Jay Rhodemyer isn’t a name many Ashland Tomcat fans may recognize today, but they should. The 1940 Ashland graduate may be the most accomplished football player in school history — an All-SEC and third-team All-American center for Bear Bryant at Kentucky and a second-team All-Pro with the Green Bay Packers.
Rhodemyer was a first-team All-State center for a 5–4 Ashland team in 1940 after earning second-team All-State honors as a junior guard. His performance drew the attention of the University of Kentucky, which offered him the opportunity to play college football.

He enrolled at UK in 1942, but when World War II intensified, he left to join the Army Air Corps, serving as a bomber pilot. After the war, Rhodemyer returned to Lexington for the 1946 season — Bryant’s first — and became a cornerstone of the Wildcats’ resurgence. He earned second-team All-SEC honors in 1946 and followed that with first-team All-SEC and third-team All-America recognition in 1947.

He played in the 1947 Blue-Gray Game in Montgomery, Ala., and was named Most Valuable Player of the 1948 College All-Star Game at Soldier Field against the NFL champion Chicago Cardinals. The All-Stars lost 28–0, but Rhodemyer’s stellar performance earned him MVP honors.
Bryant said of Rhodemyer, “He was the doggondest best center I ever coached or have seen.” The Hall of Fame coach made that remark in 1968 after Rhodemyer died of a heart attack at age 45 in Lexington.
Rhodemyer was drafted in the seventh round (51st overall) of the 1948 NFL Draft by the Packers. He played center and linebacker, intercepting five passes and recovering a fumble during his career. Green Bay, then coached by Curly Lambeau, struggled during his tenure — going 3–9 in 1948 and peaking at 6–6 in 1952. He played in 1948, 1949, 1951, and 1952; records do not indicate why he did not play in 1950.
Two future Hall of Fame quarterbacks — Bobby Layne and Y.A. Tittle — were selected in the first round of that 1948 draft.
Rhodemyer, listed at 6-foot-1 and 210 pounds, appeared in 45 NFL games and was named second-team All-Pro by the New York Daily News in 1951. After retiring, he returned to Lexington, where he was part-owner and secretary-treasurer of Thermal Equipment Sales Co. and a member of Calvary Baptist Church. Following a memorial service in Lexington, his body was returned to Ashland for a second service at Steen Funeral Home and burial in Ashland Cemetery.
Arliss Beach and the NFL
Arliss Beach, a record-setting Tomcat running back from the Class of 2002 and a former UK standout, is the only other Ashland alum with NFL ties. He signed with the Green Bay Packers as an undrafted free agent in 2006 and impressed the staff enough to make the active roster. But in the final preseason game against the Cincinnati Bengals, he suffered a high ankle sprain and spent the season on injured reserve. Beach appeared on track for a spot on the 53-man roster before the injury. Green Bay released him the following June.
Beach signed with the Dallas Cowboys in August 2007 but was released before the season. He later joined the Houston Texans’ practice squad in December 2007, signed a futures contract in January 2008, and was waived that May.
At Kentucky, Beach played during a period of coaching turnover and was often underutilized, though he delivered one unforgettable performance against highly ranked Florida. UK lost 24–21, but Beach scored all three Wildcat touchdowns. He finished his UK career with 951 yards and 14 touchdowns.
Beach’s 2001 senior season at Ashland remains one of the greatest in program history: 2,533 rushing yards and 39 touchdowns on just 244 carries (10.4 yards per attempt), including three games over 300 yards. He ended his Tomcat career with 4,711 rushing yards, 62 touchdowns, 5,073 total yards, and 426 points.
Rhodemyer and Beach remain the only Tomcats ever to reach the NFL — one earning second-team All-Pro honors and the other coming agonizingly close to playing in a regular-season game.