In an illustrious 28-year career as Farragut’s head football coach, Eddie Courtney built quite a résumé. He racked up 204 career wins, led the Admirals to a 2016 Class 5A state championship and beat cancer not once, but twice. Monday, April 13, Courtney added yet another accolade when he was inducted in the TSSAA Hall of Fame as part of the 2026 class. It is the latest honor in a list that includes a PrepXtra Coach of the Year nod in 2016; a Greater Knoxville Sports Hall of Fame Pat Summitt Ignite Award in 2017; an induction into the Tennessee Football Coaches Association Hall of Fame Class of 2020; and, earlier this year, an induction into the Farragut High School Sports Hall of Fame as a part of the 2026 class. “Tremendous honor to be honored by the TSSAA,” Courtney said. “When you look at the all the coaches who have been inducted before, it’s really humbling, given all the people who have been recognized. I tried to do it the right way and run a program that had a lot of respect, tradition and pride.” Courtney credited his family members for their roles in his success, noting he spent a lot of time away from home to run the Admiral program. Over time, though, the Farragut football stadium, which now bears Courtney’s name, became like a second home.
Read More“Someday.” For almost 20 years, that word remained stuck in Carlos Reveiz’s mind. In 2004, he heard about Camino de Santiago, a life-changing pilgrimage across Spain, from a fellow traveler in London on the way back from running a marathon with his brother. In 2023, after watching that same sibling endure a heart scare, Reveiz decided he was done waiting for “someday” to come around. Reveiz and his wife, Nancy, packed their bags, flew to Paris, took an overnight train to the start of the pilgrimage in St. Jean Pied de Port and walked half the Camino Francés, the most popular choice among 200 different routes on Camino de Santiago. That trip totaled more than 200 miles in walking alone. Now, three years later, they are doing the full length of the trip over a 47-day period and will be publishing journals for the farragutpress along their way. “We definitely want to do that because there are so many things you forget,” Carlos Reveiz said. “You work all your life, so I wanted to stop saying I’d do it someday.” Reveiz, a former insurance salesman and freelance photographer, is no stranger to being outdoors. He and his wife hiked the Appalachian Trail in 2020, and they have visited Yosemite National Park as well. But this journey will be quite different, as they will walk 483.7 miles from the foothills of the Pyrenees Mountains to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, Spain. Believed to be the burial site of St. James the Apostle, the cathedral serves as a welcoming point for pilgrims from all 200 routes. But it will not be the end of the journey for the Reveizes. They plan to continue on to Finisterre — at one point thought to be the end of the world — with a possible trip to another town, Muxia.
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