Caddo Parish deputies share spirit of giving

Caddo Parish Sheriff’s deputies volunteered their time by visiting residents at Heritage Manor West as part of a Spirit of Giving outreach effort. During the visit, deputies assisted with serving food, spent time visiting with residents, and distributed bags filled with essential items and treats.

The visit highlighted the impact that small acts of kindness can have on individuals and the community, particularly during the holiday season. The Sheriff’s Office encouraged residents to have a safe and joyful holiday season.


State defensive MVP Miller tops five Calvary stars earning All-State recognition

STOP HERE: Calvary’s Luke Miller (8) made plenty of open-field tackles on his way to earning the Class 2A Outstanding Defensive Player award from the Louisiana Sports Writers Association. (Journal photo by GAVEN HAMMOND, landgphoto.com)

JOURNAL SPORTS                                                                                                    

Calvary Baptist standouts Luke Miller, Braylun Huglon, Cooper Thomas and Ty Knight made the Louisiana Sports Writers Association’s Class 2A All-State team announced Monday, with Miller earning the Outstanding Defensive Player award.

Cavaliers defensive end David Weeks was included on the honorable mention list for the second straight year. Joining him were Javontaye Dean and Keshawn Williams – also a repeat pick — from Green Oaks.

Miller was the quarterback of the defense that sparkled as a Calvary Baptist team with 17 first-year starters reached its second Select Division III championship game in the past three years. The Cavs (12-2) also stretched their district win streak to 13 years and 70 games.

Last year Huglon was honorable mention All-State as a cornerback, but he spent most of his playing time in 2025 lighting up opposing defenses as a receiver.

Cooper anchored the Calvary offensive line. Knight, also a standout at defensive back, earned his All-State spot as a kicker.

Miller, a 6-foot, 195-pound senior, finished with 123 tackles, one of Louisiana’s top totals, including seven stops behind the line with three interceptions and 11 breakups.

Huglon scored 26 touchdowns, 21 at receiver where he hauled in 1,455 yards (103.9 per game, 19.3 per catch) on 74 receptions. He ran for two scores, returned two kickoffs the distance, and added a 100-yard pick six. Knight nailed eight of nine field goals and converted 56 of 59 extra points while booming kickoffs that helped pin foes deep in their end of the field. Thomas helped the Cavaliers  score 59 TDs while averaging 38 points.

Calvary won nailbiting playoff games at unbeaten, No. 4 seed Jewel Sumner (14-7) and third-seeded Notre Dame (34-28 in overtime) to reach the state final, where they were overwhelmed 34-17 by No. 2 Dunham and the top offensive player in 2A and perhaps at any level in Louisiana.

Dunham quarterback Elijah Haven, a rare sophomore Outstanding Player selection in 2024, only surpassed that impressive performance with a record-breaking and championship-winning junior campaign.

He repeated as the Offensive Outstanding Player, setting state single-season marks for passing touchdowns (62) and total touchdowns (73) and total touchdowns in a career (180).

Mansfield’s Darrell Barbay was chosen 2A coach of the year by the LSWA panel.

The 6-foot-5, 215-pound Haven was 240-for-331 (72.5 percent) with 3,929 yards and 62 touchdowns with just seven interceptions. He also rushed 127 times for another 847 yards and 11 scores.  His prolific effort helped lead his Tigers (13-1) to the program’s first title since 2004.

Barbay led Mansfield (10-3) to its first 10-win season and first quarterfinal run since 1993 and an undefeated District 3-2A title. The Wolverines have improved their win total every season since Barbay’s hire from Texas in 2022, including three straight years with at least one playoff victory after a four-year drought.

Mansfield opened the season with a wild comeback from 35-0 deficit to beat Minden, 46-38, and rarely slowed down during a memorable run throughout the fall. 

LSWA Class 2A All-State 

Offense

WR Brayden Allen, Lafayette Christian, 6-2, 180, Sr.

WR Braylun Huglon, Calvary Baptist, 5-10, 175, Jr.

WR Jarvis Washington Jr., Dunham, 6-4, 185, Sr.

OL Christian Comeaux, Dunham, 6-2, 215, Sr.

OL Ron Griffing Jr., Mangham, 6-1, 265, Sr.

OL Torrey Landry, Lafayette Christian, 6-3, 245, Sr.

OL Micah Mosher, Ouachita Christian, 5-10, 225, Sr.

OL Cooper Thomas, Calvary Baptist, 6-0, 210, Sr.

QB Elijah Haven, Dunham, 6-5, 215, Jr.

RB Caiden Bellard, Lafayette Christian, 5-10, 190, So.

RB Joachim Bourgeois, Notre Dame, 5-8, 165, Sr.

RB Jaidon Briggs, Vinton, 5-10, 165, Sr.

PK Ty Knight, Calvary Baptist, 5-11, 155, Sr.

ATH Braylon Walker, Lafayette Christian, 5-11, 170, Sr.

Defense

DL Jayden Arceneaux, Lafayette Christian, 5-10, 220, Sr.

DL Marvin Davis, Ferriday, 6-3, 200, Sr.

DL Cullen McIntosh, Oak Grove, 6-4, 215, Sr.

DL Eliot Trahan, Dunham, 5-9, 195, Sr.

LB Dean Ancalade, South Plaquemines, 5-9, 185, Sr.

LB Luke Miller, Calvary Baptist, 6-0, 195, Sr.

LB Cade Poland, Mangham, 6-1, 218, Jr.

LB Kendrick Wyatt, Mansfield, 6-2, 200, Jr.

DB Sabryn Bartholomew, South Plaquemines, 5-9, 165, Jr.

DB Luke Green, Lafayette Christian, 6-1, 180, Sr.

DB Matthew Hicks, Holy Savior Menard, 6-2, 175, Sr.

DB Zavier Ledet, Catholic-N.I., 5-10, 150, Sr.

P Gavin Polk, Ouachita Christian, 6-2, 175, Sr.

ATH Devin Franklin, Oak Grove, 6-4, 215, Sr.

RS Owen Layton, Oak Grove, 5-8, 165, Sr.

OUTSTANDING OFFENSIVE PLAYER: Elijah Haven, Dunham

OUTSTANDING DEFENSIVE PLAYER: Luke Miller, Calvary Baptist

COACH OF THE YEAR: Darrell Barbay, Mansfield

Honorable Mention

Daltin Albritton, D’Arbonne Woods; Izaac Andre, Catholic-NI; Aderrion Baker, St. Helena; Sam Brocato, Holy Savior Menard; Taj Callahan, Episcopal-BR; Thomas Carter, Slaughter Community Charter; Colby Casey, Mangham; Kameron Casnave, Northlake Christian; Joshua Casugay, Avoyelles; Nigile Ceasar, DeQuincy; Paityn Collins, Ferriday; Javontaye Dean, Green Oaks; Griffin Doucet, Notre Dame; Ja’Courey Duhon, Lafayette Renaissance Charter; Wesley Duplechin, Notre Dame; Justin Drago, Country Day; Aiden Fairchild, Pope John Paul II; Terroni Frederick, West St. Mary; Charlie Gilmore, Northlake Christian; Trevon Haman, Dunham; Henry Jackson, Isidore Newman; Tylon Jackson, Oakdale; Jacob Jeanise, Holy Savior Menard; Christopher Jones, Loreauville; Kevin Jones, Avoyelles; Kortlin Kyle, Vinton; Geremy Lewis, Cohen; Brodie Lejeune, Notre Dame; Dashun Lightfoot, Franklin; George Loop, Newman; Jaimason Marzell, Lafayette Christian; Owen Morris, Catholic-NI; Ian O’Boyle, Newman; Terrell Pegues, Mansfield; Brandon Perkins, Kinder; Jake Poirier, Catholic-NI; Jake Randall, Newman; Carson Riser, D’Arbonne Woods; Jack Roniger, Pope John Paul II; Eli Self, Kinder; Kaycee Sellers, Lafayette Renaissance Charter; Kaleb Simon, Lafayette Christian; Dominik Smith, Pope John Paul II; Kobe Smith, Avoyelles; Craig St. Cyr, Winnfield; Eyan Taylor, South Plaquemines; Isaiah Thomas, Kinder; Jude Turner, Ouachita Christian; Patrick Turpin, Ouachita Christian; Luke Vidrine, Ouachita Christian; David Weeks, Calvary Baptist; Detavious Williams, Winnfield; Keshawn Williams, Green Oaks; Jordan Willis, Northlake Christian; Deverrick Winnfield, Oakdale; Ja’Kyrin Woodard, Welsh; Hudson Wright, Country Day; Tyler Yokum, Lafayette Renaissance Charter.


Holiday break follows exciting local prep soccer week highlighted by Benton-Loyola girls clash

BREAKAWAY EFFORT: Benton’s Emerie Tanner tries to get by Loyola’s Jenna Drouillard in last Thursday’s matchup of top local teams.  (Photo by DANA HUDSON)
 

By DAVID ERSOFF, Journal Sports

It’s Christmas week so local high school soccer competition has briefly paused, following an impactful series of contests around town and down south last week.

Girls action on the pitch for local teams was highlighted by a battle the top two teams in last week’s Shreveport-Bossier Journal coaches poll, when top-ranked Benton went to Messmer Stadium to face No. 2 Loyola.

The game was controlled by the 15-mph wind that gave each team the advantage when downwind.

The Lady Tigers started the game with the wind and were able to take advantage of that when Eden Whiteman scored the game’s only goal with the assist created by Lanie Machen, when she hit a perfect weighted pass just over the defense to the streaking Whiteman.

The Lady Flyers did not lay down. When it was their turn with the wind, they pressured the Lady Tigers throughout the second half, but they just were not able to break through. Benton improved to 12-2 while Loyola slipped to 5-3-1.

It’s funny how a round ball can bounce one way or another, and sometimes you can only hope that it bounces your way, especially when facing a team as good as you are. The boys teams from Loyola and Bossier hosted state top four-ranked St. Louis Catholic this past weekend, and the ball bounced Loyola’s way, but not for Bossier.

Both the Flyers and the Bearkats controlled most of the action against the Saints. Both games ended 1-0, and both turned on two plays.

The Flyers got a penalty kick, due to a hand ball in the box, with 10 minutes left in the game Whit Sample calmly converted the penalty. With just a few minutes left in the game, the Saints were awarded a penalty of their own, and their penalty kick sailed just over the crossbar preserving Loyola’s 1-0 win.

Early in Bossier’s contest with the Saints, Bearkats midfielder Wilson Alvarado slotted a beauty of a pass to forward Luca Stifuentes, who sprinted towards goal. Unfortunately his shot sailed just over the crossbar. Less than a minute later the Saints had one of their few shots on goal, and it went just inside the post to be the margin in Bossier’s 1-0 loss.

Caddo Magnet jumped into a second-place tie with Bossier in the SBJ coaches boys poll, after going 1-1-1 at the Copa Acadiana tournament. The Mustangs tied Beau Chene 0-0, lost 3-1 to Central Lafourche and beat North Vermilion 1-0.

Captain Shreve gained ground in the poll by beating Bossier last Monday and going 2-0-1 at the Copa, beating St. Amant 3-0, St. Michaels 2-1 and tying H.L. Bourgeois 1-1.

The Benton Tigers went 1-2 at the Copa, beating DeRidder 3-0 before falling to Hahnville 2-1 and Catholic of Baton Rouge 5-0.

Byrd’s Lady Jackets moved back into second in the SBJ’s coaches girls poll with a solid weekend at the Copa, with two wins and a tie. Byrd beat North Vermilion 4-0 and Sulphur 1-0, before tying Teurlings Catholic 0-0.

The Lady Gators had an odd week of games, losing 8-0 to Dutchtown then beating Lutcher 8-0, to finish their 2025 slate.

Calvary’s Lady Cavaliers also went to the Copa last weekend, finishing 1-1-1 in the event. Calvary started with a 0-0 draw with Alexandria, then fell 2-0 to University Lab. They salvaged their weekend by defeating Northlake Christian 4-0, making the bus ride home a happier trip.

All local soccer teams have taken a break this week, so there will be no SBJ coaches poll next week. Instead, look for a review of how the teams stack up at the midway point in the LHSAA power rankings.

Here are both coaches poll results heading into Christmas:

Week 6 SBJ boys poll listing school (W-L-T record) points (first place votes):

1, Loyola (5-3-2), 25 (5)

T2, Bossier (6-5-2), 12

T2, Magnet (6-2-2), 12

4, Shreve (5-6-2), 10

5, Benton (6-5-2), 9

Others receiving votes: Byrd (4), Calvary (3)

Week 6 SBJ girls poll listing school (W-L-T record) points (first place votes):

1, Benton (12-2-0), 25 (5)

2, Byrd (7-3-3), 20

3, Loyola (5-3-1), 16

4, Shreve (10-1-1), 9

5, Calvary (9-4-1), 4

Others receiving votes: Magnet (1)          

Contact David at dersoff@bellsouth.net


Many more than 100 reasons to appreciate Procell’s prep career 55 years later

By JOHN JAMES MARSHALL, Journal Sports

(NOTE – As the year draws to a close, the SBJ staff is sharing a few of our favorite stories from 2025. This one was published July 25.)

It was about 20 years ago when he was driving down Highway 71 crossing into Natchitoches Parish and realized where he was. Strictly on a whim, he pulled into the parking lot of Fairview-Alpha Elementary & Junior High School a few miles north of Campti.

It had been years since consolidation relocated Fairview-Alpha’s high school classes, but that really didn’t matter. All he wanted to see was one particular building.

And more importantly, one particular spot in that building.

There was activity going on in the gym but no one seemed to notice the man who was obviously a visitor. As he walked across the floor, memories began to flood his mind like flashes of lightning. As he looked around to take it in, things weren’t exactly the same, but it didn’t matter that there had obviously been a paint job or two and the basketball goals were different than before. But this was it. This is what he came to see.

But not just to see it. To live it again.

He saw himself as an 18-year-old, pulling up for a jump shot that was unlike any of the thousands he had taken before. The arc of the ball. The swish of the net.

“I looked up at that goal and saw it all one more time,” he says today. “And then I turned around and walked out. Nobody said anything to me.”

Little did the girls’ P.E. class at Fairview-Alpha realize that Greg Procell had come to relive the moment he became the greatest scorer in the history of high school basketball.

That night.

That gym.

That spot.

* * *

In high school sports, records get set all the time that no one thinks will ever be broken. It may take a while, but eventually, almost all of them are.

It’s been 55 years since Ebarb’s Greg Procell did something that still hasn’t been broken. When his career at the Sabine Parish school was finished in 1970, all of the newspaper accounts were of how he had set the state record. At the time, no one wanted to assume that there might be someone else out there in another state who had more than 6,702 points.

They should have known better.

(Whether or not Procell still holds the record depends on how you look at it. Demond “Tweety” Carter of Reserve Christian finished with 7,494 points, but that includes his point totals as a seventh and eighth grader on the varsity. Some sanctioning organizations only recognize points scored during high school years.)

Ask men of a certain age who know high school basketball about Greg Procell and just watch their reaction. They still don’t believe it.

Nobody does.

You’d get lost trying to make sense of all that Procell accomplished: Points in a game … points in a season … points per game … scoring records set in gyms that still haven’t been broken … and a fairly unbelievable final game of his high school career.

That’s how it ended.

But only when you know how, when and where it started can you grasp just how amazing all of this really is.

* * *

Parishes in Louisiana each seem to have their own identity, but none of the other 63 can quite match Sabine Parish. Located along the Texas border along Toledo Bend, the area began to grow as a railroad town but also as the home for the Choctaw-Apache Tribe, the second-largest tribe in the state

And more than half of the tribe’s population had traditionally been in and around the town of Ebarb. The tribe’s roots dates back to the indigenous people of the 18th century. Surnames such as Sepulvado, Meshell, Remedies, Ebarb and Procell are quite common throughout the parish.

There is no shortage of pride in Sabine Parish. And that is particularly the case in high school  basketball. There are seven high schools in the parish and all seven have won a boys state championship in boys basketball. There’s no need to even look that up to see if it’s a record in Louisiana.

But it is not the most affluent – the most recent census shows that one in five residents live below the poverty level – and that was certainly the case for Procell when he was growing up. His household didn’t even have electricity until the early 1950s.

Though Procell was stricken with polio when he was five years old, he began playing basketball as soon as he could. One of his first basketball goals was constructed by his friend, Walter “Tootsie Roll” Meshell – it was simply a bicycle rim attached to a tree. Their group of friends spent as much time as they could playing basketball on a dirt court, often barefoot.

Sneakers were a little too much to ask for during those times.

When Procell was in middle school, he begged Frank Ebarb, his basketball coach, to give him a key so that the seventh grader could go to the gym and practice shooting. But that was against the rules so instead, Coach Ebarb just happened to leave a window open “by accident.”

There was an understanding between the two that it was their secret. No one else was invited.

Led by Procell, the seventh-grade team got to be pretty good and they begged their coach to let them go play in an eighth grade tournament in Noble.

“Y’all can’t play with them eighth grade boys,” Ebarb told them.

“I told Mr. Frank that if he’d let us play, we’d bring the trophy home,” Procell says.

The seventh graders played Pelican’s eight grade in the first game of the tournament.

Ebarb 98, Pelican 6.

“True story,” Procell says. “That was crazy.”

But not as crazy as what was about to happen for the next few years.

* * *

For many years in Louisiana high school basketball, schools could play an unlimited number of games. Non-football schools such as Ebarb started playing in October, but that really didn’t inflate Procell’s scoring numbers. (He played in 31, 39 and 42 games in his first three seasons.)

And the Rebels would play whoever walked in the gym. During his senior year, Procell and the Rebels played Captain Shreve (who would go to the Class AAA state championship game) two times, plus Bossier, Airline and Jesuit (now Loyola), among others.

As a freshman, Procell averaged 24.1 points per game. As a sophomore, it was 34.7 (making 52 percent of his field goals). As a junior, he averaged 34.0 per game.

That set a very big stage for Procell’s senior year. Early in that season, he had consecutive games of 70, 64, 48, 50, 50, 40 and 56 points and all but one of those was a win.

Perhaps even more than the career scoring mark of 6,702, there was one number that might still stand out above all others – 100.

That came on Jan. 29, 1970, in the opening round of the Ebarb Tournament. Previously, Procell’s high had been 72 points, but taking on Elizabeth that night, everything fell into place.

He had 42 field goals and made 18 of 19 free throws that night in a 139-79 win. Procell said he really didn’t realize how close he was to the magic number until the late stages of the game.

“When I got to about 80 (points) they started hollering out how many I had,” he says.

That also broke the state record of 82 points by Plainview’s Truitt Weldon in 1958. Amazingly, Procell doesn’t really recall much else about the game other than being taken out when he had 55 points “and the fans getting on Coach (Ken) Hebert pretty bad, so he put me back in.”

Interestingly, Hebert was the fourth different coach Procell had in four years of high school.

But the game record and the season record and the career record were all nice, but there was still one thing missing – a state championship.

And just as improbable Procell’s career had been in his first 179 games, it was the last one which took that to another level.

* * *

The boys state basketball tournament has had a number of different titles in various cities around the state, but one thing is for sure — there has never been anything like the 1969-70 Top 20 in Alexandria.

Crowds of 10,000 or more were in attendance for almost every game at Rapides Coliseum. The overtime finals between Captain Shreve and Brother Martin drew 15,657 fans.

It was the first school year after court-ordered integration, though not all the schools had begun the process. Newspapers actually charted the total number of starters in the tournament who were minorities (30 of 100; but 13 of 20 in the highest classification, it was noted).

Teams and fans came from all over the state came for the tournament, but there was no doubt who the biggest drawing card was – Greg Procell.

In the Class C semifinals against Maurice, Ebarb won 97-82 but the real story was the freeze that Maurice coach Johnny Picard instructed his team to do, even though they were losing by double figures in the fourth quarter. Not only did it prevent Procell, who had 51 points, from breaking the Class C scoring record for a state tournament game, but it also kept the Rebels from breaking the team scoring record of 103 set by, you guessed it, Maurice.

“We have the record,” Picard said. “And we want to keep it.”

Procell let Picard know about it. With eight seconds left in the game, he twice screamed at the Maurice bench “We’re Number 1, Coach.”

Not yet.

Three days later, Ebarb had to play Sabine Parish neighbor Pleasant Hill for the 11th time that season in the championship game. (Ebarb had won seven of the previous 10.)

Ebarb trailed by eight late in the game before mounting a comeback, but it looked as if it would fall short. Trailing by a point with seven seconds left in the game, Meshell missed the second of two free throws and Pleasant Hill grabbed the rebound. But Robert Jackson threw the ball away with three seconds left and Ebarb had one final chance.

While Pleasant Hill was furiously scrambling to cover Procell, who had scored 44 points, on the inbounds pass, Meshell slipped open. The pass was knocked out of his hands before he regained it in time to get off a 17-foot shot — just before the buzzer — that went through the net.

“I thought I got fouled (on the inbounds pass),” Meshell, who finished with 33 points, said after the game. “But I couldn’t wait for the whistle.”

The Rebels scored 11 of the game’s final 13 points.

“We really should have lost that game to Pleasant Hill,” Procell says now. “They were bigger and stronger and had better athletes. It was just incredible.”

* * *

Once described by his future college coach as “short, slow and couldn’t jump, but nobody had a better shooting eye,” Procell thought he was going to Southwestern Louisiana (now Louisiana-Lafayette) to play in college. In fact, Procell says “Coach Hebert came to Ebarb as our coach to recruit me to USL.”

That didn’t work out, so Procell went to Panola Junior College before transferring to Northwestern State. He had a solid career in his two seasons with the Demons, averaging 11.6 per game in 1972-73 and 7.1 the following year.

“They played that (slowdown) style ball at Northwestern,” Procell says. “It was pass it, pass it, pass it. But in fairness to him (coach Tynes Hildebrand), that’s all he knew. There weren’t a lot of teams that got up and down the floor like we did when he averaged 92 points a game (at Ebarb).”

Procell taught at Natchitoches Central for three years and at Huntington for another 18.

But it was a part-time career as a professional fishing guide that has made Procell perhaps as well-known across the country as for his high school basketball notoriety.

It was as a fishing guide on Toledo Bend that he made an acquaintance with a petroleum engineer, which has led to his career as a salesman in production chemicals for the last 32 years.

And it was on one of those sales trips that led him to the gym at Fairview-Alpha to relive the day of December 13, 1969, when Greg Procell made a shot that etched his name into a record book.

These days, he touches a lot more golf balls than he does basketballs. At 72, he’s still on the job and traveling throughout the area. And if you need a fishing guide, you don’t need to ask twice.

“Tootsie Roll” Meshell, who made that fateful shot in the state title game, recently retired after a career in teaching and the Sabine Parish sheriff’s office.

Procell stays in touch with his teammates from the 1970 team that went 56-12. He may have forgotten a few details of some of those games, but he hasn’t forgotten those who helped him along the way.

Earlier this week, Procell had a special lunch companion: 90-year-old “Mr. Frank” – the middle school coach who let that seventh-grade kid sneak into the gym and set the foundation for a career unlike any other.

“I just wanted to tell him thanks,” Procell says.

Contact JJ at johnjamesmarshall@yahoo.com


Looking back at best games, great finishes, breakout players

JOURNAL SPORTS

With All-State teams and other honors being announced, the 2025 high school football season is in the books.

So while awards are being handed out for what happened this fall, the Shreveport-Bossier Journal Coaches Roundtable has been reconvened. Over the Christmas break, several head coaches are sharing their thoughts on the season and what the future holds.

This Roundtable will use a multiple question format to get insight we will share during the final days of 2025.

What was your team’s best game this season?

DENNY DURON, Evangel: “The best game we played was against the best team in the city — Coach Coy Brotherton and his Parkway Panthers.” (The Eagles won the showdown for the District 1-5A title in a Week 10 meeting, In a surprising 55-27 romp.)

AUSTIN BROWN, Northwood: “The Minden game was our best overall in all three facets. We held a well-coached team to 140 yards. We were pretty balanced offensively and had over 400 yards (427, 241 rushing), and we were really good in the kicking game.” (It was a Week 9 home game, Senior Night, and a 42-0 Falcons’ win.) 

STACY BALLEW, Byrd: “The Benton game was our best. Christian Maxie did everything on offense that he could. He ran it, threw it, caught it, and could not be stopped. It wasn’t a one-man effort, but it looked like it on the stats and scoreboard. A lot of our guys did good jobs in that game.” (Byrd won 49-40 as Maxie, a junior halfback, ran for 343 yards and a school-record six TDs on 32 carries and threw a 39-yard TD pass.)

JERRY BYRD, Plain Dealing: “The final game of the year against Pickering. It was one where we were able to compete, score a couple of touchdowns, create turnovers, and move the football.” (The Lions had their best defensive outing of the season and built momentum for next year despite their winless finish.) 

What was the best finish you saw, either from your sideline or by other teams, on video or in the stands?

DURON, Evangel:  “Our best finish was against the Airline Vikings (a midseason 51-49 district thriller at ECA). We were so evenly matched, and it really came down to the very end of the game. We were just lucky enough force a fumble and return it 100 yards for a TD and that was the difference.”

BYRD, Plain Dealing:  “The best finish I saw was Haynesville vs. Mangham for the state 1A championship (Haynesville’s defense made a late goalline stand and scored twice in a 39-37 victory at the Prep Classic in New Orleans). Two small town North Louisiana teams getting after it in the Dome. Happy for the Tornado and the Franklin family after a tough year of losing two pillars of the community in Coach and Mrs. Franklin.”

Could you point out some breakout players, or a position group, who really stepped it up this season?

BYRD, Plain Dealing: “My only two seniors — Jeremy Fisher and Jonathon Baker-Shepard. I’m so proud of the way they led the 2025 Plains Dealing Lions and will be forever grateful for the opportunity I had to coach them. They are both GREAT young men.” 

BROWN, Northwood:  “Our defensive line played a lot bigger than they physically stand. Coming into the season, I thought that was the weak point of our team but they held their own. Braylon Levy and Devin McKenna led that group and I’m proud of that whole bunch.”

DURON, Evangel:  “Our defensive front was suddenly a force in the middle of the season. It was just as if everything came together for those guys. Ashton Dawson was the biggest turnaround player for us this year and I honestly think he was unblockable. Damari Drake had a huge year on both sides of the ball. We could not have had the record we had (9-3, District 1-5A champions at 8-0) if he had not stepped up.

“The offensive line became exceptional run blockers, and our defensive backfield got better every single game.”


The Blessed Day is near

(We dug into the archives to find a column we wrote several years ago to commemorate this special time of year.)

Christmas is almost here but it is sometimes difficult to get a clear vision of what it’s really all about when filtered through clouds of war, political upheaval, famine and disease in every corner of the world.

Yet, the time for celebrating the birth of Christ is upon us and we’re often faced with how to best honor Him in the midst of all that is going on around us.

Our church has an annual food drive where bags of groceries are accumulated from donations and distributed to needy families in the community. A few years ago, Kay and I helped bring a bit of joy to some families in our community. Seeing the faces of children and grateful parents and being able to take a bit of edge off what pain and anxiety they may be facing was worth giving up the few hours we spent.

As we handed out bags of groceries and received heartfelt thanks, my thoughts turned to memories of the season when I was growing up in the country, near Goldonna in north Natchitoches Parish.

Our Christmases were relatively simple, but that didn’t make them any less special. When it came time to put up the tree, we didn’t go to the shopping center and select an artificial one. We didn’t go to a Christmas tree farm and cut our own from a neat row of cloned trees.

We walked out to the woods to find a cedar growing away from other trees. This didn’t happen often; you’d find a tree that looked just right, until you checked the back side and saw that the oak next to it had robbed it of sunlight, leaving it shapely on one side and skimpy on the other. Mama’s solution was to put skimpy side next to the wall with shapely side to the front.

For decoration, there was red roping, icicles and colored balls. We didn’t have strings of lights those early Christmases because there was nothing to plug them into. Electricity hadn’t found its way to Goldonna yet.

My mama’s kitchen was a mixture of sights, sounds and aromas as the special day neared. Dad, my brother and I made sure we saved a couple of wood ducks shot down at the Sand Flats for mama’s special recipe. I recall seeing those ducks, roasted almost black in a Dutch oven, swimming in a dark sea of the richest gravy you can imagine.

There was a pan of dressing mama made from cornbread she’d cooked the day before and set aside. A fat hen provided the broth and zest to the dressing.

On the side, there was a bowl of ambrosia, pecan pies, chocolate pies, divinity, fudge and the traditional applesauce cake that mama made from homemade fig preserves, raisins and pecans from our tree in the yard.

As we handed out bags of groceries that day, I recalled a parallel event from childhood that made me want to have a part in sharing with other folks this time of year. Before we sat down to our Christmas dinner, mama would always prepare a big tray from the bounty of our table and our whole family would walk through the pine thicket to the home of an old couple, our neighbors, whose Christmas dinner would have been meager had it not been for mama’s generosity.

Times change, and they do it in the blink of an eye. All the older participants in those early Christmases are gone; Mom and Dad, the old couple down the road. The memories of those events came into focus though, in the eyes of appreciative folks whose Christmas may have been bleak without the provisions we brought them.

If you run into me during the next few days, don’t expect me to greet you with Happy Holidays, Merry X-mas or Season’s Greetings. You’ll hear “Merry Christmas” in honor of the One this day is all about.

Contact Glynn at glynnharris37@gmail.com


Remember This? A life-changing message

Sending text messages has become an integral part of life for most of us.  It has become such a common activity that we instinctively reach for our phones and begin tapping out a message rather than placing a voice call.  The most common text messages today are, “I love you,” “when will you be home,” and “where are you,” respectively.  The birth of our modern text messaging system can be traced back to December 3, 1992.

In 1992, 22-year-old Neil Papworth was working as a software engineer for the now-defunct Anglo-French information technology company Sema Group Telecoms.  For about a year and a half, Neil was part of a team that was searching for a way to transmit short text messages for Vodafone, a British telecommunications company.  At the time, the only function cell phones could perform consisted of making and receiving telephone calls.  Telecommunication companies knew that cell phones had the potential to do more, and they knew adding functions would lead to huge profits.  Vodafone wanted to add a pager feature (remember pagers?) into cell phones.  Neil and his team spent months testing and troubleshooting the one-way messaging system.  The main problem was that they had to create a text messaging system that would interact flawlessly with any cell phone on the market.    

Vodafone had invested a lot of money in the system and wanted to show the world that it worked.  On December 3, 1992, Neil sat in his office in Newbury, England, hoping that the text messaging system he and his team created would function as expected.  After checking and rechecking the team’s programming, Neil typed in the cell number of Richard Jarvis, the director of Vodafone, who was hosting a Christmas party on the other side of town at the time.  He typed in a short message and, as he later explained, had two thoughts: “God, I hope this works,” and “what am I going to have for dinner?”  Neil explained, “for me, it was just another day at work.”  This was far from a random test; Vodafone had planned to reveal their technology to the world at this party if it worked.  Vodafone had numerous members of the press present to be sure the word got out.  The company had planned every detail of the reveal except for what the text message would say.  Without much thought, Neil typed a two-word message and sent it.  Because it was a one-way text messaging system and Richard could not send a reply, Neil had to call Richard to ensure that the test was successful.  Neil said, “there was a lot of relief when it worked.”  By the end of 2000, cell phone users sent an average of 35 text messages per month.  Today, users send an average of 52 text messages per day.  Neil had no idea that text messaging would make such an impact on our daily lives.  

Neil Papworth, the 22-year-old software engineer who helped change the way the world sends and receives information, who is credited with sending the first commercial text message, did not own a cell phone.  He bought his first cell phone three or four years later.  Although it’s been said many times, many ways, I want to share the same message with you that Neil sent the director of Vodafone.  The first commercial text message in history consisted of just two words, “Merry Christmas.”

Sources:

1.     The Daily Nonpareil (Council Bluffs, Iowa), June 30, 2006, p.57. 

2.     Ivan Blagojevic, “23+ Texting Statistics on Modern Messaging Habits,” 99firms, August 11, 2025, https://99firms.com/research/texting-statistics/#gref.

3.     “The History of SMS – Neil Papworth w/ Bonin Bough | Messaging Summit 2019,” Bonin Bough, YouTube.com, July 9, 2019, https://youtu.be/odvj7CDGHys?si=cApKpHu6tnQyuTd9.

4.     “Meet the Legend Behind the first ‘Merry Christmas’ SMS,” MoreThan160, YouTube.com, December 4, 2023, https://youtu.be/1EQffh6-Y2Y?si=DpndYabbyoLNtHhl.


Remembering Warren D. Grafton, MD

A memorial service for Warren D. Grafton, MD will be held in the sanctuary at 10:00 a.m. Friday, December 26, 2025 at Noel Memorial United Methodist Church, 520 Herndon St., Shreveport, Louisiana. A visitation will follow the service. Officiating the service will be Reverend Dr. Max Zehner, Reverend Kaylan Walker and Reverend Mimi McDowell.

Warren was born on May 3, 1937 in Ruston, Louisiana to Agnes “Maw-Maw” Robison Grafton and George “Sport” Hoye Grafton and passed away Sunday, December 21, 2025 in Bossier City, Louisiana after a brief illness.

Warren’s three main passions in life included: surgical pathology (teaching, patient care and research), deep love for his family, and all things music – particularly Bluegrass guitar. He graduated from LSU New Orleans Medical School in 1962 and was a surgical pathologist and professor at LSU School of Medicine Shreveport, teaching over 2,000 doctors. He was President of the Shreveport Medical Society in 1999.

He also found great joy contributing to his Noel church community. He sang in the Chancel choir, played in the hand bell choir, and led and participated in the Upper Room Sunday School class.

He was preceded in death by his parents. Left to cherish his memory are his wife, Carol N. Grafton; brother, Dr. Hoye Grafton and wife, Jane; Carol’s children, Richard Paquette and Lorraine Paquette; granddaughter, Samantha; numerous nieces, nephews, grand-nieces and grand-nephews.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorials may be made to Noel Memorial United Methodist Church, 520 Herndon St., Shreveport, LA 71101 or a charity of the donor’s choice.

He wishes to be remembered by the quote, “Here lies a man who tried.”

 


Remembering Jan Fisher

Ms. Jan Fisher, age 80, passed away on Wednesday, December 17, 2025, at 5:00 p.m., following a lengthy illness.

Jan was born in Brooklyn, New York, and had been a resident of Shreveport, Louisiana for the past 70 years. She was a loving free spirit whose life was centered around helping others. Her career included nursing, baking, and most notably working as a muscular therapist.

Jan found joy in counseling and supporting her children and grandchildren. She also enjoyed gardening, listening to music from the 1960s, playing tennis, running, swimming, and spending time in the sunshine, until her health no longer permitted these activities. She remained passionate about discussing-and often debating-politics with her family until the end.

She was preceded in death by her daughter, Laurie Chandler May, and her parents, Earle J. Landry and Grace Bergeron Landry.

She is survived by her sons, Kevin Wayne Chandler and wife Sheila, and Christopher Neil Chandler, Sr.; grandchildren, Cameron May and wife Mallory, Christopher Neil Chandler, Jr., Joshua Harrison Chandler, and Isabella Grace Chandler; great-grandchildren, Lexee May and Hanna May; and her brothers, Buddy Landry and wife Ginny Lynn Landry, and Robert “Bob” Landry and wife Sandy Gillespie Landry.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be made to CADA – Caddo Council on Alcohol and Drug Addiction.

The family wishes to express their sincere appreciation to her neighbors and dear friends, Oscar, Daniele, and Ginger, as well as the Highland Hospice Care Team, for their compassion and care.


Notice of Death – December 22, 2025

Warren D. Grafton, MD
May 3, 1937 – December 21, 2025
Service: Friday, December 26, 2025, 10am at Noel Memorial United Methodist Church, Shreveport.

Gay Nell Bates
September 5, 1942 – December 18, 2025
Service: Saturday, January 3, 2026, 2pm at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Shreveport.

Dale Phillip Rimmer
April 17, 1956 – December 18, 2025
Service: Tuesday, December 23, 2025, 1:30pm at Christian Center, Shreveport.

Lavorsia “Lulu” Ford
December 14, 1962 – December 14, 2025
Service: Saturday, December 27, 2025, 11am at Israelite Baptist Church, Plain Dealing.

Michael Wayne Brunker, Sr.
April 27, 1949 – December 12, 2025
Service: Monday, December 29, 2025, 2pm at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Bossier City. 

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com.)


Shreveport FD conducts hazardous materials, firefighter safety training

The Shreveport Fire Department recently hosted a series of training sessions focused on firefighter safety and hazardous materials response, held across multiple dates to allow broad participation among department members.

The training featured the Responding to Battery and Energy Storage Emergencies course, taught by International Association of Fire Fighters instructors and made possible through the support of IAFF Local 514. The intensive eight-hour course provided firefighters and emergency responders with the knowledge and skills needed to safely manage incidents involving renewable energy and energy storage systems.

As technologies such as solar panels, electric vehicles, and battery energy storage systems become more common, the training addressed the unique hazards and challenges associated with these systems. Course content included system fundamentals, potential hazards, safety procedures, and emergency response strategies, combining classroom instruction with scenario-based, hands-on exercises.

Fire Chief Clarence Reese Jr. highlighted the importance of preparing firefighters for evolving emergency situations and ensuring they are equipped to respond safely and effectively to emerging hazards within the community.

The Shreveport Fire Department continues to emphasize ongoing training, safety, and preparedness as part of its commitment to protecting the community and its firefighters.


SU System Board of Supervisors extends Dr. Aubra J. Gantt’s contract

The Southern University System Board of Supervisors has unanimously voted to extend Dr. Aubra J. Gantt’s contract for an additional four years. This decision reflects the board’s confidence in her leadership and commitment to advancing the mission and vision of Southern University at Shreveport.

Chancellor Gantt has played a pivotal role in enhancing academic programs, increasing student enrollment, and fostering strong community partnerships during her tenure as SUSLA’s Chancellor. Her strategic initiatives have significantly contributed to the growth and development of the university.
The board looks forward to continued success and well wishes to Dr. Gantt, as she leads SUSLA into a promising future. Her focus on excellence and integrity in education stands as a testament to her dedication to the university and its students.
“Reimagine SUSLA “


Bossier Parish SRO named Gold Star award winner

The Bossier Parish Sheriff’s Office is proud to announce that Deputy Colton Hunter has been honored with Bossier Parish Schools “Gold Star Award” in recognition of his outstanding service as the School Resource Officer at Stockwell Place Elementary School in Bossier City.

The “Gold Star Award” is presented to individuals who demonstrate excellence and make meaningful contributions to the schools where they serve. Bossier Parish School Superintendent Jason Rowland surprised Deputy Hunter with the award and recognized his exceptional dedication and positive impact within the school community.

Bossier Parish Sheriff Julian Whittington said, “Deputy Hunter represents the very best of what a School Resource Officer should be. His dedication to the students and staff goes far beyond ensuring safety. He takes time to connect with students, serve as a mentor, and create an environment where children feel secure and supported. We are extremely proud of the work he does each day”.

The Bossier Parish Sheriff’s Office congratulates Deputy Colton Hunter on this well-deserved honor and thanks him for his continued commitment to the students, faculty, and staff of Stockwell Place Elementary School.


West rides local talent to I-20 All-Star Game win, ends East streak

GAME BREAKER: Huntington’s Nate Green earned the MVP honor at Sunday’s I-20 All-Star Game. (Photo courtesy Big Zigg Photography)

JOURNAL SPORTS

RUSTON — None of the West players in Sunday afternoon’s I-20 All-Star Game had anything to do with the East’s six-year winning streak in the annual postseason high school football contest between North Louisiana senior standouts.

But they wanted to stop it, and they did, thanks to a dominant defense, and plenty of contributions by local players.

The West won 26-17 at Ruston High School’s L.J. “Hoss” Garrett Stadium as Huntington’s Nate Green won MVP honors after catching a 70-yard touchdown pass from Parkway’s Kaleb Williams, and intercepting a pass on defense.

The East owed its first TD to an 89-yard kickoff return, and were limited to an offensive net of minus 2 yards until the last series of the first half.

Meanwhile, the West never trailed as Williams threw for 204 yards and two TDs, the other going 22 yards to Benton’s Case Austin.

Another Parkway star, Tony Gladney, caught seven passes for 113 yards. Airline’s D.J. Allen, who missed much of the season with a knee injury, capped his prep career with the West’s first score, a 1-yard run.

A total of 23 Shreveport-Bossier players were part of the winning team. Five Parkway seniors hit the field: Mark Copenhaver, Pat Gray, Chris Green, Gladney and Williams.

The West squad included four from Airline — Allen, Jeremiah Epps, Braylyn Jackson, and J.D. Yates – and four more Benton Tigers: Case Austin, Greg Chambers, Jonathan Hollis, and Beckett Moore.

DeVondre Johnson and DaKarrion Mitchell represented Booker T. Washington while  Andre Campbell and Cardarrian “Shawn” Devers wore their Captain Shreve helmets. Green was joined by his Raider teammate Caden Starks.

Byrd’s Ian Gray, Loyola’s Hayden Horton, and Jeremiah Johnson from Northwood were the only seniors from their teams taking part.

The West coaching staff was led by Airline’s Justin Scogin, with Vikings assistant Jacob James as offensive coordinator and Benton head coach Steven Dennis as defensive coordinator. Captain Shreve head coach Jeremy Wilburn was the offensive line coach, with Gators assistant Caleb Guidry coaching linebackers. Airline assistant Seth Stowell was the defensive line coach and Airline’s Schiarra Fields handled the defensive backs.

North DeSoto head coach Dennis Dunn was the quarterbacks coach, and his star QB, Luke Delafield, threw for 109 yards.

The game was administered by the Louisiana High School Coaches Association and the Louisiana Football Coaches Association. Plain Dealing head coach Jerry Byrd was the West team administrator.

2025 I-20 ALL-STAR GAME

At L.J. “Hoss” Garrett Stadium, Ruston

West 26, East 17

West – 7-9-7-3 – 26

East – 7-7-0-3 – 17

Scoring summary

West – DJ Allen 1 run (Eli Bray kick), 1Q, 10:28

East – Javion Henderson 1 run (Gavin Polk kick), 1Q, 8:50

 West – Case Austin 22 pass from Kaleb Williams (kick failed), 2Q, 11:49

West – Eli Bray 29 field goal, 2Q, 7:44

East – Austin Davenport 13 pass from Luke Vidrine (Polk kick), 2Q, 3:19

West – Nate Green 70 pass from Williams (Bray kick), 3Q, 3:16

East – Polk 24 field goal, 4Q, 9:35

West – Bray 33 field goal, 4Q, 3:00

RUSHING

WEST — DJ Allen 16-32, TD, Greg Chambers 14-30, Kaleb Williams 3-4, Luke Dalefield 2-minus-5. EAST — Kedrin McNeil 11-29, Cameron Williams 2-27, Willie Randolph 4-7, Luke Vidrine 5-7, Malique Credit 1-7, Javion Henderson 3-minus-5, TD, Eli Owens 2-2.

PASSING

WEST– Kaleb Williams 9-16-1, 204 yards, 2 TDs; Luke Delafield 7-13-0, 109 yards. EAST —  Luke Vidrine 7-14-2, 151 yards.

RECEIVING

WEST — Antonio Gladney 7-113, Cardarrian “Shawn” Devers 4-66, Caiden Starks 2-25, Nate Green 1-70, TD, Case Austin 1-22, TD, Greg Chambers 1-17. EAST — Desmon Jefferson 5-136, Austin Davenport 1-13, Cameron Williams 1-2.


Papa defied odds as he attained legendary status in local prep football

By JOHN JAMES MARSHALL, Journal Sports

(NOTE – As the year draws to a close, the SBJ staff is sharing a few of our favorite stories from 2025. Here’s one from July 18.)

The 1960s were something of a Golden Age for high school football in this area. The leather helmet era was gone. New schools, thanks in great part to Baby Boomers, were suddenly on the scene and making an impact.

Three different schools won state championships in a two-year span, including a couple in the same week at the same stadium. Six times, a local team was in a state championship game.

Even more memorable were the great players. Especially the quarterbacks, such as Woodlawn’s Terry Bradshaw and Joe Ferguson, who would have long careers in the NFL. Fair Park’s John Miller, who beat out Bradshaw for All-City in 1965, went on to start in the SEC at Vanderbilt.

Great teams, great games, great players.

But you could make the argument that there was one player who captured the attention of local football fans as much those players — or anyone else.

And he was all of 5-feet-6 and 160 pounds.

You won’t find his name on the list of the Top 25 rushers in Shreveport-Bossier history. In fact, he’s not even the all-time leader at his own school.

But that’s not the point.

You had to see Jesuit’s (now Loyola) Tony Papa to fully understand his impact.

He was often the smallest man of the field yet he managed to have the biggest impact. His combination of speed, shiftiness and elusiveness had people talking every Friday night and into Saturday morning.

Headlines such as “Tony Papa Romps Again” and “Pint-Sized Papa” filled the local newspapers on a regular basis.

In the 18 games he played during his junior and senior seasons, he rushed for at least 100 yards in 12 of them, including seven in a row. His 2,845 rushing yards are still No. 2 on the Flyer career list.

“I think about how fortunate I was to play at Jesuit at the time that I did,” Papa says. “Playing for Coach (C.O.) Brocato and Coach (Frank) Cicero, men who were very inspirational to my life. They knew the game and the people who surrounded me were very important to me. We were winners because of the people around me.”

It was a decorated career, highlighted by All-State berths in both football and baseball (he was the starting shortstop as a sophomore on the Flyers’ 1964 baseball state championship team).

How special was Papa? He was voted onto the All-State football team as a junior despite playing in only six games.

That special.

Why did he only play in six games as a junior? Because of what would turn out to be the defining moment of Papa’s football career – the night of Oct. 23, 1964, in which he never even had a single rushing yard.

Playing at Minden, Papa dropped back to receive a punt along with teammate Ron Stephens on the fourth play of the game. Papa caught the punt and then ran the “criss-cross” and handed it to Stephens.

“I just kind of relaxed after Ron took off and when I did, my left leg just planted and some guy just cut me down,” he remembers. “He hit me and (the knee) was just like an accordion. It went out then back in. It tore that ligament”

Papa led the city in rushing going into the game with 1,058 yards, but he was lost for the year. The Flyers, who were ranked No. 5 in the state going into the game at 5-0-1, tied that game with Minden and didn’t win another game the rest of the season (losing two more and tying another) to miss the playoffs.

Given that season-ending knee injuries were much harder to recover from 60 years ago than today, it would be easy to think that Papa was never the same after that.

Actually, he might have been even better.

He was able to recover in time to play baseball that spring (making the All-City team) and when it was time for the 1965 football season, he was determined to pick up where he left off.

“God was good to me and I got my knee back in shape,” Papa says. “We were loaded my senior year.”

After two shutout wins to start the season, the Flyers were No. 1 in the state poll and stayed there for the rest of the regular season. Papa was a big reason why, with rushing games of 183 vs. Bossier and 180 yards in a revenge game against Minden.

“I still can’t believe we didn’t win the state championship game that year,” he says.

After two home wins to open the playoffs, the Flyers took on Morgan City at State Fair Stadium in the semifinals in an attempt to reach the first state football championship game in school history. Trailing the entire game but with a pronounced yardage advantage, the Flyers scored late on a touchdown pass to Papa, who then kicked the extra point to tie the game at 19-all.

But there was no overtime for high school playoffs at that time, so the winner was determined by first downs. After Papa’s score, both teams had 13 first downs, so it was a matter of who could get the next first down.  On fourth-and-three, Morgan City used a short pass to move the chains and later picked up another to advance.

Papa finished that season with 1,274 rushing yards, averaging 8.3 per carry, and became the school’s first two-time All-State selection.

“I don’t think I was as good as a senior as my junior year,” Papa says. “There were some things I couldn’t do like I could before, like cut back. I didn’t plant with my left foot and try to go back across the field any more. I could do it with my right leg but not my left.”

He signed a SEC letter of intent with LSU and a Southwest Conference letter of intent with Texas A&M (as were the rules at the time) and decided to go with the Aggies for his National Letter of Intent after being impressed with Coach Gene Stallings, who he found much more personable that LSU’s Charlie McClendon.

But after a year at A&M – “things just didn’t work out,” he says – he had planned to transfer to Louisiana Tech. Papa had a conversation with Bradshaw (who had already been in Ruston for a year) and was able to get a meeting with new coach Maxie Lambright. But it was Tech assistant George Doherty who had been recruiting Papa since high school, so Papa called him to tell him he was ready to make the move to Tech.

“That’s when he told me he was going to Northwestern (State),” Papa says. “That’s how I ended up there.”

Papa played two seasons for the Demons (1968-69) and rushed for 689 yards on 150 carries.

After finishing at NSU, he came back to coach at Jesuit for three years (1971-73) before entering private business, mostly in insurance. Now 77 and still working, Papa says “I’m living the good life.”

He says he never watched the film of that fateful play in Minden until years later. But there are still other reminders.

“I still have that scar on my left knee,” he says.

Contact JJ at johnjamesmarshall@yahool.com


‘Football idiot’ cause of Cowboys’ continuing mediocrity; there’s one simple solution

A couple of written blasts from the recent past concerning the Dallas Cowboys:

  • The Cowboys are what the New Orleans Saints were for so long: one of the NFL’s laughingstock teams. (Wrote that in 2013.)
  • It has been a mediocre football organization on the field — making gazzilions of dollars — for, oh, 23 years. (Wrote that in 2019 … so change that to 30 years.)

And guess — just guess — what is the constant for those 30 years? Could it be the owner/general manager/chief spokesman? 

Of course, it could. He can change head coaches, offensive and defensive coordinators, he can bring in hundreds of players. But Jerry Jones remains what the Dallas Cowboys are all about.

Mediocrity.

It is about Mr. Jones’ enormous ego, nothing else really matters. It is all about Mr. Jones getting his say in front of any camera he can find.

He is a generous guy, and his family is generous in the D-FW  community. But — as sports columnist Randy Galloway used to write in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram — he is a football idiot.

There he was Sunday, after the latest 34-17 disaster — a shutout second half as the Los Angeles Chargers coasted to victory at his big stadium — telling the world that this season’s Cowboys underachieved.

Of course they did. Because Jerry was sure he had put together a Super Bowl team … again. 

No, he didn’t. This season’s defense — or should that say defenseless — is about as poor as any in the Cowboys’ 66 years. That’s the main reason a second consecutive losing season could happen.

(They might get to 8-8-1, with only the equally woeful Commanders and Giants remaining on the schedule. As if many people will watch those games.)  

You can be certain that Matt Eberflus won’t be back as defensive coordinator. Because it can’t be Jerry’s fault.  

And then Mr. Bluster talked about how good the future looks for this franchise, how good the offense has been at times this season and how there are building blocks on defense. 

Really?  Yes, the next Super Bowl victory is only 14 months away.

Because it’s only been 30 years since the last one.

Even the Saints — the Cowboys’ TV rivals/nemesis in North Louisiana — have one more Super Bowl championship (2009 season) in that time. 

Mind-blowing fact, disheartening for Cowboys fans: Since Dallas’ last Super Bowl appearance (1995 season), 21 NFL franchises have made it to The Big Game. 

Meanwhile, the Cowboys have not even reached the NFC Championship Game. There have been nine NFC East titles, so it’s not a total misfire, but always the eventual playoff failure.

So think about of some of the non-NFL championship franchises: Steelers before the 1970s, Cardinals after the late 1940s, Redskins under Dan Snyder’s ownership, Browns after 1964, Lions after 1957. Four teams have never played in the Super Bowl; nine have never won one.

The Cowboys — with their 30-year drought — are right there in the “least successful” category.

This is particularly hurtful for those of us who have rooted for this team for almost seven decades, who loved coach Tom Landry’s class and were fascinated by Jimmy Johnson’s hard-nosed approach. 

Plus, there’s the recent local connection: QB Dak Prescott (Haughton) and safety Donovan Wilson (Woodlawn).         

Let’s face it: America’s Team? Not sure they are even Dallas’ team these days. Or Fort Worth’s team. Or anyone’s team.

However, it does please the anti-Cowboys people. ESPN “mouth” Stephen A. Smith is loving it. And they’ll be fine as long as Jerry Jones is calling the shots.

Interesting to hear Mr. Jones on Sunday tell the media: “I’ll admit that the Cowboys management has played a role, a big role” in this season’s demise.

C’mon, Jerry. You don’t really mean that. 

Here’s some advice for Mr. Jones: Just shut up, and get out of the way. You want a Super Bowl championship? Bring in Nick Saban to run your franchise.

Contact Nico at nvanthyn@aol.com


Freshman Knox looks golden as LSU’s understudies shine in rout of UTA

IN THE ZONE: LSU freshman Grace Knox was dominant Sunday with a double-double.  (Photo courtesy LSU Athletics)

By RON HIGGINS, Journal Sports

BATON ROUGE – LSU head women’s basketball coach Kim Mulkey likes to say she doesn’t know if her freshman recruits can contribute in their first year until she can eyeball them daily in practice.

That said, here’s her assessment on freshman Grace Knox after she had career highs of 25 points and 12 rebounds in the Tigers’ 110-45 demolition of Texas-Arlington on Sunday afternoon.

“I don’t even know if this kid realizes how special she can become,” Mulkey said.

In a five-member freshman signing class that has combined to average more than 30 points and 15 rebounds for the unbeaten No. 5-ranked Tigers, the 6-2 Knox has consistently played fearless and physical. She’s averaging 11.5 points and 5.8 rebounds.

Even before the Las Vegas native arrived at LSU as the nation’s No. 6-ranked recruit in the Class of 2025, she established her two-prong playing philosophy.

Play hard.

“If we’re gonna play, why not be as competitive as you can and go as hard as you can?” she said several months ago. “Because if you’re not going hard, to me, it’s not fun. It’s not how the game’s supposed to be played.”

And also contribute in ways besides scoring.

“I was taught that other things matter, like rebounding, 50/50 balls, playing defense,” she said. “Those can really determine the game at the end of the day.”

Once on campus, Knox’s work in LSU’s weight room has made her stronger than she appears.

“She’s just an athlete,” Mulkey said. “Good lord, you can’t block her out. You can’t keep her from flying to the boards. She finishes in traffic.

“She works really hard defensively. You’re not going to bury Grace too many times in that paint. She’ll pull that chair out from under you and try to get a deflection.”

Knox was clearly the Tigers’ brightest star among their galaxy of dazzling athletes against UT-Arlington (6-6), which had won four of its last five games, including a 61-60 decision over SEC member Texas A&M.

The 13-0 Tigers, now 32-0 in December in Mulkey’s five seasons, used smothering defense and relentless rebounding to dismantle the visiting Mavericks quickly.

LSU scored 42 points off 34 UT-Arlington turnovers and had 33 second-chance points. UT-Arlington had almost three times as many turnovers as made field goals (12).

Also, the Tigers blasted the Mavericks 62-29 in rebounding. They had almost as many offensive rebounds (26) as UT-Arlington’s team total.

Knox and East Carolina transfer Amiya Joyner, who had 14 points and 11 rebounds, helped control the inside for the Tigers.

The perimeter was patrolled by Jada Richard and MiLaysha Fulwiley, LSU’s starting and backup point guards. They combined for 33 points, 12 rebounds, and nine steals.

South Carolina transfer Fulwiley had 23 points and five steals in 23:28 of playing time off the bench. Richard had 10 points and four steals in 23:21.

Mulkey experimented by playing Richard and Fulwiley together in the backcourt for several long stretches.

“Jada knows our system better, but anytime you put `Lay’ on the floor with anybody, she makes us faster,” Mulkey said of Fulwiley. “When she’s locked in, she gives tremendous ball pressure. When you have somebody that has those qualities, it kind of rubs off on everybody else.”

The Tigers missed four of their first five layups and led just 9-7 after the game’s opening 3½ minutes.

Then, to the delight of the crowd of 11,163, LSU went on a 31-6 run in the next 13 minutes for a 40-13 lead enroute to a 57-21 halftime cushion. The rally was fueled by defense as UT-Arlington missed 15 of 17 shots and had 16 turnovers that led to 20 LSU points.

Knox and Fulwiley scored 8 points each in the third quarter as the Tigers pushed their lead to 83-35 entering the final period.

A three-point play by freshman reserve center Meghan Yarnevich pushed LSU past the 100-point mark for the 11th time this season.

Freshman forward ZaKiyah Johnson, who has averaged 11.8 points and 5.8 rebounds in 11 starts this season, did not play Sunday. Mulkey said Johnson was being disciplined but didn’t disclose the reason.

“She knows why she’s not playing and it ain’t a big deal,” Mulkey said. “She’s a great kid. It’s just a one-game deal to get her attention.”

The Tigers scattered after the game for Christmas break. They’ll play their final non-conference game next Sunday vs. Alabama State at 3 p.m.

Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com


Remembering Gay Nell Bates

A memorial service for Gay Nell Bates, 83, will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, January 3, 2026 at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall St., Shreveport, Louisiana. A visitation will be held from 12:00 p.m. until service time. Officiating the service will be Reverend Andrew Brewster.

Gay Nell was born on September 5, 1942 to Harold and Gwendolyn Ussery in Shreveport, Louisiana and passed away peacefully in her sleep on Thursday, December 18, 2025 in Bossier City, Louisiana.

A graduate of Fair Park High School, she went to work for the VA before working at LSU Med as an administrative assistant, where she eventually retired. She enjoyed attending Mardi Gras in New Orleans and spending time with family and friends. She was a member of Beta Sigma Phi. To know her was to love her and she will truly be missed.

She is preceded in death by her parents and sisters, Jennifer Burrage and Carolyn Walker. Left to cherish her memory are her children, Steve Bates, Tracy Bates and Kirby Bates; sister, Barbara Payne of Camedenton, MO; brother, Harold “Mutt” Ussery and wife, Elaine of Marrero, LA; granddaughters, Makenzie Bates and Morgan Lassister and husband, Kenneth and great-granddaughter, Lilith Crain.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorials may be made to Alzheimer’s Association, 322 8th Avenue, 16th Floor, New York, NY 10001.


Remembering Pearl Mae Merritt

Pearl Mae Merritt was born on July 21, 1935, in Bienville and went to her heavenly home on December 19, 2025, in Blanchard.

She was preceded in death by her father, John Walter Plunkett, mother Allie Lee Plunkett, stepmother, Ardie Plunkett, Son, Gary Wayne Langley, son-in-law, Billy Kennedy, three sisters, and four brothers.

She is survived by her son, James Langley (Keith) of Shreveport, daughter, Linda Kennedy of Minden, eight grandchildren, twelve great-grandchildren, two great great-grandchildren, sister-in-law, Christia Walker numerous nieces and nephews, and her dog Sissy.

A visitation will be on Monday, Dec. 22, 2025, from 5-7 p.m. at Rose Neath Funeral Home in Minden. Graveside services will be Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025, at 10:30 a.m. at Pine Grove Cemetery in Minden.


Notice of Death – December 21, 2025

Gay Nell Bates
September 5, 1942 – December 18, 2025
Service: Saturday, January 3, 2026, 2pm at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Shreveport.

John Thomas Beckett, Jr.
November 10, 1959 – December 18, 2025
Service: Monday, December 22, 2025, 1pm at Rose-Neath Funeral Home Southside, Shreveport.

Major Robert “Bob” Jensen, USAF (Ret.)
May 18, 1951 – December 18, 2025
Service: Monday, December 22, 2025, 10am at Bellaire Baptist Church, Bossier City.

Charlotte Marie George
January 27, 1938 – December 17, 2025
Service: Monday, December 22, 2025, 2pm at North Shreve Baptist Church, Shreveport.

Michael Wayne Brunker, Sr.
April 27, 1949 – December 12, 2025
Service: Monday, December 29, 2025, 2pm at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, Bossier City. 

Jessie E. Green
January 21, 1945 – December 11, 2025
Service: Monday, December 22, 2025, 9:30am at Northwest Louisiana Veteran’s Cemetery, Keithville. 

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com.)


Caddo Grand Jury returns five indictments

The Caddo Parish Grand Jury returned five true bills against four Shreveport men in its session that ended December 18, 2025.

Two indictments concern Jon’Darius Tyruse Scott, 25, of Shreveport, who faces trial on a charge of second-degree murder and on a separate but related charge of illegal use of weapons or dangerous instrumentalities. His murder indictment, No. 411315, concerns the July 27, 2025 gunfire slaying of Hailey McDonald. The second indictment concerns the use of a weapon in that slaying. Ms. McDonald, 16, was inside a business in the 1700 block of North Market Street when she was struck by gunfire. She was rushed to Ochsner LSU Health hospital, where she died.

Two indictments for second-degree murder concern the August 3, 2025 death by gunfire of 26-year-old Sherpatrick Washington. Docket No. 411303 charges Lloyd Noland Graggs, 33, in connection with this crime, while Docket No. 411243 charges Dion Lakarl Randle, 54, for his part in this death. Ms. Washington was shot multiple times in the 1000 block of Dalzell Street.

The final indictment, No. 411463, charges Jacobi Chevez Hughes, 30, with second-degree murder in connection with the September 6, 2025 slaying of Kalisia Franklin. A second count with that true bill charges Hughes with battery on a dating partner-child endangerment in connection with that slaying, due to the presence of a six-month-old child at the scene. Ms. Franklin, 27, was killed during an apparent domestic violence incident with Mr. Hughes, her boyfriend.

All the men indicted are currently incarcerated at Caddo Correctional Center.