Jump to content

Coach Glenn McAdams


Vandy15
 Share

Recommended Posts

It was a true honor this afternoon to sit in my classroom during my planning period and watch "The Celebration of the Life of Coach Glenn McCadams" on my computer. The stories that were shared and the memories that have stuck with some outstanding people through the years were a blessing to listen to on what was a sad day for everyone in the Tennessee High School Football, David Lipscomb Football, McCadams families. Coaches, Officials, Past Players, Current Players, Parents, Family Members, & anyone else who I have failed to mention were included in this celebration. As anyone who ever met Coach Mac would tell you there wasn't a bad story to tell. Regardless of whether the story had to do with family, football, celtic music, or just life in general it was very easy to listen to the stories that were shared by those closest to the man. As I stated to a member of the Lipscomb Football Family this morning, it was impossible not to admire this man. This wasn't because of his ability to coach the sport of football or to get the most out of the young men that he coached. It wasn't because of his win/loss record for the last 30 years. What you saw and what you heard with Coach Mac was truly who he was as a person. I am going to miss those Friday nights listening to coaches postgame interviews and hearing a commentator ask Coach Mac about his team's performances or about his team's prospects. I already know he would answer the question as he always did by saying those famous words "we're blessed" to begin his response. We all now know that his powerhouse football teams weren't the only ones who said those words.

 

WE WERE THE ONES WHO WERE BLESSED TO HAVE GOTTEN THE HONOR TO MEET AND LEARN HOW TO TEACH YOUNG PEOPLE IN THE GAME OF LIFE..........R.I.P. COACH

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It was a true honor this afternoon to sit in my classroom during my planning period and watch "The Celebration of the Life of Coach Glenn McCadams" on my computer. The stories that were shared and the memories that have stuck with some outstanding people through the years were a blessing to listen to on what was a sad day for everyone in the Tennessee High School Football, David Lipscomb Football, McCadams families. Coaches, Officials, Past Players, Current Players, Parents, Family Members, & anyone else who I have failed to mention were included in this celebration. As anyone who ever met Coach Mac would tell you there wasn't a bad story to tell. Regardless of whether the story had to do with family, football, celtic music, or just life in general it was very easy to listen to the stories that were shared by those closest to the man. As I stated to a member of the Lipscomb Football Family this morning, it was impossible not to admire this man. This wasn't because of his ability to coach the sport of football or to get the most out of the young men that he coached. It wasn't because of his win/loss record for the last 30 years. What you saw and what you heard with Coach Mac was truly who he was as a person. I am going to miss those Friday nights listening to coaches postgame interviews and hearing a commentator ask Coach Mac about his team's performances or about his team's prospects. I already know he would answer the question as he always did by saying those famous words "we're blessed" to begin his response. We all now know that his powerhouse football teams weren't the only ones who said those words.

 

WE WERE THE ONES WHO WERE BLESSED TO HAVE GOTTEN THE HONOR TO MEET AND LEARN HOW TO TEACH YOUNG PEOPLE IN THE GAME OF LIFE..........R.I.P. COACH

 

Exellent post !!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Coach McAdams was a great example to young men. I`ll remember him fondly....One thing he wasn`t fond of so much was Division II...In the late 90`s Carlton Flatt and Ricky Bowers would make overtures about playing Lipscomb and he would have none of it....He considered the Mustangs to really be a public school in a Private school skin....He wasn`t necessarily a big fan of Goodpasture and their renowned "work study" program for athletes, but was trumped by the Church of Christ on that one....I distinctly remember him voicing his opinion on a potential Board of Control vote that would have completely separated publics from privates...He was adamantly against it...He saw what was coming down the pike and didn`t want to play in that sandbox.....In the last few years, I don`t think he enjoyed all of the traveling that Lipscomb was having to do because of the realigned districts.

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

    • And can you tell me who those two quarterbacks were, and every kid that was put into college from Bearden is a Bearden kid? It’s kind of why they graduated from Bearden.   and I would definitely not consider ETSU “waste”…
    • Most of this is complete gibberish. But the one part I could decipher is putting kids in college. This coaching staff hasn’t put a single Bearden kid in college. They completed wasted one of the best WRs in East TN and have ruined two talented QBs. All because they’re in over their heads. 
    • Well, I’d hope the new coaching staff thinks they are all that because they can always walk around the school, anytime they want, thinking that, especially for what they’ve done for the student athletes and the players, putting more kids in college in his first season than the old coaching staff did in numerous years combined, but we will just sweep over that because I know you don’t like facts. But trust me, nobody wanted Mr. Big britches, made the star player switch to quarterback, which is ultimately the reason he ended up transferring to play the position. He loved, but unfortunately, had to be at another school because Mr. Big Britches doesn’t like when a teenager knows more than him, but can’t expect much coming from a guy who used all class throwing pencils up into the ceiling and making fun of football kids who were failing class right to their face, and in front of numerous students, even projecting on the board most of the time.
    • After that first paragraph, I can see why you’re a TA and not a teacher. Have you made the move from South Knoxville to Bearden yet?    Maybe he left because he is an actual teacher and coach, and didn’t want to be associated with a group of foul mouthed middle school coaches who like to pretend they’re big time. 
    • Yeah and the coach is gone. Whole bizarre situation here. We played them a couple of times at MTSU last few years. She was a player for sure. 
×
  • Create New...