“He’s been a lot to our kids, to our community,” athletic director Gene Poindexter said. “He came in and did everything that we asked him to do, and he did it with passion and with enthusiasm.”
Hoover said his doctors had suggested he step down before the season began, but he wanted to see the campaign through. When his health situation became worse, he, Poindexter and Central Davidson principal Tabitha Broadway agreed that the time had come to put down the whistle.
“It absolutely kills me to step away in the middle of the season,” Hoover said. “But my wife is the most important person in my life, and if I go out and have a heart attack over high school football, it’s just not fair to her.
“Central Davidson football is my life and a huge part of my world. It’s not life and death.”
Morton has coached the game for four decades — most of it over 29 years in Covington, Va. — including 10 seasons as a head coach.
“You don’t like to step into these situations. Mark, over the last two years, has done a real good job of building the program,” Morton said. “To not be able to finish what you started is I’m sure weighing heavily on him. But he has to think about his health before anything else.
“The kids are I’m sure a little apprehensive about what the future holds right now. … We have to be positive for them, let them understand that this is one of those changes in life that happens. You’ve got to learn to overcome those bumps in life.”
Hoover will not coach for the foreseeable future. He did not rule out becoming an assistant coach after at least one or two years away from the game.
“I’m going to get myself back in physical shape the best I can,” Hoover said. “I will not be a head coach in the near future. I promised that to my wife.
“I’ll still see the kids during the day. I’ll still have my PE class.
“My message to them and their parents is: Thank you. They’ve done everything I’ve asked them to do.”
- Lexington Dispatch
- Lexington Dispatch
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