Coach John McSweeney with the team on his birthday in November. Courtesy of Liberty High School.
Coach John McSweeney with the team on his birthday in November. Courtesy of Liberty High School.

In standard metrics of public schools, Liberty High (Bedford, VA) has been having a tough run. 

Enrollment has declined. Families who live in the zone quietly transfer their children elsewhere. People talk. They joke. They say it’s not a “good” school. Too small. Too rough around the edges. Not competitive enough. Not safe enough. Not impressive enough. 

My husband and I both graduated from Liberty. Both of our sons attend Liberty now. And in the last few years, as we’ve watched the numbers dwindle, we’ve also seen something else happen, something that doesn’t show up on scorecards or rankings, but matters far more. 

A few years ago, our varsity boys’ basketball team went 2–20. Prior to that, I can’t find a winning season at least a decade back (source: MaxPreps). 

Then Coach John McSweeney arrived. 

He came to Liberty when our program was struggling through a revolving door of coaches, low numbers and a chronic state of disappointment. He arrived in his red Nissan from Tulsa, already retired, full of tall tales, and old school in every sense: strict, blunt, demanding, stubborn. 

Early on, he told our kids there was a state trophy in their future, that banners would hang in that gym. Many of us thought he was delusional. We shook our heads. We had already accepted, and taught our kids to accept, that Liberty wasn’t going to be good at basketball like it used to be.

We knew the realities. We don’t have the numbers. Good athletes have transferred. Our rivals are bigger, better funded, more prestigious. 

Coach McSweeney waved all of that away. 

“There are five guys on our side of the floor,” he told them, “and five guys on the other side.”  Translation: we can compete and we can win. 

He opened the gym before school. Stayed late. Came in on weekends. Scouted relentlessly.  Watched film obsessively. He watched grades. Learned girlfriends’ names. Threw a clipboard or two. Got red-faced angry. Cussed. Encouraged. Believed. Cussed some more. Dealt with parent complaints. And believed some more. 

He talked to those boys not just about winning games, but about belonging to something, about what it would feel like, years from now, to walk back into that gym with their families and say, that was my team. 

This season, his third, Liberty started 10–2, is ranked #1 in power points among 2C schools, and #2 in District 2 (source: MaxPreps). They have beaten their most despised rivals. They have won against tough opponents even when two starters were out. They are earning respect. 

And then, suddenly and devastatingly, on one of many snow days, Coach McSweeney died. With so much unfinished business. 

Here is what happened next.

The principal, assistant principal, athletic director, assistant coaches, school counselors, and  school resource officer gathered every player and parent at Bridge Street Café, which the owner kept open late to provide space for this difficult moment. They told us what they knew and what they did not know. They spoke plainly. They reminded the boys that their coach loved them and believed in them. They said it was okay to feel things. To talk. To ask for help. They told the truth. 

It was at that meeting we learned how anyone even knew something was wrong: the assistant JV coach had been texting him daily throughout the bad weather to check in. When the texts went unanswered, he went to see him in person. When there was no answer, he called for help and help came. 

In the days that followed the bad news, the goodness of our school spread. Churches reached out to hold prayer services. Cheerleaders asked what they could do. Volleyball players created a tribute. Nearby programs planned fundraisers. Competitors fifty miles away sent condolences — because Coach McSweeney hugged their kids too. He knew them. He watched them. He cared. These scenes — the café, the checking in, the support — this is what “good” looks like. 

Not because of trophies, though one may still come. 

Not because of test scores or prestige or booster money. 

But because when the hardest thing happened, this school showed up with care. “Good,” it turns out, means we’ve got you.

There is another school nearby with “Liberty” in its name. It is well funded. It wins  championships. It posts impressive numbers. It prays publicly before games and carries a  reputation for excellence — academically, morally, athletically. 

And this is often the school people assume I mean when I say where my children go. 

When I clarify: no, Liberty Bedford…I see the shift: The polite confusion, the quiet sympathy, as  if I’ve just admitted to settling for less. 

That moment tells me everything about how we’ve learned to measure schools. 

It takes some people a long time to fall in love with a school or a community. Some fall out of  love when they believe the grass is greener somewhere else. 

Coach McSweeney loved Liberty before he ever arrived. He traveled a long way to be here. He took care of this place and these young men. He was flawed and he was fiercely devoted. He treated our boys like young men. Told them the truth. Held them to it. Gave them vision. Helped them earn, then enjoy, winning as a team. And, I’m reminded as I re-listen to some of his interviews, he never took the credit and never failed to thank his mentors. 

He will be deeply missed. 

While I grieve his loss, check on my boys, and pray for his family, I also feel a quiet sympathy for those who never got to experience the goodness that was here all along, who missed the chance to be part of this school and its story.

Liberty didn’t become good when it started winning. 

It was already good. 

Some folks are just finally paying attention. 

So here is my invitation to you. 

Show up. 

Come to the games. Pay the ticket fee. Stand shoulder to shoulder in a packed gym. Buy the popcorn. Sit in the noise and the nerves of it. Cheer for them. Learn their names. Stay after the game and ask them what they loved about their coach. Ask them what they’ll remember. Donate money if you can. Pray, if that’s your way, but don’t let prayer replace presence. 

Because the absence will be real. Coach McSweeney’s body will not be there. That dirty, god awful yellow ball cap representing his pride in his son won’t be perched on the sidelines. The space he occupied — on the bench, in their lives, in this community — will feel enormous. 

It will be too much if these boys have to carry it alone. 

But it won’t be too much when the stands are full. 

When the town shows up. 

When adults keep their promises. 

When Liberty keeps being Liberty.

Amanda Stanley lives in Bedford and is the founder of The Artisan Leader, a leadership development and coaching firm serving organizations across Virginia.

Amanda Stanley lives in Bedford and is the founder of The Artisan Leader, a leadership development and...