
Danville High School Hall of Fame

football, basketball, track, coach

Football
First Team All State Senior year
member and Co-Captain of 1962 AA Championship Team
Scholarship to Georgia Tech where he played four years and named 1st Team All South 1966.
Voted to DHS All Time 1951-86 & was leading vote-getter, MVP 1961

60's and 70's Head Basketball Coach for 15 years with record of 286-145. Won 18 tournaments, 2 Regional and 1 CKC Championship; Tennis Coach for 14 years with Regional and Doubles Champions; Golf Coach for 2 years;
Track Coach for 2 years.

Selected as an end on DHS Football All Time 1951-1986
DHS MVP 1969
Inducted in the KHSAA Hall of Fame
Named to the Sunkist High School All-American in football and basketball
Played basketball at Morehead State University
Inducted in the Morehead State University Hall of Fame
3X All Conference selection by the Ohio Valley Conference
Named All American in 1972
Drafted by the Seattle SuperSonics in 1974"

William E. "Bunny" Davis (1917 - 2001) The grandson of former North Carolina slaves, William "Bunny" Davis was born June 9, 1917, in Perryville, Ky., which is in Boyle County. He was the well-known and beloved chief doorkeeper of the Kentucky House of Representatives for 15 years. Throughout his life, he broke many racial barriers and achieved great success in sports, community, career and government. Davis played football, baseball, basketball and ran relay at Bate High School in Danville, Ky. He was an all-state forward in basketball and was selected to play on the All-American Negro High School basketball team of 1936. It is thought that Davis was the first African American basketball player to be named All-American. He anchored a championship high school relay team where he was nicknamed "Bunny Rabbit" because of his great speed and ducking and dodging ability. He was recognized as one of the fastest track men in the state, with a consistent 9.7 seconds in the 100-yard dash, and in his senior year, he was clocked at 9.6 seconds. He played semi-pro baseball before integration. In 1947, he joined the Lexington Hustlers, the first integrated baseball team in the South. As a semi-professional baseball player in the 1940s, he played against baseball legends and Hall of Famers Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays, Satchel Paige and Roy Campanella, Cool Papa Bell, and Josh Gibson. Davis became the first African American to umpire baseball games in the Southeastern Conference and the Kentucky State High School Tournament. He was one of the first blacks to call integrated basketball in the Kentucky High School Athletic Association in Central Kentucky where he earned the rank of certified official, and, in 1991, he was inducted into the Kentucky High School Athletic Association Sports Hall of Fame. He was a successful businessman who was held in high esteem by the Danville and Boyle County communities where he was city commissioner for 13 years and served as mayor pro tem. He was highly regarded for his effective advocacy on behalf of Danville and Boyle County senior citizens, being instrumental in obtaining funding for their 25-passenger bus, and he could always be relied upon for support during fundraising efforts. He was the first black selected to serve on Ephraim McDowell's Board of Directors, on Danville's United Way Board of Directors, on Danville's Selective Service Board, on Danville's Policeman's and Fireman's Merit Board, and on Danville's Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors. To show their appreciation for his lifetime of stewardship rendered to his community, the City of Danville named its recreation building, "The William E. 'Bunny' Davis Recreation Complex," in his honor. He is widely remembered for his faithful service as the doorkeeper for the Kentucky House of Representatives, an office he held for 28 years. For 15 of those years, he served as the chief doorkeeper and was responsible for a staff of 15. His notable role was to ceremoniously present to the house speaker and members, important guests and visitors who were then escorted by staff onto the House floor. He died October 12, 2001.

Basketball. Named to AllArea Basketball Team 5 consecutive years;
1,000 Point Club, 2nd in all time scoring.
Athletic and academic scholarship to Transylvania.

Smith & Street Magazine All American 1991-
USA News All American 1991-
Dixie Dozen Orlando Sentinel All-South Team 1991
Prep Sports Recruiting Magazine All South 1991
KY/TN All-Star Football Classic 1992
KY Sports Network Class AA Player of the Year 1991
Paul Horning Outstanding Player in Kentucky 1991
Courier-Journal 1st Team All-State 1991
Associated Press 1st Team All-State 1990 & 1991
Courier-Journal 2nd Team All-State 1989
All Area Lineman of the Year 1989, 90, & 91
Played football at the University of Tennessee

All American by USA Today
National Football Foundation & Hall of Fame KY Class AA Player of the Year
Kentucky High School Coaches Assn. Finalist for KY Player of the Year
KY/TN All-Star Football Classic- Team Record 47-6 with a state title and 2 regional championships
Finalist for KY's Mr. Football
Lexington Herald-Leader Class of the Commonwealth Top 22
Associated Press 1st Team All-State
Courier-Journal 2nd Team All-State
Played football at the University of Kentucky

Sam Harp guided DHS to 10 championship game appearances with winning 7 KHSAA state football championships during his time with the Admirals. At his 2012 retirement, Coach Harp finished with a career record of 326-106 placing him 5th on All-Time list. One of only six coaches with 300 or more victories, Harp led the ADS to 27 consecutive playoff appearances, with an 82-21 post-season record. Danville won 19 district and 16 region championships under his watch, and enjoyed a 42-game win streak (1991-93). A five time Kentucky Coach of the Year honoree, Harp was a two-time finalist for National Coach of the Year.

4-time Regional Champion
3-time State Runner-Up 500m Freestyle
3-time State Runner-Up 100m Butterfly
US Olympic Training Center Eagle Select Camp 1992
Gold Select in 1989
Junior National Qualifier
Senior National Qualifier
Southern Illinois University Swim Team- All American

Named All America by USA Today, Street & Smith and Prep Star Magazines
Associated Press All-State 1998, 1999
Courier-Journal All-State 1998, 1999
Lexington Herald Leader Class of the Commonwealth Top 22
Kentucky High School Coaches Association Player of the Year
Played in the KY/TN All-Star Football Classic
Team Record 47-6 with a state title and 2 regional championships
Mr. Football Finalist
Played at the University of Kentucky and Campbellsville University

Football
Class AA All State
54th Courier Journal Overall All-State Squad
Lexington Herald All-State
American Scholar Athlete 1977 & 78
Parade All American#1
Signee at the University of Kentucky
BasketballAll CKC 1977 & 78
Retired Jersey
All District and All Region 1977-78
3rd Team All-State in 1978

Basketball
First Female member of the DHS 1000 point club with 1128 career points
Holds single game scoring record with 38 points in 1998
National Finalist Associated Press High School Athlete of the Year 1989
Who's Who in American High School Sports 1987 & 1988
All State Honorable Mention in 1988
Track & Field
1986 300 Meter Hurdles State Champion
1988 100 Meter Hurdles State Champion
1989 100 Meter Hurdles State Champion
1988 300 Meter Hurdles State Champion
1989 300 Meter Hurdles State Champion
Team State Champion 1985-1988
800m Relay State Champion 1985-1989
1600m Relay State Champion 1985-1989
All Region, All Sectional, & All State Honors 1985-1989
Academic All American 1985-1989
Member of the University of Louisville Track & Field Team

Baseball
(All-State 1991 & 1992, All-American 1992 & held National home run record (62) & RBI record (230), Player of Year in KY 1992, KY Athlete of the Year 1992.
Football: All State 1991, Played on State Football Champs 1989 & 1991. Co-MVP in 1990 & 1991
State Cross Country Runner-up 1988.
On to the UK on a Baseball scholarship.
Played 7 years with the Minnesota Twins, 1 with the LA Dodgers, and with LA Angels.
DHS Baseball Coach 2000-2022 His record of 537-244His teams won four 12th Region championships, 14 45th District titles In 2021, the ADS were state semi-finalist.

Football
1928-42 Head Coach with a record of 95-21-10
Football stadium named in is honor
Basketball
Head Coach
10 District Championships
7 Regional Championships
7 State Tournament Appearances
Track & Field
DHS first Head CoachWon 2 CKC Championships
Founding Father of the KY High School Coaches Association

Back on the DHS All Time 1925-50 selection
All State four years All Region in basketball for five years
Played football at the University of Kentucky 1946-49
A member of the Cleveland Brown's 1950 Championship Team

DHS Football All -Time 1951-1986, in KY Hall of Fame.
Track & Field
State Champion 1953 Mile & 880 Yard Dash, 1954 Mile Run, 1955 Mile Run & 880 Yard Dash, 1956 Mile Run & 880 Yard Dash
At UK 1958 SEC Mile Runner Up, 1958 Cross Country SEC Champion, 1959 SEC 880 Yard Dash Champion
Coaching -Central Kentucky Conference Track & Field Meet Champions: 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006 - Central Kentucky Conference Track & Field Coach of the Year 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006 -Class A Regional Track & Field Champions: 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006. -State Track & Field Meet Runner-Up in 2006 - Class A Track & Field Coach of the Year."

Street & Smith Magazine All America 1989
Top 100 Super Prep 1989
Parade All American Honorable Mention 1989
Dixie Dozen Orlando Sentinel All South Team 1989
KY/TN All Star Football Classic 1990
Courier Journal First Team All State 1989, 2nd Team 1988 & 89
Associated Press First Team All State 1989
USA News KY Player of the Year 1989
KY Sports Network Class AA Player of the Year 1989
Lexington Herald Leader All Decade Team of the 1980's
Played Football at the University of Kentucky

"Educator and basketball coach, Sanford T. Roach, was born in Frankfort, Kentucky. Roach graduated from Danville Bate High School in 1933 in Danville, Kentucky, where he was a basketball and football star and salutatorian of his class. In 1937, Roach earned his B.S. degree in natural sciences from Kentucky State University, where he was the captain of the basketball team, a track and field star, editor of the student newspaper, and a student council member. In 1955, Roach earned his M.A. degree in education from the University of Kentucky.After graduating from college, Roach returned to his old high school to teach and coach basketball. Over the course of three years, Roach's coaching record was 98-24; in 1941 he gained notoriety for benching his five starting players the day of the district tournament for disobeying his curfew rule. Roach's strict sense of discipline on the court caught the attention of the principal of Lexington's Paul Laurence Dunbar High School, and he was soon hired as teacher and coach. Roach taught biology, physiology, and anatomy classes; by 1943 he had become head basketball coach. In his twenty-two years as head coach, Roach led Dunbar High to a 512-142 record.In 1965, Roach's first wife, Mary, herself a basketball enthusiast, died unexpectedly. Shortly after, Roach retired from coaching. Between 1965 and 1966, Roach served as principal of George W. Carver Elementary School, becoming the first black principal of an integrated elementary school in Lexington. Between 1966 and 1975, Roach worked as an administrator at Lexington Junior High, and became the first black principal of a Fayette County secondary school. From 1975 to 1988, Roach worked as a minority recruiter and principal assistant for the state secretary of transportation, and from 1989 to 1995 he worked for Mayors Scotty Baseler and Pam Miller.Roach received numerous awards and honors for his educational and coaching career. In 1974, Roach became the first African American board member of the University of Kentucky Athletic Association; in 1991, the new Paul Laurence Dunbar High School dedicated its S.T. Roach Sports Center in his honor. Roach was featured in the National High School Sports Hall of Fame; the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame; and the Kentucky State University Athletic Hall of Fame.
Roach passed away on September 2, 2010 at the age of 94.
Roach married Lettie in 1967, and had two children: Sandra Cole and Tom Roach." -thehistorymakers.org

Baseball
All Area and All-Region SelectionEast/West All-Star Series
Basketball
All State Honorable Mention 1990
Member of the Kentucky Junior All Stars
Scored 22 pts in the 1990 Sweet 16 Tournament vs Clay Co
1368 career points & 792 career rebounds
Played baseball at University of the Kentucky



















