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Ken Sparks

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Sport(s)
  
Football

1980–present
  
Carson–Newman

Team
  
Carson–Newman University

Record
  
334–92–2

Name
  
Ken Sparks

Positions
  
Wide receiver


1967
  
Carson–Newman

Role
  
American football player

Titles
  
Head coach

1977–1979
  
Farragut HS (TN)

Ken Sparks News CarsonNewman

Born
  
February 25, 1944 (age 80) Knoxville, Tennessee (
1944-02-25
)

Overall
  
334–92–2 (college) 29–5 (high school)

Education
  
Carson–Newman University

Conference
  
South Atlantic Conference

Carson newman football 2015 the ken sparks show week 9 limestone


Ken Sparks (February 25, 1944 – March 29, 2017) was an American football coach and player. He served as the head football coach at Carson–Newman University in Jefferson City, Tennessee from 1980 until his retirement at the end of the 2016 season. He is currently the record-holder for the most wins as a coach in NCAA Division II history. His Carson–Newman Eagles won five NAIA Championships (1983–1984, 1986, 1988–1989), and were three times runners-up in the NCAA Division II playoffs (1996, 1998, and 1999).

Contents

Ken Sparks News CarsonNewman

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Biography

Ken Sparks wwwcarsonnewmaneaglescomsportsmfootbl201112

Sparks was born in Knoxville, Tennessee. He played college football as a wide receiver at Carson–Newman and graduated from the school in 1968. He was football coach at Gibbs High School in Knoxville. The next year, he received a master's degree from Tennessee Technological University where he also coached quarterbacks and receivers. He coached at Morristown East High School in Morristown, Tennessee.

Ken Sparks Sparks hires former Powell head coach Rang as receivers

In the early 1970s, Sparks was an assistant coach on the Carson–Newman football team that was a runner up in the NAIA championship game. He coached the school's track team and he was named Southern Collegiate Track Coach of the Year. In 1977, he returned to Carson-Newman where he coached the track team.

Ken Sparks CarsonNewman Football 2013 Ken Sparks Spring Practice

In the fall, he coached at Farragut High School in Knoxville where he accumulated a 29–5 record. Among his players was Bill Bates.

Following his string of successes, Carson-Newman built the new Burke–Tarr Stadium in 2005.

Sparks, who was once Fellowship of Christian Athletes National Coach of the Year, actively pursues a Christian aspect in his coaching and is a popular public speaker. He was quoted as saying that, if football can be used as a tool to bring people to the Lord, then "it has done something. If it hasn't, we haven't done a thing, no matter how many games we won."

After 37 years as the head coach at Carson-Newman University, Ken Sparks announced his retirement on November 14, 2016 at a press conference in the Ken Sparks Athletic Complex on the campus of Carson-Newman University.

Sparks died March 29, 2017 after a four-year battle with prostate cancer.

References

Ken Sparks Wikipedia


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