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Junior Lee Hedges (born November 2, 1929) is with 217 victories the winningest high school football coach in the history of Shreveport-Bossier City in northwestern Louisiana. In 2001, the Caddo Parish School Board renamed the football stadium at Captain Shreve High School in Hedges' honor. In 2010, he was elected to the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame in Natchitoches. ==Overview== Hedges is a native of rural Fifty-Six in Stone County near Mountain View in northern Arkansas. In the middle 1940s, he played football at Fair Park High School in Shreveport. He then played at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. He coached at the high school level from 1955 to 1984, with the exception of the 1966 season. His 1973 team at Captain Shreve was, as of the 2014 season, the last Shreveport-Bossier public school squad to win a state football championship. Hedges was head coach for three Shreveport public high school teams -- Byrd Yellow Jackets (1956–59), Woodlawn Knights (1960-65), and Captain Shreve Gators (1967–84). He guided teams from each school into state championship games. In 28 seasons, Hedges' teams posted a 216-92-9 (.698) record and had 24 winning seasons, reaching the playoffs 19 times and winning 11 district championships. Five of his teams reached the state semifinals. Three teams which did not make the playoffs had either 9-2 or 8-2 records. The most prominent of the athletes Hedges coached was quarterback Terry Bradshaw, the four-time Super Bowl champion with the Pittsburgh Steelers and Pro Football Hall of Fame selection. He was a first-year starter on Hedges' 1965 Woodlawn High School team that reached the state championship game.〔〔''Jerry Byrd's Football Country'' (1981), pp. 103-106, 154-157〕 Hedges' record might have been more impressive if not for two seasons in which he started programs at brand-new schools. His 1960 Woodlawn team went 0-9, not scoring for the first six games, but the 1961 team went 9-3 and won the District 1-AAA championship. His 1967 Captain Shreve team went 1-7; the 1968 team finished second in its district and made the state playoffs. Without those two first-year seasons, his teams averaged more than eight wins per year.〔 The Shreveport coach whose win total he surpassed was his own coach at Fair Park, F. H. Prendergast, who in 23 years as the Indians' head coach had a 154-78-13 (.655) record.〔 In addition to Bradshaw, other star athletes whom Hedges coached (with school and senior seasons listed) included punter-receiver Pat Studstill (Byrd, 1956), linebacker Bo Harris (Captain Shreve, 1970), running back Roland Harper (Shreve, 1970), receiver Carlos Pennywell (Shreve, 1973), defensive back Robert Moore (Shreve, 1981), running back Derrick Douglas (Shreve, 1985). All played in the National Football League.〔Compiled by Nico Van Thyn, former sports editor, ''The Shreveport Times'', and later with the ''Fort Worth Star-Telegram.''〕 Hedges' primary reputation was as a football coach, teacher of the passing game and developer of star quarterbacks, running backs and receivers, but he also was respected as a classroom teacher of mathematics and tennis coach/instructor. His Captain Shreve tennis teams won 15 state championships. He worked with young tennis players at various country clubs and organizations in Shreveport, such as Pierremont Oaks, until he was into his eighties.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lee Hedges」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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