Medal of Honor Bowl - South Carolina's Premier College Football Bowl Game
Charleston, South Carolina
January, 2018
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December 12, 2014
Ernie Mills
Former Steelers, Panthers & Cowboys Wide Receiver Ernie Mills to Serve as Assistant Coach for the Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team

CHARLESTON, SC – Chan Gailey, head coach of the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team, has announced that former NFL standout Ernie Mills will assist him as wide receivers coach.

The Medal of Honor Bowl, which will be televised live nationally by the NBC Sports Network, is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation, disabled veterans and wounded warriors.

Mills accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida and graduated in 1990, where he was a four-year letterman for coaches Galen Hall and coach Steve Spurrier from 1987-90. As a senior, Mills was a first-team All-Southeastern Conference selection as a wide receiver, and a team captain of the Gators squad that finished with a 9–2 overall record and a best-in-the-SEC mark of 6–1. He tied for team-high honors with 770 yards receiving, and led the squad with 10 touchdowns in 1990.

The Pittsburgh Steelers selected Mills in the third round (73rd pick overall) of the 1991 NFL Draft and Mills played for the Pittsburgh Steelers for six seasons (1991-96). He had his best NFL season in 1995, when he caught 39 passes for 679 yards and eight touchdowns, helping the Steelers gain a berth in Super Bowl XXX (Dallas Cowboys won, 27-17). Mills later played for the Carolina Panthers in 1997, and the Dallas Cowboys in 1998 and 1999. He finished his nine-year professional career with 196 receptions for 2,934 yards and 20 touchdowns.

As a member of the Cowboys in 1999, Mills was recognized with the Ed Block Courage Award, which honors NFL players who exemplify commitments to the principles of sportsmanship and courage. This award is unique in that the recipients are selected solely by a vote of their teammates. Every fall all 32 teams conduct a vote which results in each team selecting their Ed Block Courage Award recipient for the year.

Mills served as the wide receivers coach for the Jacksonville University football team from 2007-12. He is currently the wide receivers coach at Florida A&M, where he has been since 2013.

Tickets, which range from $15-$40, may be secured at the Medal of Honor Bowl Game’s dedicated website www. MOHbowl.com. They are also be available at The Citadel Athletic Ticket Office at 843/953-DOGS (3647).

For more information, please refer to Twitter: @MOHbowl and Facebook.com/MOHbowl

Ernie Mills

Ernie Mills
1991- 96 Pittsburgh Steelers
1997 Carolina Panthers
1998-99 Dallas Cowboys

Coaches, Press Release MOH Bowl, National Team Coaches No Comments
December 10, 2014
Elvin Bethea
NFL Hall of Famer Elvin Bethea to Coach in Medal of Honor Bowl Game

CHARLESTON, SC – Willie Jeffries, head coach of the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl’s American Team, has announced that NFL Hall of Famer Elvin Bethea will assist him as the linebackers coach.

Set for 2:30 pm on Saturday, January 10, 2015 at The Citadel’s Johnson Hagood Stadium, the Medal of Honor Bowl is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game, which will be televised live on the NBC Sports Network, honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation, disabled veterans and wounded warriors.

During his Hall of Fame career where he played for the Houston Oilers from 1968-83, Bethea played in 210 games, including a stretch of 135 consecutive. He played defensive end and guard in the 1968 season and didn’t miss a game until breaking his arm in a contest against the Oakland Raiders in 1977. He led the team in sacks six times, finishing his career with 105 unofficial sacks.

His career high was in 1973 with 16 sacks, which still ranks as the best in Oilers/Tennessee Titans history, a feat made more remarkable by the Oilers’ 1-13 record. He also had 14½ sacks in 1969. Other notable seasons in terms of sacks were: 1970 and 1971 with 10½ sacks in each, 1975 with 10 and 1978 with eight. He played in the AFC Championship game in 1978 and 1979.

In 1975 Bethea, a native of Trenton, NJ, was named All-Pro by College and Pro Football Newsweekly, the only time Bethea was a first-team All-Pro in his 16-year career. He was second-team All-Pro in 1969, 1973, 1978 and 1979 to go with his eight Pro Bowl selections.

A former standout at North Carolina A&T University where he was coached by then-assistant Willie Jeffries, Bethea was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2003, and was officially inducted during the Enshrinement Ceremony on August 3, 2003. In 2005 Bethea was inducted to the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame. The Houston Oilers also retired his No. 65 jersey.

Tickets for the Medal of Honor Bowl can be purchased now online at MOHBowl.com, or The Citadel ticket office in McAlister Field House (843/953-DOGS {3647}).

For news surrounding the game, follow @MOHbowl on Twitter and on Facebook at Facebook.com/MOHbowl

Elvin Bethea
Elvin Bethea

1968-83 Houston Oilers

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December 8, 2014
Rusty to coach American Team’s offensive line while son Paul guides running backs
Father-Son Tandem of Rusty & Paul Hamilton to Serve as Assistant Coaches for the Medal of Honor Bowl’s American Team

CHARLESTON, SC – Willie Jeffries, head coach of the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl’s American Team, has announced that Rusty and Paul Hamilton will assist him on the offensive side.

Specifically, Rusty Hamilton will guide the offensive line while his son, Paul, currently the head coach at Brevard College (NC), will coach the running backs.

Jeffries had announced previously that Cam Turner of Florida International University would serve as the offensive coordinator and coach the quarterbacks while defensively, former VMI coach Cal McCombs will be the defensive coordinator.

Set for 2:30 pm on Saturday, January 10, 2015 at The Citadel’s Johnson Hagood Stadium, the Medal of Honor Bowl is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation, disabled veterans and wounded warriors.

Paul Hamilton recently completed his 33rd year coaching collegiate football at both the Division I and Division II levels, with 17 years of experience as a head coach. He recently finished his eighth year as the head coach at Brevard.

He began his collegiate football coaching career at The Citadel in 1982 where he coached the receivers. He then moved to East Tennessee State where he guided the receivers in 1983 before coaching the quarterbacks in 1984-85, in addition to calling the offensive plays in 1986-1987. Hamilton became offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for Mike Ayers at Wofford in 1988-89.

From 1990-96, Hamilton moved to the United States Air Force Academy as quarterbacks coach under Fisher DeBerry. During his last three seasons with the Falcons, he also called the offensive plays.

Hamilton moved on to become the head football coach at ETSU in 1997. During his seven years there, he became third on the all-time win list, along with the most Southern Conference wins of any head football coach in Buccaneer history. He then moved on to become the head coach at Elon in 2004-05. In his first season as head coach he guided the Phoenix to two Southern Conference victories, a first in the school’s young history as a conference member.

After returning to the Air Force Academy in 2006, Hamilton became the head football coach at Brevard College in 2007. He has guided the Tornados from a start-up football program to Division II status, along with becoming members of the South Atlantic Conference. He led the program in 2009 to a 7-4 record in only the third year of playing a full-time schedule.

Hamilton graduated in 1981 from Appalachian State University where he lettered for three years as a quarterback under DeBerry. The Charleston native was an All-State quarterback at Fort Johnson High and earned his master’s degree in secondary education from The Citadel in 1986.

Rusty Hamilton, a native Charlestonian, served as an assistant coach for last year’s inaugural Medal of Honor Bowl and returns this year.

A longtime assistant, Hamilton has coached with the likes of former Citadel coaches Red Parker, Bobby Ross, Frank Beamer, Ralph Friedgen, Cal McCombs, Jimmye Laycock, Furman coach Bob King and the legendary John McKissick.

A standout quarterback at Charleston High School, Hamilton graduated from Florida State in 1963. He began his coaching career at Florida High School – which was on the Florida State campus – before returning home and coaching football, wrestling and track at St. Andrews High for five seasons. He became the Rocks’ defensive coordinator and helped lead the team to the 1967 State Championship game. During his time at St. Andrews, he was one of the founders of high school wrestling in South Carolina. He won two state wrestling championships and was twice named South Carolina Wrestling Coach of the Year. He was later inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame.

After spending the 1969 season as a graduate assistant football coach under Bob King at Furman, he began an eight-year run at The Citadel. While at The Citadel, Hamilton was the offensive line coach and also worked with the receivers.

From 1978-92, Rusty Hamilton left the coaching ranks to work in the family business but returned to the field in 1993-94 where he coached at Cainhoy High with Larry Sechrist. He joined John McKissick’s staff at Summerville High in 1994. In 1997, the Green Wave won the state title with Hamilton guiding the offensive line.

Tickets for the Medal of Honor Bowl can be purchased now online at MOHBowl.com, or in person at The Citadel ticket office in McAlister Field House beginning Dec. 9.

For news surrounding the game, follow @MOHbowl on Twitter and on Facebook at Facebook.com/MOHbowl

Paul Hamilton
Paul Hamilton

1982 The Citadel (Receivers)
1983 East Tennessee State (Receivers)
1984-87 East Tennessee State (Quarterbacks)
1988-89 Wofford (Quarterbacks- Offensive Coordinator)
1990-96 Air Force (Quarterbacks)
1997-03 East Tennessee State (Head Coach)
2004-05 Elon (Head Coach)
2006 Air Force (Fullbacks)
2007-present Brevard (Head Coach)

Rusty Hamilton
Rusty Hamilton

1962-63 Florida High School
1964-68 St. Andrews High (Defensive Coordinator)
1969 Furman University (Wide Receivers; Freshman Coach)
1970-77 The Citadel (Offensive Line for 7 years; Receivers for 1 year)
1978-92 Participated in family business
1993-94 Cainhoy High (Defensive Coordinator)
1994-04 Summerville High (Offensive Line for 7 years; Receivers for 2 years)

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December 8, 2014
The crowd stands as the South Carolina State University Marching 101 band performs during the 2014 Medal of Honor Bowl at Johnson Hagood Stadium in January. Paul Zoeller/Staff
Medal of Honor Bowl keeping player list top secret – for now

Courtesy of The Post and Courier

Austin Atkinson could tell you which high-profile college football players the Medal of Honor Bowl has lined up to play in Charleston’s second annual all-star game.

But then he’d have to ask you politely not to tell anyone else. At least, not yet.

Recruiting players for postseason all-star games is not quite as intense as the dog-eat-dog world of college football recruiting. But the battle for NFL Draft-eligible players among all-star games is competitive in its own way, which is one reason the Medal of Honor Bowl is keeping a close hold on its lists of player commitments.

“It can be tough out there,” said Atkinson, the Medal of Honor Bowls’ deputy director of player personnel. “Last year, some of our names got out there early and we lost some players who ended up getting drafted to other games. We don’t want that to happen again.”

Atkinson said the Medal of Honor Bowl has about 50 players committed for its second game, set for Jan. 10 at Johnson Hagood Stadium. But he doesn’t plan to begin rolling out the names until just before Christmas. All told, the Medal of Honor Bowl will have about 104 players divided between two teams, with most of the players coming from schools within a 500-mile radius of Charleston.

Atkinson and veteran coach Cal McCombs, the game’s director of player personnel and a former NFL scout himself, are competing mostly with the East-West Shrine (Jan. 17, St. Petersburg, Fla.) and the NFLPA Collegiate Bowl (Jan. 17, Carson, Calif.) for players. The Reese’s Senior Bowl (Jan. 24, Mobile, Ala.) is generally considered the top all-star game, and already has released the names of 63 committed players, including Clemson Tigers Corey Crawford, Stephone Anthony and Grady Jarrett.

Last year, the Medal of Honor Bowl had commitments from wide receivers Matt Hazel of Coastal Carolina, Ryan Clark of Tulane, Michael Campanaro of Wake Forest and Corey Washington of North Charleston and Newberry College. All ended up being drafted, and all ended up playing in other all-star games.

Still, last year’s Medal of Honor Bowl featured three players who were drafted, 73 who went to NFL camps and 28 who were on NFL rosters at the start of the season.

“I wouldn’t say we go after players who have committed to other games,” said Atkinson, who was not affiliated with the Medal of Honor Bowl last year. “But we are inviting players who also have received invitations to other games. We hope they see the light, and that coming to Charleston for a week is better than going to Tampa or to Carson, Calif.”

Toward that end, the Medal of Honor Bowls’ TV deal with NBC Sports Network this year has made a big difference on the recruiting trail, Atkinson said. Last year’s game was not televised, putting the Medal of Honor Bowl at a disadvantage in luring players.

“It’s been a great recruiting tool for us,” Atkinson said. “The players have been able to tell their family, friends and teammates that they will be able to watch them play. It puts us on an even footing with the East-West and NFLPA games.”

Uniquely among all-star games, McCombs and Atkinson have been on the road every weekend since the season started, casting a wide net that covers 21 football conferences around the nation, from the SEC, ACC and Big 12 to FCS and Division II leagues.

“Our approach was to find a 400 to 550-mile radius around Charleston and not miss any of those guys,” Atkinson said. “We’ve visited dozens of programs up and down the east coast, developing relationships with coaches and with NFL scouts. Now, those relationships are paying off. We’ve had SEC head coaches call us to recommend players, and that says a lot about how far we’ve come in stature.”

Atkinson attended the ACC championship game between Georgia Tech and Florida State on Saturday, hand-delivering invitations to players from those schools. He’s invited a “handful of players” from both Clemson and South Carolina, and at least one player from The Citadel is guaranteed a spot in the game.

“Every kid we invite is vetted through NFL scouts and college coaches,” he said. “No player gets an invitation without feedback from scouts and coaches.”

Atkinson also said he expects about 150 scouts and other NFL representatives to attend the week of practices leading up to the game, up from about 108 last year.

Player Commitment, Press Release MOH Bowl, Player List, Top Secret No Comments
December 5, 2014
True Blue Gala Invitation
2015 True Blue Gala

You are cordially invited to attend the second Annual True Blue Gala Benefiting The National Medal of Honor Museum Foundation.

Friday, January 9th, 2015
6 o’clock cocktails followed by 7′oclock dinner program
The Grove at Patriots Point
Charleston, South Carolina

$200 per person
$2000 table for ten

Keynote address by Frank Abagnale (subject of the movie and Broadway musical “Catch Me If You Can”)

Tickets available at mohbowl.com
Please RSVP no later than December 30th to Jimmy Bagwell – jbagwell@rmhinc.com
If paying by check, remit to: 207 Williams Street, Mount Pleasant, SC 29464

Sponsored by:
Bennett Hospitality
Metlife
Affluence Financial Group, LLC

True Blue Gala Invitation

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December 4, 2014
MOH Bowl National Team Assistant Coaches
Former Redskins’ “Hog” Joe Jacoby, Bills’ Lineman Joe DeLamielleure to Serve as Assistant Coaches for the Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team

CHARLESTON, SC – Chan Gailey, head coach of the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team, has announced that two former NFL offensive linemen will assist him.

Former Washington Redskins’ offensive tackle Joe Jacoby and former Buffalo Bills lineman Joe DeLamielleure, a member of the NFL Hall of Fame, have been added to Gailey coaching staff. Jacoby will coach the offensive line’s guards and centers, while DeLamielleure will lead the tackles and tight ends.

Gailey announced previously that he would serve as offensive coordinator and coach the quarterbacks.

The Medal of Honor Bowl, which will be televised live nationally by the NBC Sports Network, is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation, disabled veterans and wounded warriors.

Jacoby starred as a tackle for his hometown college, the Louisville Cardinals, from 1978-80, and signed a free agent contract with the Redskins in 1981. After working his way through rookie camp, he began a tremendous career that included four Super Bowl appearances, of which Washington won three (XVII in 1983, XXII in 1988, and XXVI in 1992), plus four consecutive Pro Bowl selections from 1983–86.

Along with Jeff Bostic, Mark May, George Starke and Russ Grimm, Jacoby was a founding member of the Redskins’ renowned “Hogs” offensive line of the 1980s and early 1990s, which was considered one of the best front fives of NFL history. The “Hogs” were a mainstay of the Redskins’ glory years during the first Joe Gibbs era.

One year after the Redskins’ third Super Bowl victory in 1992, Jacoby retired. He became an assistant coach at Shenandoah University (VA) and in 2014 was hired as the offensive line coach for Concordia University (IL).

DeLamielleure, a Charlotte, NC resident who was enshrined in the NFL Hall of Fame in 2003, was an All-American and All-Big 10 guard at Michigan State who played for the Bills from 1973-79 and 1985, and also for the Cleveland Browns from 1980-84.

In the 1970s, DeLamielleure and his Bills’ offensive line mates were dubbed the “Electric Company,” because they “turned the Juice loose.” The “Juice,” of course, was Hall of Fame running back O.J. Simpson.

“Joe D” as he was known, was selected in the first round of the 1973 NFL Draft by the Buffalo Bills and captured All-Rookie honors. It was the beginning of a string of career honors that few NFL guards experienced. He went on to become the most honored lineman of the Bills respected front wall. Eight times during his career he was selected first- or second-team All-Pro; seven times he was named first- or second-team All-AFC, and six times he was named to the Pro Bowl. Since 1970, only two Hall of Fame guards, John Hannah with 10 and Gene Upshaw with seven, were named All-Pro more often.

In 1975, the NFL Players Association named him Offensive Lineman of the Year. Extremely durable and dependable, DeLamielleure played in 185 consecutive games during his 13 playing seasons with the Bills and the Cleveland Browns.

A starter from the first game of his rookie season, DeLamielleure played and started in every game for eight seasons in Buffalo before being traded to Cleveland in 1980. During five years in Cleveland he played in every game and had only three non-starts.

Primarily due to the success of the Bills running attack led by Simpson, DeLamielleure was best known for his run blocking. As a swift pulling guard, Simpson became the first player to rush for more than 2,000 yards in a season. DeLamielleure, a six-time Pro Bowl selection who was named to the NFL’s 1970s All-Decade Team, is a member of the Bills and Browns’ Wall of Fame. He received the NFLPA AFC Offensive Lineman of the Year in 1975 and the Forrest Gregg Award for the NFL’s Offensive Lineman of the Year in 1977.

Tickets, which range from $15-$40, may be secured at the Medal of Honor Bowl Game’s dedicated website www. MOHbowl.com. They will also be available at The Citadel Athletic Ticket Office at 843/953-DOGS (3647).

For more information, please refer to our Twitter: @MOHbowl and Facebook.com/MOHbowl

Joe Jacoby
Joe Jacoby

Joe DeLamiellleure
Joe DeLamielleure

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December 3, 2014
American Team Coaches
Two Former Major College Head Coaches to Serve as Assistants for the Medal of Honor Bowl’s American Team

CHARLESTON, SC – Willie Jeffries, head coach of the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl’s American Team, has announced that two former major college head coaches will assist him.

Former Air Force Academy head coach Fisher DeBerry and Vanderbilt’s Bobby Johnson will join Jeffries’ defensive staff. DeBerry will guide the defensive linemen and Johnson will handle the defensive backs and special teams. DeBerry and Johnson coached in the inaugural game in 2014.

Jeffries previously announced that former VMI head coach Cal McCombs, will serve as the defensive coordinator. McCombs doubles as the bowl game’s director of player personnel.

Set for 2:30 pm on Saturday, January 10, 2015 at The Citadel’s Johnson Hagood Stadium, the Medal of Honor Bowl is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation, disabled veterans and wounded warriors.

DeBerry, a native of Cheraw who earned letters in four sports while at Wofford, served as the head football coach at the Air Force Academy from 1984 to 2006, and compiled a record of 169–109–1. He led 17 of his 23 Falcons squads to winning records and 12 captured a bowl game bid. Three times his teams won the Western Athletic Conference title, in 1985, 1995, and 1998, and retired with the most wins and highest winning percentage (.608) in Air Force football history.

After the 1985 season in which the Falcons finished 12-1 and captured the Bluebonnet Bowl, DeBerry received the Paul “Bear” Bryant Award as the NCAA’s college football’s coach of the year. He was inducted into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame as a coach in 2011.

DeBerry has also been awarded the State Farm Coach of Distinction award in 2001, and was enshrined in the South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame. In 2003, he received an honorary doctorate of humanities from Wofford, his alma mater, where he played flanker, defensive back and linebacker, and graduated in 1960.

Active in the American Football Coaches Association, where he served as president in 1996, DeBerry served on the AFCA’s ethics committee.

Johnson most recently was the head football coach at Vanderbilt University, a position he held from the 2002 season until his retirement in 2010. In December 2001, Johnson became the Commodores’ head coach after leading Furman University to the Division I-AA national championship game. He coached the Paladins from 1994–2001 and led the team to a 60–36 overall record during his eight years. Prior to his hiring at Furman, Johnson was the defensive coordinator at Clemson.

In 2008, Johnson led Vanderbilt to its first winning season since 1982, as his team went 7–6 with a 16–14 win over Boston College in the Music City Bowl, Vanderbilt’s first bowl victory since 1955 and only their second in school history. That season Johnson was named Southeastern Conference Coach of the Year sharing that honor with Nick Saban of Alabama and Houston Nutt of Ole Miss.

His tenure at Vanderbilt was lauded for bringing a resurgence to a team that had long been dominated by its fellow members of the SEC, notably guiding the Commodores to their first bowl game win in 53 years and snapping a 22-game losing streak to rival Tennessee.

Johnson graduated from Clemson in 1973, earning his Bachelor of Science degree in management, before earning his master’s degree in education from Furman in 1979.

For news surrounding the game, follow @MOHbowl on Twitter and on Facebook at Facebook.com/MOHbowl

Coaches, Press Release American Team Coaches, Defensive Coordinator, MOH Bowl No Comments
November 20, 2014
Tickets to the Medal of Honor Bowl
Medal of Honor Bowl Tickets Go on Sale Saturday, Nov. 22

CHARLESTON, SC – Tickets to the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl Game will go on sale on Saturday, Nov. 22.

Set for 2:30 pm on Saturday, January 10, 2015 at The Citadel’s Johnson Hagood Stadium, the Medal of Honor Bowl is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation and the Wounded Warrior Project.

General admission tickets for the East side (visitor’s) are only $15 each while general admission on the West side (home) are $20 each. Seats for the West side’s two gray sections are $30 each while those in the blue section are $40.

The Bowl also has Club Seats, which includes food and beverage, for $175 each.

In order to secure tickets, please order online at www.mohbowl.com. After December 6, fans may also get tickets through The Citadel Athletic Ticket Office at 843/953-DOGS (3647) and at many State Farm Insurance agencies around the Lowcountry.

For more information, please refer to www.mohbowl.com/tickets, Twitter: @MOHbowl and Facebook.com/MOHbowl.

— Medal of Honor Bowl—

About the Game
The Medal of Honor Bowl is a premier all-star game featuring the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation and the Wounded Warrior Project. For more information about the game and to find out how you can become a supporter, visit www.MOHbowl.com.

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November 11, 2014
Patrick Sapp
Chan Gailey Tabs Patrick Sapp as Assistant Coach for Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team

CHARLESTON, SC – Chan Gailey, head coach of the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team, has announced that former Clemson and NFL standout Patrick Sapp will serve as an assistant coach and will guide the defensive line.

Set for 2:30 pm on Saturday, January 10, 2015 at The Citadel’s Johnson Hagood Stadium, the Medal of Honor Bowl is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation and the Wounded Warrior Project.

Sapp played for the Tigers from 1992 to 1995 and lettered all four seasons. He began his career at Clemson as a quarterback and complied 2,278 yards and nine touchdowns in 14 starts over three seasons. He converted to linebacker in 1995 and led Clemson with 5.5 sacks that season.

The Jacksonville, Fla. native went on to be drafted by the San Diego Chargers in the second round of the NFL Draft (50th overall) in 1996 and enjoyed a four-year NFL career with the Chargers and Arizona Cardinals. In 63 NFL games Sapp recorded 57 tackles, two sacks, and one forced fumble.

Since March 2006, Sapp has been serving as the Director of Major Gifts at Clemson University.

Coaches, Press Release MOH Bowl, National Team, National Team Coaches No Comments
November 6, 2014
Bob Valesente
Chan Gailey Tabs Bob Valesente as Defensive Coordinator for Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team

CHARLESTON, SC – Chan Gailey, head coach of the 2nd Annual Medal of Honor Bowl’s National Team, has announced that veteran NFL and college coach Bob Valesente will serve as the defensive coordinator.

Additionally, Gailey stated that he would serve as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.

Set for 2:30 pm on Saturday, January 10, 2015 at The Citadel’s Johnson Hagood Stadium, the Medal of Honor Bowl is a premier all-star game the features the nation’s top draft-eligible college football players as projected for the NFL Draft. The game honors the Medal of Honor recipients and the game’s beneficiaries, the Medal of Honor Museum Foundation and the Wounded Warrior Project.

Valesente, who was part of Gailey’s staff last year, began his coaching career in 1964 at Cornell University where he served as an assistant for 10 years. After his time there, Valesente went on to coach at five more Division I colleges with stints at the University of Cincinnati, the University of Arizona, Mississippi State University, Kansas University (where he served as head coach for two seasons), University of Maryland and the University of Pittsburgh.

After his stint in college, Valesente went to the professional level where in 1982 and the ’83 seasons he made his NFL debut coaching with the Baltimore Colts. He returned to the NFL with the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1990-91. After two seasons there, he coached with the Green Bay Packers where he was a member of the 1997 Super Bowl champions. He stayed with the Packers until 1998 where he joined the Carolina Panthers coaching staff.

Valesente also coached with NFL Europe’s Frankfurt Galaxy, winners of the 2003 World Bowl.

With over 35 years of coaching experience Valesente first began his career at Ithaca College, where he played running back and defensive back. While at Ithaca, he also served as co-captain to the 1962 baseball team that played in the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, and earned All-ECAC and All-American honors. Before beginning his football career, Valesente spent two years in the Chicago Cubs organization as a center fielder.

Bob Valesente
Bob Valesente

Bob Valesente through the Years
1964-74 Cornell (assistant)
1975-76 Cincinnati (assistant)
1977-79 Arizona (assistant)
1980-81 Mississippi State (defensive coordinator)
1982-83 Baltimore Colts (assistant)
1984-85 Kansas (assistant)
1986-87 Kansas (head coach)
1988 Maryland (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks)
1989 Pittsburgh (defensive coordinator)
1990-91 Pittsburgh Steelers (linebackers)
1992-94 Green Bay Packers (linebackers)
1995-98 Green Bay Packers (defensive backs)
1999 Carolina Panthers (defensive backs)
2001-03 Frankfurt Galaxy (defensive coordinator/linebackers)

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Shelly Nuttall Gardner

Shelly Nuttall Gardner is the owner/director of WheelHouse Concepts Inc., a firm specializing in strategic sales and events as well as creative project management.
Shelly Nuttall Gardner
Her current projects include:

* The Medal of Honor Bowl, director of Sales and Marketing. Gardner leads the sponsorship team, oversees the production of events as well as generates community and regional awareness and excitement about The Medal of Honor Bowl through advertising and marketing campaigns.

*Taste of Atlanta, director of Restaurants. Gardner works closely with Atlanta area chefs to produce and coordinate the restaurant participation in this festival, which draws 50,000 attendees annually over the 3 day schedule of culinary events.

*The Stray Dog Society, executive director. This member based social organization is for supporters (both graduate or non-graduate) of The Citadel. Gardner runs the membership and sponsorship campaign, as well as plans and executes the Society’s many events including the tailgate parties before each home game and the Annual Homecoming Jamboree to the sell-out crowd of 1500.

Gardner is originally from Charlotte, and is a graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill. Before starting WheelHouse Inc , she was a surgical sales representative for Medtronic’s neurosurgery division.

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Andy Solomon

Native Charlestonian Andy Solomon, who handles the media relations for the Medal of Honor Bowl Game, is concluding his 39th year in athletic administration and his 23rd year as an associate athletics director at The Citadel.
Andy Solomon
Having served in marketing, promotions and sports information capacities since joining The Citadel, Solomon now devotes his efforts on special events and coordinating the school’s licensing program. He also produces The Blue & White, the official publication of The Citadel Brigadier Foundation, and Today’s Blue & White, a weekly electronic newsletter. 

He is also a Visiting Professor in the school’s Health, Exercise and Sport Science Department and teaches Sports Management courses. He has served as the NCAA representative and tournament director at baseball regionals every year since 2003. Solomon also served a term as president of the South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame and remains active as a member of the Board of Directors.

Solomon was selected as the inaugural Marketer of the Year (1999-2000) for NCAA Division I-AA and I-AAA institutions by the National Association of Collegiate Marketing Administrators (NACMA) and was named National SID of the Year in 1983 by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), becoming the youngest ever to win the award.

In March 2004, Solomon was inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame and became the third native Charlestonian to be enshrined in a national sports hall of fame, joining Art Shell (NFL) and Beth Daniel (LPGA). In 2009, he was inducted into Winthrop’s Hall of Fame.

Prior to his arrival at The Citadel, Solomon served in athletic administrative positions at College of Charleston (1973-77), Charleston Southern (1977-78), Winthrop (1978-84) and Limestone (1984-88).  He was the public relations manager at Wild Dunes Resort in 1988-89, and serves as a media relations consultant for the Charleston RiverDogs, the Class A affiliate of the New York Yankees.

Solomon earned his bachelor’s degree from College of Charleston in 1977 and a master’s from Winthrop.  He and his wife, Amy, have two daughters, Anna and Addie.

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Tommy McQueeney

W. Thomas ‘Tommy’ McQueeney is the Chairman and Founder of The Medal of Honor Bowl Game, and works closely with our beneficiaries, The National Medal of Honor Museum and the Wounded Warrior Project.
Tommy McQueeny
A native Charleston area businessman with a background in sports development he chaired the Southern Conference Basketball Championships and the Charleston Area Sports Commission twice. McQueeney also chaired the $44.5 million Johnson Hagood Stadium Revitalization, has served on The Citadel’s Board of Visitors, the MUSC Children’s Hospital Board, and the Patriot’s Point Maritime Museum Foundation.

A 2009 recipient of the Order of the Palmetto, he is a local columnist and author.

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Thomas J O'Rourke

Tom O’Rourke is the Executive Director of the Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission. Tom’s Agency has been nationally recognized for operating an ever-expanding park system without using tax increases to fund growth.
Tom O'Rourke

Tom has the direct oversight responsibility for over 10,000 acres of parkland consisting of a very diverse offering of parks, programs and services.

Prior to joining Charleston County PRC, Tom was the Director of the Mt. Pleasant Recreation Department in Mt. Pleasant South Carolina, and also worked as Manager of the Sports and Recreation Division for Seamon Whiteside and Associates a Landscape Architect and Engineering firm. Tom’s first job was as a high school Athletic Director and Coach.

Currently Tom spends a significant amount of time educating park and recreation professionals. In the past three years he has spoken at 13 different State Association Conferences and has presented sessions at the NRPA Congress for the past 12 years. He is on the Board of Regents at the NRPA Revenue School, The NRPA Directors School and a past member of the Supervisors Managements School Board.

Tom is the Chair of the Clemson University Parks Recreation and Tourism Management Advisory Board, and the Chair of the Charleston Area Sports Commission Board of Directors.

Recreation is his profession, but his passion has always been coaching. Tom currently is the Pole Vault Coach at Hanahan High School.

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Hoyt "Rusty" Holt, Jr.

Hoyt “Rusty” Holt, Jr. serves as the Medal of Honor Bowl’s Operations Director.

Rusty Holt

Having recently retired from a successful insurance career at New York Life, Holt is an active member of Savannah’s Sports Council, and a charter board member of the Savannah Hockey Committee. Holt was the presiding force behind Savannah’s Inaugural Rock n Roll Marathon in 2011.

Holt is a proud graduate of The Citadel’s class of 1973, earning his B.S. in Business Administration and lettering in both football and track. In 1988, Holt was inducted into The Citadel’s Athletic Hall of Fame for his excellence in both sports – football and track .

Originally from Mullins, SC , he currently shares his time between Savannah and Charleston with Mignon, his wife of 39 years. They are the proud parents of 3 children and 7 grandchildren whom they delight in spending time with.

In addition to his love of sports, and his involvement in The Medal of Honor Bowl, Holt is an avid outdoorsman who enjoys boating, fishing, hunting and riding his Harley Davidson.

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Rick Raybon

Rick Raybon Director of Finance

Senior Financial Executive with more than 35 years of achievement improving corporate financial performance through financial leadership in banking relations, operations, mergers and acquisitions, organizational development and global systems integration.

Raybon has served in senior financial leadership roles with both Northrop Grumman and Litton Industries. Additionally, he has served as an interim CFO in several smaller equity backed businesses.

A 1974 graduate of The Citadel he has also attended executive level leadership courses at both Harvard Business School and Wharton. He is a licensed CPA, a retired Commander, Supply Corps. USNR and resides in Mt. Pleasant, SC with his wife Vicki.

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Samuel Rivers

Samuel Rivers

Bio Coming Soon…

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Cal McCombs

McCombs1200mugCal McCombs enjoyed a standout career as a track and football athlete at The Citadel, graduating in 1967.
His coaching career included stints at The Citadel, the United States Air Force Academy and as Head Football Coach at VMI, where he was named both State of Virginia Coach of the Year and Southern Conference Coach of the Year.

McCombs also spent five years as a top player development scout for the Denver Broncos of the American football League. Through these experiences, he gained a solid reputation for assessing draft-level NFL talent.

His skills in the area of quantifying NCAA football talent brings an enormous asset to the Medal of Honor Bowl.
He coached on the winning American Team in the inaugural Medal of Honor Bowl in January of 2014.

McCombs is a native of Belton, SC, and lives on the Isle of Palms with wife Lynn. They have three children and six grandchildren.

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Austin B. Atkinson, J.D.

Austin B. Atkinson, J.D. Austin B. Atkinson, J.D. is an NFLPA Certified Contract Advisor and is a registered Athlete Agent in the State of South Carolina. Austin earned a B.A. in Political Science from The Citadel in 1999, and a Juris Doctor degree from the Charleston School of Law in 2011.

As an NFL agent, Austin was able to put players from the FBS, FCS, and Division II levels of college football into NFL camps in recent years. His eye for talent at all levels of football is invaluable in his personnel role for the Medal of Honor Bowl.

Active in the community, Austin has served as the Vice-Chairman of the Town of Mount Pleasant Board of Zoning Appeals, member of the Town of Mount Pleasant Historical Commission, Past-President of the Mount Pleasant Sertoma Club, assistant coach of the Wando High School boys lacrosse team, and is a member of the Theta Commission of Kappa Alpha Order. Austin lives in Mount Pleasant with his wife and children.

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Roy Hamlin Jr.

roy_hamlinMr. Hamlin’s strong success in video and television projects for the nation’s leading nonprofit and sports organizations has helped him network across a broad range of corporate, celebrity and charitable leaders to achieve important goals. He founded AdCraft Associates, which became recognized as a national leader through innovative marketing. After selling AdCraft Associates to Host Communications, Roy’s next venture, NorthStar Visions, took an innovative approach to a marriage between the sports and entertainment worlds. His Fairway Productions Group has been a leader in television concepts and production.
Mr. Hamlin has produced numerous sports publications and live television broadcast programming, while developing many of today’s accepted sports traditions, including the National Championship Trophy Program, Director’s Cut (Div. I, Div IAA, Div III), Basketball Poll, Women’s Basketball Poll, Football Coaches Poll, Baseball Coaches Poll, Baseball National Championship Trophy, Mohamed Ali Museum and the PGA of America Library.

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