Commemorative bricks for Putnam Stadium donor corner on sale until June 1

Ashland added to its football legacy with an undefeated 11-0 state championship season in 2020.

Now it’s your turn to add to that legacy but signing up to purchase a commemorative brick on the Donor Wall at Putnam Stadium to support the stadium restoration project. Plenty still needs to be done to finish off the stadium project, including lights, a sound system, field turf and the banked area behind the open end zone.

This fundraiser can help make some of those dreams come true for what is already one of the most iconic football stadiums in Kentucky.

Commemorative bricks are available for $100 (4×8)  or $175 (8×8) and they make a great way to honor the Tomcat in your life. The 4×8 brick gives you 3 lines and 20 characters and the 8×8 brick gives you 6 lines and 20 characters. It makes the perfect Father’s Day/birthday/Christmas gift.

You don’t have to be a football player or even an athlete to have your name – or a loved one’s name – placed in the donor corner of Putnam Stadium. Cheerleaders, band members and Tomcat fans have already put their names on bricks that adorn a special corner at the stadium around the statue of Coach Herb Conley.

Players who were a part of the 2020 championship football team, the 2019-20 undefeated basketball team and the 2019 Final Four girls’ soccer team seem like good candidates to have their names enshrined permanently in the donor corner as teams and individuals.

Those teams will be forever remembered in Ashland history for what was accomplished.

There’s plenty of room to add hundreds of bricks and support the stadium project in the process.

Ashland is riding a wave of momentum, becoming title town with regional championships in several sports during the past year and, of course, the Tomcats’ perfect 33-0 basketball season in 2019-2020.

Teams could be honored on the Donor Wall through the Tomcat Pride Club for $500.

The order has to be in by June 1 for the bricks to be made and placed by the start of the 2021 season.

PUTNAM STADIUM DONOR ORDER FORM

It is that time of the year again and we have a lot to celebrate in TOMCAT NATION!!! Do not let this opportunity to create a memory for your lifetime pass you by. If you would like to order a commemorative brick or have your name inscribed on the Donor Wall, please complete a form and designate Brick or Wall and write a check to the Putnam Stadium Restoration Foundation and mail to the address shown below:

The Putnam Stadium Restoration Foundation

c/o Christy Collins

P.O. Box 3000

Ashland, KY 41105-3000

For questions, please contact Greg Jackson at 606.922.0623

DEADLINE FOR THE NEXT ANNUAL ORDER IS JUNE 1, 2021.

This should allow us the time to place the bricks in the ground before the first home game this season!

Putnam Stadium

Donor Wall and Commemorative Bricks

Become a permanent part of Putnam Stadium.  This is your chance to permanently place your name and that of your family at Putnam Stadium, and at the same time, support Phase II of the Restoration Project.  We want to afford everyone the opportunity to be a part of this historic landmark.

For a donation of at least $500 you can place that family information (or other names to honor or place in memory of) on the Donor Wall in one of four categories for large donors as listed below:

TOMCAT TOUCHDOWN CLUB:                               $10,000 OR MORE

TOMCAT MAROON AND WHITE CLUB:                  $5,000 – $9,999

TOMCAT PAWS CLUB:                                             $1,000 – $4,999

TOMCAT PRIDE CLUB:                                             $500 – $999

For a donation of $100 or $175 you can have a brick placed in the Donor’s Corner with an inscription that you choose (name or family name, etc.):

4×8 brick:         $100            3 lines/20 characters each line (this includes spacing and punctuation)

8×8 brick:         $175            6 lines/20 characters each line (this includes spacing and punctuation)

Complete the order form with inscription and contact information, then send the form and check to the address above.

PUTNAM STADIUM RESTORATION FOUNDATION ORDER FORM

Check one of the two categories below (Donor Wall or Brick)

__   Donor Wall Inscription (For donation of $500 or more)         __  Brick Inscription

Donor Wall (if Applicable)

Name(s) as you would like it (them) to appear on the wall.  Please fill out the line below and submit the form and payment to the Putnam Stadium Restoration Foundation:

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __      

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    (40 spaces, will be 1 line)

Inscription for the Brick. Please fill out the lines below and submit the form and payment to the Putnam Stadium Restoration Foundation:

4”x8” Brick ($100)                                                                 8”x8” Brick ($175)

Example                                                                                  Example

 John and Jane Tomcat                                                                       In honor of

        Class of 2021                                                                       Joe Football 

  Jim, Janie, and Joey                                                                 Class of 2021

                                                                                                2020 State Champs

                                                                                                     Quarterback

                                                                                                     Go Tomcats!!!

Inscription (3 (4×8 brick) or 6 (8×8 brick) lines)

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    (20 spaces)

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    (20 spaces)

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    (20 spaces)

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    (20 spaces)

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    (20 spaces)

__    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    __    (20 spaces)

Name:                _______________________________

Address:              _______________________________tt

City, State, Zip   _______________________________

Home Phone:    ______________________ Work/Cell:   ______________________

Contributions to the Putnam Stadium Restoration Foundation are deemed charitable under section 170 (b) (1) (A) (vi) of the Internal Revenue code as an organization described in Section 501 (c) 3.  U.S. Federal Tax ID 26-1674277.  Please consult your accountant for any clarifications.

Clere vision for Tomcats: ‘Don was my hero,’ says legend Herb Conley

This statement from Tomcat legend Herb Conley should tell you enough about Don Clere’s impact on Ashland Tomcat football: “Don was my hero.”

Clere, who starred for the Tomcats from 1951-1953, died April 25 in Conyers, Georgia. He was a dynamite running back whose high-stepping, powerful running sent him from Ashland to the University of Kentucky where a broken leg ended his career.

“I thought he was the greatest football player who ever played in this town,” said Conley, the man who is certainly in the conversation of greatest Tomcat. “I went and watched him play all the time. He’d run over people.”

Clere ran with “high knee action” and barreled over defenders. Conley, who was five years younger, said he tried to imitate Clere’s running style when he became a Tomcat a few years later.

For several years, Ashland’s running game had a Clere vision. Don’s younger brother, Ralph, joined him on the Tomcats as a sophomore and started his junior and senior seasons.

“Ralph was a good football player, too,” Conley said. “And there’s not a better person in Ashland than Ralph Clere.”

It typically took more than one player to bring down the Clere brothers, who ran with similar power style. Don came through the hole in the line of scrimmage like a locomotive, legs pumping like pistons and head lowered. He was a punishing runner who left tacklers in his wake. You may bring him down, but you were going to feel it – maybe for days.

Don Clere gained 1,589 yards and scored 13 touchdowns during an era when the Tomcats played one of the top schedules around. He averaged 7.1 yards per carry for his career. It was also an era where the carries were equally distributed among four to five players. He only carried it about 10 times per game but made the most of them.

Don’s best game came during his senior season when he gained 190 yards in a 40-14 win over Ironton – the Tomcats only victory that season.

Conley began idolizing Clere at an earlier age when Don would put him on the front of his bicycle and go up and down Ashland Avenue to Central Park to play baseball. Little Herb Conley hung out with the older guys hoping to get put on a team. He usually held as own, as you might expect.

“We’d be going up Ashland Avenue and them muscles in his legs and arms would pop out,” Conley said. “I thought, this guy was superman. I went and watched him play (football). He’d run over people with his big thighs. I wanted to be just like him.”

Don’s best season individually was as a senior when he ran for 600 yards. He gained 469 yards as a junior and 520 yard with seven TDs as a sophomore when Ashland went 6-5. The Tomcats were 13-14-4 in his three seasons.

Clere and his brother were part of Ashland’s 1954 state championship track and field team too. Ralph started in the backfield his junior and senior seasons, gaining 900 yards with 10 touchdowns. He played two years on a strong Fort Bragg, N.C., team while serving in the military. Ralph also went through a spring practice with Bear Bryant at Alabama.

Most importantly, the brothers were men of strong faith. Don was a member at Unity Baptist in his youth and later a member of First Baptist Church in Conyers. Ralph is still a member at Unity Baptist.

Don Clere’s funeral will be May 6, 2021 at West Cobb Funeral Home in Marietta, Georgia. Burial will be at the Georgia National Cemetery.

Putnam Stadium, home of the Tomcats.