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Opinion

Watching Sports Requires an Iron Butt

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Notes from a heavy sports weekend:

Time required to watch a professional tennis match in a major tournament: Four hours. Time required to watch a major-college or pro football game from start to finish: Four hours. Time to watch a football game, tailgate, and drive to and from: Eight hours.

Tennis first. The Novak Djokovic semifinal Saturday went five sets and tested the stamina of the fans as well as the players. Today’s U.S. Open final between Djokovic and Rafael Nadal looks like a potential four-hour affair because the players are evenly matched, they hang tough in long rallies, and they take their time when it is their serve. I preferred the Serena Williams match in the women’s final Sunday because it was best of three instead of best of five. It went the distance, and was over in about two and a half hours, including a close tiebreaker in the second set and some face time for lean-and-grey Bill Clinton who got the biggest celebrity ovation of the day. The second set was suspenseful because it was a potential decider with multiple match points. In a five-setter, the early sets are often just building blocks to the good stuff in the fourth or fifth sets — like the first three quarters of an NBA game. Walk the dog time, make a sandwich time, get a life time.

Now for football. A week ago I was in Nashville to visit a friend who went to the Vanderbilt-Ole Miss game. The game was a thriller, with hot action in the last few minutes, but all my friend could talk about was how long it took to get to that point: an 8:15 p.m. kickoff dictated by ESPN, a game crammed with television timeouts, and a conclusion well after midnight.

Four hour games are the norm. Super Bowls used to be completed in less time. I watched part of the Michigan-Notre Dame game at Jack Magoo’s sports bar Saturday. Another screen was showing other, lesser games at the same time, and I would swear there was twice as much action in the lesser games and twice as many commercials in the big game. What a pay day it was for Michigan and Notre Dame, with 115,000 people in the stands in Ann Arbor and a national television audience. And what a late night for fans who sat through the whole thing and had to drive home after it was over.

There was a very good crowd, by recent University of Memphis standards, at the Liberty Bowl Saturday for the opener against Duke. In fact, it seemed to overwhelm the parking lot attendants on Central Avenue and the concessions in the stadium, where at least one of them ran out of cold soft drinks at half time. You can see why Memphis football boosters keep giving it a go. The upside is considerable, and the infrastructure is already there — the big stadium, the jumbo scoreboard, the parking lots, the access streets. If there were 35,000 people there Saturday, that’s 25,000 more than most games drew the last few years, at roughly $50 a head for tickets, parking, and concessions including $7 beers. Lot of money changing hands. If Memphis ever uncovers another DeAngelo Williams . . .

It’s water under the bridge, but the stadium renovation mandated by the U.S. Department of Justice to comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) looks so unnecessary. ADA seating now basically encircles the stands at the middle level. Most in evidence within my view on the west sideline were, in order, empty spaces, fans in portable companion chairs, fans in walkers, and fans in wheelchairs. The DOJ, which strong-armed Memphis into compliance and expansion, should take a more scientific survey.

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News

“The Good Nurse”

Leonard Gill talks with the author of The Good Nurse, about a serial killer in hospital scrubs.

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News

Pirates and Cardinals and Reds. Oh My.

Frank Murtaugh assesses the topsy-turvy race in baseball’s National League Central division.

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From My Seat Sports

Playoff Drama in the NL Central

On a weekend saturated with football — 44,000 fans at the Liberty Bowl, home wins for every Mid-South SEC team, and 11 Manning touchdown passes — the St. Louis Cardinals won their biggest series of the season, sweeping the Pittsburgh Pirates at Busch Stadium to leapfrog the Bucs and climb back into first place in the three-team dogfight that is the National League Central Division. A few observations as the last three weeks of baseball’s regular season unfold:

• The playoff chase in the National League is thoroughly uninteresting — we’ve known the five teams that will qualify since the first week in August — until you look at the NL Central standings, where two games in the loss column separate the Cardinals, Pirates, and Cincinnati Reds. (The Reds are eight games up on the next team in the wild-card standings, the Washington Nationals.)

Andrew McCutcheon: MVP?

This isn’t exactly what Bud Selig had in mind when he added a second wild-card for the 2012 season — 10 teams planning for the 2014 season on Labor Day. But the three-team race for the Central Division crown is compelling, as no team wants any part of the win-or-go-home wild-card game (a game won last year by the Cardinals in Atlanta). The team that survives these last three weeks will have the luxury of actually establishing a pitching rotation for a five game series … and without spending its ace on the wild-card affair. The team with the most to gain by winning the division? Pittsburgh. Francisco Liriano has had the kind of season that can dominate a five-game series (if he’s needed for two starts). After Liriano, the quality of the Pirates’ rotation drops precipitously.

• The Cardinals essentially held serve on their recent 13-game stretch against the Pirates and Reds (going 7-6), and it’s no secret as to how they’ve righted a ship that looked to be listing last week in Cincinnati. Last Friday, Joe Kelly started on the mound for St. Louis and held the Pirates to a single run in six innings. Adam Wainwright followed Saturday with seven shutout innings (after looking dreadful in his last two starts against the Reds), then rookie Michael Wacha (5-3 for Memphis this season) hurled seven shutout innings Sunday. With Lance Lynn spiraling downward (five losses since his last win on August 4th) and rookie Shelby Miller struggling for consistency, the trio that baffled Pittsburgh may prove to be keys to any Cardinal postseason presence.

• Pirate centerfielder Andrew McCutchen (.322 batting average, 19 homers, 27 stolen bases) would likely get my MVP vote if the season ended today. And Cardinal catcher Yadier Molina (.320, 39 doubles, defensive presence extraordinaire) is as valuable to his team’s cause as any other player in the game. But Cardinal second baseman Matt Carpenter should get some votes. Just two years after manning third base for the Memphis Redbirds, Carpenter has taken hold of a premium defensive position in St. Louis, made himself one of the best leadoff batters in the game (.386 OBP with a league-leading 112 runs and 174 hits), and is two doubles away from reaching a plateau — 50 — that only four Cardinals have reached. Those four players are either in the Hall of Fame (Stan Musial, Enos Slaughter, and Ducky Medwick) or on their way (Albert Pujols).

• In his win Saturday night, Wainwright moved past Hall of Famer Dizzy Dean into second place on the Cardinals’ all-time strikeout list. That’s the good news for the 32-year-old righty, now with 1,103 strikeouts on his baseball card. The bad news for Waino? He remains 2,014 punch-outs behind the Cardinal record holder, Hall of Famer Bob Gibson.

• Among the contending teams in the Central, the Cardinals have the most favorable remaining schedule, with 12 home games (out of 19) and none against the Pirates and Reds, while Pittsburgh and Cincinnati will play each other six more times before the season concludes (September 20-22 in Pittsburgh and September 27-29 in Cincinnati). Looking for a spoiler? Milwaukee will square off with the Cardinals six times, starting Tuesday night at Busch Stadium.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

A C’s Advice to State Dems on “Backin’ Up and Gettin’ Ready”

Mayor A C Wharton at state Democrats Jackson Day Dinner

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  • Mayor A C Wharton at state Democrats’ Jackson Day Dinner

NASHVILLE –In the course of this year’s well-attended and unexpectedly enthusiastic annual Jackson Day Dinner Saturday night in Nashville, Memphis’ A C Wharton, one of four big-city Democratic mayors who spoke to party members from the dais, took an unusual tack by way of encouraging the rank-and-file Democrats who made up his audience.

Suggesting that some of the party’s recent lean years at the polls should be regarded merely as instances of of the Democratic Party’s “backing up” in preparation for great leaps forward. the mayor told the crowd at the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum this story, which his listeners rewarded with rapt attention and appreciative laughter:

“It reminds me of what happened when I was growing up in Lebanon. My daddy always said, ‘When you see an animal in trouble somewhere, suffering, go and help the animal’….I was walking home one day,and there was this billygoat up inside a fence…He had stuck his head out of the wire, which was easy to do since his horns went backwards, but guess what? Once he got it there he was hooked.

“So I did what my daddy said. He said,’If you see an animal in trouble, go and help the animal.’ So I go up and I commence to trying to help the old billy goat….He was backing up. …He was gettin’ ready, all right. About the time I got real close to helping him is when he let it all out. And , of course, I was standing about this tall and you remember where his head was, and you can imagine where he hit me!

“Ruby tells me I got a bunch of boys at home, but, after where that billy goat hit me, I don’t know whether that’s true or not…..[But] that’s what we’re getting ready to do. Y’all remember that old billygoat. We’ve been backing up, but we’re gettin’ ready!…”

(More stories and reports from the Jackson Day weekend will appear online and in this week’s Flyer issue on the stands.)

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News

Buffalo Chicken Pizza

Stacey Greenberg delves into the spicy hot world of Memphis buffalo chicken pizza.

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Blurb Books

Charles Cullen: A Hire Too Good To Be True

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Charles Edmund Cullen was, in many ways, a good nurse. Good at working extra shifts and on holidays without complaint, good at lending a hand in the ICU or CCU, good at being first on the scene during an emergency, and good at wrapping up the bodies of the patients who happened to die on his shift. But Cullen could have been the very reason those patients died — through the giving of unprescribed medication or failure to administer prescribed medication. Some estimates put the number of patients Cullen might have killed in the hundreds over the course of 16 years in nine hospitals and one nursing home, which would make Charles Cullen damn good at being the most prolific serial killer in U.S. history. Now, he’s in prison — for good.

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Experts and investigators can’t be sure of the number of those killed, because the solid evidence linking Cullen to the deaths of so many is hard to come by. Journalist Charles Graeber‘s study of Charles Cullen, in The Good Nurse: A True Story of Medicine, Madness, and Murder (Twelve/Grand Central Publishing), can’t be sure of the number either. But Graeber has done his homework (six years’ worth of research and interviews, including with Cullen), and he’s turned all that work into a bona-fide page-turner. Which explains why The Good Nurse was a best-seller when it appeared this past April and why 60 Minutes covered Cullen the same month. Katie Couric followed with a televised interview with some of the story’s principal players in July. And now Memphians have a chance to meet Charles Graeber when he’s in town to discuss and sign The Good Nurse at The Booksellers at Laurelwood on Thursday, September 12th, at 6 p.m.

Cullen told detectives of 40 “incidents” in a seven-hour statement inside an interrogation room in late 2003. He didn’t use the word “kill.” And they weren’t — mercy killings, if that’s what you’re thinking. It may even be a mistake to label the official statement Cullen made a “confession.” More like a “story” that isn’t over yet. Because Charles Cullen cut a deal with prosecutors, who agreed to remove the death penalty if he cooperated in further investigations.

How does a man go from being “a patient advocate … organized, very giving of his time, so much to offer, very bright, witty & intelligent” (as one supervisor called Cullen) to being the probable cause in the mysterious deaths of so many?

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Good question and perhaps ultimately unanswerable. But Graeber (left) methodically mines Cullen’s unstable life history and murderous career, including Cullen’s first (of 20) failed suicide attempts beginning when he was 9 years old. (He mixed the contents of a chemistry set into a glass of milk and ended up only making himself sick.) His history of personal problems, including charges of stalking, hardly stopped there, however. And despite the initial glowing employment reviews he’d receive — “a gift from the scheduling gods, a hire almost too good to be true” — there was something plainly “off” about Cullen’s work habits, which led to his being repeatedly issued disciplinary citations and dismissed from his every assignment in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. How Cullen was able to pass from one assignment to the next is itself a frightening record of hospital hiring practices. Equally frightening but not surprising: the lengths to which hospital administrators will go to avoid adverse publicity and lawsuits.

Graeber knows his way around a hospital, including its nursing stations. Growing up, he often accompanied his physician father on his rounds, and he’s a former medical student himself. He can write of CernerPowerCharts (a mobile computer database nurses use to track patient care) and the pill-dispensing Pyxis machine — key sources for tracking Cullen’s hidden nursing activity — without losing the reader in the process. When The Good Nurse turns to the work of New Jersey detectives Danny Baldwin and Tim Braun, the book doesn’t bog down in police procedures. And when Amy Loughren, a nurse who befriended Cullen and acted as his confidante, leads to his undoing, this story takes on the ingredients of suspense thriller. But slow down and do not overlook the book’s end notes. They contain vital information. And do admire Graeber’s insights into one man’s madness.

Why did Charles Cullen kill? As Graeber writes:

“His intervention on behalf of his patients was a compulsion that had little to do with the patients themselves; often, in fact, he failed to notice the patients at all, only their outcomes. Each spasm of control offered [Cullen] a period of relief and afterglow.”

And:

“Access to the vulnerable allowed [Cullen] to manifest death without dying. He’d learned to kill himself by proxy.” •

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News

Tigers Fall to Duke 28-14

Frank Murtaugh reports on the Memphis Tigers’ opening game loss to Duke.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Duke 28, Tigers 14

The American Athletic Conference logos on the field were new. The Tiger stripes in the end zone — blue and black — were new. And the home team’s chrome helmets were as new as they were shiny. Alas, this was a Memphis Tiger football season opener, and the final score was not new. The Duke Blue Devils scored a pair of touchdowns inside the game’s final ten minutes to break a tie and give the Tiger program its ninth consecutive opening-game loss. A crowd of 44,237 at the Liberty Bowl — the largest for a Tiger game since the 2009 opener — watched a Memphis team much improved from the one that fell at Duke last season (38-14) but not quite ready to finish off a Blue Devil team (now 2-0) growing under coach David Cutcliffe.

Tevin Jones hauls one in.

“I’m not happy,” said Tiger coach Justin Fuente after the game. “Just playing a team well — and losing — is not what we’re shooting for. But I’m not frustrated either. That’s the wrong word. There are a lot of teaching points we have to make. A lot of growing up we have to do. As a program, we have to learn how to finish against a good team.”

Duke opened the scoring early when quarterback Anthony Boone pranced into the end zone from 23 yards just 3:15 after the opening kickoff. (Memphis went three-and-out on the opening possession of the game.) Tiger punter Tom Hornsey “flipped the field,” as they say, by drilling a 79-yard punt — the second longest in the history of Memphis football — after another three-and-out. Senior tailback Brandon Hayes appeared to score on a 30-yard touchdown that would have tied the game late in the first quarter, only to be called for stepping out of bounds (untouched) at the 18-yard-line. The Tigers failed to convert on fourth-and-one and trailed 7-0 after the first period.

Junior cornerback Bobby McCain intercepted a deep Boone pass and returned it 75 yards for a touchdown on the first play of the second quarter to tie the game at 7. Boone was forced to leave the game midway through the second quarter with what was described as “an upper-body injury.” His replacement, Brandon Connette, proved integral to the Duke attack, completing 14 of 21 passes for 198 yards and two touchdowns.

Duke regained the lead on an 8-yard run by Juwan Thompson just over five minutes into the second half. With the Tigers at the Duke 24 early in the fourth quarter, freshman quarterback Paxton Lynch fumbled on fourth-and-short, returning the ball to the Blue Devils with the score still 14-7. Lynch responded on the next Memphis possession, though, completing a 45-yard pass to sophomore wideout Tevin Jones for the Tigers’ biggest offensive strike of the day. Freshman Sam Craft followed the Jones reception with a 14-yard run around left end after a double reverse, then senior tailback Jai Steib carried the ball up the middle for an 11-yard touchdown that tied the game at 14 with 11:38 to play.

Connette connected with junior Jamison Crowder for deep passes on each of the next two Duke possessions, both leading to touchdowns: a 22-yard reception by Issac Blakeney and a 12-yard reception by Brandon Braxton.

“Against good teams, you can’t make little mistakes,” said Fuente. The coach seemed generally pleased by the play of Lynch in his first college game, but stressed the importance of protecting the football, especially on short yardage downs, plays he said “you have to make.” Lynch completed 14 of 24 passes for 148 yards. Lynch acknowledged some nerves early in the game, noting it was the largest crowd he’d ever played before. But he added that he felt comfortable and in command as the game developed.

Paxton Lynch on the move.

“I want to play perfect,” said the Florida native, who redshirted last season behind Jacob Karam. “But I didn’t, so I don’t think I played well.”

As they did a year ago, the Blue Devils ran considerably more plays than the Tigers (82 to 57) and won despite being sloppy with the ball (three turnovers). The Memphis ground game wasn’t strong enough to sustain drives (89 yards on 33 carries). Duke converted 10 of 18 plays on third down, while the Tigers were but two for 13.

In addition to his interception, McCain recovered a fumble to lead the Tiger defense. Junior end Martin Ifedi added two sacks and three tackles for lost yardage.

Crowder stood out among the Blue Devils, catching 11 passes for 140 yards.

The Tigers play their first road game of the season next week in Murfreesboro, where they’ll face a Middle Tennessee team that’s won four of the last five meetings between the schools.

The lasting impression from today’s loss may be that crowd, a swollen mass of blue willing to sit in 93-degree heat at kickoff to cheer a team coming off a 4-8 season. “I want to thank everyone for coming out,” said Fuente. “Keep coming out, because we’re going to get better.”

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News

Ain’t Them Bodies Saints

Addison Engelkind says filmmaker David Lowery is one to watch, and so is his latest film, Ain’t Them Bodies Saints.