Difference between revisions of "Benny Washington"
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'''James "Benny" Washington''' is a [[Woodham High School]] history teacher and former coach of the [[Woodham Titans]] basketball team. His tenure as coach featured a great deal of controversy until he was removed from the position in 2006, which Washington claimed was retribution for his opposition to Superintendant [[Jim Paul]]'s [[2006 school closure and consolidation plan|plan to close several schools]], including Woodham. On March 9, 2007, Washington was arrested for possession of marijuana, cocaine and drug paraphernalia during a traffic stop by the [[Escambia County Sheriff's Office]]. | '''James "Benny" Washington''' is a [[Woodham High School]] history teacher and former coach of the [[Woodham Titans]] basketball team. His tenure as coach featured a great deal of controversy until he was removed from the position in 2006, which Washington claimed was retribution for his opposition to Superintendant [[Jim Paul]]'s [[2006 school closure and consolidation plan|plan to close several schools]], including Woodham. On March 9, 2007, Washington was arrested for possession of marijuana, cocaine and drug paraphernalia during a traffic stop by the [[Escambia County Sheriff's Office]]. | ||
+ | Benny had helped a lot of underpriviledged and urban kids take another path than they ones they were use to walking. He showed them ways to achieve legal success by working hard, planning and setting short and long term goals. He not only taught young men how to play basketball but also how to become men who can contribute something positive to our society. Some embraced his teaching while some spurned it! | ||
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+ | In the early years, he was the only coach to set a required GPA that was higher than the county standard. He required all players to attend a study hall after school to ensure all of their school work were being accomplished and practiced his players hard. This was spurred by his amibtion to keep his players off the street and away from negative influence that might lead them in the wrong direction. His players usually went straight home after practice, finished some school work, spend time with family and went to sleep. | ||
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==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
* [http://www.pnj.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070310/NEWS01/703100316/1006 Coach faces drug charges] - [[Pensacola News Journal]], March 10, 2007 | * [http://www.pnj.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070310/NEWS01/703100316/1006 Coach faces drug charges] - [[Pensacola News Journal]], March 10, 2007 |
Revision as of 21:31, 24 January 2008
James "Benny" Washington | |
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Mugshot of arrested Woodham teacher Benny Washington
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Born | ? |
Occupation | Woodham High School history teacher, former Woodham Titans basketball coach |
James "Benny" Washington is a Woodham High School history teacher and former coach of the Woodham Titans basketball team. His tenure as coach featured a great deal of controversy until he was removed from the position in 2006, which Washington claimed was retribution for his opposition to Superintendant Jim Paul's plan to close several schools, including Woodham. On March 9, 2007, Washington was arrested for possession of marijuana, cocaine and drug paraphernalia during a traffic stop by the Escambia County Sheriff's Office.
Benny had helped a lot of underpriviledged and urban kids take another path than they ones they were use to walking. He showed them ways to achieve legal success by working hard, planning and setting short and long term goals. He not only taught young men how to play basketball but also how to become men who can contribute something positive to our society. Some embraced his teaching while some spurned it!
In the early years, he was the only coach to set a required GPA that was higher than the county standard. He required all players to attend a study hall after school to ensure all of their school work were being accomplished and practiced his players hard. This was spurred by his amibtion to keep his players off the street and away from negative influence that might lead them in the wrong direction. His players usually went straight home after practice, finished some school work, spend time with family and went to sleep.
External Links
- Coach faces drug charges - Pensacola News Journal, March 10, 2007