
’26 WR/RB/FS leads the ‘Maroon and White’ on both sides of the scrimmage line
🎶Whether I'm right or whether I'm wrong
Whether I find a place in this world or never belong
I gotta be me, I've gotta be me
What else can I be but what I am🎶
Lyrics: Walter Marks 1968
Big Ass Fans from Lexington, Kentucky has a simple corporate goal. The company is “creating a more comfortable world,” one fan at a time.
The logo is the rear of a donkey (Fanny) swishing its tail back and forth. The trademarked logo is among Kentucky’s more celebrated and well known corporate identities across the commonwealth and has come to represent commitment to quality, cutting-edge innovation, and product reliability.
Big Ass Fans is so much more than just a gigantic fan. It is gigantic quality, gigantic performance, and a gigantic commitment to reliability and innovation. Its size is far from the only selling point about our product. Our product is a Kentucky Comfort Creator…and, these days, isn’t that exactly what Kentucky needs?
“Fanny” is among Kentucky’s more celebrated and well known corporate logos…
Friday Night Fletch
Ashland, KY: Sammy Davis, Jr., somewhere around the late 60s, 1968 or so, had a hit song about having to be an individualist. If memory serves the title of the song was, “I gotta be me,” and the lyrics were written by Walter Marks in 1968.
The song has a sound premise. In it, the lyricist recites that whether right or wrong, whether there is a place for him in this world or not, he has to be who he is. He has to be genuine. Nothing wrong with that characteristic or sentiment.
Coach Chad Tackett will be fine with Cameron Davis espousing a similar sentiment over his senior season. We want Davis to be himself.
Davis being Davis was down right resplendent over his junior season. No reason for the 6’1,” 170 (or so) pounder to be anyone else.
Davis is a three phase contributor in football and a two sport (basketball & football) varsity athlete
Friday Night Fletch
Davis lists himself as a WR/RB/FS. His production bears out his playing all three spots at an All-State level. As a running back, Davis averaged close to 9.3-yards per carry (54-carries, 502-yards rushing) in ’24, scoring 9-rushing TDs or a TD ever 6th-carry.

As a WR, Davis led the team with 35-receptions for 615-receiving yards and another 8-TDs receiving. Davis was second on the team in scoring with 110-points, including a two-point conversion on special teams giving him three-phase production.
As a FS, Davis registered 47-tackles with a TFL. Davis led the team with six (6) picks and 93 IRNYs (Interception Return Net Yards).
Coming into his senior year, Davis finds himself playing for one of the premier programs at the 4A classification. The “Tomcats” were 11-2 a year ago, losing in the regional championship game to Corbin.
If you follow this publication, you know we prize athleticism and versatility. We love when kids star at more than just one sport. College recruiters agree.

Davis is a point guard on the Tomcat varsity basketball team. Ashland-Blazer was 24-8 this season and Davis got run in 15 of its games. Blazer made the “Sweet 16” this year, beat Calloway County in the first round and dropped its second game, in the Elite 8, to Bowling Green in overtime. Getting 15-games of varsity run on a team that good, isn’t too shabby.
Still, it is clear football is this ‘Cats’ forté, if you will. Going back to the lyrics of “I gotta be me,” sticking with football as the primary outlet isn’t unwise where there is where 🎶…a world of success/Is waiting for [him] if [he] heed[s] the call…🎶
This is Friday Night Fletch, reporting for KPGFootball, reminding you to PLAY THROUGH THE WHISTLE!
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