For the students, fans and parents of Union High School’s football program, the 2025 season will be remembered for more than just wins and losses: it ended with scandal, disappearance, and heartbreak.
Former head coach Travis Turner — once leading the undefeated Bears — vanished on November 20 amid serious child-sex crime allegations. Now a fugitive, he remains at large. Meanwhile the Bears, under stand-in coach Jason Edwards, pushed ahead to the state semifinals. On December 6, they lost by a single point — 21–20 — to rival Glenvar High School Vikings. The defeat ends a 13–0 season under a storm of controversy.

What follows is a full look at how a team’s perfect record unraveled — not on the scoreboard, but in real life.
The Charges and the Disappearance
Turner, 46, was slated for questioning by the Virginia State Police (VSP), after investigators announced they had obtained multiple warrants against him — five counts of possession of child pornography, and five more for using a computer to solicit a minor.
But when authorities arrived at his Appalachia, Virginia home on November 20, he was gone. The next day, local police reclassified him from “missing person” to “fugitive.”
Turner reportedly left behind his car, identification, glasses, prescription medication, and other personal items — evidence that his flight was premeditated.
Since then, extensive manhunts by VSP, the U.S. Marshals Service, FBI, and rescue teams — using drones, K-9 units, and terrain sweeps through the rugged Appalachians — have failed to locate him. A reward of $5,000 has been offered for credible information leading to his arrest.
Authorities have warned the public not to approach him — describing Turner as possibly armed and dangerous.
Before his disappearance, Turner had guided the Bears to a flawless record. With him gone, assistant coach Jason Edwards stepped in to lead the team through a turbulent playoff run. The players faced intense external pressure: media scrutiny, community gossip, and the uncertainty of their coach’s fate.
Yet in the face of it all, the Bears dug deep. They captured the regional championship in late November, securing a berth in the state semifinals — proof, supporters said, of the team’s resilience and unity under adversity.
Semifinal Heartbreak — Lost by One Point
On December 6, Union High faced Glenvar in a tightly contested semifinal game. The result: a 21–20 loss, ending their season and dash for a state title. The defeat was more than a game; for many in the community, it symbolized the collective heartbreak of a season overshadowed by scandal and absence.
Supporters and community members praised the players for maintaining focus and composure under extraordinary circumstances. As one local told WJHL after the loss: “For them to stay focused, I think it tells a lot about them and the community as well.”
Interim coach Edwards summed it up: “They can tell their kids and grandkids about it.” He encouraged the players to cherish the memories of this season — 13 straight wins, rivalry victories, regional success — even if it ended short of the championship.
The Fallout — Reputation, Trust, Questions
Now, the spotlight has turned from the field back to the absent coach.
For the community — a respected coach, once a figure of stability and pride, is now a fugitive facing horrific allegations. Trust has been shaken, especially in a small town where high school football often defines identity.
For the team and school — players, many minors themselves, must navigate trauma, rumors, and the loss of a mentor. Administrators have quietly tried to provide support and move forward, but scars run deep.
For authorities — pressure mounts to resolve the case. The public demands answers: where is Turner, what exactly happened, and how did it come to this?
The unanswered questions are many:
Did anyone help Turner escape? Is he being hidden?
Does he have allies willing to shelter him, or is he living off the grid in the rugged Appalachians?
Have investigators missed clues, compromised evidence, or underestimated the risks?
Why This Matters — Beyond a High School Season
This case is more than the downfall of a football program. It touches on broader, troubling issues:
Child-sex crimes and trust: How deeply can such accusations shatter a community? How can families, teammates, and neighbors respond when a trusted adult is accused?
Justice and due process under pressure: With media — local and national — spotlighting the case, the urgency may tempt shortcuts. Transparency and procedural integrity become vital.
Impact on youth and mental health: Teen players — many only 15–17 — are caught between grief for their coach, fear of public stigma, and their own uncertain futures.
Whatever happens next — capture, trial, or further flight — the 2025 Union High Bears season will be remembered as a cautionary tale: when off-field scandals collide with young lives and a community’s identity, the consequences can ripple far beyond the scoreboard.