The three “A’s”: academics, arts and the athletics are present at just about every school in the United States. Isidore Newman School is known for its excellence in all three categories. It has always provided some of the best academics in the entire south. The arts have always been a focal point of the school and students love to participate in all fields of art. Many great artist and scholars have come through Newman. And almost every one of them was a Newman athlete as well.
When the stereotypes of a Newman student are listed (white, Jewish, uptown, upper-class) it is hard for one to grasp how they may be so successful athletically. Through great coaching and dedicated individuals, Newman Athletics have reached the pinnacle many times, in all sports.
There have been many extraordinary coaches that have had tenures here at Newman. Ed Tuohy, Anthony Reggie Reginelli, and Billy Fitzgerald were some of the best coaches in all of high school sports around the country. Tuohy was a genius basketball coach while Reginelli controlled the successful Newman football team.
Reginelli and Tuohy came to Newman in the same year (1960) and they changed the athletic program around 360 degrees. A new set of rules was put in place and these young and talented coaches were prepared to make this program successful. Newman’s rise to the top of high school athletics would begin in 1960 with the arrival of the two new faces.
Coach Reginelli first came to Newman as an assistant coach for football in 1961. He would later receive head coaching honors. He was born in southern Arkansas in a little city on the Mississippi River. When he came to New Orleans to play baseball at Tulane University, he fell in love with the city. After college, he had hopes of playing professional baseball, but due to the closing of major leagues around the nation he took a coaching job at Holy Cross to work with Ed Tuohy. This is where the two met, and ultimately decided to come to Newman together. Once Reginelli came here, the Newman football program was headed in the right direction. Although Newman has never won a state championship in football, it has always been a prestigious club, and it was made prominent by Reginelli. He finished with a 203-63 record at Newman. He was a rough and tough, old-school styled coached who demanded 100 percent effort from his players.
Ed “Skeets” Tuohy was raised in Chicago and first came to New Orleans for college. He was recruited by Loyola University for basketball. After his college days, he moved on to becoming a basketball coach. In 1959, Tuohy agreed to become the head basketball coach for the Greenies and little did he know, he would have an everlasting imprint on the school. Coach Tuohy was known for having great relationships with his individual players. This is what helped lead Newman to state title after state title in the 1960’s. Tuohy’s son, Sean, was a great athlete at Newman. He was a tremendous basketball and baseball player and got to play for his father for one season, before Skeets’ sudden death of a stroke at the age of 49. Sean Tuohy went on to be one of the most successful athletes in Newman history. He got drafted out of high school to go play for the Cincinnati Reds in baseball. Instead, he accepted the basketball scholarship that the University of Mississippi offered him. He went on to set many school and conference records. The most impressive being that he holds the all-time assists record in the SEC. Today, Sean Tuohy is a TV broadcaster for the Memphis Grizzlies. Sean and his wife Ann Tuohy, also are known for their adoption of Baltimore Ravens tackle Michael Oher and his role in Michael Lewis’ The Blind Side.
The 1960-1961 seasons for the basketball and football teams will never be forgotten by Greenie fans. Combining for a flawless 40-0 record, Newman dominated the gridiron and hardwood floors in this highlight year. In football, The Greenies went 8-0, winning the Riverside League District. In basketball, during Ed Tuohy’s first season at Newman, the Greenies pulled off a perfect 32-0 record, winning the state championship.
After the prime time days of Tuohy and Reginelli, another coach would rise to the top of the high school sporting world. Coach Billy Fitzgerald, who specialized in baseball and basketball, would take over the reins of Newman athletics and become a legend.
Coach Fitz was born in New Orleans and went to Jesuit for high school. He moved on to Tulane, playing both basketball and baseball for the Green Wave. Out of college, he got drafted by the Oakland A’s in the first round and played five seasons of minor league ball. In 1973, Coach Fitz came to Newman as an assistant basketball and baseball coach. After coach Tuohy passed of his stroke in 1975, Coach Fitz took over. If there is one characteristic given to Coach Fitz, it would be that he is a winner. Over his 26 seasons as basketball coach at Newman, Fitz had a 551-221 record including five state championships. During his 34 seasons as baseball coach, Fitz finished with two state titles in 2000 and 2003. Overall, Coach Fitz has spent 60 seasons coaching high school athletics which spans to be approximately 1,500 games coached. He is recognized nationally thanks to one of his student-athletes, Michael Lewis. In March of 2004, the article entitled Coach Fitz’s Management Theory was published in a New York Times magazine. Also, Michael Lewis’s novel, Coach: Lessons on the Game of Life, is about Coach Fitz’s life-long impressions on his athletes. Coach Fitz was more than an athletic coach; he taught his boys how to be successful off the field as well, in the game of life.