Legendary Kentucky HS football coach Bob Beatty retires

Bob Beatty is calling it a career after spending 21 years turning Trinity High School into a Kentucky football powerhouse.

After spending the last two decades turning Trinity High School into a Kentucky football powerhouse, legendary coach Bob Beatty is calling it a career.

Beatty announced his retirement Thursday after posting a 254-44 record and winning 15 state championships over 21 seasons with Trinity. Beatty posted a remarkable 90-6 record in postseason play, including a 15-2 mark in state championship games. He went 218-22 against in-state competition and never went more than one season without winning a state title.

The 65-year-old Beatty also had a four-year run of championships from 2005-08 and a pair of three-peats from 2001-03 and 2010-12. He ended his coaching career with a 28-0 shutout of Male High School for the Class 6A state championship on Dec. 19. Trinity was dominant throughout 2020, allowing only 4.8 points per game and closing the season with three straight shutouts.

“Believe it or not, it’s a happy day,” Beatty said, per Jason Frakes of the Courier-Journal. “I’m not one for tears, but I am one for excitement. Jayne and I are ready to move on.”

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Beatty’s 2011 team was his best, as Trinity went 14-0 and was declared national champion by Rivals, Scout, Sports Illustrated and the Massey Ratings.

“The record speaks for itself,” said Jay Cobb, Trinity’s longtime defensive coordinator. “I don’t think it will ever be equaled.”

Beatty said he and his wife, Jayne, have been planning their retirement for two years and will finish out the school year at their respective schools (Jayne is a history teacher at Kentucky Country Day School) before moving to a new house on the Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri.

“I’m ready for the next chapter,” Beatty said. “So many people have asked, ‘What are you going to do?’ A lot. I’m going to do a lot. I’m excited about it. I’ll start doing some things around the house that normally we’d hire somebody to do because I didn’t have time.”

As for Trinity, its search for a new head coach begins. Athletic Director Rob Saxton said he expects the quest for Beatty’s replacement to span far and wide, and a search committee will be put together in order to ensure a quality candidate is hired to step into the large shoes Beatty leaves behind.

“Trinity won a lot of football games before I got there,” Beatty said. “And they’re going to win a lot more football games when I leave.”

Nationally ranked Trinity High School quarantining after positive COVID-19 test

Trinity High School, ranked No. 14 in the USA Today Super 25, is quarantining after a positive coronavirus test in its program.

Trinity High School (Ky.), ranked No. 14 in the USA Today Super 25, is quarantining after a positive COVID-19 test in its program.

According to Trinity athletic director Rob Saxton, a junior reserve who is typically part of the program’s 60-person gameday dress list for varsity games tested positive for coronavirus on Sunday. Saxton said the player’s last contact with Trinity team members was Wednesday.

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“One of his friends who doesn’t play football at Trinity was positive for COVID, so the football player’s mother didn’t send him to school or football on Thursday,” Saxton said, per the Louisville Courier-Journal. “The mom got the test results back Sunday that the (football player) is positive. … (The football player) wasn’t around the team Thursday, Friday, Saturday or Sunday.”

Saxton said state health department officials advised Trinity to quarantine for two weeks since its last contact with the player who tested positive. The Shamrocks, who are favorites to repeat as 6A state champions this season, have canceled their home game on Friday night and plan to return to practice on Nov. 12 — one day before they are scheduled to host Marshall County in the first round of the Class 6A playoffs.