Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Larry Finch (1951-2011)

The greatest Tiger of them all has left us. Larry Finch, the star of the 1973 NCAA tournament runners-up and for 11 years the head coach of his alma mater, died at the age of 60 at St. Francis Hospital. The last decade of Finch’s life was a battle. He suffered a series of strokes, beginning in 2001, and was wheelchair-bound by the time the 1973 team was honored at the Pyramid for the 30th anniversary of their run to the Final Four, where they fell to mighty UCLA.

Below is a column I wrote for Memphis magazine in March 2008. Hope it catches the right eye in the days ahead, when memories of Larry Finch will keep us strong as we endure his passing.

——-

Our Larry Legend

March Madness it’s called. The NCAA basketball tournament. With apologies to the Super Bowl, the three-week nationwide office-pool party that culminates with the Final Four (alas, in early April) is the most American of sporting events. What can be more Democratic than allowing an Ivy League school — or George Mason! — to compete for the same trophy that North Carolina, UCLA, and Kentucky have made their own?

With the Memphis Tigers among the top-ranked teams in the country, this may be the month we look back upon in reflecting on the greatest of so many great teams the U of M has suited up. But whether or not coach John Calipari’s charges cut down the nets in San Antonio on April 7th, it’s time to honor — again — the greatest Tiger there will ever be: Larry Finch.

Larry Finch (1951-2011)

  • Larry Finch (1951-2011)

For the few uninitiated Memphians — or perhaps those too young — here’s a brief refresher. After starring at Melrose High School, Finch rose to fame at what was then Memphis State University. Playing for coach Gene Bartow and alongside Orange Mound chum Ronnie Robinson, Finch led the Tigers to the 1973 Final Four, where the mighty UCLA Bruins and Bill Walton ended a dream season in the national championship game. Finch hung up his sneakers as the most prolific scorer (1,869 points) in school history (his mark has since been surpassed by three players). Thirteen years later, Finch was named head coach of the Tigers and, over 11 years, won more games (220) than any other coach in the program’s history. For a city that didn’t see major league sports until the NBA’s Grizzlies arrived in 2001, Larry Finch was the kind of sports star who attached his very face to the fortunes — win or lose — of his city. Think DiMaggio in New York. Unitas in Baltimore.

The Finch story isn’t all roses, though. In 2002, he suffered a massive stroke, one that has left him confined to a wheelchair, weakened in both body and spirit for almost six years now. When his 1973 team gathered at The Pyramid for a 30th anniversary celebration, Finch shed tears — arm raised triumphantly, though — from his wheelchair at center court. It was one of the saddest “happy” images I’ve ever witnessed.

The next ceremony I’d like to see Finch attend is the unveiling of a statue, one that would anchor the plaza outside FedExForum, where the Tigers have enjoyed their most recent rush to greatness. The team already practices in the Larry O. Finch Center on the university campus, and that’s a more than fitting tribute, but rather preaching to the converted, as Finch’s presence is felt in almost any building with a Tiger logo. The next step in celebrating the life and achievements of an athlete who made Memphians of all ages, colors, and creeds cheer their lungs out is to cast him in bronze, in his prime, the famous number-21 pulling up for a jump shot that shone almost as brightly as the shooter’s smile.

Who knows what the cost and logistics of commissioning such a piece would be? But I’m willing to bet the fund-raising maestros who keep Calipari in town might find some change in the couch to give FedExForum — and the city of Memphis — a crown jewel for what amounts to the center of the Mid-South basketball universe. And let’s do it now. Life is all too short.

Among my most treasured photos is a shot of myself with Coach Finch on Halloween night in 1992. The Tiger basketball team hosted fans for a teamwide autograph session at the Elma Roane Field House. Penny Hardaway was the most popular attraction, about to begin his junior (and final) season as a Tiger. The players each had a seat at long tables that surrounded the basketball court, fans standing in line with posters for each of their favorites to sign, maybe even personalize.

Larry Finch didn’t sit at a table. He wandered through the adoring crowd, shaking hands, sharing stories, listening to how very much Tiger fans loved him, and how this was the year the Memphis State Tigers would go all the way. I didn’t have a poster or pen in hand, but I had my camera. And Coach Finch was kind enough to pose with me: a 23-year-old aspiring journalist (and former basketball player, mind you) alongside a veritable civic institution. Merely a snapshot in time, but Larry Finch made me feel right at home.

I want to be the first to pose next to his statue.

Categories
Sing All Kinds We Recommend

MLK Movie “Memphis” in Trouble

It’s a couple days before the 43rd anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., and the reality of making a great King movie seems ever elusive.

Back in February we shared news from Deadline that Universal had given the go-ahead on a Paul Greengrass-helmed King movie called Memphis.

Well, never mind about that.

Deadline is reporting now that Universal has pulled out of producing the film. Memphis, which was to begin production this summer, is left looking for a new financier.

Universal says the decision is due to timing and concerns the film wouldn’t be ready for release by MLK weekend in 2012. Deadline wonders, though, if the real reason is objections from the King estate, which is working with the studio Dreamworks on a rival King biopic. That “authorized” film is written by Ronald Harwood (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, The Pianist, Cry, the Beloved Country). The King estate, Deadline says, “might go public with its displeasure over Greengrass’ script, which could have hurt the film’s theatrical prospects.”

Greengrass is looking for a new financial backer. Screen Junkies thinks the city of Memphis should chip in.

Categories
Daily Photo Special Sections

mid south cat fanciers

Categories
News

Godwin’s Last Big Bust Nets 106 Arrests

In what will likely be his last big news conference, Memphis Police Director Larry Godwin announced today that Operation Street Sweep XXXIV netted 106 arrests after a months-long undercover investigation into illegal narcotics sales. Bianca Phillips has the story.

Categories
News News Blog

Godwin’s Last Big Bust Nets 106 Arrests

Godwin and District Attorney Amy Weirich

  • Godwin and District Attorney Amy Weirich

In what will likely be his last big news conference, Memphis Police Director Larry Godwin announced today that Operation Street Sweep XXXIV netted 106 arrests after a months-long undercover investigation into illegal narcotics sales.

Fifty people were indicted for more than 160 offenses, including manufacture, delivery, and sale of a controlled substance to wit: crack cocaine, powder cocaine, ecstasy, Xanax, the pain killer Propoxyphene, and methamphetamine. Five of those indicted were known gang members from the Gangster Disciples and the Traveling Vice Lords.

Twenty-seven of the 50 people indicted were apprehended during the round-up yesterday, and 42 individuals were arrested on additional charges. Thirty-seven people were arrested for prostitution-related offenses.

The investigation, which ran from April 28th, 2010 to January 19th, 2011, also revealed two homes determined to be public nuisances. Petitions have been filed with the court to close down 698 Alabama and 1142 Margaret.

Godwin had these words to say about his last big operation before moving on to his position with the state Department of Safety and Homeland Security: “You always hate that something is your last, but I feel good for the citizens.”

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Will Call: Tips and tidbits for the theatrically inclined

Bates Brooks and Carla McDonald in Grey Gardens

  • Bates Brooks and Carla McDonald in Grey Gardens

Lots of good stuff happening this week, let’s get right to it…

Let me put this as simply as I can. August: Osage County closes this weekend at Playhouse on the Square and if you miss it you’ve missed the boat, the whole boat, and nothing but the boat. I’d blather on longer about it but it’s probably best to read the review. Also worth checking out: Grey Gardens, the musical, which is right across the street at Circuit Playhouse. Carla McDonald (little Edie) and the wonderful Bates Brooks (Big Edie)—too long absent from local stages—do extraordinary work as the famously fallen aristocrats.

Cabaret is also closing at Theatre Memphis, an event I will not mourn. I never expected to type that, but it’s so.

The Trial of One Shortsighted Black Woman vs Mammy Louise and Safreeta Mae is a mess technically. It’s poorly staged and the set looks like it might fall down. But the script flashes with brilliance and most of the character work is top notch. It’s at the Hattiloo.

Rhodes’ McCoy Theatre opens a Mid-20th Century take on Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night staged by director Nick Hutchison, a veteran of the Royal Shakespeare Company, and Shakespeare’s Globe. Could be a real treat and I’ll let you know more as soon as I can.

(UPDATE: Slight misunderstanding edition. Turns out it’s not a mid-20th Century take but a fusion of late 19th and early 20th-Century styles.)

Also opening this week: The Fantastiks at Germantown Community Theatre. I understand some liberties have been taken in the casting of this beloved musical comedy. Can’t wait to see how that works out.

Looking ahead to next week, Ballet Memphis opens Romeo & Juliet at Playhouse on the Square and I’ll share some fun video and commentary from an open rehearsal later this weekend. Until then, I’m off to the theater. Maybe I’ll see you at intermission.

Categories
News

Paying Up for News

With the New York Times charging for access online, John Branston discusses what media he’s willing to pay for and why.

Categories
Opinion

The Not-so Free Media

nytlogo.jpg

I signed up for the online New York Times this week, and I have a feeling it’s not the last time I’ll be paying for newspapers that I used to read for free.

The Times started charging this week. There are three payment plans. Mine costs $15 every four weeks, or $195 a year if I stay with it. You can read the Times online for free, but only at the rate of 20 stories per month. I probably read 5-10 stories and columns a day, seven days a week, so I’d be way over the limit.

As a fan and freelancer for the Times, I’m glad to pay them. Value for value. A few years ago I signed up for the $50 a year all-access online plan, but that one didn’t work and pretty soon the Times was free again, even Maureen Dowd’s column and other content that they tried to keep behind a pay wall.

This will make three newspapers that I pay for. I get home delivery of The Commercial Appeal seven days a week for $15 a month. For an insomniac, it is a relief. It arrives every morning, usually before 4 a.m., and Internet access is free. I also get the print edition of The Wall Street Journal at the office for $119.88 a year, including Internet access.

I like these national newspapers better than the aggregators such as the Huffington Post and The Daily Beast. The coverage is more complete and the business model supports more working journalists.

The Washington Post remains free. That could be a problem for the Times and the Journal because its coverage is nearly as complete and they have some of my favorite writers like Dana Milbank and Joel Achenbach and features like “Five Myths About . . .”

If the Post were to charge $15 every four weeks, like the Times, I would be paying $790 a year if I signed up. At that price, I would ditch at least one of the three national papers.

The Commercial Appeal, like most mid-size dailies, is free online. As a newsman and former employee, I would pay for it in just about any case, but I can see how they have limited pricing power. The rate I pay now is already $5.69 less than the quoted monthly rate on the website.

The only other papers I read more than 20 stories a week from online are the Detroit News and Detroit Free Press, in order to keep up with their pro sports teams and the University of Michigan football team. As long as there are two dailies, or almost-dailies in one city, I don’t think they can charge me for Internet access. But we will see.

Categories
Daily Photo Special Sections

Hampton Sides

Categories
News

Van Duren Is Serious

Songwriter Van Duren will perform his cult-fave debut album Are You Serious? on Saturday. Details in Local Beat.