Slideshows
Slideshow: Jacksonville State vs. Martin Methodist
Dec 11, 2012 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
Slideshow: High School Wrestling - Gene Taylor Classic
Dec 10, 2012 |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
Slideshow: Restoring the Dr. Francis Museum
Dec 09, 2012 |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
Slideshow: Oxford Christmas Parade
Dec 06, 2012 |  0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
Slideshow: Best of 2012 - High School Football
Dec 04, 2012 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
Slideshow: Anniston Christmas Kickoff
Dec 01, 2012 |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
Slideshow: The Nutcracker
Nov 30, 2012 |  0 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
Slideshow: Jacksonville Christmas Parade
Nov 29, 2012 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
Loading slideshow Click here if you are not redirected.
 
Photo Reprints

Today's Events
event calendar Icon_info

Wednesday, 19, 2013
post a new event Icon_info

Pond Spring- The Gener... 3:50 PM
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Hip Hop Hope Vacation ... 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
$0 The Living by Faith Ministry will host Vac...
Ohatchee's Wehunt appreciates having the full off-season for work this time
by Brandon Miller
Jun 19, 2013 | 1 views |  0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Ohatchee coach Nathan Wehunt works out some of his players at practice this week. (Photo by Stephen Gross/Anniston Star)
Ohatchee coach Nathan Wehunt works out some of his players at practice this week. (Photo by Stephen Gross/Anniston Star)
slideshow
OHATCHEE -- Nathan Wehunt always has believed off-season work is what gets high school football teams where they need to be, “then the fall will take care of itself.” After serving as Cherokee County’s defensive coordinator, including for the Warriors 2009 Class 4A state championship season, Wehunt certainly knows success. However, when he was hired to take over Ohatchee’s head coaching job only six days before the Indians’ 2012 spring game against Weaver, he faced immediate challenges. He didn’t have that long off-season he wanted that would help build his team. Now, as Wehunt works toward his second season at Ohatchee, he has the time to develop his players -- and it is yielding a bit of optimism for the coach. “It’s night and day from when we took over,” he said Tuesday. “I tell them if we’re getting outworked then we’re getting beat. We’ve come a long way, but we have a ways to go.” This is much different from a year ago when Wehunt was trying to prepare his team to face Weaver in the spring game. “We were kind of behind the 8-ball to begin with,” Wehunt said. “We played Weaver and played a good first half. Although it was 21-0 at the end of the first half, it was only 7-0 with about four minutes left in the half, but we have some turnovers that they turned into scores.” Despite the obvious letdown of losing the game, it was a new era at Ohatchee, and over the summer last year Wehunt saw the defense pick up quickly. However, there were still difficulties him entering a new county and school. “Not knowing any of the kids at all, we wanted to figure out who could play,” he said. “You kind of get a different look at them because when you know somebody coming in you may know the kid or his parents, but coming here and not knowing anybody it gave us a chance to just look at them from an athletic standpoint. It was the only factor.” Once Wehunt figured out his depth chart and the Indians hit the field, wins didn’t come quickly or easily in the fall. Ohatchee finished the year 2-8. The long journey included losses in its first eight games, but Ohatchee started competing more and more from Week 6 on. Finally, in Week 9, Ohatchee not only won its first game of the season, a 67-6 final against Class 2A, Region 6 opponent Victory Christian, but also set the school record for most points scored in a game. “We were competing a lot more than we had been,” running back Tristan Allen said. “Everyone was looking forward to playing even after we had some tough losses.” After Ohatchee ended the 2012 season with a win over Gaylesville, the winning continued. Ohatchee scored a 20-7 win over region opponent Pleasant Valley at the 2013 JSU Spring Jamboree in April. “We didn’t change anything as far as how we approached the game,” Wehunt said. “Last year, after we finished the year against Gaylesville on a Thursday, we gave them off Friday and went back to work that Monday. I think we would have one off day a week, so nothing changed. We’ve been hitting it as hard as we are right now.” Considering the work Ohatchee is putting in November through August with Wehunt on campus, there are high hopes for the Indians’ program despite the seventh-place finish in the eight-team region last year. Wehunt having a year on the job has made “all the difference in the world” off the field, and the strides on the field may show in the fall. “Our motto this year is ÔExpect to Win.’ When a team comes here or we go on the road, I want our mentality to be we are winning, not wondering how bad we’re going to get beat,” Wehunt said. “After winning the last two last year and the spring game this year, we’re preaching this three-game winning streak, and we don’t want that to stop.” Brandon Miller covers prep sports for The Star. He can be reached at 256-235-3575 or follow him on Twitter @bmiller_star.
Kelly Tatum
Kelly Tatum
slideshow
Man charged with robbing victims with sawed-off shotgun
by Rachael Brown
rgriffin@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 187 views |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Kelly Tatum
Kelly Tatum
slideshow
Police charged a man this afternoon with robbing two people with a sawed-off shotgun Sunday night and charges for involvement in a separate shooting this afternoon could be pending, Anniston police wrote in a press release. Police were searching for Kelly Tatum, 53, of Anniston, this week as the robbery suspect, Anniston police Capt. Allen George wrote in the release. A 58-year-old man and a 36-year-old woman were visiting friends Sunday night at a home on the 1700 block of Cobb Avenue. The victims told police another man, with whom they were acquainted, opened the door holding the weapon, Anniston police Sgt. Chris Sparks told The Star this week. The suspect, Sparks said, told everyone he was going to rob them and fired shots into a window. The man was robbed of $400 and the woman had $600 taken, according to a police report. No one was injured during the incident. Sparks said the suspect fled in a car before police arrived. This afternoon, police were dispatched to 15th Street and Dooley Avenue after a home was shot into and gunfire was exchanged between two vehicles, the release said. George said no one was injured during the shootings. Tatum was discovered by a warrants investigator on the 2500 block of Paul Street standing outside a red Ford Explorer with a broken rear window, the release noted. Tatum was armed with a shotgun, according to the release, but he dropped the weapon when he was confronted by the investigator. Tatum was apprehended and charged with two counts of first-degree robbery, a felony, and resisting arrest, a misdemeanor. Tatum could face additional felony charges for involvement in today’s shooting, the release said. Tatum was in the Anniston City Jail this afternoon. Bond and a court date have yet to be set. Staff Writer Rachael Brown: 256-235-3562. On Twitter @RBrown_Star.
Joe Medley's In My Opinion: So this is what an overexposed freshman looks like
by Joe Medley
jmedley@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 128 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Johnny Manziel won the Heisman Trophy last season as a redshirt freshman. (Associated Press photo)
Johnny Manziel won the Heisman Trophy last season as a redshirt freshman. (Associated Press photo)
slideshow
It’s easy to trash Johnny Manziel after the off-season he’s had since becoming the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy. Off-field headlines have many sizing him up as a one-hit wonder. With that in mind, he tweeted Sunday some unspecified “bull----” has him eager to leave College Station, Texas, where his school is based. Then he deleted the tweet and seemed to clarify. “Don’t forget that I love (Texas) A&M with all of my heart, but please please walk a day in my shoes,” he tweeted. The last year in his shoes has, appropriately, been more of a scramble than a walk. He went from not having played a collegiate down to winning the Heisman in less than four months and did it in the social-media era. The kid who could appear in public with little fanfare a year ago steps out and into twitpic hell, exposed flaws and all. No telling how many of his nearly 367,000 Twitter followers he walks by daily. Consider that Alabama’s AJ McCarron and Katherine Webb have 420,126 combined followers, and Manziel has more than twice McCarron’s 159,337. Alabama coach Nick Saban stands more validated than ever in limiting the public exposure of his freshmen. Contact Sports Columnist Joe Medley at jmedley@annistonstar.com. Read “In My Opinion” in every Anniston Star sports section, written by Star staff members.
-->
Marketplace