Best of 2021: Top 10 inspiring stories from Tom Archdeacon

Daniel “Danny” McCarty, the Wilmington College assistant baseball coach who is the Fightin’ Quakers recruiting coordinator and director of baseball operations, shows the “Never Give Up”  tattoo he got inked on his left arm this summer.  McCarty suffers from an inherited genetic bone disorder -- osteogenesis imperfecta – and has had over 300 broken bones in his 18 years of life. (Photo by Tom Archdeacon)

Daniel “Danny” McCarty, the Wilmington College assistant baseball coach who is the Fightin’ Quakers recruiting coordinator and director of baseball operations, shows the “Never Give Up” tattoo he got inked on his left arm this summer. McCarty suffers from an inherited genetic bone disorder -- osteogenesis imperfecta – and has had over 300 broken bones in his 18 years of life. (Photo by Tom Archdeacon)

Tom Archdeacon has been telling the Dayton area’s best sports and life stories for decades.

In 2021, he introduced the area to huge stars and little-known underdogs, all with the care of a storyteller watching for details.

Here’s a look at Tom’s favorite columns from this year:

» THE ARCHIVE: Find more of Tom Archdeacon’s award-winning columns


Larry Connor: Businessman explorer

Larry Connor (left) and Patrick Lahey on one of their recent dives in the Mariana Trench. Connor completed three dives, less than 10 months before he's scheduled to pilot the first private space mission to the International Space Station. CONTRIBUTED

icon to expand image

The CEO of the real estate investment firm The Connor Group is in the middle of his extraordinary adventure game, one that took him to the deepest depths of the ocean and, next year, is scheduled to launch him into space as he pilots the first-ever all private mission to the International Space Station.

Only two other people in history have gone to such extremes in inner and outer space and none has done so in such a short time span.

» Larry Connor on exploring ocean depths: ‘It’s a different world down there’


Amy Siewe: Python hunter

Amy Siewe with the 17-foot-3 inch python she captured last July of the Tamiami Trail in the Everglades. Amy, a former Fairmont High athlete and homecoming queen and University of Toledo tennis player, is now a python hunter contracted by the South Florida Water Management District to help rid the Everglades of the invasive pythons that are killing all the animals and birds they come in contact with and wrecking the ecosystem. CONTRIBUTED

icon to expand image

Let Siewe describe the question at the heart of this eye-opening story:

“She was trying to slide back into the swamp, so I jumped on her back and locked my hands behind her head. I dug my feet into the ground to try to keep her from moving, but she was strong. And big. I just didn’t know how big.

“That’s when it dawned on me. I was by myself and I was on the back of this gigantic snake. I kind of questioned my sanity: “What was I doing?’”

» From Homecoming Queen to python hunter


Jeff Camp: Battling boxer

Jeff Camp with the new boxing uniform he hasn’t yet worn. The new slogan “Living Proof” has never been more apropos. He miraculously survived after being shot five times – in the head, neck, back and arm – while working at a Dollar General store on Salem Avenue last October. Tom Archdeacon/CONTRIBUTED

icon to expand image

Riddled by bullets and bleeding badly, he lay on the asphalt next to the Dollar General on Salem Avenue in Trotwood.

Jeff “The Nightmare” Camp – who’d been an amateur boxer of note here and now was a colorful pro known as much for his nickname and custom-made gold fight garb and mask as his 5-2-1 record – had been shot five times on Oct. 15, 2020, by an unknown gunman who had been sitting alone in a Chevy Equinox parked near the rear of the store.

Here’s how that kind-hearted assistant manager showed his fight.

» Left for dead, boxer Jeff Camp shows his fight


Wayne and Terri Embry: Legends for more than basketball

Wayne Embry speaks to a crowd during a ceremony and presentation of the Freedom Summer of '64 Award and unveiling of a statue in his honor Tuesday, May 18, 2021 at Miami University in Oxford. Wayne Embry and his late wife Theresa Embry, both Miami alumni, were awarded the Freedom of Summer of '64 Award for their life's work as civil right champions and mentors. A statue of Wayne Embry in a basketball pose, created by sculptor Tom Tsuchiya, was unveiled in front of Millett Hall and a scholarship in his name was announced to support Miami varsity men's basketball student athletes. NICK GRAHAM / STAFF

Credit: Nick Graham

icon to expand image

Credit: Nick Graham

Wayne and the late Terri – she died in August 2020 at age 82 – received one of Miami University’s most prestigious honors, the Freedom Summer of ‘64 Award, which is given annually to notable leaders who have set an example while championing civil rights.

The story of how they got there, and what role sports and a sense of purpose played, prove why they are legends of southwest Ohio in more ways than one.

» Miami to honor Wayne and Terri Embry for a life’s work


Herbert Chongwain and Mustafa Ibrahim: Immigrant dreamers

Mustafa Ibrahim (left ) and Herbert Chongwain (right) – former Belmont High soccer teammates  -- in the 48th Clothing  store they opened two months ago at the Northwest Plaza. Tom Archdeacon/STAFF

icon to expand image

These former Belmont High School soccer teammates and immigrants from Africa launched the hip clothing store -- 48th Clothing – this year in the Northwest Plaza shopping center at 3285 W. Siebenthaler Ave.

Theirs is a story about the lessons and bonds of sports when the odds are against you.

Says their former coach:

“We always said these are skills and traits and characteristics that you can take all through your life.”

» Former Belmont soccer players dressed and blessed


Linda Waltz: COVID-19 fighter

Linda Waltz at the front desk of the Dayton Flyers women’s basketball offices. CONTRIBUTED

icon to expand image

“Miss Linda” to all those who know her is the beloved administrative assistant and “mother” of the University of Dayton women’s basketball program for the past 24 years.

Her seven missing weeks while unconscious and fighting COVID-19 are something her family, the medical staff who treated her and especially her UD family will never forget.

Her story includes a Jan. 7 moment that Neil Sullivan, UD’s vice president and director of athletics said “was probably the most powerful thing I have been a part of in my 15 years working here. It was truly amazing.”

» A complete miracle for the ‘mother’ of the UD women’s basketball program


Donnie Deaton: Hall of Famer, cancer fighter

Donnie Deaton on his 60th birthday earlier this month. CONTRIBUTED

icon to expand image

Deaton is in the fight of his life after being diagnosed with terminal stage IV pancreatic cancer in October 2020.

But room must be made for softball.

A Dayton Softball Hall of Famer who is enshrined in the Legends of the Game hall of fame has a powerful story to tell about the inspiration we take from our passions.

» Softball is tonic for toughest time


Ba Nguyen: Combat pilot, inspiring engineer

Pilot Ba Nguyen on the wing of his A-1 Skyraider that’s loaded with long fuse Mk 82 missiles. Based at Bien Hoa Air Base, he flew some 1,500 combat missions for the Republic of Vietnam Air Force (RVNAF).     (Contributed Photo)

icon to expand image

The former battle-seasoned A-1 Skyraider combat pilot in the Republic of Vietnam Air Force made a daring escape from his country in 1975.

What he did when he came to the Miami Valley – eventually willing himself through Edison State Community College, Wright State and the University of Dayton while having an impressive 33-year career as a research engineer at the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright Patterson AFB and raising three children – is even more amazing.

» Local man who escaped Vietnam sees similarities in those who fled Afghanistan


Dan McCarty: Odds destroyer

Dan McCarty and his dad, James. (Contributed photo)

icon to expand image

His parents were told there was a 5 percent chance their son would survive.

Now he’s in his late teens, gets around by wheelchair and estimates that “I’ve probably broken about 300 bones in my life, but I don’t count fingers anymore because those breaks don’t set me back.”

That includes his role as director of baseball operations and recruiting coordinator for the Wilmington College baseball team.

» The heartwarming bond of Dan and Tony


Sister Mary Xavier: Hoopstar nun

Sister Mary Xavier leaving church in Alton, Illinois after making her first vows to the order of Sisters of St, Francis of the Martyr St. George in 2015. CONTRIBUTED

icon to expand image

She no longer owns a basketball, which once helped the woman once known as Sarah Schulze become a 6-foot-1 hoop legend in Ohio.

Now she’s Sister Mary Xavier, a 32-year-old nun with the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George. And while she doesn’t have all the swag that once came with her Ohio State basketball days, she does have a simple yellow rosary – a gift from a friend when she was teaching in Cuba – that she uses daily.

» Ex-Anna star’s hoops story turns heavenly


About the Author