Ballard was Greeneville always played up Classification wise and could never get over the hump. (When there were 3 classifications we played 3a, when it went to 5 we played 4a).  Greeneville is the largest its ever been with 953 students and where playing teams 2 or 3 times there size back in the day (I had a little over 800 kids in the school when i graduated in 2008).  Other teams always would know they would be sore after a game but depth took over and never won a Championship until Greeneville played in the classification the TSSAA actually assigned them. You had names like Dustin Moore (1993 Mr Football for 3a and who Phillip Fulmer said was one of the greatest athletes he ever recruited), James "Mud Turtle" Mayes, Brigham Lyons, Byron Gillespie, Frankie Debusk (National Champion Qb at Furman with GQ), Jasmine Lowery, Cody Baugh, The Greenway Brothers, Joe Watson (Furman), etc.  Now the cultural is from the Pee Wee league up and you grow up as a young kid wanting to wear the Greene and White.  Here is a really good link when it comes to anything Greeneville Football related. https://greenevillefootball.com/   I also don't coach anymore.  Z told me i was to smart with how the school systems are ran these days and ended up going into real estate in Knoxville which has been a great decision for my life.
    • Yes, they will. I'm wondering what kinds of strides Sale Creek will make heading into the second season under Coach Fitz.
    • No yellow stripes on the rug last night. Biggest crowd I’ve seen at 825 since the alco debacle. 
×
  • Create New...