News Archive

July 20, 2010

Super Natural: Former Charleston Riverdog, Josh Hamilton's Comeback
The recovering crack addict and baseball superstar knows he's special, but it's a special that cuts two ways.

Rock bottom for baseball superstar Josh Hamilton came one night in the fall of 2005, when he woke up in a trailer surrounded by strangers. Confused, lost, and with nowhere to turn, he showed up at his grandmother's door at 2 a.m. She didn't recognize him. Mary Holt's grandson had been a chiseled athlete, 6-foot-4, 230 pounds, who could hit the ball a mile and run like a gazelle. That night he was down to 180, cheeks sunken, eyes glazed over, his rail-thin body a complete mess.

Josh Hamilton was a junkie. He was bingeing on crack, downing a bottle of whisky every day, and burning through a $4 million signing bonus. Add a few recent suicide attempts, and there really was no tomorrow. Holt began nursing her strung-out grandson back to health, but with an ultimatum: Quit the drugs or move out.

Hamilton, now an All-Star outfielder for the Texas Rangers, has been clean ever since (he must submit to urine tests three times a week), and is arguably the best player in professional baseball.
"It's amazing I'm still alive after all I've done to my body," Hamilton told Christianity Today. "My granny told me during those days that God had something special planned for me, otherwise I would have died."

'I will Never be Normal'
Holt knew Josh was special. Hamilton has heard this his whole life, beginning in Raleigh, North Carolina, when as a 6-year-old, he was outplaying boys twice his age. As a high school senior in 1999, he managed a .556 batting average. The Tampa Bay Devil Rays made him their No. 1 draft pick and gave him that $4 million check before he graduated.

His career has been up and down, mostly because of injuries and battles with drugs and alcohol. But by the summer of 2010, his third with the Rangers, fans were calling him special again: Hamilton had a monster season, batting .359 with 32 home runs and 100 rbis, despite missing 29 games due to injury. He led the Rangers to the World Series (where they lost to San Francisco), and was named the American League Most Valuable Player.
Getting Hamilton to admit he's special is a challenge. When he does, he says it with a touch of self-deprecation, because to Hamilton, "special" cuts two ways.

On one hand, it has made him a superstar. And it's made him rich; in February 2011, he signed a two-year contract extension with the Rangers for $24 million.

But being special also means never being able to carry one penny in his pocket, for fear he'll spend it on alcohol or drugs. It means always having to be protected—from himself—by one or more members of his personal support team every minute he's away from the ballpark. That team includes wife Katie, Rangers special assignment coach (and Bible study partner) Johnny Narron, fellow outfielder (and fellow Christian) David Murphy, and pitcher C. J. Wilson, who also eschews alcohol.

For Hamilton, being special means making sure the minibar is removed and in-room movies turned off before he stays in a hotel. It means having to be far more publicly candid about his sins than he'd like. It means one day having to explain to his three daughters the 26 tattoos—including one of Satan—that cover his impressive body.
And it means never being completely comfortable in social situations, not even in his own locker room, because he is and always will be an addict: one drink, one snort, or one puff away from self-destruction.

"I will never be normal, but I'm okay with that," Hamilton says.

Hamilton says it's all part of his "platform" for reaching people who deal with their own or loved ones' addictions, and for reaching people with the good news of the gospel.

His rocky road to superstardom included nearly four years away from the game between 2002 and 2006, much of that time in a crack-and-booze-induced haze, bouncing between trailer homes—where he'd collapse onto the floor with other addicts—and posh rehab centers where he failed time and again.

No Strong Foundation
Hamilton says he found Jesus at 18, but didn't do much to grow his faith.

After signing with Tampa Bay, Hamilton spent his first two years in the minor leagues living with his parents, who had quit their jobs to shepherd their son. Just before the 2001 season began, all three were injured in a car accident. While his parents recovered at home in Raleigh, Hamilton recuperated in Florida while staying with the team.

Alone for the first time, unable to play, and rudderless, he started hanging out in a local tattoo parlor where he developed his first addiction—to ink. When one of the tattoo artists invited Hamilton to a strip bar, he accepted. That night the 20-year-old had his first drink of alcohol and his first line of cocaine.
At first Hamilton's drug use was occasional, but by summer 2002, he was using during the season and acting out the paranoid life of a junkie. Then came the first of several positive drug tests and suspensions. By 2004 he had been banned from pro ball altogether.

'I will never be normal, but I'm okay with that.'
—Josh Hamilton

His downward spiral continued until fall 2005, when his grandmother gave him the ultimatum. And for the first time, he wrote in his 2008 autobiography, Beyond Belief, Hamilton began to pray.
"I'd tried the 'get-me-out-of-this-foxhole' prayers too many times, and I knew they weren't what God wanted to hear," he wrote. "This time … I wanted him to do with me what he would, whether that meant recovery or death. Either one would provide relief from this lingering hell."


Hamilton began reading a Bible and stumbled onto James 4:7: "So humble yourselves before God. Resist the Devil, and he will flee from you" (NLT). At that moment, he went cold turkey. It was a frightful few weeks. His mind played tricks on him. The cravings were gargantuan. But he began to gain weight and strength, and his grandmother began talking about a comeback. Hamilton dismissed the idea at first, focusing instead on winning back those he had hurt the most—starting with his wife.

'Completely Broken'
Katie, who met and married Josh during one of his early efforts at sobriety, was glad to see him recovering and, as a believer, happy to see his budding faith. But consumed with anger and pain, she sought counseling from her pastor and his wife.

"Our marriage was so completely broken that you couldn't even see a way to try and fix it," Katie told the Christian Broadcasting Network in November 2010. "I was completely desperate for God. There was nothing in me that could get me through that time." (Katie Hamilton declined to be interviewed for this story.) After much counseling together, Katie forgave Josh, and their marriage was restored. A counselor encouraged Hamilton to think about playing as a way of restoring meaning and purpose to his life. That was followed by a long winter and spring at the Winning Inning, a Christ-centered youth baseball academy in Clearwater, Florida, where Hamilton cleaned toilets, mowed lawns, and slept on an air mattress. Roy Silver, one of the men who run the facility, agreed to help Hamilton under strict conditions—he had to do his chores, help teach the students, and maintain a good attitude.

Silver says that initially Hamilton "was withdrawn. He wasn't very trusting of people and had a lack of maturity." But a regimen of chores, Bible study, and mentoring changed Hamilton's demeanor, and his time in the batting cages proved he still had the goods.

The Rays gave him one more chance, and late in the 2006 season, he played well in 15 games with a minor league team. But Tampa Bay, burned by Hamilton too many times, decided to part ways with him. He ended up in Cincinnati, where he displayed flashes of greatness. in the 2007 season, but he also was dogged by injuries and illnesses.
The Reds ended up trading Hamilton to Texas, where in 2008 he hit .304 with 32 homers and 130 rbis and was chosen to play in the All-Star game. In the Home Run Derby the night before, Hamilton crushed an astonishing 28 homers, some soaring over 500 feet. Afterward, as millions watched from home, Hamilton credited God for his recovery, and almost immediately the speaking requests poured in—from churches, drug rehab programs, schools.
He says, "I'm amazed God could use somebody as flawed as me."

A One-Night Relapse
Hamilton's five years of sobriety have one glitch—a highly publicized relapse in the spring of 2009. Photos of a drunk, shirtless Hamilton posing salaciously with three young women were splashed across the Internet several months later. By that time, Hamilton had already confessed to Katie and his team, and the matter had been dealt with privately.
Silver says Hamilton is proud of his return to baseball, but even more of his comeback off the field.

"How many times does this story end up in the toilet bowl?" asks Silver, citing other baseball stars whose careers were killed by drugs. "Josh has done a great job. He's shown that while he's not perfect, Jesus is still his Savior."
Heading into this season, overcoming an injury-prone history was Hamilton's biggest concern. In early April, in just the eleventh game, he broke his arm in a collision at home plate. He was told he'd miss six to eight weeks.
After the game, a frustrated Hamilton blamed third base coach Dave Anderson for the "dumb play"—for sending him home when he thought he should've stayed at third. It was an unwise comment at best, and more surprising that it came from one of the game's most polite players. The next day, Hamilton publicly apologized to his coach.
Rangers chaplain John Dee Spicer says many teammates might reasonably resent Hamilton's star power, special circumstances, and outspoken Christian faith. But that's not happening in Texas.

"His teammates genuinely love him," Spicer says. "Knowing his background, they don't want to put him in a tough situation. They look out for him."

Teammate Murphy, who co-leads the Rangers' chapel services with Hamilton, says religion can be a touchy subject in the clubhouse, but that they accept and respect Hamilton's beliefs.

"Josh is going to be who he is," says Murphy. "Mostly, though, he leads by example. The most important thing for us as Christians is to love on everybody. And that's what Josh does."

By Dan Reed for ChristianityToday

July 20, 2011

All Star Events

Over the course of the year, SC FCA will host 33 “All Star” events around the state. For every high school sport, there is a North South All Star event. This allows the best senior athletes to come together for an annual playoff between schools in the lower part of the state and the upper part of the state. In some sports, such as baseball or soccer, there may be additional events like the International Paper Baseball Invitational or the Clash of the Carolinas Soccer Tournament. At each of these events, the pregame meal has been hosted by FCA. Each of the players is fed well, given an FCA New Testament, and hears from a speaker, traditionally, a sports figure or youth pastor emphasizing the message that in today’s world, athletes are influencers.

On Saturday June 11th, the Lowcountry FCA hosted the N/S All Star Soccer breakfast at the Holiday Inn in Mt Pleasant. Over 85 players and coaches were in attendance and heard a message from Jon Davis, CSU football chaplain and pastor at Summit Church. Jon emphasized that each athlete is a light for the Christian body, and the athletes were either shining or they were dim. All players left with an understanding that their ability to play soccer so well was a God given ability and they in turn should give the Glory back to Him. Boys and Girls games were played at the College of Charleston facility at Patriots Point.

On Saturday, July 9th, The Clash of the Carolinas returned to the Lowcountry for a championship match at Blackbaud Stadium. 72 of the best boys and girls soccer players from North Carolina and South Carolina came to Seacoast Church in Mt Pleasant for the pregame meal and message from FCA. An astonishing fact, close to 60 of the 72 players had already signed letters of intent to play at the college level. These were truly some of the best of the best. Carl Martin, National Championship football player from Clemson shared his passion for college athletes with these players – that they were the next big influencers on the college campus amongst their friends, teammates, coaches, and campus. How were they going to use that influence?

This gives you a brief picture of just one of the ministry components of FCA and the Lowcountry FCA. With over 33 of these events each year, FCA is getting in front of some of the best athletes in this state and encouraging them to use their position as an athlete to challenge themselves, their coaches, and all those they influence with the adventure of having Christ as the center point of their live.

July 20, 2011

What does FCA do during the Summer?

Many folks have been surprised lately to learn just how busy FCA is during the summer months. And that is understandable. I mean it is a campus ministry and most campuses are pretty empty during the summer, right?

FCA will host over 300 camps during the eight weeks of June and July. Over 52,000 students, coaches and Huddle Leaders will attend these camps, and lives, campuses, and communities will be changed because of it. These camps are a time for inspiration and perspiration.

FCA offers a variety of camps, starting at elementary age and going up to adult coaches. FCA Power Camps are offered primarily here in the southeast and are day camps, usually 9:00 – 4:00, for boys and girls in elementary school. During the day, they are assigned to a Huddle and play series of different games like kickball, dodgeball, softball and soccer. During lunch, a Christian speaker shares a story while the kids relax and then its back to competitions! Sport Specific Camps are geared towards the individual athlete looking to become better at his sport and to do it in a way that gives Honor back to God. These camps range from lacrosse to surfing, swimming to motocross. During these camps, college and high school coaches have breakout sessions to help each athlete reach his potential. Evening time activities include a rocking contemporary praise band and then Huddle times to discuss whatever may be on the mind. Something that has become very popular are Team Camps for high school teams. Team camps allow a team to come to camp as whole to learn to play better and improve their skills. Examples of team camps include 7-on-7 Football, Team Basketball camp, and Team Volleyball camp. SC FCA will host over 7 team camps this summer, reaching more than 2,000 athletes and coaches. Leadership Camps, where I spent the last two weeks, takes the athletes that are leaders on their team and campus, and tweaks them to be more effective FCA leaders at their campus. The two camps I was at hosted more than 1,200 Through the power of the Holy Spirit, Student-Athletes and Coaches were equipped, enabled, empowered, and encouraged to impact and influence their campus and community for Christ! The camp’s focus was on three important values of a Leader – Passion, Commitment, and Courage. Athletes and Coaches learned through experience how to practically apply these values of Leadership in their Life! Here are a smattering of comments made by coaches, middle and high schoolers at these camps:

  • This camp has helped me grow so much closer to God. I let go of everything and gave it to him. It helped me athletically because I know how to be more of a team player. Kayla from Tryon, NC
  • Camp has allowed me to see that I need to not only be a leader in my school, but in my own home, for my parents. Grace from Fayetteville, GA
  • Stuart’s talks made me realize that my pride, lust, and desire for worldly things are getting in the way of having an intimate relationship with Christ. Johnny from Lilburn, GA
  • I learned that I can’t just be dedicated to serving others and leading them to Christ. Just “doing” it isn’t enough; I have to be passionate for my Father in heaven. Katlyn from Pensacola, FL
  • Camp has shown me how to trust God and know he’s always there and to have courage, passion, and commitment in all I do. Kaylie from Gallatin, TN
  • I’ve learned that I can worship and be a Christian wherever I go. Mallory from Semmes, AL
  • Leadership camp had great competition but even greater teaching and worship. Preston from Sugar Land, TX
  • Camp allowed me the opportunity to fellowship with other Christian coach’s wives and share with them the struggles that we all experience. – Angie from Swainsboro, GA
  • Camp strengthened me in my faith and helped prepare me for being a first time huddle sponsor at my school. – Jason from Thompson’s Station, TN
  • This camp always gives me peace. This has helped me evaluate myself as a leader. – Bill from Woodstock, GA

I want you to know that an amazingly high number, more than 70% of the students and coaches, required some form of financial aid (a scholarship) in order to be able to attend camp. These camps are not expensive but the current economy makes things harder and harder. Your local FCA scholarships students and coaches from this area because we feel that minimal investment will have a tremendous return in that person’s life, their team, campus, and community. If you agree, please take a moment to help pay for one of these scholarships by clicking on the link below:

Donate Now »

June 10, 2011

FCA Tennis "Fun"raiser....

On Saturday May 7th, over 75 tennis players from around Charleston came out to join in "The Battle of James Island." This event, hosted by the Charleston Country Club, and tennis professional Lee Brockman, has been an annual tournament for several years. This year, proceeds raised from the cost of registering for this event were donated to the Lowcountry FCA.

Players from all levels came out to challenge old friends and new. The competition was good and light-hearted at the same time, and everyone seemed to enjoy themselves.

After the tournament, Coach Brockman treated everyone to BBQ chicken and all the fixings. Awards were handed out and then the crowd was treated to the main event - Nationallyranked tennis pro Ryan Young, and WTA swing coach Clay Gates. Ryan, a Clemson graduate hold over 100 wins in single play and 100 wins in doubles as an All American at Clemson. Young was also active in Clemson's FCA - the largest FCA Huddle in the nation. Gates is a graduate of the College of Charleston, played the European Circuit for years, and has returned as the tennis pro at the Bee's Ferry Recreation Complex. The two put on an exhibition match that was well fought, but with Young coming out on top. The real treat was towards the end of the match, when each player reached into his bag of tricks and pulled out every trick shot and unbelievable reach that could be made.

The Lowcountry FCA wants to thank Coach Lee Brockman and the Charleston Country Club for hosting this tournament and allowing FCA to benefit from it.

June 10, 2011

Did you know?

Since 1954, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes has challenged athletes and coaches to impact the world for Jesus Christ. FCA is cultivating Christian principles in local communities nationwide by encouraging, equipping and empowering others to serve as examples and to make a difference. Reaching over two million people annually on the professional, college, high school, junior high and youth levels, FCA has grown into the largest interdenominational sports ministry in the world. Through this shared passion for athletics and faith, lives are changed for current and future generations.

FCA's staff has grown to more than 825 in 350 local offices across the country. Our message is gaining momentum as more and more dedicated supporters and volunteers share their time, talents, and beliefs to those longing to be bolstered in faith. FCA's efforts are focused on our "4 C's" of Ministry: Coaches, Campus, Camps and Community.
Camps are a time of "inspiration and perspiration" for athletes and coaches who want to reach their potential through comprehensive athletic, spiritual and leadership training. The six types of camps are Sports Camp, Leadership Camp, Coaches Camp, Power/Youth Sports Camp, Team Camp and Partnership Camp.

Additionally, the South Carolina FCA staff will be hosting multiple 7on7 football camps, basketball camps, and volleyball camps. Go to fcacamps.org to find a camp for you, your student, or coach.

That this is FCA Camp Season? Every summer, FCA hosts over 300 camps all across the country with more than 46,000 middle school, high school, and college students in attendance. On top of that, FCA will host five different camps solely to minister to coaches.

June 10, 2011

Lowcountry FCA says Goodbye
to CofC Huddle Leader, Matt Powell

For the past year, more than two dozen athletes from the College of Charleston have met once a week to share, grow, and hold one another accountable. It all started last summer, when Matt Powell, Assistant Director for Sports Performance at the CofC, contacted the Lowcountry FCA and asked about starting a Huddle. “I wanted to do it because I remember playing football in college, and FCA was the one place we could all come together and be ourselves.” says Powell about starting the group. Powell recalls the stress of playing collegiate sports. “Your day is very structured; from strength training in the morning, classes, practice, reviewing films, and mandatory study periods in the evening, there isn’t much of a break all day for athletes.” Add to this stress that many athletes receive scholarship aid, and the thought of injuries or slipping grades could mean the end of a college education.

The group meets in the Carolina Arena in the evening time. Dinner for the athletes was often provided by FCA, although several times, one or two players decided to cook up a home meal for the rest of the group. While a whole team never came to the meeting, this group ministered to players on the following teams: volleyball, tennis, M and W golf, M and W basketball, baseball softball, track and field, swimming, and the equestrian team. Powell did a great job leading the group. The meetings were always started with introductions (new athletes floated in and out weekly), everyone mentioned a high point and low point for the past week, dinner and fellowship, and then Matt would initiate a topic for discussion. “The discussions were always interesting” says Emmett Morgan of the Lowcountry FCA, “Matt was going to go around the room and give everyone a chance to answer – even if it was their first time there and they didn’t want to answer! He would just patiently wait until that athlete answered. There were never any hard feelings; they all knew they were with friends.” Outside of the meetings, Powell arranged for the FCA group to give back to the community, including these many outreach events: visited children at MUSC’s Children Hospital, spent a Saturday working on a house for Habitat for Humanity, food drive for ECCO at Thanksgiving, care packages for soldiers in Iraq, volunteered at Charleston Miracle League, toy drive at Christmas for Toys for Tots, and goody packages for orphans in Honduras.

Ultimately, Powell has wanted to get back to a school with football. Powell played football growing up, has interned with multiple NFL teams, yet found himself working at one of the few schools in the Southeast without a football program.

So now, Matt Powell enters his first year at Southeastern Louisiana University as the Lions' Director of Sports Performance. The native of Berlin, Conn., will oversee the strength and conditioning of Southeastern's 15 Division I athletic programs and its nearly 330 student-athletes.Before his arrival at Southeastern, Powell spent two seasons at the CofC where he served as Assistant Director for Sports Performance. During his stint at CofC, Powell oversaw all aspects of strength and conditioning for baseball, softball, volleyball, men’s and women’s swimming and diving and women’s track and field. He also assisted with the Cougars’ basketball and soccer teams.Powell worked as a Strength and Conditioning coach during a five-month internship with the NFL's Cleveland Browns in 2009 and also interned with the Chicago Bears in the summer of 2008.

He earned his Masters in Kinesiology from the University of Connecticut in 2009, where he worked as a Graduate Assistant Strength Coach at the school. Powell worked with the UCONN Rowing, Tennis and Golf team’s and also assisted with the school's acclaimed women's basketball program.Powell earned his bachelor's degree from Temple University in 2007 and earned three-varsity letters on the school's football team.
“Matt did a great job. Whoever takes over as the FCA huddle leader at the CofC will have some big shoes to fill. I know the athletes will miss him.” said Morgan.