Dane Grounds – Athlete of the Month for Encore Rehabilitation-Enterprise

Congratulations to Dane Grounds, Athlete of the Month for Encore Rehabilitation-Enterprise!
Dane is a Sophomore at Enterprise State Community College where he plays Baseball for the Boll Weevils. He has earned the distinction of First Team NJCAA Academic All-American Baseball for 2016-2017 (previous college). His future plans include transferring to a four-year university to play baseball and pursue a Marketing degree.
In his free time, he enjoys fishing and playing more baseball! Dane is the son of Rodney and Lana Grounds.
We wish you all the best in your future pursuits, Dane!
Encore Rehabilitation-Enterprise
404 North Main Street, Enterprise, Alabama 36330
334-393-7465
Open House April 19, 2018 for Encore Rehabilitation- Lillian

Encore Rehabilitation – Lillian
12831 6th Street, Unit C, Lillian, Alabama 36549
251-961-0090
encorerehab.com
COACH ANN SCHILLING INDUCTED INTO AHSAA SPORTS HALL OF FAME

The following is an excerpt from: Perseverance and Passion Has Highlighted Ann Schilling’s Journey to Hall of Fame, by Bill Plott, AHSAA Historian. To read the complete article, click here.
Ann Schilling’s journey to the Alabama High School Sports Hall of Fame started at the hands of a master. The Class of 2018 inductee played under the renowned Coach Becky Dickinson at McGill-Toolen Catholic High School. Coach Dickinson was in the very first class of inductees in 1991.
In a letter nominating Schilling to the Hall of Fame, Coach Dickinson wrote: “Before her high school tenure with me even began, Ann fell during summer team camp and broke her right arm. Other athletes might have let that discourage them, but not Ann. She stayed at summer camp and continued to work out. She came to every volleyball practice and game, taking statistics and stepping in wherever she could. She even taught herself to shoot a basketball left-handed.”
A native of Mobile, Schilling went from McGill-Toolen to Auburn University where she played basketball for four years, walking on and earning a scholarship by her sophomore year. She stayed a fifth year at Auburn to play volleyball when the program was reinstated.
With college-level varsity experience in basketball and volleyball under her belt, she accepted the position of physical education teacher, basketball and volleyball coach at Bayside Academy in 1987. It was a perfect union. Schilling is now in her 31st season of teaching and coaching at Bayside.
That career, by the numbers, includes the following:
- 23 state volleyball championships, four runners-up
- 16 consecutive state champions 2002-2017, an Alabama record and second in the nation, and 19 in 20 years since 1998
- More than 1,400 wins, first among state active coaches and second in the state all-time
- 6 Mobile Press Register Super 12 Coach of the Year awards
- 5 Birmingham News Coach of the Year awards
- 7 selections as AHSAA all-star coach
- National Federation of High Schools Volleyball Coach of the Year award in 2010
Additionally, Schilling has received two John L. Finley Awards for Superb Achievement as a coach and an R. L. Lindsay Service Award for club volleyball. She is founder and director of the Eastern Shore Volleyball Club.
She was elected to the Bayside Academy Hall of Fame in 2004 and to the Mobile Sports Hall of Fame in 2017.
Coach Dickinson said she saw Schilling develop and grow into a superb leader. “Looking back at her outstanding career, it may come as a surprise that Ann was not a born leader,” Dickinson said. “During her senior year, the captain of the volleyball team missed one of our tournaments, and I watched as my team floundered, leaderless. A few timeouts later, when I asked Ann and her fellow senior to take charge, I watched her step onto the court and step into her own. After that, nothing Ann did surprised me.
“I was not surprised when she started and didn’t stop winning state championships. I was not surprised when Ann’s peers repeatedly recognized her coaching ability by voting her Coach of the Year. I was not surprised that she learned to take relatively unskilled young women and teach them game skills while building their confidence and leadership skills.”
And it is no surprise that Ann Schilling has now been inducted into the AHSAA Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2018.
Coach Ann Schilling is one of 11 inductees to the Alabama High School Hall of Fame, Class of 2018. For a complete list of other 2018 inductees, please click here.
Encore Rehabilitation is proud to provide Sports Medicine Coverage for the Bayside Academy Admirals and the Alabama High School Athletic Association.
We LOVE to see you move!
encorerehab.com
Monday Motivation – March 19, 2018
#MotivationalMonday
#EncoreRehab
Rachel Johnson – Athlete of the Month for Encore Rehabilitation-Eufaula

Congratulations to Rachel Johnson, Athlete of the Month for Encore Rehabilitation-Eufaula!
Rachel is a Senior at Eufaula High School where she plays Basketball for the Tigers. She has been recognized on the Regional All-Tournament Team, 2018 Team Captain, Alabama All-State 3rd Team, and Super 12 Honorable Mention. Her post-graduation plans include playing basketball in college and pursing a Physical Therapy degree. (Great career choice!)
In her free time, Rachel likes singing at church and doing yoga. She is the daughter of Sonya Johnson.
Way to go, Rachel! We wish you the best!
Encore Rehabilitation-Eufaula
1228 S. Eufaula Avenue, Eufaula, Alabama 36027
334-355-6009
Coach Ricky Allen to be inducted into the AHSAA Sports Hall of Fame

The following is an excerpt from: Ricky Allen Built Girls’ Basketball at Brewer with a Solid Foundation by Bill Plott, AHSAA Historian. To read the complete article, please click here.
When most people might while away slow time doodling, Ricky Allen found himself drawing house plans. He once mused that perhaps he should have been an architect.
Some say he was an architect in the way he built the girls’ basketball program at Albert Brewer High School in Morgan County. Over a 30-year career he constructed a program that produced more than 600 wins, a state championship – and an enthusiasm amongst his students that has created a passion for the sport at all levels of the community.
A native of Hartselle, Allen, who is being inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in the Class of 2018 at the Montgomery Renaissance Hotel and Convention Center March 19, was in the first group of seniors at Brewer in 1973. He played on the school’s first basketball team, a squad that made it to the state tournament.
After graduation he went to Auburn University, first studying business, then education as he realized that teaching and coaching would be his calling. With a degree in hand, he returned to his alma mater as assistant football and boys’ basketball coach.
From 1978-81 he was girls’ basketball coach at Cotaco Junior High, compiling a record of 53-9. Then he spent two years at Union Hill Junior High, coaching the boys to a 23-11 record. Returning to Brewer in 1982, he coached JV basketball as well as volleyball and softball, leading the school to its first county championship in both sports. In 1985, he took over varsity girls’ basketball. Over the next 30 years it became one of the top programs in the state. Among the accomplishments:
- A record of 604-272
- One 5A state championship and one runner-up finish
- Five Region championships, 15 Area championships and 17 Morgan County Championships
- Nine All-State players and the 2012 5A state Coach-of-the-Year award.
Allen built the Brewer program by attracting elementary school girls to his basketball camps. He would go to their junior high games, watching the teams that fed into the high school and always standing under the goal rather than favoring one side or the other.
“I was like all the girls that played basketball at the feeder schools,” recalled Christy Thomaskutty, who went on to become a four-time All-State player. “We all wanted to be good enough to play at Brewer for Ricky Allen.”
Thomaskutty went on to play at Tulane, graduating magna cum laude in management. She is currently in her 14th year of coaching at NCAA Division II Emory University in Atlanta.
Mark Edwards, sports editor at The Anniston Star, covered Brewer High School when he was at The Decatur Daily earlier. He wrote that what he was most impressed with in Ricky Allen was not the wins and losses but the coach’s character.
“He began coaching Brewer girls’ sports in the early 1980s when it wasn’t necessarily considered cool to coach girl sports,” Edwards said. “In North Alabama he helped make it cool. He never let a single one of his players think for an instant that their team and their games were any less important than the boys’ teams and games.
“He worked his players hard, but he treated them fairly. At a time when it seemed as if so many male coaches screamed theirs heads off at their players, Coach Allen did the opposite. I noticed he almost never yelled during games. When he did, it was because he needed to be heard over the noise of the large crowds that came to see his teams play. He managed with a caring, firm hand – not insults and derision.”
Morgan County has always been a basketball hotbed. Allen retired as No. 4 on the list of winningest coaches. He is a member of the Morgan County Sports Hall of Fame.
Coach Ricky Allen is one of 11 inductees to the Alabama High School Hall of Fame, Class of 2018. For a complete list of other 2018 inductees, please click here.
Encore Rehabilitation is proud to provide Sports Medicine Coverage for the Brewer High School Patriots and the Alabama High School Athletic Association.
We LOVE to see you move!
encorerehab.com
Elsee Peoples-On the move with spina bifida

Elsee was born with spina bifida. Due to her condition, she has physical disabilities and requires physical therapy. Elsee and her mother, Jessica, come to Encore Rehabilitation-Winfield to work with Physical Therapist Rachel Jones.
Jessica shares, “We absolutely love the staff at Encore! We are so blessed to be a patient at the Winfield office. They have helped Elsee in so many ways.”
Thank you, Elsee and Jessica, for choosing Encore Rehabilitation as your rehabilitation provider!
Encore Rehabilitation-Winfield
199 Carraway Drive, Suite A1
Winfield, Alabama 35594
205-487-0540
encorerehab.com
Ann Hagood -“My shoulder mobility has immensely improved!”

After dislocating her shoulder and suffering a hairline fracture, Ann Hagood came to Encore Rehabilitation-Gulfport Downtown for her physical therapy. Following a program that included exercises, stretching, and manual therapy, she is doing great!
Ann shares, “My shoulder mobility has immensely improved! The entire staff-from the front desk receptionist to the techs to the physical therapists-provided a very welcoming, positive environment. They are very knowledgeable, encouraging, and patient. They are all truly assets to your organization!”
We thank you, Ann, for choosing Encore Rehabilitation-Gulfport Downtown to be your rehabilitation provider!
Encore Rehabilitation-Gulfport Downtown
2A Pass Road, Gulfport, Mississippi 39507
228-896-1189
encorerehab.com
Jean Stevenson – Feeling Better
Jean Stevenson shared her recent experience with Encore Rehabilitation-Columbiana:
“I was having sharp pain in the left leg and it was hard for me to walk and get around. After therapy, the pain is almost gone and I can move a lot freer. I can also do my work easier. Therapy has really helped me feel better.” – Jean Stevenson
Thank you, Jean, for choosing Encore Rehabilitation-Columbiana as your physical therapy provider!
Encore Rehabilitation-Columbiana
101 West College Street, Suite 100, Columbiana, Alabama 35051
205-671-0914
encorerehab.com

