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SUMMER 2012 WWW.RAMBLINWRECK.COM “OUR GREATEST ROLE MODEL” HIGH-TECH WORKOUTS A DYNASTY ON THE LINKS Georgia Tech led start to finish to capture its fourth consecutive ACC golf championship April 22nd in New London, N.C. A FLAT-OUT BLAST! GEORGIA TECH’S SPRING FOOTBALL GAME – FRIDAY NIGHT ON THE FLATS (PRESENTED BY PNC BANK) – ATTRACTED MORE THAN 18,000 TO BOBBY DODD STADIUM.
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Page 1: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

SUMMER 2012 www.RaMblinwREck.coM

“OUR GREATEST ROLE MODEL” HiGH-TEcH woRkoUTS

A DynAsty On the LinksGeorgia Tech led start to finish to capture its fourth consecutive ACC golf championship April 22nd in New London, N.C.

A FLAT-OUTBLAST!

GeOrGiA tech’s sprinG fOOtbALL GAme – friDAy niGht On the fLAts (presenteD by pnc bAnk) – AttrActeD mOre thAn 18,000 tO bObby DODD stADium.

Page 2: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

LOOKS LIKE A QB. HANDLES LIKE A DB. POWERED LIKE AN LB.

INTRODUCING THE 429-HP 2012 HYUNDAI GENESIS R-SPEC. Talk about a debut, the more powerful and more spacious 8-speed transmission Genesis R-Spec just moved the Lexus GS 460 and Mercedes-Benz E550 down on the depth chart. It also outpaces the competition in highway fuel economy and warranty—for thousands of dollars less. Making the Genesis R-Spec the #1 pick no matter how you break it down. Learn more at HyundaiUSA.com/Genesis.

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Page 3: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

SUMMER2012

The Buzz is published four times a year by IMG College in conjunction with the Georgia Tech Athletic Association. The price of an annual subscription is

$9.95. Persons wishing to subscribe or those wishing to renew their subscription should send a check or

money order (credit cards not accepted) to:

the buZZIMG College

540 N. Trade St. Winston-Salem, NC 27101

All material produced in this publication is the property of IMG College and shall not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission from IMG College and Georgia Tech. The appearance of advertising in this

newspaper does not constitute an endorsement of the advertiser and/or the advertiser’s product or service

by Georgia Tech or IMG College. The use of the name of the University or any of its identifying marks in

advertisements must be approved by Georgia Tech and IMG College.

Please send all address changes to the attention of Amanda Hobbs to:

IMG College540 North Trade Street

Winston-Salem, NC 27101(336) 831-0700 x1769 or (888) 877-4373 x1769

SUMMER 2012 • VolUME 5, NUMbER 4

EDITOR

Dean Buchan

WRITERS

Simit ShahJack Wilkinson

Adam Van BrimmerMatt Winkeljohn

PHOTOGRAPHERS

David Johnson, Danny Karnik and Sam Morgan

DESIGN & LAYOUT

Summit Athletic Mediawww.summitathletics.com

ADVERTISING – IMG COLLEGE

Tom StipesFor Information on Advertising, Please Call (404) 733-1130

In This Issue

14 “OUR GREATEST ROLE MODEL”Nine-year-old Nolan Blake has been an inspiration to Georgia Tech’s men’s tennis team.

18 INDESTRUCTIBLE BONDThe Wren twins are more than brothers and teammates – they’re the best of friends.

20 ONE OF DODD’S BOYSDodd called Sid Williams “One of the finest players I have ever coached.”

22 HIGH-TECH WORKOUTSYellow Jacket men’s basketball uses heart-rate monitors to let them know when they’re working too hard – or not hard enough.

4 PREPPING TO WORK ON LABOR DAYGeorgia Tech had a successful, relatively healthy spring. Now, attention turns to August practice and a season opener at Virginia Tech.

8 KINDRED SPIRITGeorgia Tech softball has been an ally in former Yellow Jacket Amy Hosier’s battle with cancer.

31 COMPLIANCE CORNER

WET BEHIND THE YEARSTech swim icon Herb McAuley continues to compete at the age of 89.

10

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404-874-5703wwww.midtownbowl.com

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2012

Former Jacket Foursome: (From left) Roddy Jones, Tyler Melton, Stephen Hill and Jerrard Tarrant were among the 18,125 in attendance at Friday Night on the Flats (presented by PNC Bank), a rousing spring game success.

www.RaMblinwREck.coM 3

Page 4: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

I In an annual search for low-hanging fruit, the temptation to make much out of spring football practice is a deeply rooted enter-prise in Georgia Tech’s part of the country. Silly or sage, with head coach Paul Johnson’s fifth spring on the Flats in the rear view, we endeavor here to play the guessing game again.

There are two banks of process feeding the art/science of projec-tion: the undeniable, and the un-

predictable – not that there won’t be plenty of tries to forecast the Yellow Jackets between now and their Labor Day evening season opener at Virginia Tech.

With good fortune and health, Georgia Tech may challenge for a berth in the ACC Championship game. Or, they might struggle to expand their identity as a run-heavy squad whose defense stands up less frequently than Johnson would like.

The known: Tech will be bigger on the defensive line and more experienced in the back seven than in several years. Offensively, the Jackets finally have several linemen recruited specifically for and trained in Johnson’s system, and there’s still no telling who – if anyone – will step into the breech at wide receiver.

Oh, and Tevin Washington likely remains the starting quar-terback.

From that point onward, there is considerable room for conjecture.

As nearly always, the quarter-back position interested many fans this spring as the everybody-loves-the-backup (or two) syndrome was fueled by fascination with backups Synjyn Days and redshirt freshman Vad Lee.

Once the last whistle blew, John-son confirmed that Washington would be the starter if the season were about to start. What he did

FBFOOTBALL

GeorGia Tech had a successful, relaTively healThy sprinG. now, aTTenTion Turns To auGusT pracTice and a season opener aT virGinia Tech.

PREPPING TO WORK ON LABOR DAYBY MATT WINkELJOHN

Senior Chris Jackson (33) hopes to help fill the shoes of Stephen Hill, while Rod Sweeting (6) could be one of the ACC’s top defensive backs.

4 THE bUzz

Page 5: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

not say outright but hinted at was that the distinct strengths of Days and Lee might spin forward into playing time for all three.

Washington may not throw a beautiful ball nor run it with the ferocity of predecessor Joshua Nes-bitt, but when all factors are taken into account – especially the con-cepts of running the option cleanly and securing the ball – the young man with a year-and-a-half of starts wins at least for now.

Yet Lee, the redshirt freshman, appeared to be the most effective throwing the ball (often out of the shotgun), and Days runs the ball quite a bit like Nesbitt. They have considerable ground to make up on Washington, though, when all things are considered.

“One is probably more experi-enced and knows how to do things better. The other one is a really good runner, and excels more in the option game, and the other one is the better passer and needs to work on the option game to be a complete player,” Johnson said.

“They all bring something to the table, and really it’s going to be who can improve the most between now and when we play. If you had to play right now, [Days and Lee] bring different things and they would be situational players. The goal is to . . . be able to do the whole thing.”

It’s conceivable that Days might run the ball from a position other than quarterback. He worked some at A-back in the spring, and when at quarterback he struggled noticeably to throw the ball, and his ball security issues remain.

Now, who’s to catch the ball when the Jackets throw?

The early departure of wide receiver Stephen Hill to the NFL and the graduation of Tyler Melton leaves prospects. Jeff Greene, Dar-ren Waller, Jeremy Moore, and Chris Jackson have shots. Perhaps a true freshman will arrive to make an impact.

“We only have four scholar-ship wide receivers (on the spring roster) and we’ll play five or six,” Johnson said. “So a freshman will play. Maybe two.”

Senior Orwin Smith is battled-tested at A-back. He was recover-ing from turf toe surgery and missed spring practice, but no player in ACC history has a bet-ter per-carry average (9.7) than Smith, so he’s at the top of the heap.

There is long list behind him chasing the spot left by Roddy Jones, and several are impressive enough catching the ball that it’s possible A-backs may factor as much in the passing game as wide receivers. The return from injury of sophomore B.J. Bostic merits watching.

Redshirt junior David Sims, a former quarterback, remains the B-back, but there is depth behind him. Charles Perkins fits the role and sophomore Zach Laskey, who moved to B-back in the spring from defensive back, was impres-sive in April practices.

You could hardly tell in the spring because so many were injured or held out, but All-ACC guard Omoregie Uzzi, center Jay Finch and returning starting guard Will Jackson will center a line that has considerable experience.

Shaq Mason, Ray Beno, Tyler Kidney and Nick McRae have all

started at least one game, and Cat-lin Alford, Trey Braun, Errin Joe and others will get a look.

The big boys may run more sophisticated games up front. Finch suggested the potential for audiblizing and/or changing pass protection schemes at the line is greater. “A lot of people have play-ing experience,” he said. “The coaches have a little more trust in us being able to handle it, which is good because we’re allowed to try more things.”

Two of three starters on the defensive line will be new, but fa-miliar – and bigger.

Nose tackle T.J. Barnes (6-feet-7, 347 pounds) is the space eater in the middle that every 3-4 prac-tioner covets, and there have been several comments that Barnes has worked himself into better shape than ever.

Fourth-year starter Izaan Cross (6-4, 292) is back at one defensive end, and he’ll be mirrored on the other side by Emannuel Dieke (6-6, 264) or Euclid Cummings (6-4, 270).

At inside linebacker, Tech must replace, Julian Burnett, its leading tackler each of the last two seasons. Burnett, who was a co-captain last season as a junior, will be missed. A medical condition ended his col-lege career prematurely.

Quayshawn Nealy and Daniel Drummond each started roughly half last season there, redshirt freshman Jabari Hunt-Days flashed in the spring, and defensive co-ordinator Al Groh likes a corps of redshirt freshmen and sophomores also in the mix.

Jeremiah Attaochu will start at one outside linebacker and Brandon Watts, who enjoyed an outstanding spring, will likely hold down the other side.

Four of the five leading mem-bers of the secondary are back – third-year starter Isaiah Johnson, cornerbacks Louis Young and Rod Sweeting, and utility man deluxe Jemea Thomas – and Fred Holton is back after missing last season with a ruptured Achilles’ tendon.

He was on the rise when he went down in the final scrimmage last summer.

“I’m getting back in the rota-tion,” Holton said. “I’ve come back sooner than what I was sup-posed to . . . I think I’m getting to where I need to be.”

New special teams coach Dave Walkosky has returning punter Sean Poole and returning kicker Justin Moore to start with. The greatest change in special teams, obviously, is the presence of a coach dedicated to them.

“I think we had a productive spring,” Johnson said. “We really couldn’t do a whole lot with the offensive line [absences], but . . . I saw some progress.”

Cross, who has started 28 games and played in 39, expects more than progress. And he thinks that opening the season at Virginia Tech has everybody’s attention.

“I think so. With all due re-spect… when Virginia Tech is the first game on your schedule, that wakes you up,” he said. “You say, ‘We don’t have that ease-in game to get our feet wet.

“We’ve got to go because play-ing in Lane Stadium on national television on a Monday night is going to be a huge environment. The way the bowl game ended is kind of fresh in our mind . . . that’s kind of fuel. We know that we’re a better team than we showed at the end of the year.” ■

David Sims returns as the starter at B-back. Charles Perkins and Zach Laskey give the Yellow Jackets depth at the position.

Redshirt freshman Vad Lee throws a pass in the T-Day Game.

YELLOW JAcKET SPRING cARAvANMay 7 - Augusta (Fellowship Hall at

First Baptist Church)

May 10 - Columbus (Cunningham Center at Columbus State University)

May 22 - Atlanta (GT Hotel & Conference Center)

May 29 - Dalton (The Farm Country Club)

5www.RaMblinwREck.coM

Page 6: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

FRIDAY NIGhT ON ThE FLATS ScRAPBOOK

6 THE bUzz

Page 7: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012
Page 8: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

AAmy Hosier’s shoulders absorbed many a tear

and propped up many a teammate in her Geor-gia Tech softball career.

The slugging outfielder was the go-to girl when times were tough for Yellow Jacket family members from 2003 to 2006. Any problem, big or small, was worthy of Hosier’s attention. She offered the same level of emotional support as she did run support – and with 111 RBIs and 117 runs scored in her final three seasons, that constitutes good service.

Hosier now finds herself in difficult times. Diagnosed with breast cancer last fall, the 28-year-old underwent surgery to remove can-cerous cells earlier this spring. She’s currently undergoing chemo-therapy and faces a sum-mer’s worth of radiation treatments.

Through it all, she has a supportive shoulder clad in an old gold and white uniform.

Georgia Tech’s softball team has raised mon-ey throughout the season to support Hosier. That she played with only one current Yellow Jacket – assistant coach Aileen Morales – and now lives in Colorado doesn’t matter.

“We are one big family – you’re close with one or two former players, you’re close with everyone connected to the program,” Morales said. “It was our duty and call to help her.”

Georgia Tech accepted donations for Hosier during nine home games earlier this year. The finale, a Sunday game against Maryland, was

designated “The Pink Game,” with the players donning pink jerseys in support of Hosier. The uniforms were auctioned off afterwards, with the proceeds also going to Hosier.

An IndIscrIMInAte dIseAseGeorgia Tech’s softball team has been work-

ing to strikeout breast cancer since 2007, following the example of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.

The movement has taken on new meaning

BY ADAM VAN BRIMMER

KINDRED SPIRITGEORGIA TECH SOFTBALL HAS BEEN AN ALLY IN FORMER YELLOW JACkET AMY HOSIER’S BATTLE WITH CANCER

SBSOFTBALL

hELP hOSIERLearn more about Amy Hosier’s fight against breast cancer and make a donation at her website, www.amysangels21.com/

Hosier, throwing out the first pitch in a game earlier this year, said she has been “shocked” in a good way by the support of Georgia Tech.

8 THE bUzz

Page 9: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

for the Yellow Jackets now that the disease has impacted one of their own. It puts a name and a face on the issue, said head coach Sharon Perkins.

Hosier’s plight should grab ev-ery young woman’s attention. She has no family history of breast can-cer and was healthy and active and about to celebrate her 28th birth-day when she felt a tiny knot in her left breast. The cancer cells had started in her milk duct and had been growing for two years, by her doctor’s estimates, before she was diagnosed with Stage II (on a scale of IV) cancer.

The oncologist found during surgery the cancer was more ad-vanced – Stage III -- than initially believed. Hosier had both breasts removed as well as 18 lymph nodes, 15 of them cancerous.

“Amy is so young and it came as

such a shock,” Morales said. “Play-ers heard about it and they were like ‘Wow. How old is she?’ Truth is cancer doesn’t care about age.”

Hosier never took a “Why me?” attitude. Known for her patience as a hitter – she set Georgia Tech’s single-season record for walks as a senior – she’s been aggressive with cancer, intent on “getting it out of me as fast as possible.”

The support from Georgia Tech and the softball program only strengthened her resolve.

“We talked about family a lot when I was there, but I admit I was shocked by the reaction at Georgia Tech,” Hosier said. “I didn’t play for coach Perkins. I didn’t play with any of the girls now on the team. But it’s nice to know that once you become a member of the family, you will always be one.”

enthusIAstIc responseThe Georgia Tech softball family

couldn’t wait to don the rally caps for Hosier.

Morales heard the news about Hosier from another former team-mate, Jessica Sallinger. The most accomplished pitcher in ACC his-tory, Sallinger played three seasons with Hosier and remained close with her after Hosier moved home to Colorado after graduation.

As soon as Morales got word from Sallinger and passed the news to Perkins, the coaches brain-stormed what they could do to help. They already had the “pink” event schedule and proposed expanding those efforts with the proceeds going to Hosier.

Athletic Director Dan Radakov-ich and Associate Athletic Director Theresa Wenzel supported the idea.

“We wanted to do anything to help,” Morales said. “She’s in Colorado, so it wasn’t like we could offer physical help, like taking her to her treatments or cooking for her or things like that. But we could offer financial help.”

The softball team raised more

than $4,000, and the donations continue to roll in. Another Yellow Jacket team, women’s tennis, held an “Ace for the Cure” match to benefit Hosier as well.

“It’s been so humbling,” said Hosier, who attended the alumni game in March. “I’ve never been in a situation like this where every-body rallies around me. I’m usually helping others. It’s different for me to step back and have other people help me. It means so much.” ■

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Hosier was a leader off the field for the Yellow Jacket softball team from 2003-06. She was also a heckuva player, producing 111 RBIs and 117 runs scored over her final three seasons.

Hosier with Caitlin Lever.

9www.RaMblinwREck.coM

Page 10: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

SDSWIMMING

& DIVING

hHerb McAuley’s dealt with all manner of

aches and pains in his eight-plus decades as a competitive swimmer.

Never before has an abscessed tooth confined him to the pool deck, though. And for McAuley, it’s harder to stay out of the water than to eat with just one side of his mouth.

“These teeth problems have really slowed me down,” said the former Georgia Tech swim star, swim coach and drownproofing instructor.

“I’ve been hibernating like some darn bear.”Like a polar bear, McAuley will soon return

to the water. Even at age 89, on the 70th an-

niversary of Georgia Tech swimming’s 1942 Southeastern Conference championship, McAuley longs to swim.

BY ADAM VAN BRIMMER

WET BEhIND ThE YEARSTECH SWIM ICON HERB MCAULEY CONTINUES TO COMPETE AT THE AGE OF 89

ABOuT DROWNPROOFINGDeveloped by the late Fred Lanoue, a Georgia Tech professor and swim coach, drownproofing is a water survival method. Lanoue introduced drownproofing as a Georgia Tech class in 1940 and it was taught until the summer of 1987 by Lanoue and his successor, Herb McAuley. The 22-hour course was long a Georgia Tech graduation requirement.

10 THE bUzz

Page 11: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012
Page 12: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

He made quite a splash two years ago in his return to Georgia Tech for the United States Masters Short Course National Championships. He swam seven events and finished no worse than third. Last year, he won his age group in the meet in four events.

McAuley personifies the “fast is fast” mantra of current Georgia Tech assistant swimming coach Marty Hamburger.

Fast is fast “means being competitive is a relative thing, and Herb impresses me by his dedication and his skill level,” said Hamburger, who as a Masters team coach 13 years ago tried to tried to recruit McAuley to swim for his team. “Being competitive is so important to him.”

A QuIet LegAcyMcAuley is an often overlooked Yellow Jacket

icon. He lacks the notoriety of his mentor and

longtime boss, the late Fred Lanuoe, devel-oper of the drownproofing technique. And he didn’t coach the Yellow Jackets to national prominence like two of his Tech coaching peers, Bobby Dodd and Bobby Cremins.

Yet his career spanned the tenures of both those greats. He joined Lanuoe as an assistant coach the day he graduated from Georgia Tech in 1947 and spent the next 40 years as a pro-gram leader.

He emphasized academics over athletics. He was flexible with the team’s practice schedules – some swam twice a day every day, others once a day four or five days a week -- but was unbend-ing when it came to classroom performance.

The top honor for a Tech swimmer in McAu-ley’s day was to be on a school-record setting relay team where all four members also made the dean’s list, said Paul Thompson, a 1978 graduate.

“Setting a school record was fine and good but to excel in the pool and the classroom was a very big deal,” said Thompson, one of 17 swim-mers in the Georgia Tech Hall of Fame. “To swim for coach McAuley, you had to have your priorities straight.”

So ingrained was McAuley in the culture of Yellow Jacket swimming that the program took a one-year hiatus following his retirement. The elimination of the infamous drownproofing class – long a graduation requirement – also coincided with McAuley’s departure.

stAyIng In the sportBy his own admission, McAuley was always

more swimmer than swimming coach.He finished his head coaching career with a

winning record – 169-144-1 – and tutored sev-eral Tech greats, including Georgia Tech Hall of Famers Paul Thompson and Tommy Towles.

But it was his desire to spend as much of his adult life in the pool as possible that attracted him to coaching. He enjoyed a hall of fame career himself, winning the SEC 220-yard and

440-yard freestyle titles in 1942. He continued to compete even after adding a whistle and clip-board to his practice attire.

He made Sports Illustrated’s “Faces in the Crowd” column on July 13, 1981, for winning three age group titles – back when the competi-tion was deeper in his age group than it is now -- at the Masters nationals meet.

“There’s no substitute for swimming and swimming competitively,” McAuley said. “Coaching gave me an excuse to keep swim-ming. I didn’t even consider it coaching until my last four or five years before retirement, and only then because I had a group that had little interest in their studies. I had to do more work with them outside the pool than inside it.”

then And nowThe Georgia Tech swimming program’s

current success, in and out of the pool, makes McAuley proud.

He recalls the 2010 team attending the U.S. Masters Short Course Nationals that summer and sitting together at one end of the pool.

“They didn’t look like the Tech swimmers I

remembered, so young and strong,” McAuley said.

McAuley’s program and the one now pre-sided over by Courtney Shealy Hart have little in common beyond the team name on their suits. McAuley’s teams practiced and competed in a pool at the Heisman Gym they shared with the rest of the student body. The Yellow Jackets had only 90 minutes of pool time per day, and “they always wanted us out 10 minutes early,” McAuley said.

Today’s Yellow Jackets call a former Olympic venue home.

Georgia Tech in McAuley’s day awarded few swimming scholarships, the main reason why “so many of our opponents could swim their third teamers and beat the snot out of us,” McAuley said

“But we had camaraderie and the kids were close and got something out of it,” he added. “I see that same camaraderie in the team today, and that’s why I’m so happy to see them do well. They inspire me.”

Now if only he could get those abscessed teeth to heal up so he could return to the pool… ■

McAuley became an assistant coach the day he graduated from Tech in 1947 and spent the next 40 years leading the program.

12 THE bUzz

Page 13: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

With rebates up to $1200, Comfort has never felt so good.

Call your local Carrier Dealer or visit SoutheastCarrierDealers.com for details.

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13www.RaMblinwREck.coM

Page 14: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

MTMEN’S TENNIS

KKenny Thorne had his notebook in his lap

and a scowl on his face when his smartphone chimed to alert him of a received text message.

Thorne’s Georgia Tech men’s tennis team had just lost to Virginia in the 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament. Like most coaches, he spends the hours after losses, particularly in championships, thinking about “what we could have done, should have done and what we should do in the future.”

The dinging phone interrupted his brooding, though, and he punched the necessary buttons to read the message. The note was from one of his player’s mothers, but it lacked the “nice try” or “get them next time” tone you might expect.

“We had a good day today because Nolan only threw up three times this morning,” the message read.

“Nolan” is Nolan Blake. He joined the Geor-

gia Tech team in May 2010. And while he’s nev-er played an official point for the Yellow Jackets, he’s as valuable to the team as ace Kevin King.

Blake is a nine-year-old boy from Griffin (Ga.) with Anaplastic Medulloblastoma. That’s a pretty name for an ugly affliction: brain cancer. But over the last two years, Blake and the Geor-gia Tech tennis team have formed a beautiful relationship.

His strength and courage, and that of his mother Brittany and his siblings, provides inspiration for the Yellow Jackets. Knowing his plight also puts things in proper perspective.

“You get texts about a positive day being one where you only throw up three times and you realize there are many definitions for the term ‘good day,’” Thorne said. “Nolan is incredible.”

A LAstIng BondBlake came to Georgia Tech as an unexpected

blessing.Thorne received an email in 2009 from a rep-

resentative of an advocacy group for children afflicted with brain tumors known as Friends of Jaclyn. The organization formed in 2005 after Northwestern University’s women’s lacrosse team adopted a nine-year-old girl, Jaclyn Mur-phy, as an honorary team member.

Northwestern would go on to win a national title that year, and Murphy enjoyed the experi-ence so much she convinced her parents to start a foundation that would pair cancer patients like her with high school and college teams nationwide.

Thorne responded to the email, taken with the idea of introducing his team to the relation-al side of community service.

BY ADAM VAN BRIMMER

“OuR GREATEST ROLE MODEL”NINE-YEAR-OLD NOLAN BLAkE HAS BEEN AN INSPIRATION TO GEORGIA TECH’S MEN’S TENNIS TEAM

The photo above is of Blake with the Tech tennis team in April of 2010.

14 THE bUzz

Page 15: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

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“It’s great to give back in as many ways as you can, but what we have with Nolan is different than going out for one day and helping build or clean up something,” said senior Kevin King, who was a promising sophomore when he met Blake. “It’s more rewarding than any of us would have ever imagined.”

The relationship has been an emotional roll-er coaster for King and his teammates. They got to know Blake in the wake of the boy’s cancer surgery, to remove a golf ball-size tumor on his brain, and in the midst of his first chemotherapy sessions. The operation and treatments were a success, and Blake’s strength and stamina steadily improved. He reached the point where Thorne and the players could engage him in short playing lessons.

Blake relapsed in early 2011, however. While surgeons cut away the main tumor in 2009, they couldn’t remove smaller growths on his brain stem and near his spine. The initial series of chemo and radiation treatments put that cancer in remission but failed to eradicate it.

Blake restarted treatments in March, 2011. Part of his routine on therapy days was to stop at Georgia Tech and visit with the team on his way to Scottish Rite hospital. On days schedules conflicted, the Yellow Jackets would go to the hospital and see Blake.

“They’d bring tennis balls and bounce them around the room with him,” Blake’s mother said. “When this started, I didn’t know what to expect. I was just hoping for a positive experi-ence that would help encourage him through his treatments. It’s been that and more.”

QuIck tennIs studyThe relationship has been an educational

experience for the Blakes.The family had no connection to Georgia

Tech prior to the introduction by Friends of Jac-lyn. And while Nolan is a sports nut – he rarely misses a NASCAR race or a Braves game on TV – he hadn’t shown much interest in tennis.

He’s taken to the game the same way the

Jackets have taken to him.“He very coachable,” Thorne said. “We’ll

show him some technique with the forehand or the backhand and he comes back the next time and remembers it. It’s incredible the focus he has.”

Blake’s even schooled several Georgia Tech players on the court – at least the Nintendo Wii version. His mother brought the video game console to one of his first meetings with the team and a virtual competition helped foster a quick bond.

Another memorable visit had Blake playing actual tennis in a pair of snow boots.

“There wasn’t any snow on the ground, he was just into snow boots at the time,” Brittany Blake said. “The guys just loved it.”

More than the boots, they love Blake.“He’s our greatest role model,” King said

of Blake. “When things are going tough on the court and I want to give up or give in, I just think about his example of fighting every day against incalculable odds. It’s incredible.” ■

Yellow Jacket head coach Kenny Thorne says, “Nolan is incredible.”

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Page 17: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

Every 39 seconds someone in the U.S. dies from heart disease.How long will it take you to schedule a check-up?

Georgia Tech is proud to be partnering with Close the Gap to achieve the goal of helping everyone — regardless of race, ethnicity or gender — have access to the highest-quality cardiovascular care.

Heart disease is the number one killer in the U.S. Your gender, age, race and ethnicity can affect your chance of developing heart disease. So it’s important to take charge of your heart health. Start by talking to your doctor and learning about your risk factors. You can also explore resources at Close the Gap, an initiative dedicated to helping people in your community live longer, healthier lives. Get the facts about heart disease at Your-Heart-Health.com.

Follow Close The Gap on:

Page 18: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

Kyle (right) is his brother’s biggest champion in Colby’s (left) fight against mitochondrial disease.

KKyle Wren remembers just a single detail

from his last fight with his brother Colby.“I hit him with a vicious flying drop kick,”

Kyle says, with a hint of satisfaction in his voice, in recalling the decade-old brawl. “But I don’t remember who won. Or why it started.”

Was it over a girl maybe?“No, he’d never do that, even back then when

we were too young to know better,” Kyle says.Sibling rivalry on the baseball or football

field?“No way. There’s definitely a competitive

nature between us but there’s never been re-sentment,” Kyle says.

Could he have invaded your privacy, bor-rowed a shirt without asking or something?

“Don’t think so,” says Colby, who is equally clueless about what prompted the brawl. “I was bigger and taller than him even back then.”

The answer to why they haven’t engaged in fisticuffs since is easier to come by.

“We share common interests, but we have very different personalities,” Colby says. “That

makes us more like best friends than brothers. And how often do you slug your best friend?”

Few best friends are as close as the Wrens. They play many roles in each other’s lives – con-fidant, counselor, champion and, on the dia-mond as Georgia Tech baseball players, coach.

The twins are so chummy that despite shar-ing the same living space since conception, they choose to live together in college. They even room together on Yellow Jacket road trips.

“Kyle and Colby are inseparable,” says their father, Frank Wren. “They have a special bond. Twins often do, but their relationship goes beyond that. They compliment each other with their differences.”

opposItes AttrActThe Wren brothers put the fraternal in frater-

nal twins.Colby is right-handed. Kyle is a southpaw.Colby weighs a solid 215 pounds. Kyle is 55

pounds leaner.Colby is gregarious and outgoing. Kyle is

quiet and reserved.Colby decorated his side of the room as a boy

with posters of sluggers. Kyle idolized speed-sters.

“We’re so different,” Kyle says, “it makes it easy for us to be around each other.”

Georgia Tech is a better baseball team be-cause of it. Kyle is a star, on track to be the next in a long line of Yellow Jacket centerfielders (Jay Payton, Eric Patterson, Matt Murton, Danny Payne) to make All-American and eventually be-come a high Major League Baseball draft pick.

And when Kyle’s struggling with his swing,

BY ADAM VAN BRIMMER

INDESTRucTIBLE BONDThe wren Twins are more Than broThers and TeammaTes – They’re The besT of friends

hOPE FLIES hOME RuN chALLENGEGeorgia Tech’s baseball team is partnering with the Foundation for Mitochondrial Medicine for the Hope Flies Home Run Challenge all season. Fans can pledge from $1 to $100 or more per home run hit by the Jackets during the 2012 season, with the proceeds going toward mitochondrial research. For more information or to participate, go to http://www.foundmm.org/ and click on the “Hope Flies” tab.

BBBASEBALL

18 THE bUzz

Page 19: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

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he consults his brother, a first base-man waiting his turn for playing time behind veteran Jake Davies.

“He knows my swing as well as anybody,” Kyle says of his brother. “He hit right behind in the lineup growing up, watching my swing from the on-deck circle. He sees

the nuances no one else does. He’s my biggest supporter.”

Colby says the same about his twin, although in a different sense. Kyle is his brother’s biggest champion in Colby’s fight against mitochondrial disease. The dis-order impacts the body’s ability to produce essential energy. In Colby’s case, the disease affects his digestive system and causes de-hydration, cramps, vomiting and extreme fatigue.

He was diagnosed with mito-chondrial oxidative phosphoryla-tion as a 10th grader after more than a year of stumping one medical specialist after another. A frightened yet unflinchingly posi-tive Kyle stood by his side through-out the ordeal.

“He’s going to practice and I’m going to the hospital, so it was definitely unnerving for him,” says Colby, who today serves as a spokesman and ambassador for the Foundation for Mitochondrial Medicine. “Yet he was so sup-portive. It would have been easy for him to pull away and focus on doing his own thing, but he never did. It really meant a lot that he was there for me.”

Best FrIends ForeverThe day is approaching when

life splits the Wren brothers up.Kyle’s athletic talents promise

him a future as a professional baseball player. Colby’s people skills point him toward a career in the business or communications fields.

Don’t be surprised, though, if the Brothers Wren make like Brothers Grimm and work togeth-er. Colby aspires to a front office job with a Major League Baseball team, perhaps in a public relations role. He can see himself one day ar-ranging media interviews for Kyle, the big league star.

“They have both grown up around the game and that’s all they know,” says their father Frank, who’s worked in professional base-ball his entire adult life and is cur-rently the Atlanta Braves’ general manager. “Whatever happens, they’ll remain close.”

A continued tight relationship is a given, the twins say. Their first extended period apart came last year, when Kyle spent the summer playing in the Cape Cod League. They still talked at least once each day by telephone.

Kyle’s convinced they’ll always live close to each other, even when they form their own families.

“We’ll probably live down the street from each other,” Kyle says. “We’ve seen each other every morning and talked every day of our lives. I can’t imagine not living close to Colby.” ■

Colby wants to eventually work in Major League Baseball, perhaps in a public relations role.

Kyle and teammate Brandon Thomas give Tech one of the fastest leadoff duos in college baseball.

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AIt’s easy to tell that Dr. Sid Williams loves

Georgia Tech.As one of the school’s most well-known

graduates, his resume includes an impressive list of accomplishments and has been all over the world. However, his alma mater has never been far from his heart, and this is evident as he talks about his memories of playing football for Georgia Tech.

“I tell people that it’s like a disease if you love Georgia Tech,” he said. “You can’t help it, because you love everything about it.”

That admiration began when Williams was growing up in Atlanta. His father John and mother Jessie were both avid Tech fans. “Nei-ther was a college graduate, but they always loved Georgia Tech,” noted Williams. “So I have always loved Georgia Tech as early as I can remember.”

The elder Williams had season tickets for Georgia Tech football, and Sid Williams, an Eagle Scout, served as an usher at Grant Field as part of the Tech/Boy Scout youth program. The Boy Scouts of America recently honored Dr. Sid for 60 years of service. As he got older, Williams became a star athlete at Tech High School. He played both quarterback and end, earning all-city and all-state honors. He also captained the school’s track team and was class president.

When it came time to pick his college of choice, Williams had numerous scholarship offers, but he was drawn to Coach Bobby Dodd. “He was larger than life in a lot of ways,” Wil-liams remembered. “We were 17 or 18 years old and very impressionable. He was the 6-foot-5 head coach, and had done some magical things at Tennessee, so naturally you’d think he was the king fish.

“Coach Dodd had a very Southern way of talking, and he’d say things like, ‘Plaint yo foot and slant up in there.’ He had a unique way about him, and we had a tremendous amount of respect for him.”

Williams’ football career almost derailed be-fore it started due to injuries. As a high school senior in 1947, he was selected to play in the Georgia All-Star Game, but he broke his collar-bone in several places during a practice session prior to the game.

A constant string of debilitating injuries also marred his first year on the Georgia Tech football team, but Williams was determined to play. He convinced the coaching staff to put him wherever they wanted in every practice and scrimmage. By the time the actual season began, Williams had proven that he belonged on the field. He played in about half the games in 1949, as the Jackets went 7-3. He became a full-time starter at defensive left end the follow-ing season.

“In those days, if you were a starter, they didn’t substitute for you,” he explained. “You were out there for every play. That’s the way football was in those days, offensive and de-fense teams were all the same.”

Injuries that would have sidelined a less de-termined player were simply a challenge, and Williams would not let them stop him. Prior to

the 1951 season, he visited the medical staff to ascertain the extent of the damage to his body and his full playing potential.

“The doctors said that I could continue to play, but it would be painful,” he remembered. “That’s when Coach Dodd said, ‘If you’d con-tinue to play, that would please me real good.’ That’s how he talked. I could hardly walk ,but when the call to duty presented itself, I would play 100% and never let up during the game.” The 1951 season was one of the greatest in Tech history, as the team went 11-0-1 with a perfect 7-0 record in the SEC. The only blemish was a 3-3 tie to Duke.

The team was filled with some of the brightest stars to ever don the white and gold, including Pete Brown, Lamar Wheat, Leon

Hardeman, Ray Beck, Hal Miller, Buck Martin, George Morris, Daryl Crawford, and Larry Morris.

Coach Dodd saved some of his highest praise for the fierce 160-pound Williams, declaring, “For his size, he is the finest end in America. There is no way to overestimate his value to our team. He is one of the finest players I have ever coached.” The team capped the season with a narrow victory over Baylor in the Orange Bowl, as Tech kicked the game-winning field goal in the final moments. “I remember very vividly Pepper Rodgers kicking that field goal,” recalls Williams, with a gleam in his eye. He still wears the Orange Bowl ring on this left hand.

atALExANDER-

ThARpE FUND

BY SIMIT SHAH

Williams was a starter on the 1951 team that went 11-0-1 and beat Baylor in the Orange Bowl.

ONE OF DODD’S BOYSDODD CALLED SID WILLIAMS “ONE OF THE FINEST PLAYERS I HAVE EVER COACHED.”

see ONE OF DODD’S BOYS PAGe 30

20 THE bUzz

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MBMEN’S

BASKETBALL

hIGh-TEch WORKOuTS

22 THE bUzz

Page 23: The Buzz Magazine - Summer, 2012

TTo step onto Brian Gregory’s practice floor is

to jump into the deep end of a swimming pool with a brick tied to one’s waist.

You will survive, but you’ll emerge dripping wet and dog tired.

Gregory can be as much a heartless drill sergeant as he is a men’s basketball coach. He pushes better than a bulldozer, probably be-cause he addressed his own shortcomings as an undersized overachiever during his playing days by driving himself harder each day.

Mike Bewley recognized the trait in his then new boss six years ago. No stranger to intense workouts – Bewley is a strength and condition-ing coach, after all – he knew training included a point of diminishing returns.

But where did hard work become too hard on the body? And more importantly, could he and Gregory identify that point and push players right up to it thereby maximizing their train-ing?

enter the “BeLt”Research led Bewley to the narrow strip

of fabric that fastens around the chest and includes a sensor that monitors heart rate. The sensor feeds data into a software program designed to take readings on duration of activity and level of exertion – based on a baseline maxi-mum heart rate -- and compute those numbers into workload figures.

BY ADAM VAN BRIMMER

hIGh-TEch WORKOuTSYELLOW JACkET MEN’S BASkETBALL TEAM USES HEART-RATE MONITORS TO LET THEM kNOW WHEN THEY’RE WORkING TOO HARD – OR NOT HARD ENOUGH

Tech players wear heart rate monitors at practice, allowing for real-time data on how hard each player is working.

see HigH-tEcH wOrkOutS PAGe 26

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Given those statistics, Bewley then only needed to put the num-bers into context. Not surpris-ingly, stretches of heavy practice workloads showed up in fatigue during games and even injuries. Conversely, Bewley could identify the workloads that coincided with Gregory’s team at the time, the University of Dayton, playing its best.

“I thought our guys were being over-trained but had no empirical evidence, and no coach likes to hear they’re doing too much,” Be-wley said. “All of a sudden I had the data, and while the ideas weren’t met with open arms initially, coach Gregory eventually embraced it.

“Now the belt is a part of every-thing we do.”

pLAnnIng BeneFItsGregory has customized his

practice approach to “the belt” for four years now.

He uses the data to formulate his practice plan. He spaces out exercises and drills to get the work done without overstressing the

players. And because the belts now produce workload figures in real time – each player’s output is displayed on the scoreboard dur-ing practice-- Gregory can ramp up or back down practice intensity on the fly.

“I never want to be on the court where we don’t have great inten-sity and energy, and the belts give us a map for how to get there and stay there,” Gregory said.

Bewley has found the optimal average intensity for players at practice during the season is 80 to 89 percent of their maximum heart rate. The goal is to produce weekly workload figures between 1,000 and 1,200.

Players produce approximately 200 training load points per game during the season. Based on play-ing two days a week, that leaves Gregory and Bewley 600 to 800 training load points per week for practice. They tend to go light – 100 points or so -- on the days be-fore games and either light or not at all the day after games, leaving them one high-intensity practice load day.

The schedule at times conflicts with Gregory’s coaching instincts,

especially when the coach finds his team’s play unsatisfactory. But he’s seen the results: Since adopting the belt, his teams have finished games and seasons strong. His Dayton teams went 8-2 in the post-season during his tenure and Geor-gia Tech played its best basketball down the stretch in his first season on the Flats.

“That’s no coincidence,” Gregory said. “The belts provide a barometer for keeping our guys fresh throughout the year. I don’t know how to read the numbers per se but I see the results.”

MotIvAtIonAL tooL“The belt” may be designed

as a lifebelt for worn-out players. Some, however, wear it like a shock collar.

Just as workload figures validate a hard worker, low numbers give the slacker “no place to hide,” according to Bewley. Given the competitive nature of every major college athlete, “the belt” drives effort. They can see how hard they’re working compared to their peers, which resonates louder than a cajoling coach.

“When you find something good, it’s usually good only one way,” Gregory said. “But with the belts, it protects against overtrain-ing but also drives guys to put forth the type of effort we want on a daily basis. The program captures both ends of the spectrum.”

Bewley and Gregory have even found team-building benefits in “the belts.” This generation of college athletes can be hesitant to challenge one another on effort. They have a “hard time with tough love,” Bewley said, which led him to use “the belts” in spin class sessions. The whole group had to pedal until they reached a cumula-tive workload level, and it didn’t take long for Bewley to hear calls of “Hey man, pick it up” and “Hey, we were supposed to be done a minute a go. Pedal harder.”

“Once guys get comfortable with it and start to feel account-ability to each other, you see development of the culture of the team,” Bewley said. “We utilize the belt system in a lot of ways.”

Beyond BAsketBALL“The belt” also offers Yellow

from HigH-tEcH wOrkOutS PAGe 23

26 THE bUzz

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Jackets wisdom for life beyond basketball in terms of nutrition.

The workload figures allow Bew-ley to calculate calorie burn as well as lactate production. The average Gregory workout costs players be-tween 2,000 calories (backcourt) and 2,500 calories (frontcourt), and Bewley can update players daily on their nutritional needs.

Athletes tend to under-eat dur-ing the season, Bewley said, which is why so many players that add 10 pounds of muscle in the offseason are back where they started by the start of the next offseason.

The nutritional knowledge gradually becomes innate with players.

“When we start talking about refueling there is such an immedi-ate recognition,” Bewley said. “Those types of things get guys eating purposely instead of foolish-ly. And they take that knowledge with them once they leave here.” ■

The monitor is strapped to the chest, vis-ible through Brandon Reed’s shirt.

28 THE bUzz

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What’s All the Buzz® About in Today’s Real Estate Market?

The BUZZ® Sculpture is ©2008 of Georgia Institute of Technology.The BUZZ word mark and the BUZZ Design Mark are treadmarks of the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Upon graduating with a de-gree in Industrial Management, Williams married his college sweetheart Nell Kimbrough at All Saints’ Church in Atlanta. Mar-tin was Williams’ best man, and “the church was full of football players,” Dr. Nell, his bride of 59 years, remembered.

His interest in healing and peak performance sparked Williams’ interest in chiropractic. With the same spark that had characterized his years of football at Tech, the couple set off for Iowa’s Palmer College of Chiropractic, the birth-place of the profession, where they graduated together and became legends in that school’s history. While in Davenport, they still maintained their support of Geor-gia Tech, even traveling to Indiana in 1953 to see the Jackets take on Notre Dame in the biggest game of the year.

They moved back to the Atlanta area and started their chiropractic practice. As it grew, both Drs. Wil-liams became leaders in the field. They founded Life Chiropractic College in 1974 and surrounded themselves with individuals who lived the lifestyle of Lasting Pur-pose-- to love, serve and give from one’s own abundance. Williams has written five books and has been recognized as the “Defender

of Chiropractic.” His 60 years of devotion to his profession has been characterized by the same tenacious ambition with which he founded and grew Life University into the largest chiropractic uni-versity in the world.

While his professional achieve-ments elevated his stature, many still associated Williams with Georgia Tech and his exploits on the gridiron. He had left an indel-ible mark on the spirit of the game and institution that he loves.

“One time, we were in South Africa for a meeting,” he recalled. “When I went up to speak, they played ‘Ramblin Wreck.’ Who’d ever think they had even heard of it? The crowd was standing up and singing ‘I’m a Ramblin Wreck from Georgia Tech and a hellava engineer!’ It brought tears to my eyes. It was amazing...incredible.”

The Williamses have traveled to virtually every bowl game over the years, and whenever the team plays in Florida, they usually host a mini-reunion of the 1951/52 football team at their home in Sarasota. The couple also attends every basketball game, sitting courtside for nearly 30 years.

Throughout the years, Sid and Nell Williams have contributed to Georgia Tech and its athletic programs in numerous ways. Life Members of the Alexander-Tharpe Fund, the Williamses haven’t missed a football home game in

over 60 years. In fact they sit in roughly the same spot where Wil-liams’ father had season tickets and the seats will be passed down to their son, Dr. John Sidney Wil-liams, also a Tech graduate. “We will never give up the tradition,” Dr. Nell explained. “The white and gold is in our blood.”

“We’ve watched Tech’s athletic prowess improve over the years,” said Dr. Williams. “Athletics is such an important part of the college experience, and it’s really special because it brings people together for a common purpose.”

At Life University, Williams grew the athletic program into national prominence with the help of former Georgia Tech basketball great Roger Kaiser. Williams hired Kaiser as Athletic Direc-tor to build the athletic depart-ment from scratch and coach the basketball team. Over the years the school won over 21 national championships, including three basketball titles.

Williams was inducted into Georgia Tech’s athletic Hall of Fame in 1999, and he proudly wears his Hall of Fame ring on his right hand.

“I was lucky to play football for three years at Georgia Tech because it really changed my life,” he said. “I played through a lot of physical challenges, but I learned so much from Coach Dodd and my teammates. That’s the big-

gest reason I love Georgia Tech so much. It is not only an institution of higher learning; it is the basis for a special lifestyle that becomes part of your overall viewpoint and self belief that endures throughout one’s life.” ■

from ONE OF DODD’S BOYS PAGe 20

Williams and wife Nell have contributed to Georgia Tech athletics in numerous ways.

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cOmpLiAnce cOrnerBY JEROME RODGERS

ASSOCIATE ATHLETIC DIRECTOR/COMPLIANCE

WHAT TECH SUPPORTERS SHOULD kNOW AS GRADUATION APPROACHES

Greetings from the Georgia Tech Compliance Office,

The purpose of this article is to provide insight into the world of NCAA Compliance and specifically the topic of graduation gifts for student-athletes.

You may recall that several years ago the University of Kansas (KU) men’s basketball program was punished for major violations of NCAA rules where three donors were providing graduation gifts to members of the team.

KU reported that three university supporters wanted to express their appreciation to team members who were either graduating or completing their eligibility by providing them with small gifts, including cash or clothing. The first donor had been providing a graduation gift of between $25 and $100 to graduating seniors for approximately five years. The second donor provided between $300 and $400 to student-athletes who had exhausted their eligibility over a three year period. The gifts were intended to help the student-athletes during their first few months out of college. The third donor purchased lifetime memberships to the KU Alumni Association for several student-athletes and purchased a suit for another student-athlete after completing their eligibility.

In each case, the donor had good intentions. However, NCAA rules specifically prohibit donors/supporters from providing student-athletes (even those who have graduated and/or completed their eligibility) with any benefit not expressly allowed by the NCAA.

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