The history of sports in Northern Kentucky goes back a long way. A very long way. Decades. Centuries. 

We know you’ve seen these lists before, but this is a different and unique way of presenting our “50 sports icons in Northern Kentucky” as we’ll provide you one per day over the next 50 days. 

Hall of Fames are everywhere in NKY, the Northern Kentucky Sports Hall of Fame, High School Athletic Directors Hall of Fame, NKU, Thomas More and local high schools all have something to recognize their past.

We’ll preface this series by saying this, some of you may disagree with who should or shouldn’t be in the top 50 and that’s fine. Plenty are in the Hall of Very Good, but we feel these 50 are the one’s who stuck out to us.

Sports Editor Evan Dennison spoke and conferred with several local NKY sports history buffs to get their opinions and lists of their own and who should be “locks” for the 50 sports icons. We compiled each list and came up with the 50 of our own (maybe cheated a little by putting families in as one) to present over the next 50 days.

Hope you enjoy as summer time rolls on!

The third of the 50 sports is Highlands coaching legend Homer Rice, who’s career went far beyond coaching.

HOMER RICE

Dr. Homer Rice (center) is presented The Dodd Trophy Lifetime Achievement Award at a Georgia Tech football game in 2021. Photo provided | Georgia Tech Athletics Facebook page

There’s a reason Highlands is one of the all-time winningest high school football programs in the country and it starts with Homer Rice.

The former Bluebird went on to play at Centre College in Danville before getting into the coaching scene. Coaching at three different high schools from 1951-61, Rice amassed a 109-7-1 record which included eight seasons spent at Highlands.

He led the Bluebirds to their first two of 23 state championships in 1960 and ‘61. After his success at the high school level, Rice went on to coach college with Kentucky and Oklahoma as an assistant before taking over as head coach at the University of Cincinnati.

After UC, Rice went to Rice for two seasons before becoming the head coach of the Cincinnati Bengals in 1978. He coached the Bengals for two seasons, succeeding Paul Brown.

He then landed on the administrative side where he was an Athletic Director at North Carolina, Rice and Georgia Tech. As an AD, he developed and implemented the Total Person Program which is now the model for NCAA Life Skills Program that is in place at universities throughout the nation.

The Homer Rice Award was established by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics which is given annually to a FBS director as recognition of achievement. Rice joined the Navy at 17, fighting in World War II where he served on the Pacific front in the Philippines. 

See the 50 sports icons on a day-to-day basis over the next 50 days

— Day 1: Dave Cowens

— Day 2: Shaun Alexander

— Day 3: Homer Rice

— Day 4: Dicky Beal

— Day 5: Jared Lorenzen

— Day 6: Jim Bunning

— Day 7: Tom Ellis

— Day 8: Nate Dusing

— Day 9: Jim Connor

— Day 10: Steve Cauthen

— Day 11: Irv Goode

— Day 12: Stan Steidel

— Day 13: Kenney Shields

— Day 14: David Justice

— Day 15: Morgan Hentz

— Day 16: Eddie Arcaro

— Day 17: Nancy Winstel

— Day 18: Steve Flesch

— Day 19: Donna Murphy

— Day 20: Randy Marsh

— Day 21: Mike Yeagle

— Day 22: Derrick Barnes

— Day 23: Dale Mueller

— Day 24: Dave Faust

— Day 25: Kirsten Allen

— Day 26: The Oldendick family

— Day 27: Martin “Mote” Hils

— Day 28: Nell Fookes

— Day 29: Owen Hauck

— Day 30: Becky Ruehl

— Day 31: Tom Thacker

— Day 32: Sydney Moss

— Day 33: Bob Schneider

— Day 34: The Walz family

— Day 35: John Toebben

— Day 36: Pat Scott

— Day 37: Bob Arnzen

— Day 38: Joan Mazzaro

— Day 39: Frank Jacobs

— Day 40: Adrienne Hundemer

— Day 41: The Draud family

— Day 42: Bill Krumpelbeck

— Day 43: The Molony family

— Day 44: Allen Feldhaus

— Day 45: The Maile family

— Day 46: Maureen Egan Corl

— Day 47: Bill Aker

— Day 48: Maureen Kaiser

— Day 49: John Brannen

— Day 50: Mike Bankemper


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