One Raider Nation

Raider varsity football players pass around the High 5 Sports Team of the Week trophy from Fox 5 in Atlanta. The trophy was awarded to the team on live television after their win over North Forsyth on Oct. 31. It was the Raiders' first win in 22 games.

So, the Raiders’ football season didn’t end as we’d hoped. The excitement of the team’s first win in two years on Oct. 31 fueled the team’s dreams, and ours, that they could pull it off again this past Friday. That didn’t happen. They lost to Chattahoochee 35-28. But what did happen, despite another losing season, is that the Habersham community rallied around its boys in orange and blue.

More than 9,800 votes were cast for the Raiders in the High 5 Sports Team of the Week online poll following their Halloween win against North Forsyth. Those votes earned the team a coveted trophy and the school a pep rally on steroids. It was all carried live on Fox 5’s Good Day Atlanta morning news show on Thursday.

Raiders mug for the camera after being presented Fox 5's High 5 trophy.
Raiders mug for the camera after being presented Fox 5’s High 5 trophy by reporter Paul Milliken.

Now Habersham was at the pep rally and it was nothing short of electrifying. The pall that has fallen over our high school football program these past two seasons was lifted…if only for a day. Just watch the video and you’ll see. The pep rally pumped up the athletes, coaches, students, staff, faculty, parents and community. It was one of those rare big city moments in our small town existence – Atlanta TV station comes to Mt. Airy – but it was precisely our small town existence that made it so special.

Fox 5 reporter Paul Milliken said coming to Habersham was different from his visits to Atlanta area schools. There, teams and the public are much more accustomed to being on TV. “It was wild and crazy which is exactly how I would want it to be,” he said in reference to Thursday’s HCHS pep rally. “Certainly the audience was more spirited than I even imagined. We do these every week so we always get a spirited crowd, but I think this school had a real genuine spirit to it. You could tell people were excited to be here. The football team was excited. It was amazing to see the MOB MOMs around, so, it was a blast!”

Milliken had just finished washing off orange and blue paint from his arms when I approached him, “As soon as I saw the body paint I thought, ‘well I’ve got to do that, I have to do that,'” he said, “not knowing that they bought that paint at Lowe’s,” he added with a light-hearted laugh. “I don’t think it was meant for a body.” Milliken said he scrubbed off several layers of skin trying to remove the paint but insisted the paint and the pep rally were worth it. “It’s important to us because, as everybody knows, there’s a lot of negativity on the news, it’s inescapable, and a lot of times that negativity is around schools…so, to be able each week to go into a school and show students who are hard workers, who are excited to be there, to show faculty who have so much heart for what they do and to show that the community still can rally around something like they do here for Habersham Central…it’s completely worth all the effort, there’s no doubt about it.”

Now Habersham turned the tables on the Fox 5 crew by interviewing them after the pep rally. Picture here are (l-r): Michelle Sanders, Blaze Meier, HCHS freshman Daniel Purcell, Paul Milliken and Laura Headlee.
Now Habersham turned the tables on the Fox 5 crew by interviewing them after the pep rally. Pictured here are (l-r): Michelle Sanders, Blaze Meier, 9th grader Daniel Purcell, Paul Milliken and Laura Headlee.

Milliken said there were more moms and community members at the HCHS pep rally than he’d ever seen at one of Fox 5’s pep rallies. And while he may have been the one viewers at home saw, Milliken didn’t do it alone. A three-person crew worked behind the scenes setting up, producing, photographing and beaming up the signal that hit Georgia’s airwaves.

Michelle Sanders is a Fox 5 satellite truck operator. It was her job to drive the expensive gear from Atlanta to Habersham for the live shot. Despite the early morning wake up call she said it was fun. “It makes me feel good to actually see the kids enjoying themselves and to put a smile on their face.” Photographer Blaze Meier called it one of the best pep rallies they’ve done, “Huge  turnout, great school, great gym.” Producer Laura Headlee was even more emphatic. She said the HCHS rally was, “Awesome, awesome! It’s so great to see the families turn out, to see the whole school up on their feet and cheering for these guys. What a great story, I mean, finally, victory, so sweet after two years. It’s an amazing story and we were so lucky we got to come out this time.”

HCHS sophomore Eric Miranda wore his Raiders t-shirt to the rally to show his support.
HCHS sophomore Eric Miranda wore his Raiders t-shirt to the rally to show his support for the football team.

The Fox 5 crew members weren’t the only ones happy with how the pep rally turned out. Students and parents walked away with big smiles on their faces. Heather Welborn is a MOB MOM (Mothers of Boys becoming Mothers of Men). Her son Ty Loggins is a junior this year. He has one more season to rack up some wins. Wellborn said the pep rally was a nice shot of encouragement. “Love it, love the spirit that was in there.”

Students called the pep rally exciting, awesome and fun. Andrew Burpee is a sophomore wrestler at HCHS. He knows how much time and energy goes into training for high school athletics, win or lose. Of the football team’s High 5 Sports recognition he said, “They put a lot into it, they deserve it.”

HCHS softball coach Stephanie Thomas summed it up best when she said Thursday’s pep rally wasn’t just about football, it was about “One Raider Nation.” What’s One Raider Nation? It’s the Raiders’ rallying cry for teamwork…community…family.

And so another fall tradition ends – football season is over. There will be no region playoffs this year. No more shivering in the cold under the Friday night lights yelling our lungs out for our boys on the field. No, more pacing, projecting and pontificating about the upcoming game. No more Monday morning quarterbacking. What there will be are the memories of a team of young athletes who played their hearts out against all odds and a community that rallied around them in good times and bad. Those are the memories of One Raider Nation.

Photos by Johnny Bailey