The motor that drives Huntsville senior Kirby Ennis runs at a freakishly high pace. Always has and probably always will.
Competition, whether it’s on the football field, basketball court, discus ring or classroom even, revs Ennis’ engine. And once that motor cranks up, Ennis instantly shifts into high gear.
“I go hard at everything I do,” Ennis said this week while making some last-minute preparations for the state track meet — his swan song as a Huntsville Hornet. “I never want to lose. I like to be on top and I know I can be when I work hard.
“Basically, I want to succeed in everything I do and I don’t want to have any regrets. I know what I do in high school helps determine my future.”
What Ennis did in high school — helping the Hornets win three consecutive district titles in basketball, one in football and another this spring in track and field — earned him a full football scholarship from Texas A&M.; He’ll be leaving home for Aggieland later this summer.
“I realized a long time ago that the only way I was going to college was in sports,” Ennis said. “It was going to be really hard for my relatives to pay for school.”
Huntsville’s head football coach Mitchell Coey remembers the first time he laid eyes on Ennis. A bigger-than-average eighth-grader, Ennis and one of his junior high coaches came to visit the Hornets’ football boss.
Coey knew right away that this young guy was special.
“Kirby told me that day he wanted to win a state championship,” Coey recalls. “Kirby’s a true competitor. He grew up in far from ideal conditions, but he has persevered. He’s always been focused on where he was going and he knew how he was going to get there. He works hard not only in athletics, but in academics too. Kirby works hard in the classroom. He has made something of himself and he’ll be successful in life because of the way he works. He listens and he’s coachable.
“I predict that Kirby Ennis will play on Sunday afternoons (in the NFL) barring any major injuries. He’s got that kind of talent, both physically and mentally.”
Coey said it’s been a treat to watch big No. 42 play football.
“You ought to see him come out of the dressing room,” Coey said Wednesday evening. “His eyes are bloodshot — they’re solid red.
“He’s one of those rare athletes who has that switch and he turns it on when the lights come on. He just goes at a different level than everyone else.”
Huntsville basketball coach Larry Carlson and his predecessor, Doug Anderson, say the same thing about Ennis. They sure enjoyed rolling out the ball and asking their big man to go to work.
Track coach Jason Elliott quickly found out that Ennis means business when he’s spinning around the discus ring. David Cooper has known that for four or five years now. He is Ennis’ former junior high coach who introduced him to Coey a few years back.
Today, Cooper and Ennis are still together. They’re headed to Austin this afternoon to get ready for the UIL State Track and Field Championships.
On Friday at 1:30 p.m., Ennis will compete with the top discus throwers in Texas with gold, silver and bronze medals on the line.
“It’s been fun to see Kirby set a goal and finally achieve it in his senior year,” Cooper said. “He’s been wanting to go to state since he was in eighth grade. Now he’s getting an opportunity to go there.
“If he can get in the 170s (feet), anything can happen. I just want him to go and compete well.”
Ennis will likely do that. Nearly nonstop since he first hit the doors at Huntsville High School, he has competed well from late summer through the next spring.
“I’m pretty sure my body is tired,” Ennis admitted when asked about the wear and tear that comes with playing three sports. “We’ve been doing 80 throws a day throughout the track season. I get tired sometimes, but I’ve just got to realize I’m throwing against seven other guys, and hey, they’re tired too.
“There are always times when my body feels like giving up. Playing football, basketball and track takes a toll on you,” Ennis added. “If you’re competitive, you can overcome that. It’s all about pushing yourself past that.
“That competitive spirit and heart go farther than fatigue.”
Sports
No slowing down
Hornets star to cap stellar senior year on high school track’s biggest stage in Austin
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OUTGUNNED: First-place Mavericks shoot down Sam Houston, run winning streak to 14
Texas-Arlington had an answer for every Sam Houston run Wednesday night on the way to a 75-63 victory over the Bearkats. It was the Mavericks’ 14th consecutive win and improved their Southland Conference record to 10-0.
The last team to start league action with such perfection was Sam Houston in 2010, a team which won the conference’s regular season as well as the postseason tournament championship. -
Championship salute
The Southland Conference champs from Sam Houston State received special recognition on Wednesday night for the most successful football season in school history.
Huntsville Mayor Mac Woodward, SHSU President Dana Gibson and Walker County Judge Danny Pierce were among those who honored the Bearkats during halftime of the Bearkats’ basketball game against Texas-Arlington.
Woodward declared Feb. 8 Bearkat Pride Day. -
Bearkat women win again, 61-45
Britni Martin scored 18 points, including four 3-pointers, to lead Sam Houston State to a 61-45 Southland Conference women’s basketball victory over UT-Arlington on Wednesday at the new UTA College Park Center in Arlington.
All four of Martin’s field goals were 3-pointers and the junior forward from Conroe went 6-of-6 from the foul line to post her 17th double-figure scoring performance of the season. -
Alive and kicking
For the third consecutive game, the Hornets played like a team that does not want basketball season to end anytime soon.
Desperate to notch another victory over Willis, the Huntsville boys jumped on the Wildkats early. The Hornets used their muscle and started pulling away in the second half, then when Willis made a late rally, Huntsville’s hungry bunch had enough energy left to hold off the Wildkats in a wild 76-63 victory at the Paul Bohan Hornet Gym. -
Lady Hornets roll through district undefeated again
The Lady Hornets did it again. For the second consecutive season, the Huntsville girls basketball team rolled through District 18-4A play without a loss.
On Tuesday night in Willis, the Lady Hornets closed out another perfect 14-0 district campaign with an 86-33 win over the LadyKats. -
New Waverly seniors close out regular season in style
In their final game of the regular season, the Lady Bulldogs just enjoyed themselves in a 60-46 win over Anderson-Shiro.
This was a team New Waverly beat on the road earlier in the season and a win in “Bulldog Country” would be the appropriate way to send out seniors Myeisha Williams, Morgan Eastland, Whitney McCullough and Alex Abbott. -
Streak stoppers?
The hottest team in the Southland Conference visits Johnson Coliseum tonight, riding a 13-game winning streak and sporting a perfect 9-0 league record.
Sam Houston State has a difficult task on its hands facing Texas-Arlington, a team which had its way with the Bearkats on Jan. 11 at Texas Hall. The Mavericks rolled to a 66-40 that night in what was Sam Houston’s worst loss in conference action all season. -
Bearkats to hold celebration befitting a championship team
A championship celebration unlike any in Bearkat history will take place tonight at Johnson Coliseum as part of the festivities for the Bearkats’ basketball game against Texas-Arlingon.
Walker County, the city of Huntsville and university officials will join with SHSU alumni, students, faculty-staff and fans in saluting the 2011 Southland Conference champion and NCAA Division I football national finalist Bearkat football team. -
Big week ahead for Bulldogs, Lady Bulldogs
To say that this is an important week for the Bulldogs and Lady Bulldogs basketball team would be a big understatement. With the regular season winding down, much is at stake for the New Waverly boys and girls.
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Bulldog lifters gain experience at Shepherd meet
Looking back on his lifters’ performance at last Saturday’s meet in Shepherd, New Waverly powerlifting coach Mike Carolan lauded his team’s efforts. Senior Tucker Saxton won the 220-pound classification and freshman Dillon Silvis took fifth in the 114-pound division.
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