The four former Mountaineers pictured will be inducted into the Kings Mountain Sports Hall | of Fame at its 28th annual ceremony Saturday, || May 9 at Central United Methodist Church. | Clockwise from upper left are Dale Hollifield | while he was playing football at Western || Carolina in the early 1960s; Morgan Childers | Caddell pitching for USC Upstate; Tony Leigh | 5 | | | when he was coaching baseball at KMHS in | the late 1990s and early 2000s; and Priscilla | Rickenbacker, former basketball and softball Childers, Hollifield going into Hall of Fame Four athletes who stood out on the high school and collegiate level will be inducted into the Kings Mountain Sports Hall of Fame at its 28th annual cer- emony Saturday, May 9 at Central United Methodist Church. They are Morgan Childers Caddell, whose pitching talent in softball spanned the high school, collegiate and professional levels; the late Tony Leigh, a baseball and fast pitch softball standout and a suc- cessful high school coach; Priscilla Rickenbacker a two-sport high school and collegiate athlete; and Dale Hollifield, who has been a part of Kings Mountain High athletics since 1957. Caddell, now pitching coach at Wingate Univer- sity, holds all of the pitching records at KMHS and the University of South Caroli- na-Upstate. As a Mountaineer, she pitched the softball team to back-to-back state champi- onships in 2005 and 2006. The KM ladies finished third in the state during her senior season of 2007 and made it to the Western Re- gional championship game during her freshman year of 2004. Her season and career re- cords may never be equaled at KMHS. They include a four-year pitching record of 91-8, a career ERA of 0.44 (a 0.04 her senior year in which she gave up only one run), four-time all-confer- ence player, and two-time State MVP. In the 2006 state championship (her ju- nior year), she pitched all 35 innings of a three-game series, winning all three games by 1-0. At Upstate, her pitching records include 113 career wins, 1,338 career strike- outs, 106 complete games, and 42 shutouts. She was Atlantic Sun Pitcher of the Year in 2008 and All-At- lantic Sun three years. Her jersey was retired during her Wednesday, March 4, 2015 The Kings Mountain Herald | www.kmherald.com eigh, Rickenbacker, senior year, making her the only athlete in school his- tory to have a jersey retired while she was still playing. She played professional softball with the Akron Racers in 2012 before going into the high school and col- legiate coaching ranks. Tony Leigh was an All-Conference outfielder See KMHS HOF, Page 11 Fourth quarter comeback lifts KM over North Forsyth Kings Mountain’s Moun- taineers broke their silence in the fourth quarter and came from 16 points down to de- feat North Forsyth 70-66 in the first round of the state 3A playoffs Saturday in Win- ston-Salem. Kings Mountain trailed by 13 points at halftime and 16 after three periods and seemed destined to end their season. But the Mountaineers went to a full-court press at the be- ginning of the fourth quarter and turned numerous steals and North Forsyth turnovers into baskets. “We began picking up the tempo and speeding up the game,” noted Mountaineer coach Grayson Pierce. “It was now or never and we didn’t want to leave anything out on the court.” Sophomore Kavin Mosley set the tone for the upset. “We started him at point guard because we figured he could speed us up a little bit more,” noted Pierce. “That enabled Nelson McClain to go to the wing and get his shot.” McClain finished with 18 points and Mosley 16 to lead the Mountaineer attack. Demetrius Hill added 11, Jacob Skidmore 10 and Josh Helton 8. The Mountaineers took the lead with two minutes remain- ing and never relinquished it. “Everybody was pretty si- lent until the fourth quarter,” Pierce noted. “Both of our 6-7 men (Skidmore and Hel- ton) were in foul trouble and - ended up fouling out. We hit some big free throws down the stretch to seal it.” Kings Mountain improved to 16-9 heading into a second round game at Waxhaw Cuth- bertson Monday night. G1 0 Kayin 105 York Rd., Kings Mountain PLL R EY DUKE EES Athlete of the (A Zul RK Basketball Week Now Serving i Breakfast! All Day... All The Time... $3% Combo! 6" sand. & drink ) Mountaineers (hopefully) to host Huskies, Bulldogs Weather permitting, Kings Mountain’s Moun- taineers hope to get their baseball season under way this week. All of their scheduled scrimmages last week were cancelled due to the weather. They were sched- uled to open their season Tuesday night with a South Mountain Athletic Confer- ence game at East Ruther- ford. The schedule for the re- mainder of the week has the Mountaineers playing at home tonight against the Hunter Huss Huskies and Friday against SMAC rival Burns. Next Tuesday, they travel to Shelby. Barry Gibson, former Mountaineer player and head coach of the 1980 Western NC championship team, will throw out the first pitch against Hunter Huss; and Stuart Spires, a pitcher on the state championship 1989 team, will throw out the first pitch at Friday’s game against Burns. With bad weather in the forecast for last night, Mountaineer Coach Matt Bridges noted that if the KM-East game is postponed it would probably be made up Wednesday and the Huss game moved to Saturday. The Mountaineers showed some promise in the few days of practice they’ve had, and they’re ready to see how they do against some- one other than themselves. Bridges basically has a young team and a lot of un- tested sophomores and ju- niors could play a big role. The veteran coach has 12 See BASEBALL, Page 10 Third baseman Miranda Ellis fields a hot grounder during softhall game last year. The talented junior will probably move to first base this season Lady Mountaineers host Burns on Friday Kings Mountain High’s girls softball team finally got in some scrimmage time Friday and Saturday and have a full week of regular season games this week. The Lady Mountain- eers were scheduled to go to defending state champ East Rutherford for their first SMAC game Tuesday. They go to Fred T. Foard today for a non-conference game, host Burns Friday at 6 p.m., and travel to South Point for a non-conference game Saturday. Despite the. slow start of practice because of inclem- ent weather, Mountaineer coach Craig’ Short said his ladies got in some qual- ity scrimmage time. They faced Bessemer City Friday afternoon and Butler, South Point and North Gaston Sat- urday, all at Lancaster Field #3. “I thought we played really well, especially on defense,” Short said. “We communicated very well on the field. “Just like in football, it See SOFTBALL, Page 10