Friday, June 21, 2013

Prep Football: Holman takes charge at DC

MOCKSVILLE, North Carolina — The story goes that the Holman family had to sit on the 50-yard-line at South Carolina State-North Carolina Central football matchups and cheer for both teams because there was a Holman playing on each side.
 
“Those men playing were my uncles,” said Devore Holman, who was recently named as Davie’s new head coach. “I come from a long football background.”        

Holman is a name that’s been respected in Rowan County for a long time. One of Devore’s football-playing uncles was the late Baxter Holman Jr., who was team captain at North Carolina Central. After he played in the Canadian Football League, Baxter coached in the Winston-Salem high school ranks in the 1960s. During the years of segregation, he coached at all-black Anderson High, and he piloted Anderson to a 3A runner-up finish in 1966 and a state title in 1967.

When Winston schools integrated, Baxter was named head coach at Mount Tabor, and in a Remember the Titans sort of scenario, he demonstrated to an initially skeptical white community and white players that he was the best man for the job. He was coach of the year in 1970.
 
 
 
MOCKSVILLE  --  One evening last month, Doug Illing drove to Devore Holman’s house in Mocksville and delivered the news. Illing was leaving after 15 years as Davie High School’s football coach — and Holman had been with Illing every step of the way.
 
“He told me he would ask me to come with him,” Holman said last week after he was named to succeed Illing. “But he said he was leaving for his dream job (Socastee High in Myrtle Beach, S.C.) and that it was time for me to chase my dreams.”
 
So that’s what Holman — an assistant coach at Davie for 23 years — did.
Twenty-six coaches applied for Illing’s job. Holman, the War Eagles’ defensive coordinator for the last 14 years, got it.

“I am humbled beyond measure to be able to give back to the community — and these kids and this school — what I got as a young man from these coaches, making me do the right things and being a positive role model in their lives,” Holman said. “I can’t think of a better place to do it.”

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