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Podcast No. 40: Bernie Boyle

If you need your faith in humanity restored, all you need to do is sit down and have a conversation with Bernie Boyle.
Bernie served as a firefighter for Butte-Silver Bow for 30 years, helping save buildings and save lives. Of course, the No. 1 building Bernie is associated with is the Knights of Columbus Hall.
Under Bernie’s leadership, the KC is always there to lend a helping hand to those who need it, whether it is giving money to the needy or providing free lunch each Tuesday and Thursday.
Boyle started the legendary KC basketball league, and 30 years ago he started the KC Little Kids Hoops program. For three decades, the best players at Butte High and Butte Central got their first taste of competitive basketball at the KC’s Felix Madrazo Gym.
Bernie was also instrumental in the building of the Maroon Activities Center.
Click here to listen in as Bernie discusses his love affair with the KC. Listen as he talks about shooting baskets under the lights in his alley as a young boy and how being run over by the great Buddy Walsh put an end to his football career. Listen as he describes how his faith helped him move on after the untimely death of his son Casey in 2015.
Listen to this podcast to see why Bernie is known as St. Bernard.
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Podcast No. 39: Shawn Wetzel

Shawn Wetzel moved to Butte about a year and a half ago.
At 5 feet, 20 inches, as he says, he really stands out in a crowd. It is not the height of “Uncle Wetzel” that gets everyone’s attention, however. It is his chill attitude, his story telling and his funny lines.
Click here to listen in as Wetzel talks about his famous grandfather, Walter “Blackie” Wetzel, and the national media hitting up everybody with the last name Wetzel to comment about the NFL football team in Washington, D.C. dropping the name Redskins.
He talks about being a sixth-generation Montanan. He talks about growing up in Browning and having another nine million addresses before finally settling in on the Mining City. He talks about serving as a Butte High assistant boys’ basketball coach under Matt Luedtke.
“Uncle Wetzel” truly is the unofficial mayor of Montana.
Wetzel discusses the photos below, which feature his grandfather, in this podcast.



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Every place should have a guy like Kevin Dennehy

My grandma Mary D’Arcy used to joke with me, my brothers and cousins, telling us that the greatness of a man is measured by his grandchildren.
“That,” my grandma would say, “means your grandfather is a no good (S.O.B.).”
While I would put my grandpa Jerry up against any man who ever walked the face of the Earth, it would not be entirely fair to judge him by his grandchildren.
Mixing in the potentially dangerous DNA cocktail of the Foley, Hansen, Gavigan, Kocher and Davis families is something that cannot be pinned on him.
I am not entirely sure that it is fair to blame my uncle Melvin on my grandpa, either. But the kind of children a guy turns out is a much better barometer to determine the greatness of a man.
Judging by that alone, it is safe to say that Kevin Dennehy, who sadly left us at the age of 59 on Christmas Day, was one of the greatest guys of all time. (Click here for a podcast version of this column, which includes a nod to Gus Janhunen.)
When it comes to covering athletes over the past 25 years in the Mining City, Kevin’s son and daughter, Jake and Keli, are two of my very favorite.
That has so much more to do with the kind of people they are off the field, too.
Without Jake, of course, Butte High would still be looking for its first Class AA State football title since 1991. He booted the 46-yard (and three quarters) field goal as time expired to give the Bulldogs a 38-36 win over Bozeman in the 2012 title game at Naranche Stadium.
My lasting memory of that night is not seeing the ball sail through the uprights or the ensuing celebration. It was seeing Jake, as the fog of approval from ghosts of Naranche’s past rolled in, give his mother an extended hug before climbing on the firetruck for the champions parade around town.
Jake was an unlikely hero of the game. He was relegated to kicker because he injured his shoulder on the first game of his senior season. He was sometimes a shaking field goal kicker, too.
Everyone in Butte — and the rest of the state — remembers Jake for that kick and the 8,000 or so fans storming the field after it went through. It might be the biggest sports moment in the history of our great sports town.
However, it was not even the best thing Jake did as a Bulldog.
When Jake was a sophomore, his good friend and classmate Zach Bunney was diagnosed with leukemia. Along with friend Brock Bond, Jake led the charge to raise money for Zach’s fight by selling wristbands.
That rally of support had to help as Zach won his battle and returned to the gridiron.
I first got to know Jake when he was a sophomore. Because of a gruesome broken arm he suffered in football that year, he could not play basketball. So, among other ways to stay a part of the team, Jake sat next to me on the scorer’s table and kept stats.
We had a lot of fun, laughing and joking around the entire season.
Two years later — and several inches taller and probably 40 pounds heavier — Jake rejoined the basketball team to help, mainly on defense, down the stretch of the season. He helped Butte High upset Bozeman in a playoff game in Bozeman to qualify for the Class AA State tournament.
Yes, Jake is a boogeyman in Bozeman.

That June, Jake and Zach shared the distinguished Harry “Swede” Dahlberg Outstanding Boy Athlete Award at Butte High.
Jake was also a valedictorian of the Class of 2013, and he went on to earn a doctorate in physical therapy.
Amazingly, he is probably the third best athlete in his family.
His mother, the former Liza Merrifield, was a trailblazer when it comes to women’s sports in Butte and Montana. You name the sport, and Liza was great at it.
She was a three-time national champion speedskater. She also earned All-State honors in track, golf and cross country. A member of the National Speed Skating Hall of Fame, Liza was inducted into the Butte Sports Hall of Fame in 1997.
Someday, she will surely be joined in that Hall by her daughter Keli, who is one of the best runners the Mining City has ever seen.
Keli earned All-State in cross country four times, and that is the hardest sport to earn such a distinction. An athlete has to be in the top 15 to earn that honor. Keli placed eighth as a freshman, 14th as a sophomore and third as a junior and again as a senior.
I will always believe that she would have won the title as a senior if she did not miss much of the season with a leg injury.
In track, she won the State title in the 3,200-meter race as a junior and senior.
Keli, who was a valedictorian of the Butte High Class of 2013, went on to run for the Montana Grizzlies.
The thing I remember most about Keli’s career, though, was how she was always smiling — even when I would interview her within seconds of winning a 3-mile race.
In basketball, Keli was mostly a reserve player who contributed off the bench. After games, she would often track down one of the stars of the game so I would have an interview for my story in the newspaper.
Usually if you see Keli or Jake, you will see the entire family. The four of them were almost always together. When it comes to great Mining City families, those Dennehys are second to none.
When Liza was running the computer to time a cross country or track meet, Kevin was there, offering a kind, helping hand with a genuine smile on his face.
Whether he was at the Montana Power, Touch America or St. James Healthcare, Kevin was a pillar in our community. And, he never seemed to be in a bad mood.
He was always there to enthusiastically work meets in track, cross country and speedskating. He worked road races and coached Little Guy Football, baseball, basketball and soccer, giving his time to the youth of the Mining City and well beyond.
He did it without fanfare or reward.
Every place needs a Kevin Dennehy. They just do not work without guys like him, and his loss will be felt in Butte for decades to come.
Now that he is gone, we just have to be grateful that he was here. We have to be particularly happy that he met Liza at Montana Tech in 1989 and that together the couple raised two amazing children.
If you truly judge the greatness of a many by his children, then Kevin Dennehy will go down as one of the very best.
His parents must have been pretty outstanding, too.
— Bill Foley can be reached at foles74@gmail.com.Follow him at twitter.com/Foles74. Listen to the ButteCast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.
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Podcast No. 38: Father Beretta

Father Patrick Beretta is no ordinary priest. He has lived a life that is worthy of a movie or a limited Netflix series.
Father Beretta was born and raised in Paris. He was educated in France, Ireland and Italy. He also owned fine-dining restaurants in Southern California. Father Beretta just might be the most interesting man in town. He could star in his own Dos Equis commercial.
Click here to listen in as Father Beretta discusses his education to become a Roman Catholic priest. Listen as he talks about his brief 22-year leave of absence that led to him joining the restaurant industry. Listen to him describe his road to the Mining City and learn how he celebrated surviving being buried by an avalanche while driving on Interstate 90.
Listen to how he is helping lead the fight against the fentanyl crisis that has sadly claimed the lives of too many young people.
Listen and you will see that Father Beretta is no ordinary priest, to say the least.
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Podcast No. 37: Tommy Mellott

You might know him as “Touchdown Tommy.”
Montana State University quarterback Tommy Mellott, however, is about so much more than scoring touchdowns.
On and off the field, he is a role model’s role model.
Whether it was him going to a birthday party of a young kindergarten fan he recently met, his letter to the sixth-grade graduation class at Margaret Leary Elementary or his comments on TV asking Bobcat fans to leave the Montana Grizzlies alone following the Cat-Griz Game, Mellott continues to provide a shining example of how a high-profile athlete should conduct himself.

The thing about Tommy, though, is that it is not an act. He is the genuine article.
Click here to listen in as Tommy discusses the nickname Touchdown Tommy. Listen as he discusses his incredible career as a Butte High Bulldog. Listen as he talks about his viral words following the Cat-Griz Game.








