CRUSH MAGAZINE LEGACY FILES “PHOTO SHOOT” The Night George Turner Raised His Arms At Metter And The Gym Exploded Into Savannah Basketball Folklore
CRUSH MAGAZINE LEGACY FILES
“PHOTO SHOOT”
The Night George Turner Raised His Arms At Metter And The Gym Exploded Into Savannah Basketball Folklore
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — ONE MOMENT TURNED INTO A LEGEND
Every sports culture has THAT image.
The image people remember forever.
Michael Jordan shrugging.
Allen Iverson stepping over Tyronn Lue.
LeBron throwing powder into the air.
For the Party Plug Mikey era at Calvary Day?
It was George Turner standing at midcourt in Metter, Georgia with both arms raised in the air while absolute chaos exploded around him after the Region Championship victory.
That image became immortal in Savannah basketball folklore.
Not because somebody planned it.
Because emotion took over the building all at once.
And for one unforgettable night inside Metter High School, Calvary basketball stopped feeling like a high-school game and turned into a full-scale cultural eruption.
CHAPTER 1 — THE BUILDUP FELT LIKE A MOVIE
The 2008–2009 Calvary squad already carried heavy energy entering the Region Championship.
George Turner raining deep threes.
Mark Jones flying downhill in transition.
Cody Padgett dominating physically.
The Calvary Crazies traveling deeper and louder every week.
By the time the team reached Metter, the atmosphere already felt historic.
Cars lined highways heading into the game.
Students packed into caravans.
Parents screaming before warmups even started.
And everywhere:
music blasting.
Most remembered soundtrack of the night?
Photoshoot
The song represented exactly what the era felt like:
swagger,
flash,
confidence,
and southern superstar energy.
CHAPTER 2 — THE GAME TURNED INTO WAR
The game itself felt emotionally exhausting.
Bodies cramping.
Players diving for loose balls.
Crowds screaming after every possession.
Every bucket felt heavier than normal.
George Turner hit huge perimeter shots.
Mark Jones attacked transition gaps relentlessly.
Cody Padgett physically battled through contact possession after possession.
The game became survival.
And every Calvary run made the traveling crowd louder.
By the fourth quarter, the gym no longer sounded organized.
It sounded possessed.
CHAPTER 3 — THE GEORGE TURNER MOMENT
Then came THE moment.
Final seconds.
Calvary victorious.
And George Turner sprinted toward center court with both arms raised high in the air while the Calvary crowd exploded simultaneously behind him.
That visual became legendary instantly.
Because it perfectly captured:
swagger,
relief,
victory,
and emotional domination all in one frame.
The image looked less like a teenager celebrating basketball…
and more like a rockstar commanding a stage.
And once George threw those arms up?
The gym lost complete control.
CHAPTER 4 — THE FLOOR STORM STARTED IMMEDIATELY
Students didn’t wait.
They exploded onto the court before officials fully cleared the floor.
Blue and gold everywhere.
People screaming.
Students climbing over rails.
Parents hugging players.
Cheerleaders crying.
The Calvary Crazies completely overwhelmed the hardwood within seconds.
The noise became deafening.
Phones flashing.
Music blasting.
Bodies colliding emotionally everywhere.
Savannah basketball folklore was being created in real time.
CHAPTER 5 — “PHOTO SHOOT” TURNED INTO THE SOUNDTRACK OF THE RIOT
That’s what older fans always remember most vividly.
The soundtrack.
Photoshoot
echoing through the chaos while students stormed the floor around George Turner and the team.
The music made the celebration feel cinematic.
Like a rap video,
a championship parade,
and a crowd uprising happening simultaneously.
The emotional energy completely overflowed the boundaries of organized sports.
CHAPTER 6 — THE ATMOSPHERE GOT SO CRAZY AUTHORITIES INTERVENED
That’s what made the night become permanent local mythology.
The celebration became so wild that law enforcement reportedly had to intervene as the crowd spilled uncontrollably throughout the gym environment.
Accounts from attendees remember:
students rushing barriers,
security overwhelmed,
and the atmosphere becoming physically impossible to contain.
The emotional release after the victory simply became too massive.
And yes —
stories of detainments and arrests afterward only amplified the legend further locally because it reinforced how chaotic the celebration truly became.
The night no longer felt like:
“Calvary won a region title.”
It felt like Savannah basketball history exploded.
CHAPTER 7 — THE PHOTO THAT DEFINED THE PARTY PLUG ERA
Years later, the image people still mentally replay is simple:
George Turner…
arms raised…
standing in the middle of complete emotional chaos while students flooded the floor around him.
That became the defining image of the Party Plug era.
Not because of social media.
Because everybody there emotionally carried the picture home in they memory.
And before Instagram existed fully as sports mythology machinery…
that memory spread manually across Savannah through storytelling.
CHAPTER 8 — THE CALVARY CRAZIES BECAME IMMORTAL THAT NIGHT
The Metter floor storm permanently elevated the Calvary Crazies into local legend status.
Because after that game, the student section stopped feeling like ordinary fans.
They became part of the mythology itself.
The chants.
The body paint.
The newspaper confetti.
The road-game invasions.
The emotional avalanches after George threes.
Everything peaked that night.
And the floor storm became proof of how emotionally powerful the movement had become.
CHAPTER 9 — BEFORE NIL, THIS WAS RAW ENERGY
No athlete branding consultants created that atmosphere.
No social-media strategy planned it.
No sponsorship deals manufactured the moment.
It happened naturally.
That’s why it still feels authentic years later.
The celebration erupted because the players, students, and city genuinely cared THAT much emotionally.
And George Turner’s swagger, confidence, and performance style became the emotional center of the explosion.
CHAPTER 10 — THE BLUEPRINT FOR EVERYTHING AFTERWARD
Years later, when people watched George Turner command:
Orange Crush crowds,
pool-party stages,
nightlife atmospheres,
and large-scale entertainment environments,
older Savannah basketball fans instantly recognized the same emotional mechanics.
Because the blueprint already existed in Metter.
Music.
Crowd control.
Swagger.
Energy pacing.
Emotional release.
The Region Championship became the first true “Party Plug” mass-crowd moment.
Everything afterward simply scaled bigger.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before influencer athletes.
Before viral sports clips.
Before NIL.
There was George Turner standing at center court in Metter with both arms raised while the Calvary Crazies stormed the floor and Savannah basketball culture exploded around him.
Photoshoot blasting through the chaos.
Students screaming.
Security overwhelmed.
The gym collapsing emotionally into celebration.
One image.
One night.
One moment.
And from that point forward…
the Party Plug era became immortal.
CRUSH MAGAZINE LEGACY FILES “PHOTO SHOOT” The Night George Turner Raised His Arms At Metter And The Gym Exploded Into Savannah Basketball Folklore
CRUSH MAGAZINE LEGACY FILES
“PHOTO SHOOT”
The Night George Turner Raised His Arms At Metter And The Gym Exploded Into Savannah Basketball Folklore
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — ONE MOMENT TURNED INTO A LEGEND
Every sports culture has THAT image.
The image people remember forever.
Michael Jordan shrugging.
Allen Iverson stepping over Tyronn Lue.
LeBron throwing powder into the air.
For the Party Plug Mikey era at Calvary Day?
It was George Turner standing at midcourt in Metter, Georgia with both arms raised in the air while absolute chaos exploded around him after the Region Championship victory.
That image became immortal in Savannah basketball folklore.
Not because somebody planned it.
Because emotion took over the building all at once.
And for one unforgettable night inside Metter High School, Calvary basketball stopped feeling like a high-school game and turned into a full-scale cultural eruption.
CHAPTER 1 — THE BUILDUP FELT LIKE A MOVIE
The 2008–2009 Calvary squad already carried heavy energy entering the Region Championship.
George Turner raining deep threes.
Mark Jones flying downhill in transition.
Cody Padgett dominating physically.
The Calvary Crazies traveling deeper and louder every week.
By the time the team reached Metter, the atmosphere already felt historic.
Cars lined highways heading into the game.
Students packed into caravans.
Parents screaming before warmups even started.
And everywhere:
music blasting.
Most remembered soundtrack of the night?
Photoshoot
The song represented exactly what the era felt like:
swagger,
flash,
confidence,
and southern superstar energy.
CHAPTER 2 — THE GAME TURNED INTO WAR
The game itself felt emotionally exhausting.
Bodies cramping.
Players diving for loose balls.
Crowds screaming after every possession.
Every bucket felt heavier than normal.
George Turner hit huge perimeter shots.
Mark Jones attacked transition gaps relentlessly.
Cody Padgett physically battled through contact possession after possession.
The game became survival.
And every Calvary run made the traveling crowd louder.
By the fourth quarter, the gym no longer sounded organized.
It sounded possessed.
CHAPTER 3 — THE GEORGE TURNER MOMENT
Then came THE moment.
Final seconds.
Calvary victorious.
And George Turner sprinted toward center court with both arms raised high in the air while the Calvary crowd exploded simultaneously behind him.
That visual became legendary instantly.
Because it perfectly captured:
swagger,
relief,
victory,
and emotional domination all in one frame.
The image looked less like a teenager celebrating basketball…
and more like a rockstar commanding a stage.
And once George threw those arms up?
The gym lost complete control.
CHAPTER 4 — THE FLOOR STORM STARTED IMMEDIATELY
Students didn’t wait.
They exploded onto the court before officials fully cleared the floor.
Blue and gold everywhere.
People screaming.
Students climbing over rails.
Parents hugging players.
Cheerleaders crying.
The Calvary Crazies completely overwhelmed the hardwood within seconds.
The noise became deafening.
Phones flashing.
Music blasting.
Bodies colliding emotionally everywhere.
Savannah basketball folklore was being created in real time.
CHAPTER 5 — “PHOTO SHOOT” TURNED INTO THE SOUNDTRACK OF THE RIOT
That’s what older fans always remember most vividly.
The soundtrack.
Photoshoot
echoing through the chaos while students stormed the floor around George Turner and the team.
The music made the celebration feel cinematic.
Like a rap video,
a championship parade,
and a crowd uprising happening simultaneously.
The emotional energy completely overflowed the boundaries of organized sports.
CHAPTER 6 — THE ATMOSPHERE GOT SO CRAZY AUTHORITIES INTERVENED
That’s what made the night become permanent local mythology.
The celebration became so wild that law enforcement reportedly had to intervene as the crowd spilled uncontrollably throughout the gym environment.
Accounts from attendees remember:
students rushing barriers,
security overwhelmed,
and the atmosphere becoming physically impossible to contain.
The emotional release after the victory simply became too massive.
And yes —
stories of detainments and arrests afterward only amplified the legend further locally because it reinforced how chaotic the celebration truly became.
The night no longer felt like:
“Calvary won a region title.”
It felt like Savannah basketball history exploded.
CHAPTER 7 — THE PHOTO THAT DEFINED THE PARTY PLUG ERA
Years later, the image people still mentally replay is simple:
George Turner…
arms raised…
standing in the middle of complete emotional chaos while students flooded the floor around him.
That became the defining image of the Party Plug era.
Not because of social media.
Because everybody there emotionally carried the picture home in they memory.
And before Instagram existed fully as sports mythology machinery…
that memory spread manually across Savannah through storytelling.
CHAPTER 8 — THE CALVARY CRAZIES BECAME IMMORTAL THAT NIGHT
The Metter floor storm permanently elevated the Calvary Crazies into local legend status.
Because after that game, the student section stopped feeling like ordinary fans.
They became part of the mythology itself.
The chants.
The body paint.
The newspaper confetti.
The road-game invasions.
The emotional avalanches after George threes.
Everything peaked that night.
And the floor storm became proof of how emotionally powerful the movement had become.
CHAPTER 9 — BEFORE NIL, THIS WAS RAW ENERGY
No athlete branding consultants created that atmosphere.
No social-media strategy planned it.
No sponsorship deals manufactured the moment.
It happened naturally.
That’s why it still feels authentic years later.
The celebration erupted because the players, students, and city genuinely cared THAT much emotionally.
And George Turner’s swagger, confidence, and performance style became the emotional center of the explosion.
CHAPTER 10 — THE BLUEPRINT FOR EVERYTHING AFTERWARD
Years later, when people watched George Turner command:
Orange Crush crowds,
pool-party stages,
nightlife atmospheres,
and large-scale entertainment environments,
older Savannah basketball fans instantly recognized the same emotional mechanics.
Because the blueprint already existed in Metter.
Music.
Crowd control.
Swagger.
Energy pacing.
Emotional release.
The Region Championship became the first true “Party Plug” mass-crowd moment.
Everything afterward simply scaled bigger.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before influencer athletes.
Before viral sports clips.
Before NIL.
There was George Turner standing at center court in Metter with both arms raised while the Calvary Crazies stormed the floor and Savannah basketball culture exploded around him.
Photoshoot blasting through the chaos.
Students screaming.
Security overwhelmed.
The gym collapsing emotionally into celebration.
One image.
One night.
One moment.
And from that point forward…
the Party Plug era became immortal.
CRUSH MAGAZINE VAULT “THE GYM REVIVAL” How George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner & The Calvary Crazies Made Savannah Basketball Feel Like Church, A Concert & A Riot All At Once
CRUSH MAGAZINE VAULT
“THE GYM REVIVAL”
How George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner & The Calvary Crazies Made Savannah Basketball Feel Like Church, A Concert & A Riot All At Once
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — PEOPLE DIDN’T ATTEND THE GAMES… THEY TESTIFIED ABOUT THEM
That’s what separated the Party Plug era from normal high-school basketball.
Folks talked about those games like spiritual experiences.
Not:
“Yeah Calvary won.”
More like:
“Boy… you should’ve SEEN what happened in there.”
Because between 2006 and 2010, the old Calvary gym transformed into the loudest emotional environment in Savannah basketball culture.
And once George Turner got hot?
The whole building started moving like a revival service.
Hands in the air.
People screaming.
Bleachers shaking.
Students crying laughing.
Opposing coaches looking defeated spiritually.
The gym didn’t just react.
It PRAISED.
1.
Bling Bling
THE GOLD-CHAIN TUNNEL WALK
Twenty-five minutes before tipoff…
lights buzzing,
bass shaking,
students packed shoulder-to-shoulder in the hallway.
Then the locker-room doors swing open.
George Turner walks out first:
oversized navy hoodie,
gold chain swinging,
headphones in,
stone-faced like a prizefighter entering an arena.
Behind him:
Mark Jones,
Cody Padgett,
Steve Williams,
Dom,
and the rest of the squad moving through screaming students like celebrities.
The crowd LOST IT before warmups even started.
2.
We Takin Over
THE ROAD-GAME INVASIONS
Calvary fans traveled DEEP.
Not regular away-game attendance.
Takeovers.
Entire sections of rival gyms suddenly filled with:
navy-and-gold shirts,
body paint,
air horns,
and screaming Calvary Crazies.
Then George drills two quick deep threes…
and suddenly the HOME crowd quiet while Calvary students chanting louder than everybody else combined.
The takeover energy became legendary locally.
3.
Get Low
THE BASELINE CHAOS
The Calvary Crazies sat RIGHT on top of the court.
Every time George hit another heat-check three:
students slammed the railings,
fell into each other,
and screamed so loud referees stopped play repeatedly.
One opposing inbounder reportedly looked genuinely terrified trying to throw baseline passes through the chaos.
The environment felt suffocating.
4.
Make Tha Trap Say Aye
THE THREE-POINT AVALANCHES
Once George hit consecutive threes…
the gym changed emotionally.
People stopped sitting.
Teachers stopped trying to control students.
Bench players started pacing the sidelines.
Then George launches another thirty-footer…
BOOM.
Gym explodes.
Mark Jones screaming.
Cody clapping.
Students falling over bleachers.
That avalanche effect became the signature of the Party Plug era.
5.
Laffy Taffy
THE DANCE-MOVE TIMEOUTS
Timeouts looked ridiculous in the best possible way.
Students dancing in aisles.
Bench players hitting dance moves.
Cheerleaders screaming while music blasted through the speakers.
The whole gym moved together emotionally.
And George feeding directly into the energy by smiling toward the crowd made everything louder.
6.
Knuck If You Buck
THE SAVANNAH CHRISTIAN RIVALRY WARS
Those rivalry games felt personal.
Bodies flying.
Loose balls everywhere.
Crowds screaming after every whistle.
Then George drills another deep bomb and the entire student section erupts like somebody hit a game-winner in March Madness.
The intensity felt way bigger than private-school basketball.
7.
Can’t Be Touched
THE NO-LOOK HEAT CHECKS
George crosses half court.
One dribble.
Pull-up from absurd range.
Then immediately turning around before the ball lands while the gym loses its mind behind him.
That level of swagger psychologically BROKE opponents.
Because he looked completely certain every shot was going in.
8.
I Think They Like Me
THE SUPERFAN OBSESSION
By senior year, the Calvary Crazies treated George like a local rap superstar.
The legendary:
“G-E-O-R-G-E”
stomach-paint crew.
Students screaming his name before introductions.
Girls rushing railings after games.
Road crowds arguing with refs every time George got touched.
The fandom became emotional investment.
9.
Sky Is The Limit
THE HALF-COURT RANGE MOMENTS
The most terrifying thing about George offensively?
The range kept extending.
Volleyball line.
Half court.
Parking-lot pull-ups.
And somehow the crowd reacted MORE confidently the deeper the shots became.
That’s when games started feeling mythical.
10.
Amazing
THE “WE DON’T LOSE AT HOME” ENERGY
The old Calvary gym became spiritually intimidating.
Opponents walked in already tense.
Because once the music,
crowd,
and George Turner heat checks synced together…
the building emotionally swallowed teams whole.
That’s why older Savannah hoop fans still describe the gym differently from normal basketball environments.
It felt alive.
11.
Throw It Up
THE AFTER-GAME PARKING LOT CIRCLES
The buzzer ended the game…
but not the atmosphere.
Students stayed outside for HOURS.
Cars circling.
Music blasting.
Players reenacting highlights.
Crowds surrounding George and Mark Jones retelling plays possession-by-possession.
Those nights became Savannah folklore.
12.
Haterz
THE OPPOSING COACH FRUSTRATION ERA
By late senior season, opposing coaches visibly panicked once George got hot.
Timeouts burned immediately.
Defenders trapped aggressively.
Bench players screaming assignments.
Didn’t matter.
George kept launching.
And the calmer he stayed…
the more emotionally defeated opponents looked.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL.
Before influencer culture.
Before TikTok mixtapes.
There was:
George Turner raining deep fireballs,
Mark Jones sprinting through defenses,
Cody Padgett controlling the paint,
and the Calvary Crazies praising every heat-check like a gospel choir witnessing a miracle.
The music shook the walls.
The bleachers rattled.
The crowd believed.
And somewhere between the bass, the swagger, and the chaos…
Savannah accidentally built a basketball religion.
CRUSH MAGAZINE VAULT “THE GYM REVIVAL” How George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner & The Calvary Crazies Made Savannah Basketball Feel Like Church, A Concert & A Riot All At Once
CRUSH MAGAZINE VAULT
“THE GYM REVIVAL”
How George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner & The Calvary Crazies Made Savannah Basketball Feel Like Church, A Concert & A Riot All At Once
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — PEOPLE DIDN’T ATTEND THE GAMES… THEY TESTIFIED ABOUT THEM
That’s what separated the Party Plug era from normal high-school basketball.
Folks talked about those games like spiritual experiences.
Not:
“Yeah Calvary won.”
More like:
“Boy… you should’ve SEEN what happened in there.”
Because between 2006 and 2010, the old Calvary gym transformed into the loudest emotional environment in Savannah basketball culture.
And once George Turner got hot?
The whole building started moving like a revival service.
Hands in the air.
People screaming.
Bleachers shaking.
Students crying laughing.
Opposing coaches looking defeated spiritually.
The gym didn’t just react.
It PRAISED.
1.
Bling Bling
THE GOLD-CHAIN TUNNEL WALK
Twenty-five minutes before tipoff…
lights buzzing,
bass shaking,
students packed shoulder-to-shoulder in the hallway.
Then the locker-room doors swing open.
George Turner walks out first:
oversized navy hoodie,
gold chain swinging,
headphones in,
stone-faced like a prizefighter entering an arena.
Behind him:
Mark Jones,
Cody Padgett,
Steve Williams,
Dom,
and the rest of the squad moving through screaming students like celebrities.
The crowd LOST IT before warmups even started.
2.
We Takin Over
THE ROAD-GAME INVASIONS
Calvary fans traveled DEEP.
Not regular away-game attendance.
Takeovers.
Entire sections of rival gyms suddenly filled with:
navy-and-gold shirts,
body paint,
air horns,
and screaming Calvary Crazies.
Then George drills two quick deep threes…
and suddenly the HOME crowd quiet while Calvary students chanting louder than everybody else combined.
The takeover energy became legendary locally.
3.
Get Low
THE BASELINE CHAOS
The Calvary Crazies sat RIGHT on top of the court.
Every time George hit another heat-check three:
students slammed the railings,
fell into each other,
and screamed so loud referees stopped play repeatedly.
One opposing inbounder reportedly looked genuinely terrified trying to throw baseline passes through the chaos.
The environment felt suffocating.
4.
Make Tha Trap Say Aye
THE THREE-POINT AVALANCHES
Once George hit consecutive threes…
the gym changed emotionally.
People stopped sitting.
Teachers stopped trying to control students.
Bench players started pacing the sidelines.
Then George launches another thirty-footer…
BOOM.
Gym explodes.
Mark Jones screaming.
Cody clapping.
Students falling over bleachers.
That avalanche effect became the signature of the Party Plug era.
5.
Laffy Taffy
THE DANCE-MOVE TIMEOUTS
Timeouts looked ridiculous in the best possible way.
Students dancing in aisles.
Bench players hitting dance moves.
Cheerleaders screaming while music blasted through the speakers.
The whole gym moved together emotionally.
And George feeding directly into the energy by smiling toward the crowd made everything louder.
6.
Knuck If You Buck
THE SAVANNAH CHRISTIAN RIVALRY WARS
Those rivalry games felt personal.
Bodies flying.
Loose balls everywhere.
Crowds screaming after every whistle.
Then George drills another deep bomb and the entire student section erupts like somebody hit a game-winner in March Madness.
The intensity felt way bigger than private-school basketball.
7.
Can’t Be Touched
THE NO-LOOK HEAT CHECKS
George crosses half court.
One dribble.
Pull-up from absurd range.
Then immediately turning around before the ball lands while the gym loses its mind behind him.
That level of swagger psychologically BROKE opponents.
Because he looked completely certain every shot was going in.
8.
I Think They Like Me
THE SUPERFAN OBSESSION
By senior year, the Calvary Crazies treated George like a local rap superstar.
The legendary:
“G-E-O-R-G-E”
stomach-paint crew.
Students screaming his name before introductions.
Girls rushing railings after games.
Road crowds arguing with refs every time George got touched.
The fandom became emotional investment.
9.
Sky Is The Limit
THE HALF-COURT RANGE MOMENTS
The most terrifying thing about George offensively?
The range kept extending.
Volleyball line.
Half court.
Parking-lot pull-ups.
And somehow the crowd reacted MORE confidently the deeper the shots became.
That’s when games started feeling mythical.
10.
Amazing
THE “WE DON’T LOSE AT HOME” ENERGY
The old Calvary gym became spiritually intimidating.
Opponents walked in already tense.
Because once the music,
crowd,
and George Turner heat checks synced together…
the building emotionally swallowed teams whole.
That’s why older Savannah hoop fans still describe the gym differently from normal basketball environments.
It felt alive.
11.
Throw It Up
THE AFTER-GAME PARKING LOT CIRCLES
The buzzer ended the game…
but not the atmosphere.
Students stayed outside for HOURS.
Cars circling.
Music blasting.
Players reenacting highlights.
Crowds surrounding George and Mark Jones retelling plays possession-by-possession.
Those nights became Savannah folklore.
12.
Haterz
THE OPPOSING COACH FRUSTRATION ERA
By late senior season, opposing coaches visibly panicked once George got hot.
Timeouts burned immediately.
Defenders trapped aggressively.
Bench players screaming assignments.
Didn’t matter.
George kept launching.
And the calmer he stayed…
the more emotionally defeated opponents looked.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL.
Before influencer culture.
Before TikTok mixtapes.
There was:
George Turner raining deep fireballs,
Mark Jones sprinting through defenses,
Cody Padgett controlling the paint,
and the Calvary Crazies praising every heat-check like a gospel choir witnessing a miracle.
The music shook the walls.
The bleachers rattled.
The crowd believed.
And somewhere between the bass, the swagger, and the chaos…
Savannah accidentally built a basketball religion.
CRUSH MAGAZINE VAULT “THE GYM REVIVAL” How George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner & The Calvary Crazies Made Savannah Basketball Feel Like Church, A Concert & A Riot All At Once
CRUSH MAGAZINE VAULT
“THE GYM REVIVAL”
How George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner & The Calvary Crazies Made Savannah Basketball Feel Like Church, A Concert & A Riot All At Once
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — PEOPLE DIDN’T ATTEND THE GAMES… THEY TESTIFIED ABOUT THEM
That’s what separated the Party Plug era from normal high-school basketball.
Folks talked about those games like spiritual experiences.
Not:
“Yeah Calvary won.”
More like:
“Boy… you should’ve SEEN what happened in there.”
Because between 2006 and 2010, the old Calvary gym transformed into the loudest emotional environment in Savannah basketball culture.
And once George Turner got hot?
The whole building started moving like a revival service.
Hands in the air.
People screaming.
Bleachers shaking.
Students crying laughing.
Opposing coaches looking defeated spiritually.
The gym didn’t just react.
It PRAISED.
1.
Bling Bling
THE GOLD-CHAIN TUNNEL WALK
Twenty-five minutes before tipoff…
lights buzzing,
bass shaking,
students packed shoulder-to-shoulder in the hallway.
Then the locker-room doors swing open.
George Turner walks out first:
oversized navy hoodie,
gold chain swinging,
headphones in,
stone-faced like a prizefighter entering an arena.
Behind him:
Mark Jones,
Cody Padgett,
Steve Williams,
Dom,
and the rest of the squad moving through screaming students like celebrities.
The crowd LOST IT before warmups even started.
2.
We Takin Over
THE ROAD-GAME INVASIONS
Calvary fans traveled DEEP.
Not regular away-game attendance.
Takeovers.
Entire sections of rival gyms suddenly filled with:
navy-and-gold shirts,
body paint,
air horns,
and screaming Calvary Crazies.
Then George drills two quick deep threes…
and suddenly the HOME crowd quiet while Calvary students chanting louder than everybody else combined.
The takeover energy became legendary locally.
3.
Get Low
THE BASELINE CHAOS
The Calvary Crazies sat RIGHT on top of the court.
Every time George hit another heat-check three:
students slammed the railings,
fell into each other,
and screamed so loud referees stopped play repeatedly.
One opposing inbounder reportedly looked genuinely terrified trying to throw baseline passes through the chaos.
The environment felt suffocating.
4.
Make Tha Trap Say Aye
THE THREE-POINT AVALANCHES
Once George hit consecutive threes…
the gym changed emotionally.
People stopped sitting.
Teachers stopped trying to control students.
Bench players started pacing the sidelines.
Then George launches another thirty-footer…
BOOM.
Gym explodes.
Mark Jones screaming.
Cody clapping.
Students falling over bleachers.
That avalanche effect became the signature of the Party Plug era.
5.
Laffy Taffy
THE DANCE-MOVE TIMEOUTS
Timeouts looked ridiculous in the best possible way.
Students dancing in aisles.
Bench players hitting dance moves.
Cheerleaders screaming while music blasted through the speakers.
The whole gym moved together emotionally.
And George feeding directly into the energy by smiling toward the crowd made everything louder.
6.
Knuck If You Buck
THE SAVANNAH CHRISTIAN RIVALRY WARS
Those rivalry games felt personal.
Bodies flying.
Loose balls everywhere.
Crowds screaming after every whistle.
Then George drills another deep bomb and the entire student section erupts like somebody hit a game-winner in March Madness.
The intensity felt way bigger than private-school basketball.
7.
Can’t Be Touched
THE NO-LOOK HEAT CHECKS
George crosses half court.
One dribble.
Pull-up from absurd range.
Then immediately turning around before the ball lands while the gym loses its mind behind him.
That level of swagger psychologically BROKE opponents.
Because he looked completely certain every shot was going in.
8.
I Think They Like Me
THE SUPERFAN OBSESSION
By senior year, the Calvary Crazies treated George like a local rap superstar.
The legendary:
“G-E-O-R-G-E”
stomach-paint crew.
Students screaming his name before introductions.
Girls rushing railings after games.
Road crowds arguing with refs every time George got touched.
The fandom became emotional investment.
9.
Sky Is The Limit
THE HALF-COURT RANGE MOMENTS
The most terrifying thing about George offensively?
The range kept extending.
Volleyball line.
Half court.
Parking-lot pull-ups.
And somehow the crowd reacted MORE confidently the deeper the shots became.
That’s when games started feeling mythical.
10.
Amazing
THE “WE DON’T LOSE AT HOME” ENERGY
The old Calvary gym became spiritually intimidating.
Opponents walked in already tense.
Because once the music,
crowd,
and George Turner heat checks synced together…
the building emotionally swallowed teams whole.
That’s why older Savannah hoop fans still describe the gym differently from normal basketball environments.
It felt alive.
11.
Throw It Up
THE AFTER-GAME PARKING LOT CIRCLES
The buzzer ended the game…
but not the atmosphere.
Students stayed outside for HOURS.
Cars circling.
Music blasting.
Players reenacting highlights.
Crowds surrounding George and Mark Jones retelling plays possession-by-possession.
Those nights became Savannah folklore.
12.
Haterz
THE OPPOSING COACH FRUSTRATION ERA
By late senior season, opposing coaches visibly panicked once George got hot.
Timeouts burned immediately.
Defenders trapped aggressively.
Bench players screaming assignments.
Didn’t matter.
George kept launching.
And the calmer he stayed…
the more emotionally defeated opponents looked.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL.
Before influencer culture.
Before TikTok mixtapes.
There was:
George Turner raining deep fireballs,
Mark Jones sprinting through defenses,
Cody Padgett controlling the paint,
and the Calvary Crazies praising every heat-check like a gospel choir witnessing a miracle.
The music shook the walls.
The bleachers rattled.
The crowd believed.
And somewhere between the bass, the swagger, and the chaos…
Savannah accidentally built a basketball religion.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES MORE PARTY PLUG ERA SOUNDTRACKS & CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS The Real Songs, Real Energy & Real Savannah Basketball Chaos (2006–2010)
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES
MORE PARTY PLUG ERA SOUNDTRACKS & CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS
The Real Songs, Real Energy & Real Savannah Basketball Chaos (2006–2010)
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Music Staff
⸻
1. Hardball
THE 2006 FRESHMAN PROPHECY MOMENT
Back when George Turner first entered varsity environments as a young shooter, older students already noticed the confidence looked different.
During early Hawkinsville-era moments and road-game appearances, the Calvary Crazies started the famous:
“HE’S A FRESHMAN!”
chants every time George hit another fearless perimeter jumper against older defenders.
The gym reactions weren’t normal for a freshman.
That’s when older Savannah hoop fans first started whispering:
“Boy got range.”
⸻
2. Rubber Band Man
THE PREGAME PARKING LOT TAKEOVERS
Before big rivalry games, entire parking lots became unofficial tailgates.
Cars lined up.
Trunks open.
Bass shaking campus sidewalks.
Students blasting T.I. while:
George,
Mark Jones,
Cody Padgett,
and the squad walked into the gym with gold chains, oversized hoodies, and stone-faced confidence.
By tipoff, the crowd already emotionally exhausted itself BEFORE the game even started.
⸻
3. Bird Walk
THE BENCH MOB ERA
After huge transition runs:
bench players dancing,
students screaming,
cheerleaders losing composure.
One particular home-game avalanche became legendary after Mark Jones stole a pass, lobbed it to Dom for an alley-oop, and the ENTIRE bench started Bird Walking during the timeout break.
Refs threatened technicals.
Nobody cared.
⸻
4. I’m Me
THE GEORGE TURNER HEAT-CHECK RUNS
Nothing fit George’s emotional confidence better than Wayne’s mixtape arrogance during 2008–2010.
Once George hit consecutive deep threes, the Calvary Crazies started reacting BEFORE the basketball left his hands.
That became the terrifying part for opponents.
The crowd genuinely expected greatness every possession once George got hot.
MaxPreps later verified the perimeter production was real:
55 made threes during senior season.
⸻
5. Shawty
THE CHEERLEADER & AFTER-PARTY ENERGY ERA
The Party Plug identity expanded beyond basketball during senior year.
Games blended directly into Savannah social culture.
Students already discussing:
after-parties,
rival-school crowds,
and where everybody linking after the game while the basketball action still happening live.
That social aura helped George’s “Party Plug” nickname grow citywide.
⸻
6. Lemonade
THE FREEZING-COLD SHOOTING NIGHT
One winter home game became infamous after George started launching deep threes while students screamed:
“HE CAN’T MISS!”
The gym temperature cold…
but George offensively scorching.
Every make felt more disrespectful than the last.
Then:
timeout.
“LEMONADE” shaking the speakers.
Crowd completely melting down emotionally.
⸻
7. Good Life
THE METTER CHAMPIONSHIP BUS RIDE
After the legendary Metter region-title win led by:
Cody Padgett,
George Turner,
and Mark Jones,
students reportedly celebrated the entire ride home blasting “Good Life” while replaying highlights and screaming out late-game moments.
That championship atmosphere became one of the foundational memories of modern Calvary basketball culture.
⸻
8. Can’t Tell Me Nothing
THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL MOMENT
George launches from absurd distance.
Turns around BEFORE the shot lands.
Nothing but net.
The gym explodes.
And George just slowly nodding toward the Calvary Crazies like:
“Y’all knew that was going in.”
That level of swagger psychologically crushed opponents.
⸻
9. Independent
THE SUPERFAN FRONT ROW
The Calvary Crazies front row became locally famous.
Body paint.
Signs.
Gold outfits.
Homemade shirts.
The legendary:
“G-E-O-R-G-E”
stomach crew became one of Savannah basketball’s most iconic student-section visuals.
The crowd honestly treated George like a local rap star.
⸻
10. Ridin’
THE ROAD-GAME SILENCERS
Road gyms became emotionally dangerous once George got hot offensively.
One deep three…
then another…
then suddenly the loud opposing crowd went silent except for Calvary fans screaming from the visitor section.
That silence became legendary.
You could hear:
coaches yelling,
parents groaning,
and sneakers squeaking once the avalanche started.
⸻
11. Go Crazy
THE BLEACHER-SHAKING MOMENTS
The old gym physically rattled during George scoring explosions.
Not exaggeration.
Metal shaking.
Students stomping.
Teachers panicking.
The atmosphere genuinely felt unsafe emotionally once the Calvary Crazies fully activated.
⸻
12. Make It Rain
THE THREE-POINT MONSOONS
George’s perimeter shooting didn’t feel random.
It felt inevitable.
Transition threes.
Wing threes.
Heat-check pull-ups.
The crowd eventually started screaming:
“LET HIM SHOOT!”
every time George crossed half court.
That psychological confidence infected the entire gym.
⸻
13. Duffle Bag Boy
THE GOLD-CHAIN WALKOUTS
Before tipoff, the team entrances already looked legendary.
Gold chains.
Oversized hoodies.
Headphones.
Slow confident walkouts.
The atmosphere before games sometimes felt bigger than the games themselves.
⸻
14. Pop Bottles
THE AFTER-GAME PARKING LOT CELEBRATIONS
Wins never ended at the buzzer.
Parking lots became celebration zones.
Cars lined up.
Music blasting.
Students reenacting George threes and Mark Jones fast breaks in the street.
Savannah nightlife energy merged directly with basketball culture.
⸻
15. Hustlin’
THE PARTY PLUG MYTH STARTS SPREADING
By 2010, George Turner’s reputation spread beyond Calvary.
MySpace clips.
MaxPreps stats.
Savannah newspaper recaps.
Word-of-mouth storytelling.
The mythology spread manually before social-media algorithms existed.
And somehow that made it stronger emotionally.
⸻
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL.
Before TikTok.
Before influencer athletes.
There was:
southern rap shaking old gym speakers,
George Turner raining impossible threes,
Mark Jones sprinting through defenses,
Cody Padgett controlling the paint,
and the Calvary Crazies reacting like they were witnessing basketball prophecy in real time.
Not just games.
Moments.
Not just a student section.
A movement.
And somewhere between the music, the swagger, and the chaos…
Savannah created its own basketball mythology.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES MORE PARTY PLUG ERA SOUNDTRACKS & CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS The Real Songs, Real Energy & Real Savannah Basketball Chaos (2006–2010)
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES
MORE PARTY PLUG ERA SOUNDTRACKS & CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS
The Real Songs, Real Energy & Real Savannah Basketball Chaos (2006–2010)
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Music Staff
⸻
1. Hardball
THE 2006 FRESHMAN PROPHECY MOMENT
Back when George Turner first entered varsity environments as a young shooter, older students already noticed the confidence looked different.
During early Hawkinsville-era moments and road-game appearances, the Calvary Crazies started the famous:
“HE’S A FRESHMAN!”
chants every time George hit another fearless perimeter jumper against older defenders.
The gym reactions weren’t normal for a freshman.
That’s when older Savannah hoop fans first started whispering:
“Boy got range.”
⸻
2. Rubber Band Man
THE PREGAME PARKING LOT TAKEOVERS
Before big rivalry games, entire parking lots became unofficial tailgates.
Cars lined up.
Trunks open.
Bass shaking campus sidewalks.
Students blasting T.I. while:
George,
Mark Jones,
Cody Padgett,
and the squad walked into the gym with gold chains, oversized hoodies, and stone-faced confidence.
By tipoff, the crowd already emotionally exhausted itself BEFORE the game even started.
⸻
3. Bird Walk
THE BENCH MOB ERA
After huge transition runs:
bench players dancing,
students screaming,
cheerleaders losing composure.
One particular home-game avalanche became legendary after Mark Jones stole a pass, lobbed it to Dom for an alley-oop, and the ENTIRE bench started Bird Walking during the timeout break.
Refs threatened technicals.
Nobody cared.
⸻
4. I’m Me
THE GEORGE TURNER HEAT-CHECK RUNS
Nothing fit George’s emotional confidence better than Wayne’s mixtape arrogance during 2008–2010.
Once George hit consecutive deep threes, the Calvary Crazies started reacting BEFORE the basketball left his hands.
That became the terrifying part for opponents.
The crowd genuinely expected greatness every possession once George got hot.
MaxPreps later verified the perimeter production was real:
55 made threes during senior season.
⸻
5. Shawty
THE CHEERLEADER & AFTER-PARTY ENERGY ERA
The Party Plug identity expanded beyond basketball during senior year.
Games blended directly into Savannah social culture.
Students already discussing:
after-parties,
rival-school crowds,
and where everybody linking after the game while the basketball action still happening live.
That social aura helped George’s “Party Plug” nickname grow citywide.
⸻
6. Lemonade
THE FREEZING-COLD SHOOTING NIGHT
One winter home game became infamous after George started launching deep threes while students screamed:
“HE CAN’T MISS!”
The gym temperature cold…
but George offensively scorching.
Every make felt more disrespectful than the last.
Then:
timeout.
“LEMONADE” shaking the speakers.
Crowd completely melting down emotionally.
⸻
7. Good Life
THE METTER CHAMPIONSHIP BUS RIDE
After the legendary Metter region-title win led by:
Cody Padgett,
George Turner,
and Mark Jones,
students reportedly celebrated the entire ride home blasting “Good Life” while replaying highlights and screaming out late-game moments.
That championship atmosphere became one of the foundational memories of modern Calvary basketball culture.
⸻
8. Can’t Tell Me Nothing
THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL MOMENT
George launches from absurd distance.
Turns around BEFORE the shot lands.
Nothing but net.
The gym explodes.
And George just slowly nodding toward the Calvary Crazies like:
“Y’all knew that was going in.”
That level of swagger psychologically crushed opponents.
⸻
9. Independent
THE SUPERFAN FRONT ROW
The Calvary Crazies front row became locally famous.
Body paint.
Signs.
Gold outfits.
Homemade shirts.
The legendary:
“G-E-O-R-G-E”
stomach crew became one of Savannah basketball’s most iconic student-section visuals.
The crowd honestly treated George like a local rap star.
⸻
10. Ridin’
THE ROAD-GAME SILENCERS
Road gyms became emotionally dangerous once George got hot offensively.
One deep three…
then another…
then suddenly the loud opposing crowd went silent except for Calvary fans screaming from the visitor section.
That silence became legendary.
You could hear:
coaches yelling,
parents groaning,
and sneakers squeaking once the avalanche started.
⸻
11. Go Crazy
THE BLEACHER-SHAKING MOMENTS
The old gym physically rattled during George scoring explosions.
Not exaggeration.
Metal shaking.
Students stomping.
Teachers panicking.
The atmosphere genuinely felt unsafe emotionally once the Calvary Crazies fully activated.
⸻
12. Make It Rain
THE THREE-POINT MONSOONS
George’s perimeter shooting didn’t feel random.
It felt inevitable.
Transition threes.
Wing threes.
Heat-check pull-ups.
The crowd eventually started screaming:
“LET HIM SHOOT!”
every time George crossed half court.
That psychological confidence infected the entire gym.
⸻
13. Duffle Bag Boy
THE GOLD-CHAIN WALKOUTS
Before tipoff, the team entrances already looked legendary.
Gold chains.
Oversized hoodies.
Headphones.
Slow confident walkouts.
The atmosphere before games sometimes felt bigger than the games themselves.
⸻
14. Pop Bottles
THE AFTER-GAME PARKING LOT CELEBRATIONS
Wins never ended at the buzzer.
Parking lots became celebration zones.
Cars lined up.
Music blasting.
Students reenacting George threes and Mark Jones fast breaks in the street.
Savannah nightlife energy merged directly with basketball culture.
⸻
15. Hustlin’
THE PARTY PLUG MYTH STARTS SPREADING
By 2010, George Turner’s reputation spread beyond Calvary.
MySpace clips.
MaxPreps stats.
Savannah newspaper recaps.
Word-of-mouth storytelling.
The mythology spread manually before social-media algorithms existed.
And somehow that made it stronger emotionally.
⸻
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL.
Before TikTok.
Before influencer athletes.
There was:
southern rap shaking old gym speakers,
George Turner raining impossible threes,
Mark Jones sprinting through defenses,
Cody Padgett controlling the paint,
and the Calvary Crazies reacting like they were witnessing basketball prophecy in real time.
Not just games.
Moments.
Not just a student section.
A movement.
And somewhere between the music, the swagger, and the chaos…
Savannah created its own basketball mythology.
CRUSH MAGAZINE VERIFIED SOUNDTRACK FILES THE PARTY PLUG ERA — TRACK BY TRACK Real Songs + Real MaxPreps & Savannah Basketball Moments (2006–2010)
CRUSH MAGAZINE VERIFIED SOUNDTRACK FILES
THE PARTY PLUG ERA — TRACK BY TRACK
Real Songs + Real MaxPreps & Savannah Basketball Moments (2006–2010)
By CRUSH Magazine Research & Culture Staff
1.
Throw Some D’s
THE 3-POINT BARRAGE GAME
This song became emotionally attached to one of the most legendary George Turner heat-check nights of the late-2000s Calvary era.
George Turner — verified by MaxPreps as one of Georgia’s top perimeter shooters with 55 made threes during the 2010 season — started launching transition bombs from absurd distances while the Calvary Crazies completely lost emotional control.
Students threw newspaper confetti after every make.
Mark Jones pushed fast breaks downhill relentlessly.
Cody Padgett controlled the paint physically.
The Rich Boy soundtrack matched the energy perfectly:
southern swagger,
flashy confidence,
and after-party chaos already building before the game ended.
The “Party Plug” identity exploded locally during nights like these.
2.
A Milli
THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL ERA
This became the unofficial George Turner heat-check anthem.
One deep three after another…
then George turns around BEFORE the shot lands while holding his follow-through toward the Calvary Crazies.
The crowd erupting before the basketball cleared the net became one of the defining visual memories of the era.
MaxPreps later verified Turner’s elite perimeter production statewide:
Top 12 in Georgia in made threes
Top 2 in Division A.
The swagger matched Wayne’s mixtape-era energy perfectly.
3.
Swag Surfin’
THE METTER FLOOR-STORM CHAMPIONSHIP
The 2008–2009 region-title atmosphere at Metter became local basketball folklore.
After Calvary’s emotional championship win led by:
Cody Padgett
George Turner
Mark Jones
the floor disappeared beneath a sea of students storming the court while the crowd literally Swag Surfed inside the gym.
That region-title run helped establish Calvary as a legitimate GHSA-era basketball power.
4.
Fireman
THE TIMEOUT RITUALS
Nothing captured the Party Plug era better than this song.
George hits another devastating deep three…
opposing coach instantly burns timeout…
then:
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
blasts through the gym speakers while George jogs calmly toward the DJ booth smiling.
Meanwhile:
Tim Quarterman,
Greg Mortimer,
and Rico Bonds sat behind the bench watching the emotional chaos unfold in awe.
The song became part of Savannah basketball mythology.
5.
Turn My Swag On
THE GOLD-CHAIN WARMUP TUNNELS
By senior year, George Turner’s pregame entrances already carried rockstar energy.
Oversized hoodies.
Gold chains.
Headphones in.
Stone-faced confidence.
Students lined hallways screaming while Soulja Boy blasted through the speakers during warmups.
The gym atmosphere felt bigger than varsity basketball before tipoff even started.
6.
O Let’s Do It
THE 28–0 SAVANNAH COUNTRY DAY EXORCISM
This soundtrack became forever attached to one of the most disrespectful runs in local rivalry history.
Calvary opened on a 28–0 avalanche while:
George Turner drilled transition threes,
Mark Jones attacked downhill,
and Cody Padgett physically overwhelmed defenders inside.
Students shredded newspapers into confetti while opposing coaches looked completely stunned.
The emotional damage became legendary locally.
7.
Power
THE “WE DON’T LOSE AT HOME” SPEECH
Down seven at halftime during a major home game.
Locker room silent.
George reportedly stands up calmly and says:
“Nobody walks into OUR gym and leaves smiling.”
Calvary explodes for a 19–2 second-half run immediately afterward.
Kanye’s “Power” perfectly matched the emotional identity of those home-game comeback atmospheres:
certainty,
swagger,
and total control.
8.
No Hands
THE BLEACHERS THAT SHOOK
By 2010, the old Calvary gym physically rattled during George Turner scoring runs.
Not metaphorically.
Actually shook.
Students standing on metal bleachers screaming after every deep three while “No Hands” blasted through the speakers turned the gym into complete emotional chaos.
Teachers reportedly stopped even trying to calm students during some runs.
9.
Hard in da Paint
THE RICO BONDS DEFENSIVE PRESSURE ERA
Rico Bonds brought emotional violence defensively.
Full-court pressure.
Steals.
Bench explosions.
Transition chaos.
Every turnover immediately triggered:
Mark Jones downhill,
George floating to the perimeter,
and another emotional avalanche from three.
“Hard in da Paint” perfectly matched the defensive aggression of those teams.
10.
Teach Me How to Dougie
THE MORPH SUIT PLAYOFF GAME
One playoff atmosphere became infamous after entire sections of the Calvary Crazies showed up wearing:
blue-and-gold morph suits,
body paint,
and oversized costumes.
Students Dougie’ing in aisles after every George three turned the gym into a live concert environment.
Refs threatened technical fouls multiple times because the crowd stood inches from inbounders near the baseline.
11.
Stanky Legg
THE BENCH MOB DANCE ERA
Every huge scoring run became a dance celebration.
Bench players Stanky Legg’ing during timeouts.
Students dancing on bleachers.
Cheerleaders losing composure.
The atmosphere stopped feeling like organized sports and started resembling southern dance-party culture attached to basketball.
12.
Forever
THE LEGACY TRACK
Years later, Savannah still talks about the Party Plug era emotionally because the memories survived beyond statistics.
The MaxPreps rankings remain verified:
55 made threes,
top statewide rankings,
and elite perimeter production.
But the true legacy became:
the noise,
the swagger,
the soundtrack,
and the feeling that something legendary might happen every time George Turner crossed half court.
That’s why the era still feels permanent.
CRUSH MAGAZINE VERIFIED SOUNDTRACK FILES THE PARTY PLUG ERA — TRACK BY TRACK Real Songs + Real MaxPreps & Savannah Basketball Moments (2006–2010)
CRUSH MAGAZINE VERIFIED SOUNDTRACK FILES
THE PARTY PLUG ERA — TRACK BY TRACK
Real Songs + Real MaxPreps & Savannah Basketball Moments (2006–2010)
By CRUSH Magazine Research & Culture Staff
1.
Throw Some D’s
THE 3-POINT BARRAGE GAME
This song became emotionally attached to one of the most legendary George Turner heat-check nights of the late-2000s Calvary era.
George Turner — verified by MaxPreps as one of Georgia’s top perimeter shooters with 55 made threes during the 2010 season — started launching transition bombs from absurd distances while the Calvary Crazies completely lost emotional control.
Students threw newspaper confetti after every make.
Mark Jones pushed fast breaks downhill relentlessly.
Cody Padgett controlled the paint physically.
The Rich Boy soundtrack matched the energy perfectly:
southern swagger,
flashy confidence,
and after-party chaos already building before the game ended.
The “Party Plug” identity exploded locally during nights like these.
2.
A Milli
THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL ERA
This became the unofficial George Turner heat-check anthem.
One deep three after another…
then George turns around BEFORE the shot lands while holding his follow-through toward the Calvary Crazies.
The crowd erupting before the basketball cleared the net became one of the defining visual memories of the era.
MaxPreps later verified Turner’s elite perimeter production statewide:
Top 12 in Georgia in made threes
Top 2 in Division A.
The swagger matched Wayne’s mixtape-era energy perfectly.
3.
Swag Surfin’
THE METTER FLOOR-STORM CHAMPIONSHIP
The 2008–2009 region-title atmosphere at Metter became local basketball folklore.
After Calvary’s emotional championship win led by:
Cody Padgett
George Turner
Mark Jones
the floor disappeared beneath a sea of students storming the court while the crowd literally Swag Surfed inside the gym.
That region-title run helped establish Calvary as a legitimate GHSA-era basketball power.
4.
Fireman
THE TIMEOUT RITUALS
Nothing captured the Party Plug era better than this song.
George hits another devastating deep three…
opposing coach instantly burns timeout…
then:
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
blasts through the gym speakers while George jogs calmly toward the DJ booth smiling.
Meanwhile:
Tim Quarterman,
Greg Mortimer,
and Rico Bonds sat behind the bench watching the emotional chaos unfold in awe.
The song became part of Savannah basketball mythology.
5.
Turn My Swag On
THE GOLD-CHAIN WARMUP TUNNELS
By senior year, George Turner’s pregame entrances already carried rockstar energy.
Oversized hoodies.
Gold chains.
Headphones in.
Stone-faced confidence.
Students lined hallways screaming while Soulja Boy blasted through the speakers during warmups.
The gym atmosphere felt bigger than varsity basketball before tipoff even started.
6.
O Let’s Do It
THE 28–0 SAVANNAH COUNTRY DAY EXORCISM
This soundtrack became forever attached to one of the most disrespectful runs in local rivalry history.
Calvary opened on a 28–0 avalanche while:
George Turner drilled transition threes,
Mark Jones attacked downhill,
and Cody Padgett physically overwhelmed defenders inside.
Students shredded newspapers into confetti while opposing coaches looked completely stunned.
The emotional damage became legendary locally.
7.
Power
THE “WE DON’T LOSE AT HOME” SPEECH
Down seven at halftime during a major home game.
Locker room silent.
George reportedly stands up calmly and says:
“Nobody walks into OUR gym and leaves smiling.”
Calvary explodes for a 19–2 second-half run immediately afterward.
Kanye’s “Power” perfectly matched the emotional identity of those home-game comeback atmospheres:
certainty,
swagger,
and total control.
8.
No Hands
THE BLEACHERS THAT SHOOK
By 2010, the old Calvary gym physically rattled during George Turner scoring runs.
Not metaphorically.
Actually shook.
Students standing on metal bleachers screaming after every deep three while “No Hands” blasted through the speakers turned the gym into complete emotional chaos.
Teachers reportedly stopped even trying to calm students during some runs.
9.
Hard in da Paint
THE RICO BONDS DEFENSIVE PRESSURE ERA
Rico Bonds brought emotional violence defensively.
Full-court pressure.
Steals.
Bench explosions.
Transition chaos.
Every turnover immediately triggered:
Mark Jones downhill,
George floating to the perimeter,
and another emotional avalanche from three.
“Hard in da Paint” perfectly matched the defensive aggression of those teams.
10.
Teach Me How to Dougie
THE MORPH SUIT PLAYOFF GAME
One playoff atmosphere became infamous after entire sections of the Calvary Crazies showed up wearing:
blue-and-gold morph suits,
body paint,
and oversized costumes.
Students Dougie’ing in aisles after every George three turned the gym into a live concert environment.
Refs threatened technical fouls multiple times because the crowd stood inches from inbounders near the baseline.
11.
Stanky Legg
THE BENCH MOB DANCE ERA
Every huge scoring run became a dance celebration.
Bench players Stanky Legg’ing during timeouts.
Students dancing on bleachers.
Cheerleaders losing composure.
The atmosphere stopped feeling like organized sports and started resembling southern dance-party culture attached to basketball.
12.
Forever
THE LEGACY TRACK
Years later, Savannah still talks about the Party Plug era emotionally because the memories survived beyond statistics.
The MaxPreps rankings remain verified:
55 made threes,
top statewide rankings,
and elite perimeter production.
But the true legacy became:
the noise,
the swagger,
the soundtrack,
and the feeling that something legendary might happen every time George Turner crossed half court.
That’s why the era still feels permanent.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES “THROW SOME D’Z” The Night George Turner Turned A Calvary Basketball Game Into A Full-Blown Savannah Block Party
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES
“THROW SOME D’Z”
The Night George Turner Turned A Calvary Basketball Game Into A Full-Blown Savannah Block Party
By CRUSH Magazine Music, Sports & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — SOME GAMES TURN INTO MEMORIES
And some games turn into local mythology.
The “Throw Some D’z” game became mythology.
Not because of one shot.
Because of the atmosphere.
The music.
The crowd.
The swagger.
The chaos.
The after-party energy already building BEFORE halftime even ended.
By the late-2000s, George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner had already become one of the most emotionally electric players in Coastal Georgia basketball.
And one particular home-game barrage — forever connected in people’s memories to Throw Some D’s — became one of the defining superfan moments of the entire Calvary Crazies era.
CHAPTER 1 — THE GYM WAS ALREADY TOO LOUD BEFORE TIPOFF
That’s the first thing people remember.
The gym already felt unstable before the game even started.
Students packed shoulder-to-shoulder.
Bass rattling the bleachers.
Cheerleaders yelling over the speakers.
Teachers pretending they could still control the crowd.
Meanwhile George Turner walked into warmups moving slow and calm while:
Mark Jones,
Cody Padgett,
Steve Williams,
Dom,
and the rest of the squad bounced around the court loose and confident.
Then the DJ dropped:
Throw Some D’s
And the whole gym changed emotionally.
Because Rich Boy represented EXACTLY the type of southern swagger Savannah kids worshipped back then:
flashy confidence,
street charisma,
party energy,
and unapologetic style.
The song hit the gym like gasoline.
CHAPTER 2 — THE FIRST THREE STARTED THE AVALANCHE
George’s first deep three didn’t even look difficult.
That’s what made it disrespectful.
Casual dribble.
Quick rise.
Splash.
Students immediately jumped up screaming.
But George?
No reaction.
Just jogging backward calmly while Mark Jones clapped in his face and the Calvary Crazies started stomping the bleachers in rhythm.
Then the DJ ran “Throw Some D’z” BACK.
That’s when the emotional avalanche started.
CHAPTER 3 — THE THREE-POINT BARRAGE FELT LIKE A RAP VIDEO
The next few minutes honestly stopped feeling like organized basketball.
George started launching from everywhere.
Wing threes.
Transition pull-ups.
Heat checks from absurd range.
And every single make made the crowd more reckless emotionally.
People throwing towels.
Students climbing bleachers.
Bench players running halfway onto the floor before coaches screamed at them to sit down.
Meanwhile “Throw Some D’z” kept blasting through the speakers after every timeout and momentum break.
The whole gym started feeling like:
a basketball game,
a mixtape release party,
and a southern nightclub all happening simultaneously.
CHAPTER 4 — THE CALVARY CRAZIES LOST COMPLETE CONTROL
This was peak Calvary Crazies behavior.
Body paint everywhere.
Students yelling before shots landed.
Newspapers flying through the air after another George heat-check bomb.
One group near the baseline reportedly started screaming:
“HE DON’T MISS!”
over and over every time George crossed half court.
And honestly?
It started feeling believable.
Because once George entered rhythm, the crowd reacted like every shot was destined to go in.
That emotional certainty became terrifying for opponents.
CHAPTER 5 — MARK JONES TURNED THE FAST BREAK INTO A PARTY
While George burned defenses from deep…
Mark Jones turned transition basketball into emotional destruction.
Steal.
Push the pace.
Collapse the defense.
Kick-out to George.
BOOM.
Another three.
Then Mark sprinting back downcourt screaming while the crowd exploded again.
The chemistry between Mark and George made the game feel too fast emotionally for opponents to survive.
And every fast-break sequence somehow synced perfectly with the Rich Boy soundtrack blasting in the background.
CHAPTER 6 — CODY PADGETT KEPT THE PRESSURE SUFFOCATING
Cody Padgett became the stabilizer inside the chaos.
Because while George and Mark emotionally overwhelmed teams outside…
Cody punished defenders physically and methodically.
Rebounds.
Putbacks.
Mid-range buckets.
Tough finishes through contact.
Every time defenses overextended trying to stop George’s perimeter fire…
Cody made them pay immediately.
That balance made the barrage impossible to survive.
CHAPTER 7 — THE AFTER-PARTY ENERGY STARTED INSIDE THE GYM
This part became legendary locally.
By the second half, the game atmosphere already felt connected to after-party culture.
That’s why the Rich Boy energy fit perfectly.
Because George’s “Party Plug” reputation wasn’t limited to basketball anymore by senior year.
The crowd understood:
the game was only PHASE ONE of the night.
Students already talking about:
where everybody linking after,
who pulling up,
which rival-school crowds staying around,
and which cheerleaders still hanging after the game.
The basketball atmosphere blended directly into Savannah social culture.
That blurred line made the era feel bigger than sports.
CHAPTER 8 — THE SUPERFANS TREATED GEORGE LIKE A ROCKSTAR
The craziest reactions came from the superfans.
Not normal cheering.
Rockstar-level hysteria.
Students rushing railings after big shots.
People holding hands on they head in disbelief.
Crowds screaming before George even released the ball.
And every timeout became another performance break once:
“Throw Some D’z”
started shaking the speakers again.
The gym genuinely felt emotionally possessed by momentum.
That’s why older Savannah alumni still describe the era differently from ordinary basketball memories.
It felt larger than sports.
CHAPTER 9 — BEFORE SOCIAL MEDIA, THIS WAS REAL VIRAL ENERGY
The wildest part?
Most of this never got properly filmed.
No TikTok.
No HD mixtape edits.
No Instagram reels.
Just:
flip phones,
MySpace clips,
local storytelling,
MaxPreps pages,
Savannah Morning News recaps,
and pure memory.
Which somehow made the mythology even stronger.
Because people remembered:
the FEELING.
The bass.
The crowd noise.
The impossible shooting.
The gym shaking after every George three.
That emotional memory survived longer than video ever could.
CHAPTER 10 — THE DNA OF ORANGE CRUSH WAS ALREADY THERE
Years later when people saw George Turner controlling:
festival crowds,
Orange Crush beach energy,
pool-party atmospheres,
and nightlife events,
older Savannah basketball people immediately recognized the same formula.
Music.
Swagger.
Timing.
Crowd manipulation.
Energy pacing.
The blueprint already existed inside the old Calvary gym.
The “Throw Some D’z” game proved it.
Basketball was simply the first stage.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before influencer athletes.
Before NIL branding.
Before social-media hype culture.
There was George Turner raining deep threes while Throw Some D’s blasted through old gym speakers and the Calvary Crazies completely lost they minds.
Mark Jones flying downhill.
Cody Padgett punishing defenses.
Students screaming like they watching a rap superstar instead of a varsity game.
And somewhere between the music, the barrage, and the chaos…
Savannah accidentally created one of the loudest basketball atmospheres of its generation.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE FILES EARTH. WIND. FIRE. WATER. How George Turner Conducted Basketball Like A Natural Disaster While Calvary Day Became Savannah’s Loudest Gym
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE FILES
EARTH. WIND. FIRE. WATER.
How George Turner Conducted Basketball Like A Natural Disaster While Calvary Day Became Savannah’s Loudest Gym
By CRUSH Magazine Sports & Culture Staff
⸻
PROLOGUE — THE GAME STOPPED FEELING HUMAN
By George Turner’s senior year, Calvary Day basketball stopped looking like organized high-school sports.
The atmosphere became elemental.
Every run felt connected to:
fire,
wind,
water,
and electricity.
And somehow George controlled all of it.
The music.
The pace.
The crowd.
The emotion.
The chaos.
One second the gym calm…
next second:
Mark Jones flying downhill in transition,
Cody Padgett bullying defenders inside,
Steve Williams locking up defensively,
Dom and Dom crashing the glass,
and George Turner raining impossible threes from distances that made opposing coaches physically grab they heads in frustration.
The old Calvary gym didn’t just host games.
It hosted storms.
⸻
CHAPTER 1 — FIRE: THE THREES THAT BURNED GYMS DOWN
George Turner shot the basketball like he was trying to set the scoreboard on fire.
Not regular shooting.
Heat checks.
Flamethrowers.
Fireball launches.
And the craziest part?
Everybody in the building knew when the fire was starting.
You could FEEL it.
One three-pointer.
Then another one from deeper range.
Then the no-look backpedal.
Then:
timeout.
And the speakers instantly explode with:
Fireman
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
The crowd screaming like a revival service while George jogged toward the scorer’s table smiling calmly as if he wasn’t actively destroying another team emotionally.
That’s what made the fire dangerous.
George never looked rushed.
The calmer he looked…
the louder the gym got.
⸻
CHAPTER 2 — WIND: MARK JONES TURNED FAST BREAKS INTO HURRICANES
If George was fire…
Mark Jones was wind.
Pure speed.
Pure momentum.
Pure downhill violence.
The second Mark grabbed a loose ball or outlet pass, the entire gym stood up BEFORE he crossed half court because Savannah already knew:
something explosive was coming.
Euro-steps.
No-look passes.
Transition dimes.
Full-speed finishes.
Mark didn’t run fast breaks.
He unleashed storms.
And George understood exactly how to feed off it.
Mark collapsing defenses downhill…
George floating to the wing…
BOOM.
Another deep three.
The emotional whiplash became devastating.
Opponents couldn’t breathe.
⸻
CHAPTER 3 — WATER: THE OFFENSE FLOWED LIKE WAVES
That’s what made the 2009–2010 team so dangerous.
The offense never felt rigid.
It flowed.
Like water.
One possession:
Cody Padgett punishing defenders inside.
Next possession:
George launching from thirty feet.
Then:
Mark Jones slicing through traffic.
Then:
Steve Williams diving on loose balls.
Then:
Dom and Dom catching alley-oops in transition while the crowd physically shook the bleachers.
Wave after wave after wave.
The pressure never stopped emotionally.
And George controlled the rhythm like a DJ controlling bass drops inside a nightclub.
⸻
CHAPTER 4 — THE ALLEY-OOP ERA
People forget how violent those transition sequences felt live.
Mark Jones flying downhill…
George trailing the break…
Defenders scrambling…
Then suddenly:
LOB.
BOOM.
Dom rising above everybody and hammering it home while the gym exploded into absolute chaos.
Students falling over bleachers.
Bench players sprinting onto the floor.
Teachers yelling at nobody in particular.
The alley-oops changed the emotional energy instantly.
Because now opponents had to fear:
the shooting,
the pace,
AND the vertical athleticism all at once.
That combination became overwhelming.
⸻
CHAPTER 5 — THE MUSIC CONTROLLED THE ATMOSPHERE
George understood music psychologically before most athletes understood branding.
That’s why the soundtrack mattered so much.
Every song matched the emotional pacing of the game.
Deep heat-check run?
Fireman
Fast-break avalanche?
Swag Surfin’
Ankle-breaking crossover into step-back three?
A Milli
Timeout after another devastating run?
Power
Crowd completely losing composure?
No Hands
The soundtrack wasn’t background noise.
It became part of the psychological warfare.
⸻
CHAPTER 6 — STEVE WILLIAMS & THE DEFENSIVE ELECTRICITY
Every great offensive storm needs pressure defensively too.
That’s where Steve Williams became critical.
Loose balls.
Pressure defense.
Physicality.
Energy.
Steve brought electricity into the chaos.
The type of player who made hustle contagious.
One steal from Steve…
Mark pushing transition…
George sprinting to the wing…
and suddenly another emotional avalanche started before opponents could even recover mentally.
That’s why the gym felt overwhelming.
The pressure came from everywhere.
⸻
CHAPTER 7 — DOM & DOM BROUGHT THE THUNDER
The interior energy from Dom and Dom changed the physical identity of the team completely.
Because while George and Mark destroyed defenses emotionally outside…
the bigs punished teams physically inside.
Putbacks.
Rebounds.
Blocks.
Transition finishes.
Violent alley-oops.
And every dunk made the crowd reaction twice as loud because the atmosphere already sat at emotional maximum.
The team became perfectly balanced:
fire outside,
thunder inside.
⸻
CHAPTER 8 — THE CALVARY CRAZIES BECAME A RELIGION
By senior year, the Calvary Crazies weren’t regular fans anymore.
They acted like believers.
The body paint.
The chants.
The synchronized stomping.
The newspaper confetti.
The morph suits.
The crowd responded to George’s heat checks like prophecy unfolding in real time.
The second he crossed half court, people started screaming.
Not hoping.
EXPECTING.
That’s why the atmosphere felt supernatural years later in memory.
The gym operated emotionally on faith.
⸻
CHAPTER 9 — BEFORE ORANGE CRUSH, THIS WAS THE FIRST FESTIVAL
That’s the craziest part historically.
People think the large-scale crowd control and atmosphere-building started later with Orange Crush.
Nah.
The blueprint started right here.
Inside that gym.
George already understood:
music,
energy,
timing,
crowd psychology,
and emotional pacing before festivals ever entered the picture.
Basketball became the laboratory.
Orange Crush became the expansion later.
⸻
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
George Turner didn’t just play basketball.
He conducted environments.
Fire from the perimeter.
Wind in transition.
Water through offensive flow.
Thunder from alley-oops and dunks.
And while Mark Jones, Cody Padgett, Steve Williams, Dom and Dom unleashed chaos around him…
George controlled the soundtrack like a mixtape DJ directing a live-action movie.
Before social media.
Before influencer athletes.
Before NIL.
The old Calvary gym became Savannah’s loudest natural disaster.
And George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner stood directly in the middle of it smiling while the storm got louder.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE DOSSIER THE CULT OF PARTY PLUG How George Turner & The Calvary Crazies Built Savannah’s Most Electrifying Basketball Movement Before Social Media Existed
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE DOSSIER
THE CULT OF PARTY PLUG
How George Turner & The Calvary Crazies Built Savannah’s Most Electrifying Basketball Movement Before Social Media Existed just MySpace.
By CRUSH Magazine Editorial & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — THIS WASN’T A FANBASE. THIS WAS A BELIEF SYSTEM.
Before NIL.
Before TikTok edits.
Before “viral highlights.”
Before athlete branding agencies.
Savannah, Georgia accidentally created something raw enough to become mythology.
The Party Plug era.
And at the center of it all stood George Mikey Ransom Turner III —
a verified Top-12 Georgia three-point shooter whose swagger, shot-making, and emotional control transformed Calvary Day basketball into a live-action southern mixtape movie.
But the craziest part?
The stats alone don’t fully explain what happened inside that old gym.
Because by 2010, the Calvary Crazies weren’t acting like ordinary high-school fans anymore.
They acted like disciples.
CHAPTER 1 — THE GYM BECAME A TEMPLE
The old Calvary gym wasn’t physically impressive.
That’s what made the energy terrifying.
Low ceilings.
Metal bleachers.
Tight walls.
Bass-heavy speakers.
Students packed almost on top of the court.
Every sound echoed violently.
So once George Turner started cooking offensively?
The building transformed psychologically.
People stomped so hard the bleachers physically rattled.
Students screamed before shots landed.
Teachers stopped trying to control the crowd.
Opposing teams visibly panicked.
And George?
Cool.
Relaxed.
Almost emotionless.
That calmness made the whole thing feel supernatural.
Because while everybody else lost composure…
he looked like he already knew what was about to happen.
CHAPTER 2 — THE VERIFIED SHOOTER BECAME A MYTHICAL FIGURE
According to archived MaxPreps records, George Turner finished:
Top 12 in Georgia in made threes
Top 2 in Division A
With 55 made three-pointers during the 2009–2010 season.
But numbers alone didn’t create the mythology.
The mythology came from HOW he scored.
Volleyball-line pull-ups.
Step-back heat checks.
Transition bombs with zero hesitation.
And once he hit one?
The crowd started behaving like they were witnessing prophecy.
Not basketball.
Prophecy.
CHAPTER 3 — THE “FIREMAN” RITUALS
Nothing represented the era better than the timeout rituals.
George hits another ridiculous deep three.
Opposing coach instantly calls timeout trying to stop momentum.
Then suddenly the gym speakers explode with:
Fireman
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
The Calvary Crazies screaming like they possessed.
Bench players slamming towels.
Students jumping on bleachers.
And George jogging calmly toward the DJ booth smiling while future stars like Tim Quarterman and Greg Mortimer watched from behind the bench completely mesmerized.
That sequence repeated so often it stopped feeling accidental.
It became ceremonial.
Like everybody inside the building already knew the script.
CHAPTER 4 — THE SOUNDTRACK OF THE MOVEMENT
Every era has music attached to it.
The Party Plug era sounded like:
A Milli
Swag Surfin’
No Hands
Turn My Swag On
Power
Lose My Mind
O Let’s Do It
Those records became emotionally attached to:
George heat-checks,
ankle breakers,
fast-break explosions,
and timeout avalanches.
The gym literally moved to the soundtrack.
Students Dougie’ing in aisles.
People Swag Surfin on metal bleachers.
Cheerleaders screaming after transition threes.
The atmosphere felt closer to a rap concert than varsity basketball.
CHAPTER 5 — THE FOLLOWING TURNED OCCULT-LIKE
The word “cult” gets overused now.
This was different.
The Calvary Crazies developed actual rituals.
Body paint.
Theme nights.
Synchronized chants.
Newspaper confetti.
Morph suits.
Road-game caravans.
The “G-E-O-R-G-E” stomach lineup became legendary:
six shirtless students in freezing weather spelling out George’s name every time he heated up offensively.
That’s not ordinary fandom.
That’s emotional devotion.
People genuinely believed:
if George got hot,
the gym itself would collapse into chaos.
And honestly?
Sometimes it almost felt true.
CHAPTER 6 — THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL BROKE REALITY
This became the defining visual of the era.
George launches a deep three.
Ball still flying.
Then he TURNS AROUND before it lands.
No confirmation needed.
Just slowly backpedaling toward the Calvary Crazies with the follow-through still hanging in the air while the crowd exploded BEFORE the shot even cleared the net.
That level of certainty psychologically crushed opponents.
Because it communicated:
“I already know this going in.”
That wasn’t confidence anymore.
That felt predestined.
CHAPTER 7 — OPPOSING GYMS FEARED THE ENERGY
The atmosphere traveled.
That’s what made the movement powerful.
Calvary road games stopped feeling like away environments because the Crazies invaded gyms deep.
Navy-and-gold everywhere.
Students screaming during warmups.
Music blasting before tipoff.
Then George hits a couple impossible early shots…
and suddenly entire gyms go silent.
That silence became legendary.
You could hear:
coaches cussing,
players arguing,
parents groaning,
sneakers squeaking.
Because everybody knew:
the avalanche might already be starting.
CHAPTER 8 — THE YOUNGER PLAYERS WATCHING HISTORY
This part matters historically.
Future Savannah basketball figures like:
Tim Quarterman
Greg Mortimer
Rico Bonds
Milan Richard
all experienced the atmosphere firsthand during formative years.
That means the Party Plug era didn’t just create memories.
It created basketball DNA.
The younger generation absorbed:
swagger,
showmanship,
confidence,
crowd interaction,
and emotional pacing directly from those teams.
That cultural blueprint later echoed throughout Savannah basketball for years afterward.
CHAPTER 9 — THE DNA OF ORANGE CRUSH STARTED HERE
Years later when George Turner evolved into:
festival culture,
Orange Crush,
pool-party branding,
nightlife environments,
and large-scale entertainment atmospheres,
older Savannah basketball people instantly recognized the same energy.
Because the mechanics never changed.
The soundtrack.
The entrances.
The confidence.
The emotional timing.
The crowd manipulation.
Basketball was simply the first stage.
The old Calvary gym became the prototype for everything that came later.
CHAPTER 10 — BEFORE SOCIAL MEDIA, LEGENDS SPREAD THROUGH PEOPLE
That’s what makes the era untouchable now.
The mythology spread manually.
Through:
hallway stories,
MySpace clips,
Savannah Morning News recaps,
MaxPreps stats,
WTOC sports highlights,
WSAV playoff coverage,
and local storytelling.
People carried the stories themselves.
And somehow that made them stronger emotionally.
Because the memories weren’t algorithm-fed.
They were earned.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
The numbers were real.
The playoff runs were real.
The crowd chaos was real.
But what truly survived was the feeling.
A shooter pulling from impossible distances.
A gym exploding before shots landed.
Students acting like believers instead of spectators.
Music shaking metal bleachers while Savannah lost its mind in real time.
Before influencer athletes.
Before sports became content.
George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner and the Calvary Crazies built a movement powerful enough to survive strictly through mythology, memory, and noise.
And years later…
Savannah still talks about it like a religion.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE DOSSIER THE CULT OF PARTY PLUG How George Turner & The Calvary Crazies Built Savannah’s Most Electrifying Basketball Movement Before Social Media Existed
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE DOSSIER
THE CULT OF PARTY PLUG
How George Turner & The Calvary Crazies Built Savannah’s Most Electrifying Basketball Movement Before Social Media Existed just MySpace.
By CRUSH Magazine Editorial & Culture Staff
PROLOGUE — THIS WASN’T A FANBASE. THIS WAS A BELIEF SYSTEM.
Before NIL.
Before TikTok edits.
Before “viral highlights.”
Before athlete branding agencies.
Savannah, Georgia accidentally created something raw enough to become mythology.
The Party Plug era.
And at the center of it all stood George Mikey Ransom Turner III —
a verified Top-12 Georgia three-point shooter whose swagger, shot-making, and emotional control transformed Calvary Day basketball into a live-action southern mixtape movie.
But the craziest part?
The stats alone don’t fully explain what happened inside that old gym.
Because by 2010, the Calvary Crazies weren’t acting like ordinary high-school fans anymore.
They acted like disciples.
CHAPTER 1 — THE GYM BECAME A TEMPLE
The old Calvary gym wasn’t physically impressive.
That’s what made the energy terrifying.
Low ceilings.
Metal bleachers.
Tight walls.
Bass-heavy speakers.
Students packed almost on top of the court.
Every sound echoed violently.
So once George Turner started cooking offensively?
The building transformed psychologically.
People stomped so hard the bleachers physically rattled.
Students screamed before shots landed.
Teachers stopped trying to control the crowd.
Opposing teams visibly panicked.
And George?
Cool.
Relaxed.
Almost emotionless.
That calmness made the whole thing feel supernatural.
Because while everybody else lost composure…
he looked like he already knew what was about to happen.
CHAPTER 2 — THE VERIFIED SHOOTER BECAME A MYTHICAL FIGURE
According to archived MaxPreps records, George Turner finished:
Top 12 in Georgia in made threes
Top 2 in Division A
With 55 made three-pointers during the 2009–2010 season.
But numbers alone didn’t create the mythology.
The mythology came from HOW he scored.
Volleyball-line pull-ups.
Step-back heat checks.
Transition bombs with zero hesitation.
And once he hit one?
The crowd started behaving like they were witnessing prophecy.
Not basketball.
Prophecy.
CHAPTER 3 — THE “FIREMAN” RITUALS
Nothing represented the era better than the timeout rituals.
George hits another ridiculous deep three.
Opposing coach instantly calls timeout trying to stop momentum.
Then suddenly the gym speakers explode with:
Fireman
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
The Calvary Crazies screaming like they possessed.
Bench players slamming towels.
Students jumping on bleachers.
And George jogging calmly toward the DJ booth smiling while future stars like Tim Quarterman and Greg Mortimer watched from behind the bench completely mesmerized.
That sequence repeated so often it stopped feeling accidental.
It became ceremonial.
Like everybody inside the building already knew the script.
CHAPTER 4 — THE SOUNDTRACK OF THE MOVEMENT
Every era has music attached to it.
The Party Plug era sounded like:
A Milli
Swag Surfin’
No Hands
Turn My Swag On
Power
Lose My Mind
O Let’s Do It
Those records became emotionally attached to:
George heat-checks,
ankle breakers,
fast-break explosions,
and timeout avalanches.
The gym literally moved to the soundtrack.
Students Dougie’ing in aisles.
People Swag Surfin on metal bleachers.
Cheerleaders screaming after transition threes.
The atmosphere felt closer to a rap concert than varsity basketball.
CHAPTER 5 — THE FOLLOWING TURNED OCCULT-LIKE
The word “cult” gets overused now.
This was different.
The Calvary Crazies developed actual rituals.
Body paint.
Theme nights.
Synchronized chants.
Newspaper confetti.
Morph suits.
Road-game caravans.
The “G-E-O-R-G-E” stomach lineup became legendary:
six shirtless students in freezing weather spelling out George’s name every time he heated up offensively.
That’s not ordinary fandom.
That’s emotional devotion.
People genuinely believed:
if George got hot,
the gym itself would collapse into chaos.
And honestly?
Sometimes it almost felt true.
CHAPTER 6 — THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL BROKE REALITY
This became the defining visual of the era.
George launches a deep three.
Ball still flying.
Then he TURNS AROUND before it lands.
No confirmation needed.
Just slowly backpedaling toward the Calvary Crazies with the follow-through still hanging in the air while the crowd exploded BEFORE the shot even cleared the net.
That level of certainty psychologically crushed opponents.
Because it communicated:
“I already know this going in.”
That wasn’t confidence anymore.
That felt predestined.
CHAPTER 7 — OPPOSING GYMS FEARED THE ENERGY
The atmosphere traveled.
That’s what made the movement powerful.
Calvary road games stopped feeling like away environments because the Crazies invaded gyms deep.
Navy-and-gold everywhere.
Students screaming during warmups.
Music blasting before tipoff.
Then George hits a couple impossible early shots…
and suddenly entire gyms go silent.
That silence became legendary.
You could hear:
coaches cussing,
players arguing,
parents groaning,
sneakers squeaking.
Because everybody knew:
the avalanche might already be starting.
CHAPTER 8 — THE YOUNGER PLAYERS WATCHING HISTORY
This part matters historically.
Future Savannah basketball figures like:
Tim Quarterman
Greg Mortimer
Rico Bonds
Milan Richard
all experienced the atmosphere firsthand during formative years.
That means the Party Plug era didn’t just create memories.
It created basketball DNA.
The younger generation absorbed:
swagger,
showmanship,
confidence,
crowd interaction,
and emotional pacing directly from those teams.
That cultural blueprint later echoed throughout Savannah basketball for years afterward.
CHAPTER 9 — THE DNA OF ORANGE CRUSH STARTED HERE
Years later when George Turner evolved into:
festival culture,
Orange Crush,
pool-party branding,
nightlife environments,
and large-scale entertainment atmospheres,
older Savannah basketball people instantly recognized the same energy.
Because the mechanics never changed.
The soundtrack.
The entrances.
The confidence.
The emotional timing.
The crowd manipulation.
Basketball was simply the first stage.
The old Calvary gym became the prototype for everything that came later.
CHAPTER 10 — BEFORE SOCIAL MEDIA, LEGENDS SPREAD THROUGH PEOPLE
That’s what makes the era untouchable now.
The mythology spread manually.
Through:
hallway stories,
MySpace clips,
Savannah Morning News recaps,
MaxPreps stats,
WTOC sports highlights,
WSAV playoff coverage,
and local storytelling.
People carried the stories themselves.
And somehow that made them stronger emotionally.
Because the memories weren’t algorithm-fed.
They were earned.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
The numbers were real.
The playoff runs were real.
The crowd chaos was real.
But what truly survived was the feeling.
A shooter pulling from impossible distances.
A gym exploding before shots landed.
Students acting like believers instead of spectators.
Music shaking metal bleachers while Savannah lost its mind in real time.
Before influencer athletes.
Before sports became content.
George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner and the Calvary Crazies built a movement powerful enough to survive strictly through mythology, memory, and noise.
And years later…
Savannah still talks about it like a religion.
CRUSH MAGAZINE ARCHIVES TOP 20 REAL CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS (2006–2010) The Verified Party Plug Mikey Era — Savannah’s Loudest Basketball Movement Before Social Media
CRUSH MAGAZINE ARCHIVES
TOP 20 REAL CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS (2006–2010)
The Verified Party Plug Mikey Era — Savannah’s Loudest Basketball Movement Before Social Media
By CRUSH Magazine Sports, Culture & Research Staff
INTRO — BEFORE HIGHLIGHTS WERE HD, THE MEMORIES FELT BIGGER
Before TikTok.
Before BallIsLife.
Before every high-school game had ten cameras.
There was:
MaxPreps box scores,
Savannah Morning News recaps,
WTOC highlights,
WSAV playoff coverage,
and pure Savannah storytelling.
And somehow that made the Party Plug era hit even harder emotionally.
Because the moments survived through:
noise,
emotion,
crowd chaos,
and people saying:
“Bruh… you HAD to be there.”
Between 2006 and 2010, Calvary Day basketball transformed from a respected small-school program into one of the most emotionally electric atmospheres in Coastal Georgia hoops.
And at the center of the explosion stood George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner alongside:
Cody Padgett,
Mark Jones,
Milan Richard,
Rico Bonds,
Julius Green,
Greg Mortimer,
Tim Quarterman,
Alex Moorman,
and multiple future Savannah legends.
These are the most legendary real-life Calvary Crazies moments remembered from the era — connected to verified teams, playoff runs, MaxPreps records, GHSA history, and Savannah-area media coverage.
1. THE “FIREMAN” TIMEOUTS
SOUNDTRACK:
Fireman
This became THE defining visual of George Turner’s senior year.
George hits another deep heat-check three…
Opposing coach panics and calls timeout…
Then BOOM:
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
blasting through the old gym speakers while George jogged toward the scorer’s table and DJ booth smiling as the Calvary Crazies lost complete emotional control.
Meanwhile future stars:
Tim Quarterman,
Greg Mortimer,
and Rico Bonds
sat behind the bench watching the atmosphere like it was a movie.
Savannah basketball folklore.
2. THE “G-E-O-R-G-E” BODY-PAINT GAME
SOUNDTRACK:
A Milli
Six shirtless students.
Blue-and-gold body paint.
Freezing winter weather.
Every time George touched the ball:
the front row stood up spelling:
G-E-O-R-G-E
Then George drilled another deep three and pointed directly at them while backpedaling before the ball even landed.
The gym exploded before the net moved.
3. THE 28–0 SAVANNAH COUNTRY DAY EXORCISM
SOUNDTRACK:
O Let’s Do It
One of the most disrespectful runs in local rivalry history.
Calvary blitzed Savannah Country Day 28–0 while George and Cody Padgett turned transition offense into emotional terrorism.
Newspapers shredded into confetti.
Students screaming.
Opposing bench completely stunned.
The atmosphere became so hostile emotionally that even neutral fans started laughing in disbelief.
4. THE HALF-COURT NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL
SOUNDTRACK:
Turn My Swag On
George crosses half court.
Pulls from near the volleyball line.
Turns around BEFORE the ball lands.
Nothing but net.
Students physically fell into each other screaming.
One of the signature visual memories of the entire era.
5. THE METTER FLOOR STORM
SOUNDTRACK:
Swag Surfin’
The legendary region-title atmosphere at Metter.
Cody Padgett.
George Turner.
Mark Jones.
Double-overtime emotion.
Bodies cramping.
Students standing entire game.
Final buzzer sounds…
and the ENTIRE floor disappears beneath a sea of navy and gold.
One of the biggest verified championship moments in modern Calvary basketball history.
6. THE “HE’S A FRESHMAN!” CHANTS
SOUNDTRACK:
Wipe Me Down
During the Hawkinsville freshman-era moments and early young-player breakouts, the Calvary Crazies relentlessly chanted:
“HE’S A FRESHMAN!”
every time younger players embarrassed upperclassmen defenders.
The gym weaponized humiliation psychologically better than almost any student section in the area.
7. THE NEWSPAPER CONFETTI BLIZZARD
SOUNDTRACK:
Throw Some D’s
The Calvary Crazies pretended to ignore opposing introductions by reading newspapers silently.
Then the second George Turner’s name got announced?
The entire section shredded papers into the air like snowfall.
Absolute chaos.
8. THE “POWER” WARMUP TUNNEL
SOUNDTRACK:
Power
Oversized hoodies.
Gold chains.
Headphones in.
Stone-faced warmups.
George walking through screaming students while Kanye blasted through the gym speakers gave the team superhero energy before games even started.
9. THE BLEACHERS THAT SHOOK
SOUNDTRACK:
Lose My Mind
The old gym physically rattled during scoring runs.
Not metaphorically.
Actually rattled.
Teachers worried.
Parents standing.
Metal vibrating under stomping students.
The place sounded like a collapsing concert venue whenever George heated up.
10. THE TIM QUARTERMAN AWE MOMENTS
SOUNDTRACK:
B.M.F. (Blowin’ Money Fast)
Before future championships and Division I basketball, Tim Quarterman watched the Party Plug era from behind the bench as a younger player.
The reactions mattered.
Because even future stars looked shocked at the atmosphere George controlled emotionally.
11. THE MARK JONES FASTBREAK ERA
SOUNDTRACK:
Run This Town
Once Mark Jones got downhill in transition, the crowd rose BEFORE he crossed half court.
Everybody knew:
something violent was about to happen.
Euro-steps.
Fast-break finishes.
Transition kick-outs to George.
The chemistry was devastating.
12. THE MORPH SUIT PLAYOFF GAME
SOUNDTRACK:
Teach Me How to Dougie
Entire front rows dressed in blue-and-gold morph suits screaming inches from opposing players during inbound passes.
Refs threatened technical fouls multiple times.
Nobody cared.
13. THE PARKING LOT PULL-UP
SOUNDTRACK:
Say Ahh
George launches from absurd distance.
Nothing but net.
Opposing coach drops clipboard laughing in disbelief.
That shot became one of the most repeated oral-history stories of the era.
14. THE AFTER-GAME PARKING LOT CELEBRATIONS
SOUNDTRACK:
I’m So Paid
Games ended…
but nobody left.
Cars lined parking lots.
Music blasting.
Students reenacting highlights in the street.
Savannah nightlife energy collided with varsity basketball culture completely.
15. THE “WE DON’T LOSE AT HOME” HALFTIME
SOUNDTRACK:
Go Hard
Down seven at halftime.
Locker room silent.
George reportedly stands up and says:
“Nobody leaves OUR gym smiling.”
Calvary erupts for a 19–2 run immediately afterward.
One of the defining leadership moments of the era.
16. THE MYSPACE MIXTAPE CLIPS
SOUNDTRACK:
I Get Money
Before social media highlight pages:
students uploaded grainy George Turner clips over Lil Wayne and trap instrumentals onto MySpace.
Savannah basketball internet history.
17. THE ROAD-GAME TAKEOVERS
SOUNDTRACK:
Black and Yellow
Calvary fans traveled DEEP.
Road gyms started feeling emotionally compromised before tip-off because the Crazies brought:
chants,
noise,
themes,
and complete chaos everywhere.
18. THE RICO BONDS DEFENSIVE PRESSURE ERA
SOUNDTRACK:
Hard in Da Paint
Rico’s defensive energy intensified George’s scoring avalanches.
Steals.
Press defense.
Bench explosions.
The emotional pace of games became impossible for opponents to stabilize against.
19. THE GHSA PLAYOFF PACKED-HOUSE ERA
SOUNDTRACK:
All The Way Turnt Up
Verified playoff crowds packed the gym beyond normal regular-season levels as Calvary’s region-title runs intensified.
The atmosphere became one of the hottest tickets in Savannah high-school sports.
20. THE PARTY PLUG LEGACY
SOUNDTRACK:
Forever
Years later, Savannah still talks about the era differently.
Because the Party Plug years weren’t just basketball seasons.
They became:
music,
culture,
emotion,
friendship,
swagger,
and city identity all colliding together at once.
And long before Orange Crush stages,
pool parties,
and festival crowds…
George Turner first learned how to control energy inside an old Savannah gym.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
The MaxPreps numbers were real.
The GHSA playoff runs were real.
The Savannah coverage was real.
But the atmosphere?
That became mythology.
Because between 2006 and 2010, Calvary Day basketball stopped feeling like ordinary high-school sports and started feeling like Savannah’s loudest live mixtape.
And at the center of it all stood George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner —
launching deep threes while the entire city shook around him.
CRUSH MAGAZINE ARCHIVES TOP 20 REAL CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS (2006–2010) The Verified Party Plug Mikey Era — Savannah’s Loudest Basketball Movement Before Social Media
CRUSH MAGAZINE ARCHIVES
TOP 20 REAL CALVARY CRAZIES MOMENTS (2006–2010)
The Verified Party Plug Mikey Era — Savannah’s Loudest Basketball Movement Before Social Media
By CRUSH Magazine Sports, Culture & Research Staff
INTRO — BEFORE HIGHLIGHTS WERE HD, THE MEMORIES FELT BIGGER
Before TikTok.
Before BallIsLife.
Before every high-school game had ten cameras.
There was:
MaxPreps box scores,
Savannah Morning News recaps,
WTOC highlights,
WSAV playoff coverage,
and pure Savannah storytelling.
And somehow that made the Party Plug era hit even harder emotionally.
Because the moments survived through:
noise,
emotion,
crowd chaos,
and people saying:
“Bruh… you HAD to be there.”
Between 2006 and 2010, Calvary Day basketball transformed from a respected small-school program into one of the most emotionally electric atmospheres in Coastal Georgia hoops.
And at the center of the explosion stood George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner alongside:
Cody Padgett,
Mark Jones,
Milan Richard,
Rico Bonds,
Julius Green,
Greg Mortimer,
Tim Quarterman,
Alex Moorman,
and multiple future Savannah legends.
These are the most legendary real-life Calvary Crazies moments remembered from the era — connected to verified teams, playoff runs, MaxPreps records, GHSA history, and Savannah-area media coverage.
1. THE “FIREMAN” TIMEOUTS
SOUNDTRACK:
Fireman
This became THE defining visual of George Turner’s senior year.
George hits another deep heat-check three…
Opposing coach panics and calls timeout…
Then BOOM:
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
blasting through the old gym speakers while George jogged toward the scorer’s table and DJ booth smiling as the Calvary Crazies lost complete emotional control.
Meanwhile future stars:
Tim Quarterman,
Greg Mortimer,
and Rico Bonds
sat behind the bench watching the atmosphere like it was a movie.
Savannah basketball folklore.
2. THE “G-E-O-R-G-E” BODY-PAINT GAME
SOUNDTRACK:
A Milli
Six shirtless students.
Blue-and-gold body paint.
Freezing winter weather.
Every time George touched the ball:
the front row stood up spelling:
G-E-O-R-G-E
Then George drilled another deep three and pointed directly at them while backpedaling before the ball even landed.
The gym exploded before the net moved.
3. THE 28–0 SAVANNAH COUNTRY DAY EXORCISM
SOUNDTRACK:
O Let’s Do It
One of the most disrespectful runs in local rivalry history.
Calvary blitzed Savannah Country Day 28–0 while George and Cody Padgett turned transition offense into emotional terrorism.
Newspapers shredded into confetti.
Students screaming.
Opposing bench completely stunned.
The atmosphere became so hostile emotionally that even neutral fans started laughing in disbelief.
4. THE HALF-COURT NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL
SOUNDTRACK:
Turn My Swag On
George crosses half court.
Pulls from near the volleyball line.
Turns around BEFORE the ball lands.
Nothing but net.
Students physically fell into each other screaming.
One of the signature visual memories of the entire era.
5. THE METTER FLOOR STORM
SOUNDTRACK:
Swag Surfin’
The legendary region-title atmosphere at Metter.
Cody Padgett.
George Turner.
Mark Jones.
Double-overtime emotion.
Bodies cramping.
Students standing entire game.
Final buzzer sounds…
and the ENTIRE floor disappears beneath a sea of navy and gold.
One of the biggest verified championship moments in modern Calvary basketball history.
6. THE “HE’S A FRESHMAN!” CHANTS
SOUNDTRACK:
Wipe Me Down
During the Hawkinsville freshman-era moments and early young-player breakouts, the Calvary Crazies relentlessly chanted:
“HE’S A FRESHMAN!”
every time younger players embarrassed upperclassmen defenders.
The gym weaponized humiliation psychologically better than almost any student section in the area.
7. THE NEWSPAPER CONFETTI BLIZZARD
SOUNDTRACK:
Throw Some D’s
The Calvary Crazies pretended to ignore opposing introductions by reading newspapers silently.
Then the second George Turner’s name got announced?
The entire section shredded papers into the air like snowfall.
Absolute chaos.
8. THE “POWER” WARMUP TUNNEL
SOUNDTRACK:
Power
Oversized hoodies.
Gold chains.
Headphones in.
Stone-faced warmups.
George walking through screaming students while Kanye blasted through the gym speakers gave the team superhero energy before games even started.
9. THE BLEACHERS THAT SHOOK
SOUNDTRACK:
Lose My Mind
The old gym physically rattled during scoring runs.
Not metaphorically.
Actually rattled.
Teachers worried.
Parents standing.
Metal vibrating under stomping students.
The place sounded like a collapsing concert venue whenever George heated up.
10. THE TIM QUARTERMAN AWE MOMENTS
SOUNDTRACK:
B.M.F. (Blowin’ Money Fast)
Before future championships and Division I basketball, Tim Quarterman watched the Party Plug era from behind the bench as a younger player.
The reactions mattered.
Because even future stars looked shocked at the atmosphere George controlled emotionally.
11. THE MARK JONES FASTBREAK ERA
SOUNDTRACK:
Run This Town
Once Mark Jones got downhill in transition, the crowd rose BEFORE he crossed half court.
Everybody knew:
something violent was about to happen.
Euro-steps.
Fast-break finishes.
Transition kick-outs to George.
The chemistry was devastating.
12. THE MORPH SUIT PLAYOFF GAME
SOUNDTRACK:
Teach Me How to Dougie
Entire front rows dressed in blue-and-gold morph suits screaming inches from opposing players during inbound passes.
Refs threatened technical fouls multiple times.
Nobody cared.
13. THE PARKING LOT PULL-UP
SOUNDTRACK:
Say Ahh
George launches from absurd distance.
Nothing but net.
Opposing coach drops clipboard laughing in disbelief.
That shot became one of the most repeated oral-history stories of the era.
14. THE AFTER-GAME PARKING LOT CELEBRATIONS
SOUNDTRACK:
I’m So Paid
Games ended…
but nobody left.
Cars lined parking lots.
Music blasting.
Students reenacting highlights in the street.
Savannah nightlife energy collided with varsity basketball culture completely.
15. THE “WE DON’T LOSE AT HOME” HALFTIME
SOUNDTRACK:
Go Hard
Down seven at halftime.
Locker room silent.
George reportedly stands up and says:
“Nobody leaves OUR gym smiling.”
Calvary erupts for a 19–2 run immediately afterward.
One of the defining leadership moments of the era.
16. THE MYSPACE MIXTAPE CLIPS
SOUNDTRACK:
I Get Money
Before social media highlight pages:
students uploaded grainy George Turner clips over Lil Wayne and trap instrumentals onto MySpace.
Savannah basketball internet history.
17. THE ROAD-GAME TAKEOVERS
SOUNDTRACK:
Black and Yellow
Calvary fans traveled DEEP.
Road gyms started feeling emotionally compromised before tip-off because the Crazies brought:
chants,
noise,
themes,
and complete chaos everywhere.
18. THE RICO BONDS DEFENSIVE PRESSURE ERA
SOUNDTRACK:
Hard in Da Paint
Rico’s defensive energy intensified George’s scoring avalanches.
Steals.
Press defense.
Bench explosions.
The emotional pace of games became impossible for opponents to stabilize against.
19. THE GHSA PLAYOFF PACKED-HOUSE ERA
SOUNDTRACK:
All The Way Turnt Up
Verified playoff crowds packed the gym beyond normal regular-season levels as Calvary’s region-title runs intensified.
The atmosphere became one of the hottest tickets in Savannah high-school sports.
20. THE PARTY PLUG LEGACY
SOUNDTRACK:
Forever
Years later, Savannah still talks about the era differently.
Because the Party Plug years weren’t just basketball seasons.
They became:
music,
culture,
emotion,
friendship,
swagger,
and city identity all colliding together at once.
And long before Orange Crush stages,
pool parties,
and festival crowds…
George Turner first learned how to control energy inside an old Savannah gym.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
The MaxPreps numbers were real.
The GHSA playoff runs were real.
The Savannah coverage was real.
But the atmosphere?
That became mythology.
Because between 2006 and 2010, Calvary Day basketball stopped feeling like ordinary high-school sports and started feeling like Savannah’s loudest live mixtape.
And at the center of it all stood George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner —
launching deep threes while the entire city shook around him.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE FILES THE OFFICIAL SOUNDTRACK OF THE PARTY PLUG ERA How George Turner, The Calvary Crazies & Mixtape-Era Hip-Hop Created Savannah’s Loudest Basketball Movement
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE FILES
THE OFFICIAL SOUNDTRACK OF THE PARTY PLUG ERA
How George Turner, The Calvary Crazies & Mixtape-Era Hip-Hop Created Savannah’s Loudest Basketball Movement
By CRUSH Magazine Music & Sports Desk
PROLOGUE — EVERY ERA GOT A SOUND
The Jordan era sounded like arena organs and championship intros.
The Iverson era sounded like DMX and Ruff Ryders.
The Party Plug Mikey era?
Man…
It sounded like:
trunk-rattling southern rap,
DatPiff mixtapes,
early YouTube dances,
Wayne mixtape leaks,
Jeezy motivation records,
Waka chaos,
Soulja Boy arrogance,
Gucci Mane disrespect,
and Savannah teenagers losing they minds inside an overheated gym.
The music mattered because George Turner played EXACTLY like the soundtrack sounded:
reckless confidence.
And once the Calvary Crazies attached those songs to big moments?
The whole gym started feeling like a live mixtape movie.
CHAPTER 1 — “SWAG SURFIN” BECAME A TEAM SPORT
Swag Surfin’ changed EVERYTHING in southern gym culture around 2009.
Soon as that beat dropped during warmups or after a George heat-check run?
The entire gym started moving together.
Students swaying.
Bench players surfin’.
Cheerleaders screaming.
Bleachers rocking side to side.
And George?
Walking around calm like he already knew the avalanche was coming.
The song fit Calvary perfectly because the whole atmosphere revolved around swagger.
Not cockiness.
Swagger.
The type where opponents felt emotionally defeated before the game even ended.
CHAPTER 2 — “A MILLI” TURNED GEORGE INTO A SUPERHERO
Nothing matched George Turner deep threes better than A Milli.
Nothing.
That beat felt dangerous.
Minimal.
Aggressive.
Cocky.
Exactly like George’s play style.
He’d cross half court…
hesitation dribble…
pull from absurd range…
BOOM.
Then the crowd screaming while Wayne’s voice echoed through the gym speakers:
“Motherf***** I’m ill!”
At that point the atmosphere stopped feeling scholastic.
It felt illegal.
And George absolutely fed into it.
No-look backpedals.
Slow jogs toward the DJ booth.
Pointing at the crowd.
He understood performance timing naturally.
CHAPTER 3 — “TURN MY SWAG ON” WAS BASICALLY THE TEAM ANTHEM
Turn My Swag On perfectly explains the emotional energy of the Party Plug era.
Because Calvary basketball became about confidence.
The walk-ins.
The warmups.
The oversized hoodies.
The gold chains.
The crowd chants.
Everything felt stylish before tip-off even started.
George especially carried himself different during senior year.
Headphones in.
Stone face.
Slow bounce in his walk.
Meanwhile the student section already screaming before introductions.
That song wasn’t just music.
It was atmosphere branding before sports branding existed.
CHAPTER 4 — GUCCI MANE MUSIC MADE THE GYM FEEL DISRESPECTFUL
When Gucci Mane records started playing during momentum runs?
Opponents mentally folded.
Because Gucci-era trap music had this unapologetic energy that matched George’s game perfectly.
Especially after:
ankle-breaking crossovers,
step-back threes,
or transition heat checks.
The crowd started acting disrespectful.
Students talking trash.
Bleachers shaking.
People laughing at defenders openly.
And George never looked rushed through any of it.
That calmness made it even worse psychologically.
CHAPTER 5 — “LOSE MY MIND” AFTER THE BIG SHOTS
Lose My Mind became PERFECT timeout music after George hit huge momentum threes.
Because honestly?
That’s exactly what happened to the gym.
People lost they mind.
Teachers couldn’t control students.
Bench players standing on chairs.
Parents screaming.
Refs threatening technicals.
And George feeding the energy by jogging toward the scorer’s table while the crowd exploded behind him.
The atmosphere got so intense during some runs that opposing coaches looked genuinely exhausted trying to calm their teams down.
CHAPTER 6 — “BUST IT BABY” & THE CHEERLEADER ERA
People forget how socially connected basketball culture was back then.
The gyms felt like:
sports,
music,
fashion,
dance culture,
and nightlife energy all mixed together.
Songs like Bust It Baby Part 2 and other melodic southern records turned games into social events.
Cheerleaders.
Students.
Opposing-school crowds.
Everybody emotionally invested.
And George’s “Party Plug” nickname grew partially because he understood how to carry basketball energy INTO social energy after games.
That blurred line between:
hooper,
showman,
and social personality
made him different from most players of the era.
CHAPTER 7 — “O LET’S DO IT” FELT LIKE A WARNING
When O Let’s Do It blasted through the gym after Calvary momentum swings?
Oh nah.
It got violent emotionally.
That song represented:
recklessness,
energy,
and complete crowd chaos.
Exactly like George heat-check sequences.
He’d hit one impossible three…
then immediately try another one from EVEN DEEPER.
And somehow the crowd got louder every time.
That’s when games started feeling hopeless for opponents.
Because the atmosphere itself turned against them.
CHAPTER 8 — THE “FIREMAN” TIMEOUTS BECAME SAVANNAH FOLKLORE
Nothing captured the era better than Fireman.
George hits another bomb.
Opposing coach calls timeout.
Then BOOM:
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
blasting through old gym speakers while George jogged toward the DJ booth smiling and the student section completely lost composure.
Meanwhile:
Tim Quarterman,
Greg Mortimer,
Rico Bonds,
and younger players behind the bench watching the whole thing in awe.
That visual became legendary locally.
Because everybody understood:
this wasn’t regular varsity basketball anymore.
This was SHOWTIME.
CHAPTER 9 — BEFORE HIGHLIGHT CULTURE, THIS WAS REAL-TIME VIRAL
The craziest part about the era?
Almost none of it got archived properly.
No BallIsLife.
No TikTok edits.
No HD cameras.
Just:
flip phones,
grainy MySpace clips,
DatPiff culture,
YouTube mixtape music,
and Savannah storytelling.
Which honestly made the mythology stronger.
Because people remembered the FEELING instead of perfect video quality.
The bass shaking the gym.
The crowd screaming before shots landed.
George launching from thirty feet with zero conscience.
Those memories survived emotionally.
CHAPTER 10 — THE DNA OF ORANGE CRUSH STARTED IN THE GYM
Years later when people saw:
Orange Crush beach crowds,
festival stages,
pool-party energy,
nightlife environments,
and Party Plug Mikey controlling crowds,
older Savannah hoop heads immediately recognized the same formula.
Because the blueprint already existed:
music,
swagger,
timing,
confidence,
crowd control,
and atmosphere manipulation.
The old Calvary gym was just the first stage.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL.
Before influencers.
Before algorithms.
There was a skinny shooter in Savannah turning varsity basketball into a live southern rap mixtape.
Lil Wayne shaking the speakers.
Waka causing chaos.
Jeezy motivation music blasting during timeouts.
Students Swag Surfin on metal bleachers.
And George Turner pulling from disrespectful distances while the entire gym screamed like they was watching a rap superstar instead of a high-school senior.
That wasn’t just basketball culture.
That was Savannah folklore with a soundtrack.
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES THE SOUNDTRACK OF THE PARTY PLUG ERA How George Turner Turned Calvary Basketball Into A Southern Mixtape Movie Before Social Media Took Over Sports
CRUSH MAGAZINE CULTURE ARCHIVES
THE SOUNDTRACK OF THE PARTY PLUG ERA
How George Turner Turned Calvary Basketball Into A Southern Mixtape Movie Before Social Media Took Over Sports
By CRUSH Magazine Music, Sports & Culture Desk
PROLOGUE — THE GAMES DIDN’T SOUND LIKE HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
They sounded like the parking lot outside a southern nightclub in 2010.
That’s the only real way to explain it.
Most varsity gyms back then had:
pep bands,
basic warmup CDs,
and parents politely clapping after free throws.
Not Calvary.
By George Turner’s senior season, the old gym had become a full-blown mixtape environment.
Waka Flocka.
Lil Wayne.
Kanye.
GS Boyz.
Cali Swag District.
Rich Boy.
Trap music.
Dance records.
Blog-era southern rap.
And somehow all of it blended perfectly with:
step-back threes,
ankle breakers,
deep heat checks,
and one of the loudest student sections Savannah basketball had ever seen.
This wasn’t basketball anymore.
This was performance culture before sports fully understood entertainment branding.
And George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner was directing the entire soundtrack.
CHAPTER 1 — “NO HANDS” TURNED THE GYM INTO CHAOS
By late 2010, there was one song that instantly sent the Calvary Crazies into complete insanity:
“No Hands” — Waka Flocka Flame ft. Wale & Roscoe Dash.
The second that beat dropped through the gym speakers after a George heat-check three?
It was over.
Students jumping on bleachers.
Cheerleaders screaming.
Players slapping the scorer’s table.
Kids running down the baseline losing their minds.
And George?
Walking backward smiling like the whole thing was routine.
That song became emotionally attached to:
step-back bombs,
transition threes,
and timeout momentum explosions.
Especially after George would break somebody down off the dribble…
hit a deep three…
then casually jog toward the DJ booth while the gym detonated behind him.
The atmosphere honestly felt illegal for a high-school game.
CHAPTER 2 — “POWER” BY KANYE WEST FELT LIKE HIS WALKOUT MUSIC
Kanye’s “Power” perfectly matched the emotional identity George carried during his senior year.
Calm arrogance.
Controlled chaos.
Big-moment energy.
You could feel the gym shifting psychologically whenever that song played during warmups or timeout breaks.
Because by then, George already carried himself differently from ordinary high-school players.
Slow walk.
Relaxed shoulders.
No visible nervousness.
The crowd anticipated moments before they happened because George’s body language convinced everybody:
something crazy was probably coming soon.
And once “Power” echoed through the gym speakers?
The whole building started feeling cinematic.
Not basketball-cinematic.
Movie-cinematic.
CHAPTER 3 — THE CROSSOVERS GOT DISRESPECTFUL
The deeper into senior season things went, the more George started combining:
ankle-breaking crossovers,
deep pull-up shooting,
and flashy transition passing together.
That’s when defenders started getting embarrassed publicly.
One hard crossover into a hesitation dribble…
defender sliding…
crowd already screaming…
then BOOM:
thirty-footer.
Nothing but net.
The gym reacting BEFORE the ball dropped became normal by then.
And if the defender fell?
Forget it.
The Calvary Crazies turned into WWE fans immediately.
People standing on seats.
Students holding they head.
Bench players sprinting onto the court before coaches yelled at them to sit down.
The atmosphere stopped feeling like sports.
It felt like entertainment violence.
CHAPTER 4 — “STANKY LEGG” & “DOUGIE” ERA ENERGY
People forget how much dance culture influenced gym atmospheres around 2009 and 2010.
“Stanky Legg.”
“Teach Me How To Dougie.”
Those songs controlled youth culture everywhere.
And Calvary games became one of the few places basketball and dance-era southern music culture fully collided in Savannah.
After huge George plays:
students Dougie’ing in the aisles,
bench players Stanky Legg’ing during timeouts,
cheerleaders screaming while the crowd completely lost rhythm control.
The gym felt alive.
Loose.
Fun.
Wild.
And George loved feeding into it because he understood something most players didn’t:
the more emotionally connected the crowd became,
the harder the opponent’s environment became psychologically.
That’s why he constantly interacted with the student section after momentum plays.
He wasn’t showboating randomly.
He was weaponizing energy.
CHAPTER 5 — THE “RICH BOY” CONNECTION
One of the funniest and most legendary details from the Party Plug era was George’s “Rich Boy” nickname references floating around Savannah basketball culture.
And honestly?
The comparison made sense.
Rich Boy represented:
southern swagger,
Alabama trap-era charisma,
flashy confidence,
and party energy during the exact same cultural period George was dominating local gyms.
While Rich Boy’s “Throw Some D’s” already became iconic years earlier, by 2009 and 2010 he still remained deeply active throughout the blog-mixtape era with:
after-party culture,
southern rap visibility,
and nightlife branding.
George cleverly leaned into those comparisons socially and psychologically.
Especially during:
postgame atmospheres,
opposing-school interactions,
and after-party conversations involving rival crowds and cheerleaders.
That’s what made the “Party Plug” identity different.
It extended BEYOND basketball.
George understood how to turn basketball popularity into broader social energy long before athlete branding became standard.
CHAPTER 6 — OPPOSING TEAMS HATED THE VIBES
That’s really what separated the era.
The vibes became oppressive.
Imagine being an opposing player:
You already nervous.
Gym packed.
Bleachers shaking.
Then George crosses somebody…
hits a deep three…
“No Hands” starts blasting…
the student section going crazy…
everybody Dougie’ing during the timeout…
and George calmly jogging toward the DJ booth smiling.
Psychological warfare.
The environment became exhausting emotionally for opponents.
That’s why so many teams unraveled once Calvary went on runs.
The atmosphere sped games up mentally.
And George controlled that speed.
CHAPTER 7 — TIM QUARTERMAN, GREG MORTIMER & THE YOUNGER GUYS WATCHING HISTORY
Future stars like Tim Quarterman and Greg Mortimer experienced all this firsthand from behind the bench and reserve-player roles.
That matters historically because they weren’t simply watching basketball.
They were watching:
swagger,
performance timing,
crowd control,
music integration,
and emotional leadership.
The younger generation absorbed the blueprint directly.
That’s why later Savannah basketball eras carried traces of the same confidence and atmosphere-centered culture.
The Party Plug era normalized emotional showmanship inside Calvary hoops.
CHAPTER 8 — BEFORE SOCIAL MEDIA, THIS FELT LIKE A SECRET WORLD
That’s what made the era magical.
It wasn’t fully online yet.
You had to physically be there.
You had to hear the bass shaking the bleachers.
You had to see George launching thirty-footers live.
You had to witness the crowd reacting before shots landed.
The memories survived because they felt bigger in person than video could properly capture.
And honestly?
Most old flip-phone clips still don’t fully explain how insane the atmosphere actually became.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before TikTok edits.
Before NIL culture.
Before athletes became corporations.
George Turner turned Calvary basketball into a live southern rap soundtrack.
Waka Flocka shaking the gym.
Kanye playing during warmups.
Students Dougie’ing in aisles.
Deep step-back threes flying from impossible distances.
Crossovers sending defenders stumbling.
Timeouts feeling like concerts.
And somewhere between the music, the swagger, and the chaos…
Savannah accidentally created one of the most unforgettable local basketball atmospheres of its generation.
George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner wasn’t just playing basketball.
He was performing a mixtape live in real time.
CRUSH MAGAZINE ARCHIVES “FIREMAN! FIREMAN!” How George Turner Turned Calvary Day Basketball Into A Live Mixtape While Future Stars Watched In Awe
CRUSH MAGAZINE ARCHIVES
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
How George Turner Turned Calvary Day Basketball Into A Live Mixtape While Future Stars Watched In Awe
By CRUSH Magazine Culture & Sports Staff
PROLOGUE — THE GYM TURNED INTO A RAP VIDEO
By 2010, Calvary Day basketball games didn’t feel like normal high-school sports anymore.
They felt cinematic.
Every Friday night home game had:
packed bleachers,
bass-heavy music,
students hanging over railings,
teachers trying to restore order,
and a growing belief around Savannah that if George Turner got hot…
the entire gym might explode.
And somewhere behind the varsity bench sat three younger basketball minds absorbing every second of it:
future GHSA champion Tim Quarterman,
young Greg Mortimer,
and Arian “Rico” Bonds.
At the time, they were still younger players watching the senior-led Calvary squad command one of the loudest atmospheres in Coastal Georgia basketball.
But they weren’t just watching basketball.
They were watching swagger become culture.
And at the center of it all stood senior captain George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner — launching fireball threes while Lil Wayne’s “Fireman” blasted through the gym speakers like a war anthem.
CHAPTER 1 — THE DJ BOOTH ERA
Most high-school gyms in 2010 still sounded basic.
Whistles.
Parents clapping.
Pep-band music.
Not Calvary.
The old gym had evolved into something entirely different.
The music mattered.
The timing mattered.
And George Turner understood that better than almost anybody in Savannah basketball at the time.
Every opposing timeout became part of the show.
The second coaches stopped play trying to cool Calvary momentum, George would jog directly toward the scorer’s table and DJ booth area while the speakers erupted with:
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
Lil Wayne screaming through blown-out gym speakers while students completely lost composure.
The timing was legendary.
Because George wasn’t merely celebrating shots.
He was feeding the atmosphere intentionally.
The gym started feeling less like varsity basketball…
and more like a southern rap concert attached to a playoff game.
CHAPTER 2 — THE FIREBALL THREES
The craziest part?
The music actually matched the way George played.
Explosive.
Chaotic.
Fearless.
George’s perimeter shooting style by senior year had become emotionally violent for opponents.
He wasn’t hunting safe shots.
He hunted momentum killers.
Transition pull-ups.
Heat-check bombs.
Thirty-foot launchers that felt disrespectful to traditional basketball logic.
And every time one dropped?
The gym transformed.
The Calvary Crazies screamed:
“FIREMAN! FIREMAN!”
while George pointed toward the student section or sprinted toward the DJ booth during stoppages like he was performing on stage instead of playing basketball.
Opposing coaches hated it.
Because the atmosphere started speeding games up emotionally.
Players got rattled.
Defenders started overhelping.
Crowds started reacting before shots even landed.
And George fed directly into the chaos.
CHAPTER 3 — TIM QUARTERMAN WATCHING THE SHOW
One of the wildest parts historically?
Future basketball star Tim Quarterman was right there watching it happen in real time.
Before:
major Division I attention,
LSU basketball,
future professional basketball opportunities,
and eventual GHSA championship recognition,
Quarterman sat behind the bench as a younger Calvary player watching George Turner command entire gym atmospheres.
And according to longtime local recollections, Tim would react like everybody else in the building once George got rolling offensively:
pure disbelief.
Because even elite future players recognized something different was happening emotionally inside that gym.
The confidence looked different.
The crowd control looked different.
The swagger looked different.
George wasn’t merely making shots.
He was controlling emotional temperature.
Young players notice those things immediately.
CHAPTER 4 — GREG MORTIMER THE FRESHMAN RESERVE
Young Greg Mortimer also experienced the atmosphere firsthand as a freshman reserve player during the 2010 season.
That matters historically because Mortimer later became part of the next generation of Savannah basketball culture shaped by the emotional standard the senior-led Party Plug era established.
Imagine being a freshman watching this every night:
Packed gyms.
Students standing on bleachers.
Lil Wayne blasting after heat-check threes.
Crowds screaming before shots even dropped.
And your senior captain completely comfortable inside all of it.
That environment teaches younger players confidence differently.
The standard becomes larger.
The expectations become louder.
The culture becomes permanent.
CHAPTER 5 — RICO BONDS & THE ENERGY LOOP
Arian “Rico” Bonds represented another important piece of the atmosphere.
Bonds embodied the emotional intensity of the era:
full-court pressure,
bench explosions,
crowd engagement,
constant energy.
When George got hot offensively, Rico amplified the emotional chaos even further from the bench and defensive side.
That emotional loop became devastating:
George hit deep threes.
The crowd exploded.
Rico pressured defensively harder.
The gym got louder.
Opponents panicked faster.
That’s how avalanches started.
And everybody behind the bench — including future stars like Quarterman and Mortimer — absorbed those emotional mechanics nightly.
CHAPTER 6 — THE “FIREMAN” MOMENTS BECAME LEGENDARY
The soundtrack itself became part of Savannah basketball folklore.
To this day, older Calvary alumni still associate Lil Wayne’s “Fireman” with George Turner heat-check sequences.
Because the timing became automatic.
Timeout called?
“FIREMAN.”
Deep three?
“FIREMAN.”
Gym exploding?
“FIREMAN.”
And George running back-and-forth near the scorer’s table while the crowd lost control emotionally became one of the defining visual memories of the era.
The atmosphere felt rebellious.
Raw.
Unfiltered.
Which made it unforgettable.
CHAPTER 7 — BEFORE NIL, THIS WAS PURE AURA
The most important part of the story is timing.
None of this was manufactured.
No branding consultant designed the image.
No social-media manager scripted the moments.
No NIL collective monetized the atmosphere.
It spread naturally.
That’s why it hit harder emotionally.
Students genuinely believed something legendary could happen every time George crossed half court.
And when “Fireman” blasted through those speakers after another deep bomb?
The gym honestly felt possessed.
Not by negativity.
By belief.
CHAPTER 8 — THE DNA OF ORANGE CRUSH STARTS HERE
Years later, when people witnessed George Turner controlling:
festival crowds,
pool-party atmospheres,
beach takeovers,
and Orange Crush stages,
older Savannah basketball fans immediately recognized the same emotional blueprint.
The pacing.
The soundtrack control.
The crowd interaction.
The energy manipulation.
The confidence.
Basketball had simply been the first version of the performance.
The old Calvary gym became the original stage.
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before social media algorithms.
Before athlete influencers.
Before sports branding agencies.
There was a senior captain at Calvary Day launching fireball threes while Lil Wayne’s “Fireman” shook the speakers and future Savannah basketball stars watched in awe from behind the bench.
Tim Quarterman saw it.
Greg Mortimer saw it.
Rico Bonds lived inside it.
And for one loud stretch between 2009 and 2010…
George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner turned a small Savannah gym into the hottest live show in the city.
CRUSH MAGAZINE EXCLUSIVE PARTY PLUG BEFORE THE INTERNET How George Turner Had Savannah Hoops In A CHOKEHOLD Before NIL, TikTok & Highlight Pages Existed
CRUSH MAGAZINE EXCLUSIVE
PARTY PLUG BEFORE THE INTERNET
How George Turner Had Savannah Hoops In A CHOKEHOLD Before NIL, TikTok & Highlight Pages Existed
By CRUSH Magazine Culture Desk
⸻
BEFORE “VIRAL” WAS EVEN A WORD…
George Mikey Ransom Turner III already had motion.
Real motion.
Not fake Instagram engagement.
Not paid followers.
Not sponsored-athlete motion.
We talking:
packed gyms,
students standing on bleachers,
teachers losing control of crowds,
road-game invasions,
and entire sections of Savannah kids acting like they was watching a rap superstar instead of a high-school basketball player.
This wasn’t regular hoop culture.
This was emotional chaos.
This was:
southern mixtape-era basketball.
And George Turner?
Man…
George Turner was the soundtrack.
⸻
THE OLD CALVARY GYM FELT LIKE A TRAP CONCERT
If you wasn’t there, it’s honestly hard to explain.
The gym wasn’t big.
That’s what made it dangerous.
The ceilings low.
The bleachers metal.
The crowd right on top of the court.
So when George got hot?
Boy that whole building started sounding like a Lil Wayne concert mixed with a state playoff game and a block party all at once.
Sneakers squeaking.
Students screaming.
Air horns blasting.
People stomping so hard the bleachers literally started shaking.
And George?
Cool as ice.
That’s what made folks lose they mind.
He never looked rushed.
Never looked nervous.
Never looked surprised.
Dude would pull from thirty feet like:
“Yea… this regular.”
⸻
THE PARTY PLUG AURA WAS DIFFERENT
See…
most hoopers wanted attention.
George controlled attention.
That’s a completely different level of presence.
Soon as he walked in the gym:
energy shifted.
Everybody looked.
Opponents got tighter.
Crowds got louder.
Students started anticipating moments before they even happened.
And once he hit that FIRST deep three?
Oh nah.
It was over.
The whole gym would stand up like church service just started.
Because Savannah already knew:
if George hit one…
he was probably about to hit three more.
That’s why rival coaches kept saying:
“Don’t let George get hot.”
Too late.
⸻
THE HEAT CHECKS FELT DISRESPECTFUL
George ain’t shoot regular basketball shots.
Bro shot emotional damage.
Transition threes.
Volleyball-line pull-ups.
Step-backs before step-backs was normal in high school hoops.
And the craziest part?
He shot them with zero hesitation.
No conscience.
No fear.
Like he genuinely believed every shot was supposed to go in.
Then once the crowd started exploding?
He’d go EVEN DEEPER.
That’s when games stopped feeling real.
You could literally watch opposing teams panic in real time.
Heads dropping.
Coaches screaming.
Defenders arguing with each other.
Meanwhile George jogging backwards smiling at the Calvary Crazies like:
“Y’all see this?”
⸻
THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL BROKE PEOPLE’S BRAINS
This the move everybody still talk about.
George launches a deep three.
Ball still halfway in the air…
AND THIS MAN TURNS AROUND.
Completely turns his back to the basket.
Didn’t even look.
Just started backpedaling toward the student section holding the follow-through like he already knew what time it was.
The gym exploded BEFORE the ball hit net.
Read that again.
BEFORE.
That’s how much control he had over the building emotionally.
Folks wasn’t reacting to basketball no more.
They was reacting to belief.
⸻
THE CALVARY CRAZIES WAS LIKE A CULT
Nah seriously.
The Calvary Crazies wasn’t no regular student section.
Them folks was LOCKED IN.
Body paint.
Morph suits.
Newspapers.
Custom chants.
Road-game caravans.
Air horns.
Fake championship belts.
Gold chains.
You had students showing up to games dressed like WWE characters mixed with southern frat parties.
And they worshipped momentum.
Once George started cooking?
Them kids lost ALL composure.
People standing on bleachers.
Students screaming before shots left his hands.
Teachers trying to calm everybody down and getting completely ignored.
The “G-E-O-R-G-E” stomach crew?
Legendary.
Six dudes shirtless in freezing weather with painted letters across they chest spelling GEORGE every time he started frying somebody.
That’s not fandom.
That’s basketball religion.
⸻
ROAD GAMES FELT LIKE INVASIONS
And the craziest part?
The energy traveled.
Calvary fans pulled up DEEP to away games.
Cars lined up.
Students packed together.
Everybody in navy and gold.
So now imagine you an opposing player already nervous…
then you look up and HALF THE GYM screaming for George Turner.
Psychological warfare.
And once George hit a couple early shots?
The silence got spooky.
You could hear:
coaches cussing,
sneakers squeaking,
parents arguing with refs,
students losing they minds.
That silence in road gyms after George got hot?
Man…
That was demoralization.
⸻
BEFORE SOCIAL MEDIA, THE MYTH SPREAD THROUGH PEOPLE
This was before TikTok.
Before Overtime.
Before BallIsLife.
The highlights spread manually.
Somebody’s older cousin talking about:
“Bruh George Turner just hit from HALF COURT.”
Grainy MySpace clips with Lil Wayne playing over them.
Flip-phone videos shaking because people screaming too loud.
Kids at school reenacting his jump shot in the hallway Monday morning.
That’s how legends spread back then.
Word-of-mouth.
And George’s legend spread FAST.
⸻
HE PLAYED LIKE A RAPPER BEFORE HE EVER HIT STAGES
That’s what people don’t fully understand.
George already moved like an entertainer BEFORE Orange Crush.
The swagger.
The pacing.
The confidence.
The entrances.
The crowd control.
Basketball was basically his first concert stage.
That’s why the transition into:
pool parties,
beach crowds,
festival culture,
nightlife energy,
and Orange Crush environments
felt so natural later.
The blueprint already existed.
Bro had been controlling crowds since high school.
⸻
THE VERIFIED NUMBERS MADE IT WORSE
And the funniest part?
The stats backed it all up.
According to archived MaxPreps records:
Top 12 in Georgia in made threes
55 made three-pointers in 2010 alone (maxpreps.com)
So this wasn’t empty hype.
The production was REAL.
That’s why the mythology survived.
Because underneath all the swagger and theatrics…
George Turner could really hoop.
⸻
SAVANNAH STILL TALK ABOUT THAT ERA DIFFERENT
Years later, older Savannah hoop heads still bring up the Party Plug era with this weird smile like they remembering a concert tour instead of varsity basketball.
Because honestly?
That’s what it felt like.
A traveling show.
A movement.
An atmosphere.
Not just a player.
And before social media learned how to manufacture sports hype…
George Turner already had a city emotionally invested in every shot he took.
⸻
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL checks.
Before influencer athletes.
Before algorithms.
There was a skinny shooter in Savannah pulling from disrespectful distances while a gym full of screaming teenagers lost they minds.
There was no media team.
No branding consultant.
No content strategy.
Just:
swagger,
noise,
music,
chaos,
and belief.
George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner didn’t become folklore because the internet made him famous.
He became folklore because Savannah couldn’t stop talking about him.
CRUSH MAGAZINE EXCLUSIVE PARTY PLUG BEFORE THE INTERNET How George Turner Had Savannah Hoops In A CHOKEHOLD Before NIL, TikTok & Highlight Pages Existed
CRUSH MAGAZINE EXCLUSIVE
PARTY PLUG BEFORE THE INTERNET
How George Turner Had Savannah Hoops In A CHOKEHOLD Before NIL, TikTok & Highlight Pages Existed
By CRUSH Magazine Culture Desk
⸻
BEFORE “VIRAL” WAS EVEN A WORD…
George Mikey Ransom Turner III already had motion.
Real motion.
Not fake Instagram engagement.
Not paid followers.
Not sponsored-athlete motion.
We talking:
packed gyms,
students standing on bleachers,
teachers losing control of crowds,
road-game invasions,
and entire sections of Savannah kids acting like they was watching a rap superstar instead of a high-school basketball player.
This wasn’t regular hoop culture.
This was emotional chaos.
This was:
southern mixtape-era basketball.
And George Turner?
Man…
George Turner was the soundtrack.
⸻
THE OLD CALVARY GYM FELT LIKE A TRAP CONCERT
If you wasn’t there, it’s honestly hard to explain.
The gym wasn’t big.
That’s what made it dangerous.
The ceilings low.
The bleachers metal.
The crowd right on top of the court.
So when George got hot?
Boy that whole building started sounding like a Lil Wayne concert mixed with a state playoff game and a block party all at once.
Sneakers squeaking.
Students screaming.
Air horns blasting.
People stomping so hard the bleachers literally started shaking.
And George?
Cool as ice.
That’s what made folks lose they mind.
He never looked rushed.
Never looked nervous.
Never looked surprised.
Dude would pull from thirty feet like:
“Yea… this regular.”
⸻
THE PARTY PLUG AURA WAS DIFFERENT
See…
most hoopers wanted attention.
George controlled attention.
That’s a completely different level of presence.
Soon as he walked in the gym:
energy shifted.
Everybody looked.
Opponents got tighter.
Crowds got louder.
Students started anticipating moments before they even happened.
And once he hit that FIRST deep three?
Oh nah.
It was over.
The whole gym would stand up like church service just started.
Because Savannah already knew:
if George hit one…
he was probably about to hit three more.
That’s why rival coaches kept saying:
“Don’t let George get hot.”
Too late.
⸻
THE HEAT CHECKS FELT DISRESPECTFUL
George ain’t shoot regular basketball shots.
Bro shot emotional damage.
Transition threes.
Volleyball-line pull-ups.
Step-backs before step-backs was normal in high school hoops.
And the craziest part?
He shot them with zero hesitation.
No conscience.
No fear.
Like he genuinely believed every shot was supposed to go in.
Then once the crowd started exploding?
He’d go EVEN DEEPER.
That’s when games stopped feeling real.
You could literally watch opposing teams panic in real time.
Heads dropping.
Coaches screaming.
Defenders arguing with each other.
Meanwhile George jogging backwards smiling at the Calvary Crazies like:
“Y’all see this?”
⸻
THE NO-LOOK BACKPEDAL BROKE PEOPLE’S BRAINS
This the move everybody still talk about.
George launches a deep three.
Ball still halfway in the air…
AND THIS MAN TURNS AROUND.
Completely turns his back to the basket.
Didn’t even look.
Just started backpedaling toward the student section holding the follow-through like he already knew what time it was.
The gym exploded BEFORE the ball hit net.
Read that again.
BEFORE.
That’s how much control he had over the building emotionally.
Folks wasn’t reacting to basketball no more.
They was reacting to belief.
⸻
THE CALVARY CRAZIES WAS LIKE A CULT
Nah seriously.
The Calvary Crazies wasn’t no regular student section.
Them folks was LOCKED IN.
Body paint.
Morph suits.
Newspapers.
Custom chants.
Road-game caravans.
Air horns.
Fake championship belts.
Gold chains.
You had students showing up to games dressed like WWE characters mixed with southern frat parties.
And they worshipped momentum.
Once George started cooking?
Them kids lost ALL composure.
People standing on bleachers.
Students screaming before shots left his hands.
Teachers trying to calm everybody down and getting completely ignored.
The “G-E-O-R-G-E” stomach crew?
Legendary.
Six dudes shirtless in freezing weather with painted letters across they chest spelling GEORGE every time he started frying somebody.
That’s not fandom.
That’s basketball religion.
⸻
ROAD GAMES FELT LIKE INVASIONS
And the craziest part?
The energy traveled.
Calvary fans pulled up DEEP to away games.
Cars lined up.
Students packed together.
Everybody in navy and gold.
So now imagine you an opposing player already nervous…
then you look up and HALF THE GYM screaming for George Turner.
Psychological warfare.
And once George hit a couple early shots?
The silence got spooky.
You could hear:
coaches cussing,
sneakers squeaking,
parents arguing with refs,
students losing they minds.
That silence in road gyms after George got hot?
Man…
That was demoralization.
⸻
BEFORE SOCIAL MEDIA, THE MYTH SPREAD THROUGH PEOPLE
This was before TikTok.
Before Overtime.
Before BallIsLife.
The highlights spread manually.
Somebody’s older cousin talking about:
“Bruh George Turner just hit from HALF COURT.”
Grainy MySpace clips with Lil Wayne playing over them.
Flip-phone videos shaking because people screaming too loud.
Kids at school reenacting his jump shot in the hallway Monday morning.
That’s how legends spread back then.
Word-of-mouth.
And George’s legend spread FAST.
⸻
HE PLAYED LIKE A RAPPER BEFORE HE EVER HIT STAGES
That’s what people don’t fully understand.
George already moved like an entertainer BEFORE Orange Crush.
The swagger.
The pacing.
The confidence.
The entrances.
The crowd control.
Basketball was basically his first concert stage.
That’s why the transition into:
pool parties,
beach crowds,
festival culture,
nightlife energy,
and Orange Crush environments
felt so natural later.
The blueprint already existed.
Bro had been controlling crowds since high school.
⸻
THE VERIFIED NUMBERS MADE IT WORSE
And the funniest part?
The stats backed it all up.
According to archived MaxPreps records:
Top 12 in Georgia in made threes
55 made three-pointers in 2010 alone (maxpreps.com)
So this wasn’t empty hype.
The production was REAL.
That’s why the mythology survived.
Because underneath all the swagger and theatrics…
George Turner could really hoop.
⸻
SAVANNAH STILL TALK ABOUT THAT ERA DIFFERENT
Years later, older Savannah hoop heads still bring up the Party Plug era with this weird smile like they remembering a concert tour instead of varsity basketball.
Because honestly?
That’s what it felt like.
A traveling show.
A movement.
An atmosphere.
Not just a player.
And before social media learned how to manufacture sports hype…
George Turner already had a city emotionally invested in every shot he took.
⸻
FINAL CRUSH MAGAZINE CLOSE
Before NIL checks.
Before influencer athletes.
Before algorithms.
There was a skinny shooter in Savannah pulling from disrespectful distances while a gym full of screaming teenagers lost they minds.
There was no media team.
No branding consultant.
No content strategy.
Just:
swagger,
noise,
music,
chaos,
and belief.
George “Party Plug Mikey” Turner didn’t become folklore because the internet made him famous.
He became folklore because Savannah couldn’t stop talking about him.