Text file of the story published in the Christmas issue, December 25, 2009 in The Roanoke Times,

reprinted here with their permission.

  

Friday, December 25, 2009

A place to call home

Johnnie Bennett says he used to live as a thug. He decided to leave

that life and return to school. But that's tough when you don't even

know where you're going to sleep. At Covington Boys' Home, he found

more than a place to play basketball. Johnnie Bennett finally found a

place to call home.

 

By Brad Foster

brad.foster@roanoke.com

981-3222

 

   Matt Linkous couldn't take his eyes off the scrappy teenager.

    Sure, Johnnie Bennett was a good basketball player, not to mention

his team's vocal leader, but that's not what grabbed Linkous' attention during

a game last month.

    As Bennett raced up and down the floor directing his teammates,

Linkous, the coach at Pathway Christian Academy, focused on the

basketball player's feet.

    His shoes were full of holes and falling apart.

    Linkous was stunned, but he was also familiar with the school that

Bennett's team is from -- Covington Boys' Home.

    The small boarding school operated by the Episcopal Church on the

outskirts of Covington fielded teams that Linkous himself competed

against when he played basketball at Gateway Christian in Blacksburg.

    As a coach, Linkous has looked for ways to support the school.

That's why he invited the Hilltoppers to his two-day tipoff tournament.

    "They are giving kids a chance that normally would not get a

chance," he said of the Boys' Home.

    Bennett is one of those kids.

    "To be honest with you," Bennett said, reflecting on the struggles

he's faced, "I don't understand why I didn't just give up."

    Bennett admits it: He was a thug.

    When the 19-year-old moved to Clifton Forge from Fort Lauderdale,

Fla., last year to help his elder brother work through some personal

issues, he had dreadlocks and saggy pants.

    "The whole nine yards," he said. "I'm not saying that I chose to

be a thug, that's just how I was brought up."

 

    He had no intention of enrolling in school. But that changed as he

adjusted to life in the Alleghany Highlands.

    "It felt so peaceful and different from Florida. I thought I might

as well as go to school."

    He took the initiative to enroll at Covington High School.

    Bennett said he made mostly D's and F's at school in Florida. That

changed in Covington. He wanted to learn.

    His only problem: getting there. Staying with his brother in

Clifton Forge meant he was more than 10 miles from school.

    "I went every day," Bennett said. "Just when things got hard on

transportation and everything because of living arrangements -- I'd

just have to come to school and leave. But I made sure I got to

school, though."

    Bennett doesn't like to talk about problems that arose at his

brother's home, but he soon found himself unsure of where he would

sleep each night.

    Dennis Fitzgerald, the basketball coach at Boys' Home, among other

duties, described Bennett's living situation as "couch surfing."

    "When I woke up, I knew I was going to go school, I was going to

go ahead and do my work, but after that, that's all I knew," Bennett

said. "There was a couple of times when I thought I was going to have

to sleep under a bridge."

    Recognizing the need for an intervention, Covington High School

made arrangements for him to stay at a local motel for two weeks.

    After his time at the motel ran out, the school set up a meeting

with representatives from Boys' Home.

    Bennett was not enamored with the school's grooming and dress code

policies. In order to enroll, he would have to cut his hair and change

his wardrobe.

    "We outlined some of the stuff that Johnnie might have to change,

and he wasn't quite ready to change all of them," Boys' Home Executive

Director Donnie Wheatley said. "Being the age he was and the

circumstances he was coming from, it was more his decision than it was

anybody else's."

    Bennett originally passed on the offer, but after reflecting on

his decision overnight, he knew what he had to do.

    The next morning, he called Boys' Home and officially enrolled. It

was Sept. 23.

 

Helping hand

    Boys' Home was founded in 1906 as a place for boys to get a basic

education. It moved to its current location a dozen years later.

    It eventually became a boarding school, taking in wards of the

court, boys who were in the judicial system as well as some whose

parents did not have the means or abilities to care for them.

    At its peak in the 1950s and '60s, the school had a regular

enrollment of 85 or greater. This year, its 35 residents range in age

from 7 to 19.

    All but two of the current students were privately placed by their

families. Also, the school, which originally cared for boys almost

exclusively from Virginia, now has residents from around the country.

    "We see a lot of families whose kids are becoming known to the

court, and the court is basically giving them an opportunity to do

something about it," Wheatley said. "They're being diverted out of the

system."

    Many of the families the school currently serves are low-income.

    Boys' Home gets some government support. About 3 percent of its

total funding comes from tax dollars, but the rest is collected

through fundraising and donations.

    And once the essentials are taken care of, there's not much left

for extracurricular activities.

    The school runs its basketball program -- as well as other

recreation activities -- on an annual budget of about $16,000.

    The Hilltoppers -- formerly known as the Indians -- have not

purchased new uniforms since 1997. And as enrollment has dropped, so

has the number of victories.

    Residents also have the option to attend and play sports at the

public schools in Alleghany County, further depleting the talent pool.

    "We encourage the good basketball players who have themselves-

together and are doing OK academically to play in the public schools,"

Wheatley said.

    This often leaves Fitzgerald, in his sixth year as head coach,

with a bunch of youngsters who have little or no organized sports

experience.

    "They've played in the streets," Fitzgerald said. "Very rarely do

we have someone that has played any organized basketball."

    Wheatley, himself a resident of Boys' Home from 1959-66, can

recall a different era.

    "In the 1950s and again in the early 1960s, we had some pretty

tough teams here," he said.

   

More than just winning

    That's not the case anymore. At one time, the school even dropped

basketball because of poor results and little interest from the

residents.

    The school's administration now realizes that basketball has value

beyond wins and losses.

    "We all like to win, but that's the least of our worries," said

Fitzgerald. "We use basketball for several reasons. We use it to build

self-confidence, teach sportsmanship and show them how to get along in

a team environment."

    Players sign a contract as well as a code of conduct saying that

they will adhere to certain principles, and they must show it on the

floor.

    If a Hilltopper knocks an opponent to the floor, he is required to

help that player up. Trash talking and taunting are not tolerated.

    For the most part, Fitzgerald's players buy into the philosophy,

and at least one person in the high school basketball community has

noticed.

    Veteran official David Felps was assigned to the Hilltoppers' game

against Parry McCluer High School on Dec. 9.

    Boys' Home lost 80-38, but the score wasn't what caught the

referee's attention.

    "They played their hearts out," Felps said. "They were very

respectful of my crew and I, starting with the coach on down through

the last player."

    Natural leader

    Leading the Hilltoppers this season is Bennett, whose daily

routine is unique even for Boys' Home standards.

    While the rest of the home's residents who attend public school go

to Alleghany High, Bennett was allowed to remain at Covington.

    He takes eight classes (the standard semester load is seven) so

that he can graduate at the end of the year. He's passing all of them.

    "I never understood math, but once I got here to Covington, the

teacher, the way she teaches, I can remember it," he said. "I can do

math in my head; I don't have to use a calculator."

    Bennett also joined the Hilltoppers' basketball team, marking the

first time he has played organized hoops.

    The wiry 6-footer averages almost 14 points per game, but it's his

leadership on the floor that has most impressed Fitzgerald.

    "He's doing tremendous," Fitzgerald said. "He's the one that

encourages our younger players, he directs them on the floor. He never

gets mad; I've never seen him mad. He's quite the young man."

     Bennett's game actually complements the core mission of the

program. He's unselfish and never lets up when the clock is running.

    "I love to pass the ball," Bennett said. "To see them make the

shot, and they feel so good and so happy, that makes me feel good and

happy."

    All of these things would make him a valuable asset at a public

school such as Covington, where he would be eligible to play in

January.

    However, Bennett said his place is with the Hilltoppers, who went

1-7 before the holiday break.

    "I never had a family, and I feel like this here is becoming

family now," he said. "It wouldn't feel right to leave them. I

understand that I would get more recognition at [Covington]. I love

basketball, but I'm not in it for those things."

   

Springing to action

    Linkous was ready right away to show his support for the Hilltoppers.

    As Boys' Home was in the midst of a lopsided loss on the first day

of the two-day tournament, the Pathway coach went into action.

    "I got the kids together Friday and just asked them if they would

go home and check their closet, and if they have any [shoes] they

would be willing to give away, bring them in," Linkous said. "I told

them if you don't have any, just bring $5, and we'll go out and buy

them some shoes."

    The next day, the Panthers did not disappoint their coach.

    "I was expecting to see just six or seven pairs, and I looked in

there, and there was probably a good 30 pairs of shoes," Linkous said.

"A lot of them went home and brought three, four, five pairs of shoes

in for those guys."

    Boys' Home accepted the goodwill gesture before their first game

that morning. Several Hilltoppers even played the remainder of the

tournament with their new equipment.

    "We do buy team shoes; it's just that they were late coming this

year," Fitzgerald said. "We were so moved by that. That's, to us, what

it's all about."

    The two teams squared off twice that day, with Pathway winning

both games handily.

    The Panthers went on to win the tournament, but Boys' Home was the

unanimous choice among the tourney's coaches for the sportsmanship

award. 

Pathway plans to build on what it started.

    If the Panthers return to the Virginia Association of Christian

Athletics state title game this season -- they finished second a year

ago -- they plan to invite the Hilltoppers to join them at their

pregame meal.

   

A future with hope

    When the Hilltoppers hosted West Virginia's Meadow Bridge High

School before winter break, Bennett was still playing in a pair of the

Dwyane Wade high-tops one of the Panthers players had donated.

    He scored 10 points, playing hard from start to finish, but the

Hilltoppers fell 44-26.

    Bennett is spending Christmas with his grandmother in Florida, but

he is eager to return to what he now considers home.

    And with just a couple of months left until graduation, the

Hilltoppers' swingman is starting to look over his options.

    "It's confusing because I think about it almost every night as I

go to sleep," he said. "What am I going to do with my life? ... I

never had options growing up. I just keep doing the right things and

hopefully that'll lead me to the right direction."

    Bennett hopes to enroll in college and pursue a career as a

firefighter. He dreams of going to Virginia Tech, but he knows

community college is his first step.

    Dabney S. Lancaster Community College is just a 15-minute drive

away from where he is now, and Bennett would almost certainly be able

to stay on the Boys' Home campus.

    Also, Boys' Home will be able to help him pay for college.

    No matter what he decides, Bennett knows that he couldn't have

done it without the support of Boys' Home.

    "This is my family," he said.

    "Boys' Home is teaching me to become that man that I deserve to be."

 

Copyright © The Roanoke Times 2009