Robert E Hathaway began his
twenty-year tenure as head soccer coach at Ben Lippen School
in Asheville when few high schools were playing soccer in
North Carolina in 1960. Little of the soccer that was being
playing in NC at the time was being played in the Western
part of the state. With few nearby high school programs
to compete against, he pioneered the effort to expand opportunities
for participation for boys at Ben Lippen and across the
region. Eighty-five of the 310 games he coached for Ben
Lippen were played against college junior varsity or junior
college teams. Opportunities for the better teams to compete
in post-season play were unavailable until 1967. The Ben
Lippen Falcons won the local Prep School Tournament Championship
in 1967 and 1968.
Bob Hathaway’s extraordinary
contributions as a coach at Ben Lippen School and as a trailblazer
at the high school level have earned him the distinction
of being selected as a member of the fifth class of inductees
of the North Carolina Soccer Hall of Fame on this, the fifth
day of January, 2002.
Many Christian missionaries
returning to Western North Carolina from trips oversees
enrolled their sons at Ben Lippen, a Christian school. While
at the missions, the boys had been exposed to the game of
soccer and wanted to play at the school. In 1960 Bob was
“drafted” to coach the school team. Recalling
how little he knew about soccer at the time, Bob is unashamed
to reveal how fortunate he was to have had so many players
who passed along their passion for the game to him; in time,
he turned that passion into his own. On one hand, his efforts
to convince other schools to start playing soccer were utilitarian
– his teams needed opponents. On the other hand, his
efforts wound up exposing so many others to the game. Soccer
became the fall sport of choice for many schools in Western
North Carolina that were too small to field football teams.
And he worked with others to develop the Western North Carolina
Soccer Officials Association so there would be a sufficient
pool of qualified referees.
While leading the Falcons
for twenty seasons, Hathaway’s teams had a record
of 256-34-20. Included in that record was a streak of 76
games without a loss from 1966 through 1971. Included in
that run of 76 games was an incredible streak of 65 consecutive
victories, a record that still stands as the most ever in
the history of North Carolina prep soccer. As if that was
not enough, the Falcons put together yet another streak
of 43 consecutive victories from 1975 until 1977. By the
early ‘70s, a state championship was conducted by
the North Carolina Scholastic Soccer Coaches Association
(NCSSCA). That tournament featured teams from both public
and private schools statewide. Ben Lippen won the NCSSCA
State Championship in 1973, 1975, and 1976 and was runner-up
in 1974. They were finalists in the inaugural North Carolina
Independent School Athletic Association (NCISAA) championships
in 1977. The 1976 season was particularly notable since
the team posted a 21-0-0 record and scored 114 goals while
giving up only 8 on their way to winning all four games
in the state championship tournament. Following that season
Bob was honored as the state Coach-of-the-Year by the NCSSCA.
Coach Hathaway coached the team until the conclusion of
the 1979 season. The school relocated to Columbia, South
Carolina in 1988.