There will be something missing
this fall when the Loudon football team takes the field. The man dubbed the "Spirit of Loudon
High School," Bruce Lawson, died Tuesday after reportedly not feeling particularly well the past
week.
"Bruce not being there is kind of like the
scoreboard not being there," said Lawson's longtime friend and former Loudon Principal David
Clinton.
"He was Loudon High. I don't know what more
you could say," Loudon Head Football Coach Jeff Harig said of the loss.
"He was the very spirit of Loudon High School," John Napier, Loudon instructor, historian
and longtime friend of Lawson, said.
According
to Loudon High School Principal Cheri Parrish, Lawson, 55, hadn't felt well Monday and his brother
had made him some soup. The next day Lawson didn't show up for a scheduled doctor appointment.
His brother was alerted and Lawson was found lying on the floor with the soup still on the
table.
"It's a huge loss for Loudon," Parrish
said.
Lawson truly did live and breathe Loudon High
School sports his entire life. He went to high school there and lived in the community except
for just more than two years of his life, during which he attended Hiwassee College and spent two
weeks in the military. Even when he was gone from the town he still found a way back to take
in the athletic events. Lawson had a streak of 417 consecutive Loudon football games attended
that was eventually snapped in 2000 when he had surgery on his leg the day of a road trip to South
Greene, Loudon historian and teacher Bill Brakebil
said. Lawson didn't have time to make the field after his surgery.
"I fully believe that if the game had been at home, he'd have been there and found a way to
get into the press box," Brakebill said. As it was, Lawson couldn't make the game so he did
the next best thing - he sat at home, kept the stats and called the radio station after the game to
keep up his tradition of relaying the game's statistics over the air. When his stats were
compared to the official ones taken, he was one yard off.
And even
though the consecutive game streak was snapped, Lawson still made it to his final 90 Loudon football
games and never missed a game played in the history of Dukes Field. "He's the most
knowledgeable wealth of information of Loudon athletics you could ever come across," Mike Thompson,
Loudon football and baseball play-by-play announcer recalled.
Clinton
referred to him as a "stat library" and countless Loudon natives who know him recounted his ability
to process and retain statistics and Loudon sports trivia. "You could always count on Bruce
keeping the scorebook, the clock, or both. He took pride in the fact that he could keep the
scorebook and the clock in basketball at the same time," Loudon Athletic Director and Head Baseball
Coach Bill Thompson said.
Discussing Lawson's ability to
figure up stats in his head while reporting them on the radio, Loudon Head Girls Basketball Coach
and Vice Principal Bryant Collins said, "He wouldn't have it worked out. As he was saying it
on the radio he'd average it in his head."
Mike
Thompson chimed in, "His total recall is unparalleled."
Lawson's
ability to recall stats from what seemed the most obscure of situations led some to attempt to
playfully trip him up. Prior to Loudon home football games, booklet are produced by Brakebill
that contain information of the upcoming Redskin football game and placed in the press box.
"Sometimes, Mr. Brakebill would put some errors in there intentionally," Collins laughed. "I
made one up specifically for him (with errors)," Brakebill recalled. "The reason I did that
was if I made a mistake in there, he caught it. If I had one mistake, he found it as soon as
he opened the book."
Brakebill said he had known Lawson for roughly 40
years, but got to really know him during youth trips Lawson would go on with Brakebill's youth group
in the 1980s. Brakebill recalled one in particular when his group went with Lawson to the Lost
Sea and they encountered Fatman's Squeeze. "Bruce got stuck and started saying, 'I can't get
in, I can't get any farther,'" Brakebill recalled. That's when Brakebill's brother, Merritt,
told Lawson, "Come on Bruce, do it for the Redskins." With a chuckle, Brakebill then recalled,
"When (Merritt) said do it for the Redskins, Bruce started struggling and he got
through."
"His life was Loudon sports. There will
never be a bigger fan than Bruce," Bill Thompson said. But it wasn't just the Loudon sports
community that will remember Lawson, who made countless scouting trips for all of the sports teams,
fondly.
"There's not a coach or referee in East Tennessee
that didn't know him," Loudon Head Boys Basketball Coach Colt Narramore
said.
"You mention Loudon and his name comes up,"
Collins added.
Brakebill also recalled a couple of moments when
he was a bit surprised to find the name Bruce Lawson. "I was in Australia and ran into
somebody that knew him. I was in Puerto Rico once and ran into somebody that knew him,"
Brakebill said with a bit of amazement in his voice.
Collins
added that he generally likes to call referees by name during games. He admitted, however,
that he doesn't know all the names. When he didn't, "I'd just ask Bruce and he'd know them or
their dad," Collins said.
"There are very few people in the
world who you could just use their first name. They all know who he is just by his first
name," longtime Loudon teacher Jerry Foster, who currently has a consecutive game stretch of his own
sitting above 500, said of how widespread Lawson's name has become. "I bet there are a lot of
people who don't even know his last name."
"Bruce was
an institution, not only for Loudon, but around the district and region, everyone knew him," Clinton
said.
Lawson was also fiercely loyal to the coaches and
administrators who have passed through Loudon in his years. "There wasn't a coach that came
through here that he didn't keep in touch with," Harig said.
Lawson's
impact also stretched beyond the confines of the high school itself. "I've known Bruce all of
his life," said Loudon Mayor Bernie "Inky" Swiney. "I've thoroughly enjoyed him, appreciated him and
spent a lot of time with him when we were doing football games."
"He's the
eternal Redskin fan. As a community, we'll miss him," Swiney added.
Longtime Loudon resident and friend, Ronnie McNabb, said he remembers Lawson fondly. "I just
think he's a good-hearted person," McNabb said. "It'll be a huge loss in the Loudon
neighborhood."
Lawson may never have coached a day in his life,
but that didn't stop those around him from thinking of him in those terms. "For me . . . he
was part of the team. He'd go everywhere we went," Bill Thompson said.
Foster agreed saying Lawson was the next best thing to a coach.
Lawson's impact also stretched to the families of those he knew. It was echoed by those who
remember Lawson fondly that he was a good man who was always helpful and will be
missed.
"He always asked about my family. He was a
caring person," Foster said.
With a look
of sober reality, Napier said, "It's going to be hard to realize what an LHS sporting event will be
like without him. He's always been there."
According
to Parrish there are plans to rename the Redskin Spirit Award after Lawson.
"It's going to be hard to realize he's not there. I don't think we'll ever say
goodbye," Clinton said.
That statement may ring true for
the entire city of Loudon.