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02-10-2012, 08:44 AM
Eighth-grader Markie Duffy, the next great girlsâ swimmer in a long line of them at Scott, ponders what school life will be like without her coach, Jerry Mohr, who is retiring Nov. 1 after 27 years of teaching and coaching in the district.
âI havenât lost many coaches so Iâm really going to miss him after he leaves,â said Duffy, the top seed and winner in Thursdayâs regional preliminary 200-yard freestyle race at Scott. âItâs not just swimming. Heâs in just about everything and he means a lot to our school.â
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Mohr, 50, is in his final season as Scott boysâ and girlsâ swimming coach. This is his last Region 4 meet. He presided over his final Eagle Classic, an event that Mohr built into a cornerstone of the annual schedule, in December.
âItâs really sad,â Scott diver and relay swimmer Bridget Fallis said. âIâve been with him for six years and now heâs going to go.â
Mohr will preside over his last boysâ track team in the spring. Because he needs 70 additional work days following the completion of this school year, he will coach his final Scott boysâ and girlsâ cross country teams in the fall.
Sophomore Franny Kaelin, who has participated in cross country, track and swimming for coach Mohr, said the school will be losing an invaluable role model and one of its funniest people when the coach packs up his belongings in the aquatics office and leaves Scott after the first trimester of the 2012-13 school year.
âItâs going to be a shock,â Kaelin said. âItâs not going to be the same without him keeping us loose. When youâre down, he knows how to cheer you up with a joke. Iâll never forget him running with us in his short shorts up to here. It was priceless.â
For more than two decades, Mohr coached six sports teams each year.
âTheyâve kept me pretty busy and thereâs never been a dull moment,â said Mohr, whoâs been the Kenton County Aquatics Director since 2000. âWith pool duties, I usually work six days a week.â
He used to coach the girlsâ track team. Since he was hired as Scottâs sports everyman in 1984, the Highlands and Eastern Kentucky University graduate has coached over 140 teams at the school.
âHeâs irreplaceable. And besides, he canât leave now. Itâll take him three years to clean out his office,â Scott athletic director Ken Mueller said. âYou canât replace a guy who is that organized in all those sports. He definitely makes my job a lot easier and I canât imagine life without him.â
Mohr has crowned 42 state champions and sent over 60 athletes to college. His colorfully appointed aquatics office just inside the main entrance to the school has been a sanctuary for many athletes and remains a common touchstone for Scott graduates years after they leave. His athletes like to call themselves âJerryâs Kids.â
âI have a lot of memories in that office,â Fallis said. âI love to go in there and look at old pictures of swimmers. Weâll always be Jerryâs kids and part of his extended family.â
Mohr said it will be tough to leave behind such an extensive legacy.
âIâve worked with a lot of great kids and wonderful families. But, at some point, I need to be with my family,â said Mohr, who is married to wife Vanetta and has three grown children and six grandchildren. âMy wife will finally be able to take my picture down from the refrigerator because sheâll know what I look like.â
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âI havenât lost many coaches so Iâm really going to miss him after he leaves,â said Duffy, the top seed and winner in Thursdayâs regional preliminary 200-yard freestyle race at Scott. âItâs not just swimming. Heâs in just about everything and he means a lot to our school.â
⢠Take our high school nicknames quiz
⢠Enquirer's Recruiting Trail blog
⢠Enquirer high school sports blog
⢠Check us out on Facebook
⢠More prep coverage
Mohr, 50, is in his final season as Scott boysâ and girlsâ swimming coach. This is his last Region 4 meet. He presided over his final Eagle Classic, an event that Mohr built into a cornerstone of the annual schedule, in December.
âItâs really sad,â Scott diver and relay swimmer Bridget Fallis said. âIâve been with him for six years and now heâs going to go.â
Mohr will preside over his last boysâ track team in the spring. Because he needs 70 additional work days following the completion of this school year, he will coach his final Scott boysâ and girlsâ cross country teams in the fall.
Sophomore Franny Kaelin, who has participated in cross country, track and swimming for coach Mohr, said the school will be losing an invaluable role model and one of its funniest people when the coach packs up his belongings in the aquatics office and leaves Scott after the first trimester of the 2012-13 school year.
âItâs going to be a shock,â Kaelin said. âItâs not going to be the same without him keeping us loose. When youâre down, he knows how to cheer you up with a joke. Iâll never forget him running with us in his short shorts up to here. It was priceless.â
For more than two decades, Mohr coached six sports teams each year.
âTheyâve kept me pretty busy and thereâs never been a dull moment,â said Mohr, whoâs been the Kenton County Aquatics Director since 2000. âWith pool duties, I usually work six days a week.â
He used to coach the girlsâ track team. Since he was hired as Scottâs sports everyman in 1984, the Highlands and Eastern Kentucky University graduate has coached over 140 teams at the school.
âHeâs irreplaceable. And besides, he canât leave now. Itâll take him three years to clean out his office,â Scott athletic director Ken Mueller said. âYou canât replace a guy who is that organized in all those sports. He definitely makes my job a lot easier and I canât imagine life without him.â
Mohr has crowned 42 state champions and sent over 60 athletes to college. His colorfully appointed aquatics office just inside the main entrance to the school has been a sanctuary for many athletes and remains a common touchstone for Scott graduates years after they leave. His athletes like to call themselves âJerryâs Kids.â
âI have a lot of memories in that office,â Fallis said. âI love to go in there and look at old pictures of swimmers. Weâll always be Jerryâs kids and part of his extended family.â
Mohr said it will be tough to leave behind such an extensive legacy.
âIâve worked with a lot of great kids and wonderful families. But, at some point, I need to be with my family,â said Mohr, who is married to wife Vanetta and has three grown children and six grandchildren. âMy wife will finally be able to take my picture down from the refrigerator because sheâll know what I look like.â
http://www.NKY.com
02-10-2012, 08:44 AM
02-10-2012, 08:44 AM
02-10-2012, 08:44 AM
02-10-2012, 08:44 AM
02-10-2012, 08:45 AM
02-10-2012, 08:45 AM
02-10-2012, 08:45 AM
02-10-2012, 08:45 AM
02-10-2012, 08:45 AM
02-18-2012, 07:40 PM
If you've ever been in Scott's gym you sure see his name up on alot of banners for coach of the year
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