Categories
Sports Sports Feature

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK

* * In the story, I use an anecdote about Tommy West and Lex Ward to illustrate a couple of points. The first is that coaches DO listen to talk radio. The second is that talk radio is full of misinformation.

I did NOT mean to imply (1) that Lex Ward is one of those (regardless of his background) who makes a habit of putting out misinformation. Ward does as much preparation for his show as anyone and I respect the work he does on SportsCall 790. And (2) I did not mean to imply that what Ward said about the offensive coordinator job was necessarily false. I don’t think anyone knows what Tommy West is going to do with the job, including West himself.

* * I asked John “Rainman” Rainey, a professional sports handicapper, if he had ever had trouble getting media credentials to college games due to the NCAA’s worries about gambling. He said he had not.

“From the first day that I was on the radio, I never used the University of Memphis in any of the plays that we put out. Never. I don’t tell people to bet on them or against them, either way. I have access to the coaches through the radio show and that would obviously be a no-no with the NCAA.”

* * I asked Jeff Weinberger to comment on the fact that people accuse him of making outlandish statements for the sole purpose of getting listeners to call in. Here is his response:

“I swear on my grandmother’s grave, I do not just say things to get people to call. I don’t know if this speaks good of me, but I really believe everything I say.”

* * I talked to both Greg Gaston, who does play-by-play for the University of Memphis on TV and Dave Woloshin, who is the radio voice of the Tigers, about people calling them “homers.”

“We walk a fine line,” Gaston said. “We won’t duck an issue, but I won’t use the radio format to ruffle feathers just to cause controversy. That’s not the type of person I am. Especially being involved with the Tigers, I’m not going to bring up anything just to cause a stir if it is not a legitimate story.”

“I don’t think they listen to the whole show. I don’t think they are listening objectively,” Woloshin said of his critics. “When I’m doing a game, the same way as when Jack Buck is doing a game, he’s for the Cardinals, I’m for the Tigers. I think if somebody is calling me a homer they are either fans of the opposition team or they are Tiger fan who doesn’t think I am a homer enough for us.”

* * The Jim Rome Show is sometimes criticized by callers to Sports 56. New WHBQ-AM program director Bill Grafeman says he has no intention of canceling the syndicated program, even though he realizes that Rome is not popular with many in the Mid-South. The show’s ratings in the Memphis market are “no better or no worse” than most of the other sports talk shows, Grafeman said.

“I have a feeling that Jim Rome being from Southern California tends to stay away from the South for some reason. I don’t know why that is,” Grafeman said. “He comes across as very arrogant. He’s one of those people who you either love him or hate him.”

* * Interestingly, Rainey attributes a job in his past with helping him with the host role on talk radio.

“One of the things that may have helped me was playing in a couple of rock and roll bands back in the Sixties,” he said. “I learned a lot of timing from that. A lot of radio is an innate sense of timing.”

Categories
News The Fly-By

ARKANSAS NEIGHBORS

The Jonesboro Sun, known for breaking exciting news items like, no
more chicken fingers in school cafeterias, has scooped the Flyer
again. On Monday, February 12th the Sun ran a story with the headline,
Swedish Visitor Photographs Jonesboro Nuns.

Man, those Swedeners are some kind of crazy.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

thursday, february 15th

The UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS takes on arch-rival CINCINNATI in a
Conference USA basketball game at The Pyramid. ESPN will broadcast the game
live beginning at 8 p.m.

If basketball is not your thing, you might try OPEN-MIKE POETRY at Java
Cabana, 2170 Young, 8-10 p.m.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Jock Talk

In my car the radio buttons are set to every Memphis station that
carries sports talk radio shows. From the first time I discovered sports talk
during my college days, I was hooked.

In those early years I only had a few choices. There was George
Lapides and maybe another show or two. Nothing like today. Memphis has two
radio stations that are committed to the sports talk format — 24 hours a day.
Another broadcasts three hours of sports talk each afternoon.

Tired of listening to the same old fans call in day after day?
You can tune in a national show such as Jim Rome or Tony Kornheiser. Can’t get
enough college recruiting talk? There’s even a show for you.

I even got to work on a sports talk show. From 1992 through 1996
I was a weekly guest on WREC-AM, on SportsLine, the show originated by
Lapides back in the 1970s. That was a thrill, getting paid to talk on the
radio about sports. But the landscape has changed quite a bit since I had my
15 minutes of sports talk fame.

Some would argue that the changes have been for the worse. There
are more choices, to be sure, but with the opening up of so many hours of
local sports talk (there are 15 hours of locally produced sports talk weekdays
from 6 a.m. till 6 p.m. by my count), the bar has been lowered.

“I’ve listened to sports talk in other areas. I would like
to think that our show is up to standards anyplace else in the country,”
says John “The Rainman” Rainey, whose show, Memphis
Primetime
, is on Sports 56 (WHBQ-AM). “I think overall, sports talk
in Memphis is pretty good. I think there are some shows that wouldn’t be on
the air if I had the option of making that decision. But you have to be
careful. There are a lot of different types of fans that listen and you have
to try to give each one of them something during the day. That’s hard to
do.”

Dave Woloshin, the radio voice of the University of Memphis and
host of Sports Call 790 on WMC-AM, says the format has changed since he
first got into the field in 1983.

“You have to understand what talk radio really is now.
Sports talk radio is not journalism. It’s entertainment with a sports theme.
There are still folks who do talk radio as sports journalists. Myself, George
Lapides, I think Greg Gaston, the newest entry into the field, is trying to do
that,” Woloshin says. “A lot of the other guys either have agendas
like gambling or they are trying to be sports entertainers. Sometimes it’s
unfortunate, particularly in this market. There are guys who are not
entertainers, who are not journalists, what they are is fans. They have
wiggled their way in. I don’t know if they demean the genre or not, but I
think you have to recognize the genre for what it is. It is not journalism
anymore. Entertainment is the primary objective.”

Rainey, whose first experience in radio came in 1993 when he
began hosting a handicapping show on the weekends, doesn’t dispute these
facts: He owns a sports handicapping business; he buys the 4 to 6 p.m. time
slot from Flinn Broadcasting; and he uses the show to promote his handicapping
business.

“There has to be some reason that people listen to you and
pay attention to what you say,” Rainey says. “I think when we
started, the handicapping was the reason that people listened. Whether people
want to admit it or agree with gambling on sports or not, a large percentage
of the population bets on games.”

Several of the shows on WHBQ are similar to the arrangement
Rainey has. The host buys the air time and then sells the advertising spots
himself. This trend (called “Do It Yourself Radio” by one disdainful
local broadcaster) is alarming to some.

Woloshin makes it clear that his station doesn’t sell time for
sports talk shows. “I know that is not true at WMC, it was not true at
WREC. Those are the two stations where I have done the majority of my
work,” Woloshin says. “Dr. Flinn has a responsibility, in my
opinion, to try to make that as professional as he can make it.”

Flinn Broadcasting is owned by Dr. George Flinn, a local
radiologist. Even the program director at Sports 56 won’t say how many of the
station’s local shows are purchased by the host.

“Some do and some don’t,” says Bill Grafeman, the new
program director. “It’s an odd situation. I would rather not go into it.
I don’t know everybody’s situation yet. My idea is eventually for everything
to be consistent throughout the day.”

According to Grafeman, Jeff and Jack is the highest rated
show on Sports 56. Jeff Weinberger, the co-host of the show, is equally
evasive.

“It’s a back and forth deal,” he says. “It’s not
as simple as a yes or no answer.”

Generally the way to tell if the time has been bought by the host
is by the type of commercials run during the show. If most of the advertising
spots are testimonials (“Have you been to XYZ Electronics lately?”)
the chances are you’re listening to a show that is buying time. This method is
not foolproof, however.

John
Rainey and Tony Brooks host Memphis Primetime on WHBQ.

“You don’t go from saying, ‘The Tigers signed the top recruit
in Memphis yesterday and let me tell you about Oak Hall,'” says Rainey,
who broadcasts his show from his own professional studio and prerecords all
his commercials. “I don’t think commercials should be part of the show
content. That’s just a personal opinion.”

The Oak Hall remark is a personal dig at Lapides, the dean of
sports talk hosts in Memphis. Lapides’ show from 8 to 9 a.m. on Sports 56 is
laden with deals, from barbecue to automobiles to dry cleaning.

Which brings up another point — there is a lot of animosity
among the various talk radio hosts. This is not limited to local
personalities. Rome, who is based in Los Angeles, constantly makes derogatory
remarks about Kornheiser, who broadcasts from the D.C. area. But the enmity
between hosts on the same station can be a little disarming.

“There are a few talk shows that just go after other talk
shows. I don’t know why they do it, but it is always going to be that
way,” says Weinberger. “It’s the same way in other cities, too. It’s
really sad, because this is just talk radio.”

There has been more than one occasion where rival sports talk
hosts have almost come to blows at public functions. This isn’t true of
everybody in the genre, but if you are planning a dinner party and want to
invite sports talk hosts, it might be wise to check the list twice.

Two guys who do get along are Weinberger and his partner Jack
Eaton. “We don’t have any ego problems,” the former TV news anchor
says. “He thinks I’m an idiot and I think he’s an idiot. It’s just talk
radio, it’s not life and death. It’s not brain surgery.”

Into this rough-and-tumble atmosphere comes Grafeman, who arrived
in Memphis just last month. He is 26 but could easily pass for 17. How is this
guy going to tame the Wild West that Sports 56 has become?

“If the guy was 50 years old, he would have trouble with
that group,” Weinberger laughs.

“I’m looking forward to it,” Grafeman says of the
challenges facing him. “I have a lot ideas, not only from myself but from
the staff. I’m really looking forward to the situation.”

One of the first changes under Grafeman has been the addition of
the Morning Sports Report from 9 to 11 a.m. The show features ABC-24
sports director Greg Gaston and Michael Eaves, a reporter and part-time anchor
at Channel 24 and its sister station UPN-30. Graffman is quick to credit Flinn
with the negotiations that brought Gaston and Eaves to the station.

“They’re a great addition,” Grafeman says. “I’m
real proud of the way that show is going.”

Gaston and Eaves work for Clear Channel Communications, which
owns several radio stations in Memphis. “It was a very touchy situation.
It was very complicated. [General manager] Jack Peck gets all the credit for
it,” Gaston says. “I’m sure the Clear Channel people were a little
reluctant to do it. But then again they were not giving me an opportunity on
their [radio] stations. We get our name out in front of a sports audience. It
is good name recognition for the TV stations.”

Though some would say that it is the ultimate oxymoron, Gaston
says he wants to deliver “intelligent sports talk.”

“I know that a lot of the sports shows here have been beaten
up for not having intelligent sports talk. They’re either trivia-oriented or
giveaway-oriented or shock talk, things thrown out just to get callers,”
says Gaston, who had talk radio experience before coming to Memphis.
“We’re going to bring on experts. We aren’t always knowledgeable about
every subject. That’s what our expert guests are for.”

One group of experts Gaston will not be able to tap is the
sportswriters at The Commercial Appeal. The paper’s management does not
allow reporters to do talk radio shows (Geoff Calkins seems to be an
occasional exception). The Memphis market is being deprived of some
interesting perspectives (not to mention the impressions and general humor of
Ron Higgins).

Ironically, one of the most respected voices in Memphis sports
talk radio belongs to former C.A. reporter Mike DeCourcy. DeCourcy, now
the college basketball editor for The Sporting News, is a guest on
Lapides’ show every Wednesday. DeCourcy brings a national viewpoint that is
refreshing, yet because of his time spent at The Commercial Appeal as
the U of M basketball beat writer, he provides a local take as well.

Another newspaper reporter who makes for good conversation is
David Climer from The Tennessean. Also a guest on Lapides’ show, Climer
understands the Memphis-Nashville rivalry and makes particularly judicious use
of that knowledge.

In fact, sportswriters are popular on sports talk radio
nationwide, both as guests and as hosts. Kornheiser works for The
Washington Post
and former Memphian Paul Feinbaum, a columnist with The
Birmingham News
, has a show in that hot-bed of Southern talk radio.

The emphasis may be talk, but not every show focuses on callers.
Lapides, for one, will often do his entire show without talking to a single
caller. If he has interesting guests, he concentrates on them. In fact, one of
the problems with a small market such as Memphis having so many locally
produced shows is the lack of original callers and original takes. Anyone who
listens to Memphis sports talk radio can recognize about a dozen callers. Some
seem to call every show every day.

“We want to encourage people to call us. If you have
something to say, call us,” says Gaston. “But we don’t want people
to call and take up five or six minutes saying nothing.”

As Jim Rome would say: “Have a take and don’t
suck.”

It is what sets the national sports talk show apart from the
local. On the national level there is no patience with callers who don’t have
anything to say. The Fabulous Sports Babe — whose host is one of the
few female voices in the genre — is no longer heard in Memphis, but her show
is famous for its lack of tolerance with boring callers. When she doesn’t like
a call she hangs up with the sound effect of a bomb going off. Rome is equally
impatient.

Larry Robbins, host of The Press Box from noon till 2 p.m.
on The Ticket 1210-AM, the other Flinn all-sports station, remembers the first
time he heard a Memphian call The Jim Rome Show.

“Rome will make fun of people who live in this area. One guy
from Memphis tried it and he just tore him apart,” Robbins recalls.
“Called him stupid, called him a hillbilly, told him to go back to his
trailer. That’s so unfair to everybody who lives here.”

Locally sports talk is more personal, more laid back.

“We have made a conscious effort to build a relationship
with the listeners and the callers,” says Rainey, who regularly does
remotes at casinos. “We are maybe more out in the public and available to
the listeners on a personal basis than some of the other show hosts are.
That’s by choice.”

Robbins agrees. “Sports fans are very loyal. You become
friends with these people,” he says. “Some of them call on a daily
basis, so it becomes just like having a friend.”

Of course not everyone who likes sports is in love with the
sports talk format. Many players and coaches, for example, don’t like it.

“I don’t listen to it,” says Memphis head basketball
coach John Calipari. “I never listened to it in Boston, I never listened
to it in New Jersey, and I have never listened to it here. So to any
Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi fan that is going on radio trying to get
under my skin, I don’t listen. They are wasting time and breath. I never
listen to it and if anybody asks me about talk radio I say you are talking to
the wrong guy.”

As a head coach in the most visible sports franchise in town,
Calipari makes appearances on local and national talk shows. But he seems
sincere in saying that he never listens.

“Living in this town which has so many fans from other
teams, why would you let them drive you crazy?” he asks. “They don’t
have any effect on me whatsoever. And I would say this: Do you think those
fans want me to be the coach here?”

New Tiger football coach Tommy West makes no such claims. On
national signing day, the day schools can announce which players have signed
scholarships, West went on WMC-AM, which broadcast the press conference
live.

The day before, Lex Ward, Woloshin’s co-host on Sports Call
790,
had said that he thought West was ready to hire an offensive
coordinator, an assistant coaching position that is unfilled on the new
coach’s staff. Ward named the candidate. But when he asked the coach about it
on signing day he didn’t get the answer he was looking for.

“Well, I thought you took care of that for me
yesterday,” West laughed. After he was off the air he admitted he hadn’t
even talked to the assistant coach who was thought to be the leading
candidate.

It was a harmless situation and West didn’t seem to mind, but it
does illustrate one of the negative sides of talk radio, especially in a
market where many of the hosts are not trained journalists. Anyone can say
anything on the radio. And because it is on the radio, it feels authoritative,
it feels real. What the host says and what the caller says can get mixed in
the listener’s mind.

Dave
Woloshin, the “Voice of the Tigers,” hosts Sports Call 790 on WMC-
AM; Channel 24 sportscaster Greg Gaston (far right) is the new kid on the
block at WHBQ-AM.

“It was on the radio. I heard it.”

If you look at the numbers, the audience for sports talk radio is
small — miniscule compared to the powerhouse FM stations. According to the
Fall 2000 Arbitron rankings, an average of 3,100 listeners tuned into Sports
56 between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. each day. That makes it 19th among the 26 Memphis
station ranked by Arbitron. WMC was 21st, with an average of 2,000
listeners.

But according to people in the industry, sports talk radio makes
money. The audience may be relatively small, but it includes the demographic
group that some advertisers want to reach.

“Can an all-sports talk format make money in this market? I
don’t have any doubt. I know for a fact. I have proven that,” says
Rainey, who operated his own station in the mid-1990s — SuperSport 1030.

“It’s very profitable. We’ve really started to turn a
corner,” says Robbins, who besides hosting a show works on the staff at
Sports 56. “Even Dr. Flinn was really pleased with its
performance.”

For the average sports talk listener, demographics and ratings
mean little. We just want our fix — sports news, opinion, and smack.

As Larry Robbins puts it: “Sports talk will always be on the
radio. As long as there are guys, as long as there are athletes, there will
always be a need for sports talk radio. Forever.”

You can e-mail Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com.


The Coaches Corner

Dana Kirk and Pete Cordelli

Former coaches bring unique perspectives.

6 to 8 a.m., Sports 56

Sportstime

George Lapides and Mark McClellan

Great guests, few calls — no-nonsense sports talk.

8 to 9 a.m., Sports 56

Morning Sports Report

Greg Gaston and Michael Eaves

The new kids have a good spot: between Lapides and Jim Rome’s
national show.

9 to 11 a.m., Sports 56

The Press Box

Larry Robbins and Jake Lawhead

“Sports, girls, beer, and other stuff interesting to
guys.”

Noon to 2 p.m., 1210 AM, The Ticket

Jeff and Jack

Jeff Weinberger and Jack Eaton

Recruiting and comedy. Argumentative. Fun.

2 to 4 p.m., Sports 56

SportsCall 790

Dave Woloshin and Lex Ward

News, talk, and Tigers — the home station of the U of M.

3 to 6 p.m., WMC-790

Memphis Primetime

John Rainey and Tony Brooks

Contests, nicknames, and handicapping.

4 to 6 p.m., Sports 56

Categories
News The Fly-By

CITY REPORTER

Another Week, Another County Lawsuit

Last October, Shelby County jail chief Marron Hopkins was accused of

threatening his subordinate guards, instructing them not to

talk to court-appointed jail monitors assigned to

report on the jail’s efforts to cut down violence and

reduce overcrowding. Hopkins told jailers that the

monitors were “not their friends” at a meeting he

called just a week after federal judge Jon McCalla

had taken a surprise tour, led by the chief, of the

troubled downtown lockup.

All that would have gone unnoticed if jail commander Robert Ivory
hadn’t told jail

monitor Curtis Shumpert of Hopkins’ improprieties. As a result, inmates
attorney Robert Hutton

filed a complaint at the request of Judge Jon

McCalla, who is overseeing the implementation of

the four-year-old court order.

Ivory was terminated the same day that Shumpert told the judge about
Hopkins’

actions. Months before, Ivory had been following the court’s mandate to
cooperate with

the monitors by answering Shumpert’s questions, locating documents, and
providing

requested assistance to the monitor.

Ivory held four jobs at the jail since being

hired in 1997 to be in charge of sanitation. He

was fired despite having a clean personnel record. Though 201 Poplar is known
for its unclean

environment, Ivory’s employee evaluations state

that “he has been working very hard to meet

deadlines in improving the overall sanitation

condition of facility … follows established policy,

guidelines, and procedures … and is competent

and effective … exceeds expectation.”

This week, attorney Saul Belz filed a $2 million wrongful termination
suit

against Shelby County Sheriff A.C. Gilless and Hopkins. Belz says the
situation is

reminiscent of Sheriff’s Deputy Harold Hayes’

termination, which came after he spoke out about the

Ray Mills and Stephen Toarmina badges-for-cash scam two years ago.

Ivory has been unable to get a job since being forced from his post in
October.

“There’s no reason why this man

shouldn’t be working,” says Belz. — Ashley Fantz

Music Commission Holds First Town Hall

Roughly three years after its formation and almost two years after

hiring Jerry Schilling as its president, the

Memphis & Shelby County Music Commission will hold its first town hall
meeting this week.

The event, which will take place at

Strings & Things music store at 1555 Madison

Avenue, is scheduled to run from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. and be moderated by WREG-
TV’s

Alex Coleman. Schilling says that all of the commission’s 20 members who will
be

in town that day are expected to attend, but that a select few members will be

on the panel that takes audience questions.

Panelists, in addition to Schilling, will include

Pat Mitchell of the Blues Foundation, Jon Hornyak of the

Recording Academy, Kevin Kane of the Convention and Visitors Bureau,

John Frye of Ardent Studios, and Onzie Horne of the House of Blues.

Schilling anticipates that there may be some negative responses from
the

audience but says he relishes the opportunity to

bring the commission closer to the community.

“I think that people who are going to

take the time to come to something like this will either have really
legitimate criticisms or

some really great ideas that we could

incorporate,” he says.

To prepare themselves, last month the commission convened the first
meeting of

its Musician’s Advisory Council, a commission offshoot designed to give
contemporary

working musicians more voice on the commission. Members of the still-forming
council

include Jim Dickinson, Reba Russell, and the Pawtuckets’ and MADJACK Records’

Mark McKinney.

“I want to get the city behind this

event, not just the music community,” says

Schilling. “I want to get the Memphian there who

might think, ‘Why do we need a music commission?’ I know down deep that
Memphians are

proud of our heritage, but I want them to also be proud of what’s going on
today.”

But apparently not everyone is looking forward to the event.
“There are a few

commissioners that are a little afraid of this,” Schilling

admits, “but my feeling is that if there’s

something that we don’t know, then damn it, we

should know. If somebody can bring something up

and we don’t have the answer then we’ll damn well look for it. We don’t want
to be sitting

behind the desk, comfortable. We want to be on the

firing line.” — Chris Herrington

“Gibson Experience” Put On Hold

The Gibson Guitar plant located downtown is slowly getting up to

speed. According to plant manager Mickey Butler, Gibson is producing 71
guitars a day

and employing 67 people. When Butler first arrived in Memphis from the Gibson
plant

in Nashville, the Memphis site was producing only four guitars a day. Butler
says that

he has plans to increase production to 100 guitars a day and hire up to 120
people by

the summer.

However, the site is also supposed to house the “Gibson
Experience,”

which would include a factory tour, Gibson museum, theme restaurant, and a
live

music venue. This has yet to materialize and, according to Gibson chairman and

CEO Henry Juskiewicz, is going to take time.

The Rock ‘N’ Soul Museum, operated as a division of the Smithsonian

Institution, opened last year on the second floor of the Gibson factory.

“It’s going slower than we’re pleased

with,” says Juskiewicz. “I hesitate to give dates.

The fact is that we’re four and a half years behind.”

Juskiewicz says the delays stem from “problems with construction.
Things

didn’t get done.” Those things include an

installed kitchen for the restaurant. According to project manager Bryan
Campbell

of MCDR Incorporated, the construction firm that built the plant, his company

was never contracted to install the kitchen. This matter is currently being
contested in court.

Despite the roadblocks, Juskiewicz is confident about the success of
the

Memphis operation.

“We’re pumped about Memphis,” he

says. “We’re not happy about [the delay], but

we’re committed to Memphis and we will fill our obligations. We’re going to
make the

community proud.” — Chris Przybyszewski

Velsicol Blast

Worries Residents

As the sky filled with thick black smoke after an explosion at

the Velsicol Chemical Corporation’s plant Thursday, the surrounding North

Memphis neighborhoods were in “sheer

panic” for about 45 minutes, says resident

Reverend Balinda Moore.

Knowing the plant stores many dangerous chemicals, several residents
fled in

their cars, while others without transportation awaited a call from the
automated

hazardous materials phone service that never came. The sirens at the adjacent
school

and community center also didn’t sound, Moore found out later from the fire

department, because the accident didn’t pose a health threat.

Moore says she tried to call Velsicol to find out what happened, but
no one

answered the phone. The community should be informed after an accident, she
says,

to calm fears or detail evacuation routes.

Though no one was injured in the blast, 75 firefighters and 22 pieces

of equipment were dispatched to the scene when the top blew off a

50,000-gallon chemical storage tank, according to a fire department press
release.

Working with the Concerned Citizens for Douglas Bungalow Crump, a

neighborhood group focusing on environmental

concerns, Moore has been fighting Velsicol to clean up

its act. Though the company is working to remove toxic waste on its site ,
Moore blames them

for causing cancer and asthma in her neighborhood.

Andrew Wilkins

Applegate Era Ends At Channel 5

A tumultuous period for THE local TV news industry came to an end

last month with the long-anticipated promotion of WMC-TV vice president and
general

manager Bill Applegate to the same positions at two stations in Cleveland,
which were

recently purchased by Raycom Media, WMC’s parent

company.

Applegate arrived at WMC, long the market’s most powerful and
respected news

station, in April 1998, with a reputation as one

of the most controversial executives in the industry. A cover story in this
paper that ran

shortly after his arrival characterized Applegate as

a tough, abrasive administrator who would boost ratings and cut costs at the
expense of

product quality and staff morale.

It didn’t take long for those predictions to

come true. Less than a year after Applegate’s arrival,

local print media were taking note of the increasingly hysterical tone of the
station’s newscasts,

especially the station’s rather loose interpretation

of the term “breaking news.” The Commercial

Appeal reported that half of the newsroom had

left or been fired in the first year — a figure

confirmed by staffers who were there at the time.

Richard Enderwood, director of promotion and audience development at
WMC from

1993 until November 1998, and who now works in a similar capacity at stations
in Oklahoma

City, echoes many former Channel 5 staffers in decrying the stylistic shift
that Applegate

introduced.

“I believe that many of the special stories

that were written and produced for news sweeps

were frivolous and lightweight and were done in an attempt to attract viewers
without addressing

issues that actually impact the lives of

Memphians,” Enderwood says. “I’m sure there are industry

reasons for those changes too, but the kinds of

frivolous newscasts that were going on around the country were not going on at
WMC or in

Memphis really until [Applegate’s] arrival.”

“They are less traditional than they were

before he came, there’s no doubt about that,”

says Dr. James Redmond, chair of the journalism department at the University
of

Memphis. “Whether that’s good or bad is open to

interpretation — it depends on what kind of news you prefer.”

The ratings at the station under

Applegate’s tenure partially bear out his approach,

however. The first May sweeps under Applegate’s

watch, which occurred just before he brought in equally controversial news
director

Peggy Phillip, reflected trouble. The station had

been knocked out of first place at 5 p.m. for the

first time in five years, losing to WREC-TV Channel 3 by half a ratings point
and finding

themselves in a tie with Channel 3 at 6 p.m. The station held a two-point lead
at 10 p.m.

During the November 2000 sweeps, the last under Applegate’s watch, WMC
was back

on top by a full point at 5 p.m., had pulled ahead considerably at 6 p.m., and
was maintaining

a similar lead at 10 p.m.

But many lament what has been lost in the ratings wars.

“To look at the organization as a whole

in the community, I don’t think they’re as

involved as they used to be. I think they pick

their spots,” says Harold Graeter, associate

executive director of the AXA Liberty Bowl, whose position of sports director
was eliminated

by WMC in the fall of 1998.

Some former staffers and media watchers have expressed hope that
Applegate’s

successor, Howard Meagle, who served for several years at a Raycom station in
Cape

Girardeau, Missouri, will return some of the

station’s community service focus.

But many question whether Applegate’s approach has even been a success
at

WMC. Media watchers point out that his record has largely been one of
improving ratings in

the short term but leaving stations worse off than when he arrived. His real
impact at

WMC may be more accurately reflected in the

next few sweeps periods.

“Sometimes you trip over dollars to

pick up nickels, and sometimes you make changes that’ll make the ratings spike
a

little bit but in the long term will actually contribute to a further
decline,” says

Redmond. “How that all shakes out [at Channel

5] remains to be seen.”

“I don’t think he had a dramatic

impact on the ratings, and I certainly think he affected morale in a negative
way,” says

Graeter, in an opinion echoed by many other former WMC staffers. “But as
long as you have

that core group of Joe [Birch], Dave [Brown], and Jarvis [Greer], that station
will maintain

its position in the market, because it’s about personalities.”

Chris Herrington

More Dirt On Downtown School Construction Costs

Shortly after approving a plan to borrow $50 million through the city

government, the Memphis City Schools board voted to

allocate $2 million in additional funding for the

new downtown elementary school.

The money — more than 20 percent of the

school’s accepted bid price of $9.4 million from

Jameson-Gibson Construction — was requested to replace

a four-foot layer of unsuitable soil.

“An engineer determines what needs to

be done to support the building,” says Melva

Williams-Argaw, coordinator of Memphis City Schools Office of Facility
Planning. “You

have to take out the rubble, old concrete

foundations, and soil that does not have characteristics

conducive to supporting a building.” According

to Williams-Argaw, both soil and rocks will be brought in to fill the hole and
carry the

weight of the 85,000-square-foot school building.

Williams-Argaw could not say how much of the money was for excavation,
how much

for stone and soil, and how much for transportation of the material to the
site because the

official change order for the project has not yet

been issued. The $2 million is essentially an

estimate by the staff based upon recommendations

from the project’s architects and engineers.

According to several local grading companies, however, removing a
cubic yard of bad

soil generally costs $5 to $10. Replacing it costs about the same amount,
depending on

what type of fill you’re using, how far you have

to move it, what type of area you’re working in, and whether or not the site
retains water.

But even if the entire seven-acre site

needed an extra four feet of excavation, at $10 a

cubic yard for removal and $10 for fill, the

construction should cost about $900,000 — about

half the amount approved by the board.

According to Williams-Argaw, the staff

took the estimated $2 million to the board in

order to keep the project moving.

“We had to make sure we had the

money,” she says. “If we slowed down the process,

by the time the construction company is ready to do the work, then we’d have
to wait on

the board to approve the funds. Because of the

time factor, we’re asking to proceed with the work while we work out the
price.”

Each school has an amount for construction contingency — money to be
used for

additional, unexpected costs. But in this case,

the project’s size dictated the staff go to the

board with a funding request.

“This change order would wipe out the

contingency,” says Williams-Argaw. “We’re at the

very beginning of this project. We’re just coming

out of the ground, so we’re bypassing that pot.”

The original specifications for the

school, scheduled to open in August 2002, included

excavating and replacing eight feet. Although standard testing was done to
determine how

much soil needed to be replaced, it was recently

determined that a total of 12 feet needed to replaced.

“We have a differential of four feet. It’s

based on a test, but we’re still dealing with a

margin of error,” says Williams-Argaw.

If the soil replacement does not cost all

of the $2 million, the money will go back to

the capital improvement fund. If it goes over, the staff will have to use the
contingency

money or go back to the board.

Originally part of a 15-school package proposed by Inman-Beers
Construction,

the downtown school was slated to cost$12.4 million. After school officials
announced

last year that there wasn’t enough money to build all the schools, the board
decided

to award a smaller nine-school package bid. The downtown school and

five others were re-bid individually. Jameson-Gibson Construction

eventually won the contract with a bid of $9.4 million.

Managers at Jameson-Gibson declined to be interviewed.

Mary Cashiola

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Big Fred’s Decision

Although there was no particular reason for it to be so, the word had got
out in advance of last Saturday’s keynote speech by U.S. Senator Fred
Thompson
at the Shelby County Republicans’ Lincoln Day Dinner that he
might ‘fess up as to his plans for 2002.

A good deal of suspense has been invested in the question of how
Thompson will resolve his options, which are: 1) to stay where he is and run
for reelection to the Senate; 2) to cut loose from the Senate and run for
governor; 3) to return to Hollywood (where he filmed 18 movies) as the
successor to Motion Picture Association president Jack Valenti; 4) none
of the above.

Even the last option is considered possible (though unlikely),
since Thompson has always had an air of listening to those proverbial inner
drums and traveling at his own pace to his own destination. He is, quite
literally, not to be rushed — as his nervous would-be handlers in the 1994
Senate race, which he started slow and finished fast, found out, and as all
those who urged him in vain to run for president after 1996 also
discovered.

In any case, Thompson’s much-ballyhooed visit to Memphis on
Saturday attracted not only the usual thousand-or-so Lincoln Day banqueteers
but a largish corps of GOP politicians whose own plans for 2002 depend on
his.

Among them were U.S. Representatives Ed Bryant and Van
Hilleary
, of Tennessee’s 7th and 4th congressional districts,
respectively; State Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Franklin); Memphis
lawyer David Kustoff; Memphis city councilman Brent Taylor;
State Rep. Larry Scroggs (R-Germantown); and Dr. Philip
Langsdon
, a Germantown/Memphis plastic surgeon who was Shelby County GOP
chairman for two terms in the 1990s.

Until recently, Bryant and Hilleary were virtually
interchangeable as potential successors to Thompson or, alternatively, as
rival claimants to the governorship should Big Fred decide to stay put in the
Senate. A few weeks back, however, Bryant hazarded the intriguing ploy of
opting out of the governor’s race, come what may, and either running for the
Senate, if that race opened up, or running for re-election to the House.

The latter prospect quite naturally dismays the last several
persons on the aforementioned list. Messrs. Kustoff, Taylor, Scroggs, and
Langsdon all aspire to Bryant’s congressional seat and would like nothing
better than to see their congressman move up and out.

It was with that in mind that Bryant, one of the preliminary
speakers at Saturday night’s banquet, tucked his tongue in cheek and said from
the dais, “When it was time for me to come up here, I looked around and saw
David Kustoff and Brent Taylor and Larry Scroggs and Phil Langsdon out there,
and I was almost afraid to get up and leave my seat!”

He might have added the name of Blackburn, who was there with her
personal guru and adviser Raymond Baker. Blackburn was asked: Why had
she come? “For America,” she said. (She actually said that.) Another
Middle Tennessee pol in attendance put it otherwise: “She thinks that in
congressional redistricting, she’ll get put in the 7th, and she’s ready to go,
too, if Bryant tries to go up.”

Blackburn, it will be remembered, took a run at Bart Gordon’s 6th
District congressional seat in 1992 before doing a stint as head of the
state’s film commission and then running successfully for the state Senate in
1998. But he still has congressional ambitions, it seems clear.

But Blackburn and company will have to wait just a bit longer to
see where their destinies lie. As he indicated Saturday, Fred Thompson is not
ready to tip his hand. “I’ve got a few months to decide,” he opined before his
speech, which consisted mainly of Republican boilerplate and contained nary a
hint as to his political intentions.

If Thompson does eventually decide to run for the governorship,
he will almost certainly have the Republican nomination for the asking, and
Rep. Hilleary will be up against it. He continues to indicate that he remains
in the running for the Senate, and chief aide Jim Burnette, a former
state GOP chairman, promises that a race between Hilleary and Bryant would be
“one of the most polite races in history.”

But there are some who have concluded — on what evidence, it’s
hard to say — that an unspoken arrangement exists between Bryant and
Thompson, whereby the latter will indeed go on to run for governor, leaving
the way open for Bryant to succeed him.

In that scenario, or even in a less conspiratorial one that has
Thompson in a gubernatorial race, Bryant’s potentially win-win ploy is invoked
— one of appearing to have deferred graciously to Hilleary for one office
while relegating the other to himself.

In the event, of course, Hilleary — who recently took some
Tennesseans on a tour which included the Senate cloakroom and experimentally
sat in a lounge chair there which he declared “fits my fanny” — is prepared
to contest the senatorial issue with Bryant, and it remains to be seen just
how polite that turns out to be.

Categories
Editorial Opinion

The Conversion of Tom Moss

It was expected that Tom Moss, who was appointed Shelby County Commissioner
last fall, would try to get himself assimilated as a member in good standing
of the commission’s seven-member GOP majority. After all, nominal Republican
Moss had defeated mainstream Republican David Lillard and was named to his
post basically by a Democrat-dominated coalition (the same coalition that
boosted lodge brother Shep Wilbun into the vacant Juvenile Court clerkship).
Moss, along with veteran Republican Clair VanderSchaaf (who voted with the
Democrats both times), was supposed to be dog meat for righteously vengeful
Republicans to gnaw on at re-election time in 2002.

So now builder Moss, whose ascension to the commission may have
been more a developers’ coup than anything expressly political, has tried to
accommodate himself to his fellow Republicans.

But things have become almost surreal: There was Moss after
Monday’s commission meeting complaining, “I don’t think we’re a solid enough
bloc. I don’t think we’re exacting enough in return for what we give up.” We?
Why, the Republican majority, of course!

“For example, we should have demanded a quid pro quo from the
Democrats when Bridget [Chisholm] came on,” Moss continued, referring to the
young African-American woman, hitherto a political unknown like himself who
was elected to the commission to replace Wilbun.

In other words, Tom Moss — who achieved office under the cloud
of Democratic sponsorship — has now become the most zealous of GOP partisans:
No more deals with the Democrats unless something of solid value to the
Republican coalition comes from it! It’s really quite remarkable, this
turnaround saga of Moss the hardnose.

Though there are those who maintain that Chisholm is in the same
developers’ camp as Moss, she herself boasts state Senator John Ford and U.S.
Rep. Harold Ford Jr. as her chief supporters. In a key vote Monday on a
Southeast Shelby County development resisted by its projected residential
neighbors, Chisholm voted one way (against), Moss voted another (for), and
VanderSchaaf voted yet a third way, proposing an amendment that would have
split the difference.

The project deadlocked at six to six and thereby died, although
it can — and probably will — be brought up for consideration again. But the
interesting fact about the vote was that none of the three supposed New Bloc
members were together on the deal.

It may be easier than one would have thought for Tom Moss to take
on protective coloration he’ll need for next year’s election season. At last
Saturday’s annual Shelby County Republican Lincoln Day Dinner at the Adam’s
Mark, Moss was observed having a chummy conversation with Chris Norris, the
ex-commissioner’s wife and a bedrock Republican in her own right.

That was followed by an even chummier conversation with county
GOP chairman Alan Crone, who was overheard asking the new commissioner out to
lunch.

The upshot of all this? Perhaps nothing more than a modification
of the old saw that “politics makes strange bedfellows.” Sudden ones, too, we
could add. Or maybe the point is that partisanship is a substance which these
days is thicker than blood or water.

Categories
News News Feature

NO GOVERNOR’S RACE FOR THOMPSON

In an announcement Thursday that was a shocker, not so much because of what it said, but when it was said — suddenly and without advance notice — U.S. Senator Fred Thompson took himself out of the 2002 governor’s race.

Thompson said he was “drawn to the challenge,” but had decided to focus his efforts in Washington for the foreseeable future, concentrating during “an unusually important year up here” on helping President George W. Bush with aspects of the presidential agenda.

Thompson’s announcement left 4th District U.S. Rep. Van Hilleary the odds-on favorite to become the Republican nominee for governor, as his only serious potential rival, fellow GOP congressman Ed Bryant of the 7th District, had

said recently he would not run for governor but would consider running for

the Senate.

At the time Bryant’s statement drew speculation that he and

Thompson had an understanding concerning the opening-up of the incumbent’s Senate seat. Thursday’s news blew that prospect aside and left Hilleary the winner in a subtle game of maneuver between the two congressman, each of whom for most of the last year had been looking at either the Senate or the governorship as a means of stepping up.

Bryant promptly issued his own statement Thursday, confirming his intention to run for reelection in the 7th District. It read:”In light of Senator Thompson’s announcement today not to run for Governor, I thank him for his early decision and voice my continued support for him as my Senator. Our State is fortunate to have two outstanding men such as Senators Thompson and [Bill Frist] representing us in Washington.

“Insofar as my personal plans, I have filed for reelection to the House in 2002. Given the likelihood of a reconfigured district due to the census, I look forward to the challenge of consolidating the Seventh District.”

Also sidelined from intended action next year were several potential candidates for Bryant’s 7th District congressional seat. They were: former state Bush campaign director David Kustoff of Memphis; Memphis city councilman Brent Taylor; State Rep. Larry Scroggs of Germantown; and former Shelby County Republican chairman Phil Langsdon. Another prospect in event of redistricting including her in the 7th was State Senator Marsha Blackburn of Brentwood.

Thompson, however, did not affirm that he would run again for the Senate, deferring any announcement on that and thus leaving room open for a change of plans once more by all the would-be upwardly mobile.

With Hilleary as the likely GOP nominee for governor in 2002, a spirited race may occur between Democrats for the right to contest the issue with him. So far U.S. Rep. Bob Clement of Nashville and former State Senator Andy Womack have filed papers allowing them to start raising money, and several other candidates, including former state Democratic chairman Doug Horne, former state Education Commissioner Charles Smith, and 8th District U.S. Rep. John Tanner are in the wings.

One public figure whose plans may change precipitately is Shelby County Mayor Jim Rout, who had nursed gubernatorial ambitions at the time of his 1998 reelection, then let them slide in view of the likely candidacy of either Thompson or Bryant, with whom he shared a local base. The mayor — beset though he is with a looming budgetary deficit problem of his own –may now want to rethink the situation.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FIRST IMPRESSIONS

First impressions are a big deal. That’s nothing new. But the idea has teeth.

Try the first impression a team makes on its home city, the first impression in front of more than 30,000 at the Liberty Bowl. The team wants to prove itself. Those in attendance come with hope in their hearts. The team fumbles that hope away.

Now ask the fans to come back next week, to believe one more time.

Such is the task faced by the XFL Memphis Maniax after their opening loss — a game marked by costly turnovers; a game that should have been a Maniax win. Las Vegas won because it was the better team, right? Hardly. Vegas didn’t total over a hundred yards rushing or passing.

In their opening win against the NY/NJ Hitmen, Outlaws QB Ryan Clement hit eight different receivers 13 times for 189 yards and two touchdowns. But the Maniax defense held Clement to two completed passes before knocking him out of the game. His replacement, Mike Crawley (who played at James Madison for former Memphis coach Rip Scherer) completed only three for a grand total of five completions for 62 yards. Vegas did not fare much better on the ground, rushing for only 97 yards.

But. But, but, but. The Maniax also gave up three fumbles and an interception, all which resulted in Vegas scores (two fumbles and the pass were run back for touchdowns). This gave Vegas 322 yards in Òmiscellaneous yards.Ó Due to Memphis’ inability to protect the ball, Las Vegas produced 481 total yards!

How’s that for first impressions?

The Maniax need to win Saturday against a San Francisco Demons team that also started hot, beating league favorite L.A. Extreme, before losing to Eastern Division 800-pound gorilla The Orlando Rage. The Demons feature the league’s top QB in Mike Pawlawski, who leads the XFL in completion percentages (67.7 %), and total yards (577).

The Maniax need to continue their defensive intensity. They need to continue their punishing ground game behind Rashaan Salaam, the XFL’s leading rusher (236 yards — 5.4 yards per carry). If Salaam can avoid his penchant for fumbling and continue his torrid running pace, he can live up to the Heisman hype that landed him a first-round draft choice in the NFL.

But the real need is for the Maniax to prove themselves to those fans who come to see their second game. Television coverage is important for the league to succeed, but this community has a big monkey on its back named professional football and it’s time to start fighting that monkey. To do that, Memphis needs a winner.

The Maniax didn’t prove themselves last week. Impressions last. Can the Maniax can shake their shakes and will Memphis fans come back, just once more, to root for a home football team. Just in the name of hope. Stay tuned.

Categories
News News Feature

CAUGHT IN THE WEB

Logan Young walks into the French Quarter Inn, locates the reporter he has agreed to talk to, and sits down.

“I just don’t know when this is all going to end,” he sighs. “I mean, it just keeps getting bigger and better.”

Better for newspapers and University of Tennessee football fans, maybe, but not better for Young. The University of Alabama booster and onetime owner of the Memphis Showboats is, you might say, the “usual suspect” in the alleged $200,000 payment to former Trezevant High School football coach Lynn Lang for sending lineman Albert Means to Alabama. Before that story broke in December, Young was fodder for Internet rumors about recruiting violations. Last fall the rumors made it into a book, Bragging Rights: A Season Inside the SEC, by Richard Ernsberger Jr., and Young’s name has been appearing regularly in newspaper, Internet, and broadcast accounts since then.

After months of denying those reports, Young and his attorney, Louis F. Allen, are considering a defamation lawsuit against Young’s nemesis, UT superfan Roy Adams, for comments made by Adams on the Internet site Gridscape.com.

Adams, who goes by the screen name “Tennstud,” is known for wearing orange blazers and a white coonskin cap at booster group meetings. As Ernsberger outlines in his book, Adams and Young used to be friends until their kidding took a nasty turn.

“I saw him at Folk’s Folly a few years ago and asked him what the deal was,” Young says. “He said he was just putting out what he heard on the street. Now I think it has gotten to where he thinks he is the self-appointed savior of high school recruiting in Memphis. Or at least Tennessee’s recruiting.

“I think Roy has become enamored of the Internet. We have been keeping a file for at least a year. The lawsuit was drawn up before this thing with Lang and Means. The Internet definitely stirred it up and keeps it going.”

Lawyers with experience handling defamation cases say the semi-anonymity of an Internet chat room is no protection against libel.

“Dissemination is the key,” says Jerry Mitchell. An e-mail from, say, one employee to another is private, but a defamatory comment on a Web site could bring legal action.

“Internet libel is a hot topic,” says S. Russell Headrick, who is currently defending ESPN in a lawsuit involving comments made on the air and on its Web site about a UT football player and academic tutor.

In some cases, attorneys have gone to webmasters to learn the identities behind screen names. While many of the postings on Gridscape.com are anonymous, Adams lists his real name, age, and biographical information in his “Tennstud” profile.

The references to Logan Young range from coy “suspicions” to flat-out accusations: that Young gave money and cars to Lang and Melrose High School football coach Tim Thompson; that Young laundered money at Tunica casinos; that former University of Memphis football coach Rip Scherer told Alabama athletic director Mal Moore about illegal recruiting in Memphis last spring. In Bragging Rights, Ernsberger includes a denial from Young but devotes several pages to the unsubstantiated allegations of Adams, buttressed by an unnamed source who says of Young, “Yeah, he’d do it.”

The story really took off after Lang’s former colleague, Milton Kirk, went public with his claim that Lang shopped Means for $200,000. Whatever the source of the accusations, Young denies giving cars or money to Thompson or Lang or to an intermediary.

“I didn’t give anybody any money and I just don’t believe it happened,” Young says. “I hate to say that about Kirk because he may think it happened, I don’t know. I just know I didn’t do it and I know that [former Alabama football recruiter] Ivy Williams didn’t know anything about it because I talked to Ivy when he was in Memphis. And I asked Ivy after I heard all this: ÔDid they ask you for any money?’ He said they didn’t. And Ivy told the NCAA that.”

Young says he met Lang for the first time last year after Bragging Rights came out.

“Louis Allen had both him [Lang] and Tim Thompson come to his office at separate times,” he says. “They both showed him a note on a car that they owned and what they paid monthly. I think Tim’s was two or three years old. And I think Lynn had bought his car in Dyersburg or somewhere, but he had a note and a very small down payment. I don’t think it’s hard to lease a nice car. I mean, a guy that makes $40,000 can lease a car.”

Young says he first met Thompson six or seven years ago at a Touchdown Club meeting. Asked if he had seen Thompson lately, he says, “Well, I have since last summer because he’s anxious for me to sue the book people.” He adds that Thompson never asked him for anything except summer jobs for players, which Young says he arranged through an Alabama fan in Germantown.

Young and Mal Moore have been friends for several years.

“Nice guy, really nice guy, and an honest guy,” says Young. “And to say that he knew what was going on … . Well, he got upset about it and called Rip Scherer. He said this guy on the Internet is saying that illegal things are going on and you told me about it. And Rip wrote him a letter and said that’s not true, and sent it to the SEC commissioner.”

Scherer confirmed to the Flyer that he wrote such a letter to the commissioner and copied Moore on it.

“Basically it said it has been reported that I had notified Mal Moore a while ago as to goings-on in Memphis, and I just told him that I indeed sat with Moore [at a banquet] but I never made that statement,” Scherer said.

Young says no investigators have talked to him.

“I don’t know who all is investigating,” he says. “I read that the FBI is. If somebody is crazy enough to give $200,000 to a coach to get a football player, I guess he’s got a tax problem. I don’t think it happened, and I would bet a lot of money that it didn’t happen. I never in my life heard anything like it.”

Investigators did ask Young’s former secretary about several matters, including whether he goes to Tunica casinos and where he bought his car. Young says he hasn’t been to Tunica in a year and a half and drives a Jaguar from Bluff City Jaguar.

The story has had its comic moments. During the Liberty Bowl game telecast, an announcer said Young was believed to be involved in illegal recruiting at Kentucky. Pepper Rodgers, the former Showboats coach, called Young to joke that he hadn’t realized he was a Kentucky booster.

“I said I didn’t either. So they came back later and ran the story twice but without my name. So obviously somebody must have said they got it mixed up.”

Young says he expects his lawsuit to be filed this week. Libel lawsuits, however, can be perilous to all parties. Young’s hero, legendary Alabama coach Bear Bryant, was involved in the most famous sports libel lawsuit of all time. In 1963, the Saturday Evening Post published a story that claimed Bryant and Georgia athletic director and former coach Wally Butts conspired to fix a game. In separate suits, Bryant and Butts charged that the story was libelous.

The book Fumble, by James Kirby, exposed numerous contradictions in Bryant’s statements. But the suit was to be tried in Birmingham, and the “Bear” reached a settlement with the Post. In the Butts lawsuit, depositions brought to light his drinking and extramarital affairs. He won at trial and again on appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, but his reputation was badly damaged. He was forced to resign as athletic director and never got back into the game.