Saturday, June 23, 2018

Walker, Warren represent Lonoke County in all-star game

Lonoke's Keiunna Walker directs traffic for the East squad. (Photo by Emmy Buffalo)

Carlisle's Kylie Warren is fouled while driving to the basket for the East squad. (Photo by Mark Buffalo)


By Mark Buffalo
Staff Writer

CONWAY — The two best high school girls basketball players from Lonoke County participated in the Arkansas High School Coaches Association All-Star Basketball Game at the Farris Center on Saturday.
Lonoke’s Keiunna Walker and Carlisle’s Kylie Warren were members of the East squad, which lost to the West 86-79 in a five-period contest. 
Walker, who will continue her playing career at Louisiana Tech University this coming year, finished with a game-high 16 points in 20 minutes of action. She had 4 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 block and 1 steal. 
“It was a great experience,” Walker said. “I’d do it all over again. I wish we could have stayed a week to get to know the team better. Playing against better competition got me better.”
Walker reports to Ruston, La., on Sunday. She’s taking a summer class. 
“i’m taking a summer math class,” she said. 
Warren, who will continue her playing career at Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia, scored 4 points and grabbed 2 rebounds in 12 minutes of action. 
Warren said she enjoyed playing with some of the best players in the state. 
“It was different,” she said. “It’s a lot more advanced that high school ball is. Most of them are going to play college basketball. It was a good experience. I really enjoyed it.”
Warren said she needs to get back in shape to get ready for SAU.
“I need to stay in the gym … I really regret taking the time off that I did. It was a wakeup call. I’ve been practicing with Coach [Jonathan] Buffalo and the Lady Bison. I feel like I’m old now.”

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Caleb Shock is new Bison football coach

Caleb Shock, left was hired as the new Carlisle Bison football coach Tuesday night. He is pictured with his wife Danielle and daughter Katie Mae. (Photo courtesy of the Shock family)


By Mark Buffalo
Staff Writer

CARLISLE — The Carlisle Bison football team has a new coach.
Caleb Shock, a 2004 graduate of Vilonia High School, was hired to replace Mark Uhiren by the Carlisle School Board on Tuesday night. 
Shock, 32, was out of coaching the last year, working for his mother’s insurance company, Sue Shock Insurance in Vilonia. His last coaching job was in Heber Springs, where he was the junior high coach then defensive coordinator for the Class 4A Panthers. 
“The man is more that just a great football coach; he is a leader of men that always displays impeccable character and work ethic,” said B.J. Green, Carlisle Director of Athletics. “Coach Shock comes from a  coaching family as his father was a longtime Arkansas football coach. Coach Shock was exposed to the game, the grind of building a top-notch program and how to treat others at a very early age.”
Shock is excited for the opportunity to a first-time head high school coach at tradition-rich Carlisle. 
“I’m very excited and honored that Carlisle would have me,” Shock said Tuesday night. “I know this is late in the game for B.J. and the administration. I’m sure that played a little bit into my favor. It’s been  dream of mine to be a high school head coach. And to finally have the opportunity to do that … I’m thrilled to do it.”
Shock said he had full intentions of taking over the family business and staying in it until he got a phone call about the Carlisle job. 
“I answered it and listed to it and it materialized into this,” Shock said of an offer to come to Carlisle. 
Shock got his first taste of coaching while attending Harding University. He volunteered with the Harding Academy football program under coach Tommy Shoemaker. He also coached with Shoemaker at Central Arkansas Christian. He’s been a coach at a school in Tennessee before coming to Heber Springs. 
Shock’s name may sound familiar to some Bison fans. His father, Steve Shock, was the Carlisle Bison football coach for the 1988 season. He hired James Clayton as his defensive coordinator. The next year, Clayton was promoted to head coach when Steve Shock left and the Bison went to the Class A state title game. 
Caleb Shock said coaching where his father did at one time means a lot to him. 
“Because I grew up in Vilonia, my first dream was to follow him at Vilonia,” Schock said. “Sometimes God has different plans. I still got to follow him as a coach; it was just at a different school.”
Shock said his dad speaks fondly of his one year at Carlisle. 
“He’s always said it was a special place to him,” Shock said. “I think he probably looks back and thinks what if he had stayed and been around for those good years that followed with Coach Clayton.
“To be where he was and be able to get Carlisle back up to where it was after he left and restore some of those traditions, I’m excited to get in there and learn about it and do it.”
Shock said he’s not ready to talk about goals for the upcoming season but he does have some things he wants to accomplish with his new team. 
“I want to build a big-time rapport with the kids,” he said. “I think relationships with the players are important. We demand a lot out of those teenage guys. Before you can really start demanding that out of them, they’ve got to know that you think about them more than as just a player. You learn about them as a person.”
Greene is excited about the future of Bison football with Shock at the helm.
“Coach Shock is a diligent worker that embodies what it means to be a Bison — respectful, hardworking and tenacious. I am extremely excited for Coach Shock to arrive and begin working with our young men.”

Shock and his wife Danielle, have one daughter, Katie Mae. 

Sunday, June 10, 2018

Bison football coach retires; search underway for replacement

Bison football coach Mark Uhiren, right, talks with quarterback Braiden Jenkins during a game in 2017. Uhiren retired as a coach and teacher with the Carlisle School District last week. (Photo by Mark Buffalo)


By Mark Buffalo
Staff Writer

CARLISLE — The Carlisle Bison football team is searching for a new head coach.
According to Carlisle High School principal and athletic director B.J. Greene, Bison coach Mark Uhiren has retired from coaching and teaching at the Carlisle School District. 
The head coaching position was posted on the Arkansas Activities Association bulletin board June 6. 
“The interview process started on Friday [June 8],” Greene said Sunday night. “I interviewed our first coach. We’re going to go through interviews for about a week, just because I want to get it done as soon as possible. That way, we can get our kids introduced to the new head coach.”
The Bison have lost two assistant coaches since the end of the 2017 season. Mike King resigned earlier this year then Phil Bernhardt resigned recently. 
Uhiren, a 1977 graduate of Carlisle High School, went 7-5 in 2016, his first year at the helm. Injuries beset the Bison in 2017 and they went 2-7. Uhiren previously was head coach at Lonoke and Marion. 
Carlisle is now looking for its fourth head coach since Scott Waymire left for Trumann following the 2012 season. Waymire is now the athletic director for the Jacksonville North Pulaski School District.