The County Chronicle

The online newspaper of Loudoun County High School

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The Loudoun Raider thanks FCA for its support

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NOTABLE ATHLETES FROM THE PAST INDUCTED INTO HALL OF FAME

Cara Hodge | Editor in Chief


The athletic department recently inducted nine former County students into the Hall of Fame, ranging from past football quarterbacks and basketball stars to current New York lawyers and business owners. “It brought back fond and proud memories with my teammates and classmates who were avid Raiders’ fans,” said Jack Barrett, one of the inductees who was named “Most Athletic” by the Class of 1961 and went on to be a history teacher for 33 years.


“My athletic success enhanced my desire to experience similar satisfaction in other life adventures,” said Barrett, who was not only a teacher but the president of Quality Pool Company and Loudoun Golf and Country Club, as well as the author of five books on the history of Loudoun County. “Success in athletics leads to success in other elements,” Barrett said. It is clear that his drive for success is rooted in earlier accomplishments.


“It feels great to be on the wall with all the other accomplished athletes to come through LCHS,” said inductee Brian Fixx, Class of 1989, who was captain of the football, basketball, and baseball teams during high school. Fixx went on to play basketball at California University of Pennsylvania where his team advanced to the Final Four in the 1991-1992 season. “I tend to lean on my athletic experiences to help with my business approach as well as in helping others that I coach,” Fixx stated, giving merit to how he was able to apply athletics to his professional life as well as to influence the future generation of athletes.


“The Hall of Fame is a great testament to the rich history of our school and our athletic accomplishments,” said Athletic Director Kate Cassidy. The Hall of Fame was started six years ago. Every year from February to May a committee of eight staff members meet to look through nominations and choose who is most notable.


Applications are submitted by family or friends of past Loudoun County athletes who have gone on to accomplish many things in their athletic careers. The family or friends are required to provide documentation of past and present accomplishments and records of success.


“Having our athletes walk by the Hall of Fame pictures everyday is a great motivator for them to perform their best and strive to one day be on the wall,” said Cassidy. In addition to Brian Fixx and Jack Barrett, the Class of 2019 Hall of Fame Inductees include:


Bill Oblas, Administrator: Oblas was involved in Loudoun County Public Schools for over 40 years. He served as principal of Loudoun County from 2004-2014, where he helped form the infamous “Raider Riot.” He was actively involved in VHSL and served on the District Council for nine years.


Katie Baldwin, ‘02: Baldwin was a four-year letter winner for Raider basketball and broke multiple records during her high school career. She went on to play Division 1 basketball at St. Francis College and the University of North Carolina, where she would later coach as well as at Tusculum College. She now owns her own in-home personal training company.


Dennis Duff, ‘74: Duff earned seven varsity letters during his career at LCHS for his participation in football, basketball, and baseball. He was best known for his accomplishments in baseball where he led the team with a .491 batting average senior year. He went on to play baseball at VA Tech, where he would break the record for home runs. He is now a career firefighter in Fairfax County.


Joe Hembrook, ’98: Hembrook ran four years of varsity cross country and track and field for the Raiders. He broke multiple school records in track and field as well as a state title and earned All-State honors in both sports as a senior. He went on to run at Christopher Newport University where he is still in the top ten all time in the 800.


Nancy McBride, ‘76: McBride was an eight-time letter winner for the Raiders. She helped the basketball team win District Championships three years in a row and pitched for the softball team all four years. She won All-District honors three years for basketball and was named the Northwestern District Player of the Year as a senior. She played on the Loudoun Women’s Fastpitch Softball League before heading off to Radford University.


Morgan Petkovich, ‘08: Petkovich was a member of the first LCHS volleyball team to capture a state title in 2007. As a senior she was named First Team All-District, All-Region, and All-State, then earned a full-ride to play volleyball at Villanova University, where she gained Big East All-Conference honors and joined the 1,000-killclub. She graduated from Columbia Law School and now works as a sports and antitrust lawyer in New York.


James Wynn, ‘98: While in high school Wynn was captain for football, wrestling, and baseball. He received many honors in all three sports and placed 5th in the state for wrestling. He was elected Most Athletic by his senior class and was awarded the Donald F. Larson Scholarship for Citizenship, Honesty, Integrity, Loyalty, Sportsmanship, and Human Decency. He went on to attend law school at the University of Virginia.

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ATHLETE OF THE ISSUE: ALAYNA JOHNSON

Byron VanEpps | Raider Staff

Alayna Johnson digs the ball during the September 5 home game against Stone Bridge High School. Photo: Debbie Senchak


For our first athlete of the issue, the newspaper staff nominated Alayna Johnson, freshman varsity volleyball player. Johnson, who has been playing volleyball for three years, is a libero and has played in all games (19 so far, at the time of publication) this season.


Johnson’s Coach, John Senchak, cites her speed, quickness, and natural ability to read the game at high speeds as reasons for her being on the varsity team. “Once I and Coach Christina North saw all of these elements in Alayna, we then had to see how she would interact with the returning varsity players. Once they accepted her as a teammate, the decision to keep her on the varsity roster was easy,” Senchak said, noting that her defensive instincts are better than any he has seen in his eight-year coaching career, with her (at the time of writing) 43 defensive digs.


Johnson and the rest of the team practice two and a half hours every day and three hours every Saturday morning until the season ends in November, but the schedule does not seem to be a burden. “The team is very caring and loving and they have a lot of support towards every player on the team,” Johnson said.


Johnson boasts a 91.7 percent serve rating along with other impressive stats, like a tremendous 18 sets played within her first three months of playing, as well as 4 aces.


“Alayna is a great defender, she’s always ready to jump in and defend,” said sophomore setter and outside hitter Sarah Jordan. “I love playing with her.”

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SWIFTEST RUNNERS REVEAL THE VALUE OF CROSS COUNTRY

Cara Hodge | Editor in Chief

Senior Suzie Dilorenzo runs at the meet at Great Meadows in September. Dilorenzo took 14th place overall at the Loudoun County Championships with a time of 19:39.50. Photo: Raider Sports

What makes running for miles in the sweltering heat on uneven terrain worth doing? It’s a question many have pondered as they’ve watched struggling runners crawl past the finish line. For two of Loudoun County’s fastest cross country runners, senior Suzie Dilorenzo and junior Sean Rombach, the answer is simple.


“Going into freshman year one of my friends was saying that her parents were making her do it,” said Dilorenzo. She had no previous running experience and joined solely because she thought it would be fun to be a part of a team.


“It’s rewarding, because you work really hard and get the results you want. It’s all about being stronger than you think you are.” Dilorenzo has done just that, participating in cross country all four years of high school and is now one of the fastest runners on the team.


For Dilorenzo, her most memorable race “would have to be Third Battle last year  because I broke 20 minutes, and the rest of my team got lifetime and season PRs.” She ran this fast pace into this year as she got an impressive 5k time of 19:39.50 and took 14th place at the Loudoun County Championships.


“I started running in fourth grade and carried it through high school and I’ve kind of reignited my passion,” said Rombach, who has participated in cross country all three years of high school. “I really like the team effort. You’re all working to move up,” Rombach stated. He gives a lot of credit to the team aspect of cross country for influencing him to run every year.


Rombach’s most memorable race was also at the Third Battle Invitational where his strategy was “to stay in a fast pack and let them carry me through 1.5 miles faster than I had ever gone.” He said it was also his most difficult race and that he pushed his “body to absolute exhaustion.” In the end he collapsed across the finish line with a time of 17:00.6, a significant personal record for his sophomore cross country season.


“Earning a lifetime best and All-County” this year he placed 15th at the LCPS Championships with a time of 16:56.9. “We have high hopes and Coach Campbell knows he needs to push us,” Rombach said. He is confident in himself and his team’s ability to reach their goal of making it to states this year.


“We’re all working for each other,” Rombach said. “Each position matters for team scoring and this season we’ve lit a fire.” Most people think of cross country as an individual sport but each person’s time has an affect on their team’s overall time. “I’ve met a lot of great people through it, a lot of lifetime friends, it’s a good atmosphere,” said Dilorenzo. For both of these star runners it’s the people and the coaches that motivate them to work as hard as they do.


“I honestly think it was better for me. I met more people so I was more comfortable in high school,” said Dilorenzo. Cross country has given both these runners the ability to form strong bonds and a real connection to the sport. “I’m considering running in college now because I want to work with a team for longer,” said Rombach. There is no reluctance to run among these two, both are possibly looking to run in college, always wanting to have, as Dilorenzo said, “a family thing” to be apart of.

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Students run year round with indoor track

Anna Claire Mitchum | Raider Staff

 

Timmy Landicho and Chase Breda sprint to finish the 1000 meter race at Stonebridge High School on December 5. LCHS’s newest sport helps athletes take advantage of the extra season to improve their times. Photo Courtesy of Elena Dinman

As the sun sets in the cold, students run, seeing their breath hanging in the air like ghosts. They wiggle their fingers to keep them awake and struggle to see in the twilight. This is what student athletes who participate in the new sport, indoor track, go through every practice. Outdoor track and field coach Courtney Campbell started the team last year, and it quickly gained popularity.

“[The athletes] were asking me about wanting to compete indoor and I felt obligated to them. I also felt bad that other schools in the County had teams and we did not,” Campbell said.

Two athletes, seniors Jessie Eck and Smith Drupa, who participated in indoor track both this year and last year, said they run indoor to stay in shape during the winter. “I wanted to stay in shape and improve my times for outdoor track,” Eck said.

“The number of people involved has more than doubled, I believe, so the team has definitely grown,” Drupa said.

“Last year we had about 15 runners and this year we have 48,” Campbell said. In past years the cross-country team has had approximately 120 runners.

“The average practice is less than outdoor track because we don’t have as much sunlight,” Eck said. The team also goes to the weight room after runs. During evenings when the weather is too cold, the team practices inside the school. “We currently only practice as a team three days a week and then usually have a meet on Saturday. We practice from about four till six and try to get outside every day but it’s cold,” Campbell said.

The meets are sometimes outdoors, while others are at the indoor track at Liberty University in Lynchburg. So far this season, several athletes have broken their own personal records, as well as school and state records.

Although track introduces Campbell to different types of athletes, cross country is his favorite because he likes to run distance. Eck says outdoor track is her favorite because she gets to watch interesting events. Drupa says although he enjoys running distance, indoor track is his favorite due to the intimate group setting.

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Athlete of the issue: Megan Bukala

Robert Wertz | Editor


At season’s close, another Varsity Volleyball alumni has committed to a D1 university. This year, Senior Megan Bukala committed to Loyola University in Baltimore, Maryland.

Bukala committed in February of 2018 and plans to study biology starting in the 2019 school year. “I liked the school because I fell in love with the campus, the coaches and players are so welcoming and the standard of academics is at a very high level,” Bukala said.

Bukala was a four-year member of the Raider Volleyball team, a three-year Varsity member, and has also helped the team win three state titles in a row.

Bukala started playing volleyball eight years ago, when she was in fourth grade, because both her parents and brother had played before. She became interested through her family telling her about the game and watching her brother’s games.

Bukala started with her team in elementary and middle school. During freshman year, she made it on the JV team, and later moved up to Varsity as an outside hitter her sophomore year. “My favorite part of volleyball is the high intensity matches and getting to hit people in the face,” Bukala said.

This year, Bukala was named Virginia Volleyball State Player of the Year, which she says is “my biggest accomplishment as an athlete.” Bukala had also made the VHSL 4A 1st Team All-State Roster for two years in a row.

Ashley Rubino, also a member of the Varsity volleyball team, said Bukala “is one of the hardest working teammates I’ve ever had. She never stops pushing herself to become a better player, and her drive is contagious.”

Bukala continues to excel in her sport, as she looks forward to her next four years of playing college volleyball.

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The Loudoun Raider thanks Melt Gourmet Cheeseburgers

Thank you for your support of our publication. 

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The Loudoun Raider thanks Vicky Noufal

Thank you for your support of our publication. 

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Athletic director Sheppard retires after transforming community

Brooke Jones | Raider Staff

 

Bruce Sheppard reminisces with Michelle Luttrell at a retirement luncheon held during a teacher workday. Members of the faculty stopped by to congratulate Sheppard. Photo by Valerie Egger.

Athletic director Bruce Sheppard retired in January, after working with the Raiders for three years. He worked in Virginia for 40 years and coached for 30 years in Loudoun County before moving into athletic administration.

Sheppard redesigned and incorporated our new Raider mascot and implemented it into facility design and spirit wear, tripled athletic income in the last two years, and repainted all outdoor complexes and storage outbuildings to enhance the look of our school among other things, according to principal Michelle Luttrell.

He launched two new varsity sports programs, painted all the sound panels to match our school colors, and improved the main gyms, tennis courts, wrestling and cheer room, baseball stadium, and the softball stadium. A physical education teacher and coach of football, basketball, and track, Sheppard eventually became the head football and track coach. He first taught at Hampton City schools and coached there for two years before teaching in Frederick County for 19 years. He retired during his nineteenth year at LCPS.

Sheppard’s passion for sports began when he participated in high school athletics and club sports in college.

“My high school football coach had a big impact on me, by teaching me a lot about coaching,” he said.

Sheppard taught at James Wood and Loudoun Valley and then became the assistant athletic director at Woodgrove before becoming the athletic director of Loudoun County for the last three years.

“I chose to work at Loudoun County because I thought it was a great school and I knew Dr. Luttrell was doing great things,” Sheppard said, knowing it would be the last full time job he’d ever have.

Sheppard’s many interesting experiences from coaching span all levels. “The most interesting thing that’s happened is just dealing with kids. It never gets boring, it keeps you young, and it’s invigorating,” Sheppard said.

Even after having been in administration, he says he still misses coaching. “All of my best memories were of working with kids outside of the classroom, building teams, building camaraderie; watching them grow and develop and improve is very gratifying,” Sheppard said.

After retirement, Sheppard plans to relax, though coaching is a possibility as well. “My wife and I are avid skiers and hikers, and I fly fish, so I’m planning to get back into my old hobbies,” Sheppard said.

At Loudoun Valley, Sheppard started the outdoor education club, which consisted of camping, fishing, outdoor skills, and outdoor cooking. “We learned map and compass skills, and would go on four field trips every semester,” Sheppard said. After he left that job for athletic administration, his son, a teacher, took over the program.

Among the students Sheppard inspired is LCHS’s own Dr. Michelle Lutrell. Luttrell attended James Wood High School, where Sheppard was a teacher. “She was an outstanding athlete and student,” Sheppard said. “She played volleyball, basketball, and softball and was good at all of them.” Luttrell was also in the outdoor education program. “I remember back when she hiked Old Rag with us,” Sheppard said.

“Mr. Sheppard inspires those around him to become better,” Luttrell said. “I am fortunate to have known him as a student, and now as a colleague and good friend. I will miss him and wish him well in his retirement.”

Assistant Athletic director Kate Cassidy took over after Sheppard’s retirement. She has worked with Sheppard for three years, but she coached against him when they were both track coaches. “He has gone above and beyond with doing facility improvements, like the gym, painting the entryway, new bushes outside, new windscreens,” Cassidy said.

“If I had three words to describe him I would say he is charismatic, well-spoken, and a hard worker,” Cassidy said. According to Cassidy, Sheppard is a workhorse, putting in the time everyday to go above and beyond. “I think he could have a job in radio if he gets bored in retirement because he is good with people and well spoken,” Cassidy said.

His passion for education continues in his family. “Two of my children have followed me into education and coaching,” he said. “I’m satisfied that they felt good about this profession, that they wanted to do it.”

“Working at Loudoun County has been a great place to be,” Sheppard said.

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Raider Alumni inducted into Hall of Fame

Anna Claire Mitchum | Raider Staff

 

Hall of Fame inductees. Courtesy of John Klimavicz

Every year, the athletic department inducts new members into the Hall of Fame. This year’s induction, after being rescheduled due to Hurricane Florence, was held on January 4.
According to athletic director Kate Cassidy, the recipients are nominated by members of the Raider community. These individuals have demonstrated greatness in their sport, whether by participating in it or coaching. This is the Hall of Fame class of 2018:

Maurie Alcala, Basketball, Track, Class of 1992: Alcala was crowned the Virginia AA State Champion in 1992 in track for shot put and discus.

Scott Anderson, Football, Basketball, Baseball, Class of 1986: Anderson set several records in baseball and played for the Spiders on a conference championship team in 1987.

Gary Cochran, Baseball, Basketball, Golf, Class of 1961: Cochran was the captain of the first Raider golf team and later played in the Virginia State Amateur golf competition.

Rick Furr, Football, Basketball, Baseball, Class of 1976: Rick Furr set records in football, and later, was the first Raider to play in the Atlantic coast conference.

Dhata Harris, Football, Wrestling, Track, Class of 1994: Harris finished third in wrestling in the state on the Group AA heavyweight division, and was in the state championship for the discus.

Stevie Jackson, Football, Basketball, Track, Class of 1997: Jackson led the Raiders to a 24-7 overall as a varsity starter, with 10-0 his senior season.

Mark Kirk, Baseball, Football, Wrestling, Class of 1977: Kirk was named All-District in football and baseball a combined five times. He was also in the regional tournament in wrestling for three times.

Whitney Knudsen, Volleyball, Basketball, Softball, Class of 2004: Knudsen was All-District and All-Region for basketball, and first team All-District, Region and State for volleyball and softball.

“Bootsie” Leonard, Football, Baseball, Basketball, Class of 1956: Lawrence “Bootsie” Leonard led both football and baseball to undefeated seasons, he later coached the first state championship team in Loudoun County Public Schools’ history.

Jimmy Parker, Baseball, Basketball and Softball Coach, 1973 -1999: Parker coached the softball team to 10 championships, including the 1993 Northwestern District and Region II titles.

Amy Sarver, Basketball, Volleyball, Tennis, Class of 2006: Sarver was a member of the region champion and state runner-up team for tennis. She also played volleyball for the Loudoun’s region championship team in 2005.

Although it is important to look back and appreciate the hard work former athletes have put in to making our current athletics program great, we can also look forward to the people who at this moment are making history. The open nominiation process means that when students have grown up, they can reflect on the people who inspired them to do their best, Cassidy said.

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