Growing up Amy

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Steve Amy (right) has been reunited with his brother, Kevin (left) in his first year in the Tigers' corner at Princeton High School. Growing up, Steve  would team up with their younger brother, Keith, for their family squabbles at home. (BCR photo//Kevin Hieronymus)
Steve Amy (right) has been reunited with his brother, Kevin (left) in his first year in the Tigers' corner at Princeton High School. Growing up, Steve would team up with their younger brother, Keith, for their family squabbles at home. (BCR photo//Kevin Hieronymus)
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Steve Amy started wrestling at age 3 and by 4 was taking his mom down to the kitchen floor.

Amy, the first-year head coach at Princeton High school, became one of the state’s most elite wrestlers, winning three state titles with a runner-up finish for Rockridge High School in Taylor Ridge.

His brothers, Kevin, two years behind, and Keith, five years behind, followed in his footsteps, each also wrestling their way to state. All three boys also played football for their dad’s Rockets' football team.

That’s the only way their parents, Rick and Kay Amy of Illinois City, would have it.

Rick coached Rockridge football for 28 years, 11 as head coach, and is coaching his 33rd and perhaps final year with the Rockets’ wrestling program. He coached all three sons in both sports along the way.

Kay grew up in a house of a basketball coach and a school teacher and said, “I was raised in the schools, so I guess that’s what I did with my kids, too.”

Mom was the rock of the family, and still is, Steve said. Rick said he could have never done his coaching career without her.

She took the boys to the youth tournaments and coached from the sidelines because Rick was busy with the high school team. She became well adept at coaching from the corner and running a video camera at the same time.

“I figure that’s my job. You got kids; you take care of them,” she said.

Mom would also be the one the boys would turn to when they thought Dad was too hard on them.

“I was the one that heard it,” she said.

Rick said he tried to separate his dual roles as dad and coach.

“I’d tell them at school, I’m being a coach now. At home, I’m being a dad,” he said. “There’s a fine line. If I’d jump Steve’s butt in practice, he’d come home and tell Mom.”

Rick also coached summer softball when the boys were little, and the girls on the team would help out babysitting for the coach by passing the boys down the bench.

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