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2A Championship Trousdale Co vs. Peabody


FightingBlue0
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2 minutes ago, BCB~MVP said:

Very well done. We rednecks in troosdale had to splice the films together to get ours to work. Glad we arent going to an Art Festival tomorrow because this piece kicks our..... well. 

Still like our work though!

After I seen the video I went to google translate bc I thought he was pronouncing it wrong, and the voice on thgere was saying it just like he said haha. I’ve never heard it pronounced that way before. 

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5 minutes ago, BlackGoldTsunami said:

:roflolk::roflolk::roflolk:  8  years  ago  technology   wasn't   like  that.  maybe  when  i  was  in  the  5th  grade  Back  in  the  late  70's   L.M.B.O   :roflol:

Pretty sure it was a laptop pointed at a TV recording the actually video off of said TV in a college dorm room, but I'm just guessing :shock:

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2009: Jim Nunley

nunley%20jim%20WEB%20old.jpg nunley%20jim%20coach%20WEB.jpg


Jim Nunley
During a successful 40-year football coaching career, Jim Nunley was known for always avoiding publicity. But the linemen he coached never shied away from contact with opponents on the gridiron. Nunley earned a reputation as one of the best high school football line coaches in Tennessee. His linemen were noted for sound fundamentals, outstanding technique, and hard hitting. His ability to develop line players helped Trenton Peabody compete and win against larger schools during his 32 years as a coach with the Golden Tide. A humble man who avoided self glorification, Nunley said he found rewards by watching his players and teams achieve success through hard work.

The son of the late Jack and Emma Nunley of Hartsville, TN, Nunley starred at guard, tackle, and fullback at Trousdale County. The first football game he saw was one in which he played. He was All-Conference two years and won the Phil Dickens Football Award. He played 2 years at Indiana University and then transferred to UTM, where he played linebacker, guard, and offensive-defensive tackle, and won All-Conference honors.

He earned a B.S. in Secondary Education in 1964, and later a Masters in Administration. His first teaching and assistant coaching job was at Milan High in 1964. In 1965, he moved back to Hartsville, and for two years was the head junior high football coach, assistant varsity football coach, and head boys basketball coach. In 1967, he became assistant football and head track coach at Humboldt. In 1972, he accepted an offer from Peabody coach, Walter Kilzer, to be Peabody's offensive-defensive line coach. He remained at Peabody until his retirement in 2004, teaching Social Studies and Drivers Ed, and serving as assistant principal.

He was an assistant coach on 2 state runner-up football teams at Humboldt (1969) and Peabody (1991), and coached his two sons, Steve and Stan. Coach Nunley is married to Judy Ross Nunley, a retire guidance counselor at Peabody. They have two sons, Steve and Stan. Jim is a deacon and member of First Baptist Church, in Trenton.

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25 minutes ago, BlackGoldTsunami said:

2009: Jim Nunley

nunley%20jim%20WEB%20old.jpg nunley%20jim%20coach%20WEB.jpg


Jim Nunley
During a successful 40-year football coaching career, Jim Nunley was known for always avoiding publicity. But the linemen he coached never shied away from contact with opponents on the gridiron. Nunley earned a reputation as one of the best high school football line coaches in Tennessee. His linemen were noted for sound fundamentals, outstanding technique, and hard hitting. His ability to develop line players helped Trenton Peabody compete and win against larger schools during his 32 years as a coach with the Golden Tide. A humble man who avoided self glorification, Nunley said he found rewards by watching his players and teams achieve success through hard work.

The son of the late Jack and Emma Nunley of Hartsville, TN, Nunley starred at guard, tackle, and fullback at Trousdale County. The first football game he saw was one in which he played. He was All-Conference two years and won the Phil Dickens Football Award. He played 2 years at Indiana University and then transferred to UTM, where he played linebacker, guard, and offensive-defensive tackle, and won All-Conference honors.

He earned a B.S. in Secondary Education in 1964, and later a Masters in Administration. His first teaching and assistant coaching job was at Milan High in 1964. In 1965, he moved back to Hartsville, and for two years was the head junior high football coach, assistant varsity football coach, and head boys basketball coach. In 1967, he became assistant football and head track coach at Humboldt. In 1972, he accepted an offer from Peabody coach, Walter Kilzer, to be Peabody's offensive-defensive line coach. He remained at Peabody until his retirement in 2004, teaching Social Studies and Drivers Ed, and serving as assistant principal.

He was an assistant coach on 2 state runner-up football teams at Humboldt (1969) and Peabody (1991), and coached his two sons, Steve and Stan. Coach Nunley is married to Judy Ross Nunley, a retire guidance counselor at Peabody. They have two sons, Steve and Stan. Jim is a deacon and member of First Baptist Church, in Trenton.

So a TC native taught yall what you know about  football?

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