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BBHS Hits it Big

The Diocese of Memphis yesterday announced an anonymous donation of $1 million to Bishop Byrne High School.

The donation, according to Dr. Mary McDonald, Superintendent of Catholic Schools, comes in response to a feature article in The Memphis Flyer in its October 26-November 1 issue. The article, titled “To Save a School: Bishop Byrne High School Takes a Stand,” covered the 33 year-old institution’s recent decline in enrollment, subsequent debt, and efforts to rebuild and stabilize itself in the Whitehaven area.

The donation will create a permanent endowment for the school to support scholarships and financial assistance. In addition, the school is using this donation to challenge other members of the community to take part of its newly established annual giving fund, which has a goal of an additional $50 thousand.

Says Bishop Byrne principal Albert Langston, Jr. “God’s mighty hand is guiding the destiny of Bishop Byrne. He has sent an angel of mercy to ensure our continued existence.”

The Most Reverend Terry Steib, S.V.D., Bishop of the Diocese of Memphis, agrees. “Our commitment to making Catholic education available in the under-served areas of our diocese has always remained a priority for us. It is a blessing to us that others see the sincerity of our commitment and want to help make a difference for the children. These students [at Bishop Byrne] now share in the hope of being future leaders.”

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AIDS Group Holds Fund-Raiser

To improve their services and provide clients with needed items, Loving Arms will host a live and silent auction Saturday, November 19th, from 6 to 10 p.m. in Memphis Botanic Garden’s Hardin Hall. The nonprofit organization will auction off donated items, including local and national art pieces, gift certificates, gift packages, jewelry from local jewelers, and other gifts for the Christmas holiday.

“We are part of the Memphis HIV Family Care Network, which is a network of agencies in the city that serves people with HIV, but our focus is on women and children,” says Shelia Tankersley, founder of Loving Arms. “I’ve seen our client base go from about 25 women to 186 women. We are serving over 500 children who are infected and affected by HIV. We basically started out doing transportation and now we are doing transportation, support groups, holistic health, massage therapy, tutoring and cooking classes.”

Tankersley, also the organization’s executive director, started Loving Arms in 1991 while on a spiritual search.

“I had raised [four children] alone and when they were all grown, I was at a place in my life that I knew there was something I was suppose to do. So I just meditated and asked for guidance.”

Tankersley saw a need for a program that concentrated on assisting women and children in the Memphis area. Starting out of her home, Tankersley primarily provided clients with transportation to various clinics, hospitals, and support groups. As more clients were referred by hospitals like St. Jude and LeBonheur, Tankersley quit her full-time job and lived on her savings the following year. A year later, in 1996, she was able to write a grant for her salary.

In 1998, Loving Arms held its first live and silent auction. The proceeds enabled them to move into their current offices at 1233 Peabody in Midtown.

Yvonne Wooten, the agency’s social service coordinator for the past TK years, started out as a volunteer with Loving Arms. She says the experience has been rewarding.

“I knew that what [Shelia] stood for, I agreed with it,” she says. “It’s what we are all here on this Earth for, our purpose to fill in and help out. There isn’t another organization in the city that is helping women and children in this capacity”

Currently working with two van drivers and four staff members, the organization relies heavily on volunteers.

“HIV is not a real popular area,” says Tankersley. “Lots of times it really takes people who are committed in that area. My experience has been, with my volunteers, people feel called to do it.”

Volunteers tutor children after school, clean inside and outside the center, and participate in recreational outings and holiday parties. They also watch children when the mother is not available or just spend time interacting with clients.

The agency also depends heavily on contributions.

“We get donations from Johnson & Johnson and CCI and some other companies, but we always need more,” Tankserley says. “Our clients are on food stamps, so items that aren’t covered by food stamps are an added expense for them. We provide diapers to the babies Ñ baby oil, baby lotion, powder. When our newborns come home, we provide them with new baby beds. We really try to meet the needs that no one else in the community is meeting.”

She says that Loving Arms concentrates on improving the lives of the women who who seek their aid.

“One thing I found out early on, in order to meet the needs of the children, you have to serve the mother,” says Tankersley. “For the child to benefit, it means teaching and empowering the women. . . . Our program is very focused on providing services that allow the women to have a healthy balanced body, mind and spirit.”

“I would like for us to be able to expand our facility, to have a larger facility because our client load is growing so much,” she continues. “We’re growing fast and we’ve got a big place here, but sometimes I feel like we’re going to have to have a bigger place.”

Wooten says that Loving Arms events benefit everyone. The group not only provides services to women, but the community also gets the opportunity to participate in something positive.

“Once I met those kids, those babies and those moms, I felt like it could have been me,” she says. “I put myself in their place. I could have been me, or it could have been my daughter, or it could have been my son or one of my relatives. So if I help them, why can’t I help somebody else?”

“We have women attending college, some of our kids are really excelling in school, and we have women who have purchased houses,” she adds. “The word gets passed around that Loving Arms is a great agency and they do care about you and they will help you. Once you get involved with the agency, we take you on as part of the family.”

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Changing the Riverfront for Good

According to John Barry’s The Rising Tide, The Mississippi River is “20 percent larger than China’s Yellow River [and] fifteen times that of Europe’s Rhine.” These numbers make it easy to see that taming such a beast is “a mighty task”

Historically, Memphis has had little large-scale success in co-habituating the River and City, settling instead for pockets of interest in projects like Mud Island, The Pyramid, and Tom Lee Park.

While few argue with the value of these attractions to the city, no real connection between them exists. The effect is a hodge-podge of attractions which do not encourage pedestrian cross-traffic.

That’s something that Benny Lendermon, president of the Riverfront Development Corporation (RDC), wants to change. The RDC’s goal is to bring together the various elements of the river in such a way that increases use of downtown facilities and promotes a better image for Memphis.

All this is easier said than done. Even if Memphis had an unlimited budget (which it does not), and even if the RDC could please everyone (which it probably will not), this would be a formidable undertaking. As it stands, Lendermon and the RDC are charged with changing the course of history for an entire city in a way that is affordable and popular.

Such a task requires planning, says Lendermon, which requires gathering input from Memphians. “If you do the best, you’re doing what Memphis wants. What we don’t want are a number of designers doing only what they want.”

Lendermon, the RDC, and the consultant groups Cooper-Robertson & Partners, Civitas, Hamilton Rabinovitz & Alschuler, and PDR Engineers have been listening to citizens via Internet message boards and town meetings.

The result so far is the formulation of ten design principles, as set forth in a memo by Cooper-Robertson & Partners. Each principle outlines general goals for the project. For example, the first principle is called, “The Riverfront,” a plan to “create a continuous, publicly accessible Riverfront. The Riverfront design will explore three components: a linked system of parks, a ‘Riverside Drive,’ and connections back to the City.”

The latter translates into plans for extending Beale Street, Poplar Avenue, Union Avenue, North Parkway, and Chelsea Street down to the river. The improvements are geared to better connect Memphis with its riverfront and to link the area neighborhoods (i.e. South Pickering, Pinch District, and Manassas) with amenities such as grocery stores and entertainment options.

Lendermon says that these streets need to reach the river so that people can better access the waterfront. Says Lendermon, “Poplar Avenue is our ‘Peachtree’ (Atlanta’s main thoroughfare) and it doesn’t get to the river.” In addition, there is an ambitious proposal to link Riverside Drive to Front Street and to a loop around Mud Island, so that Riverside would become a recursive element instead of ending at an on-ramp to the I-40 bridge.

By connecting neighborhoods and amenities, Lendermon hopes to encourage more people to live downtown, though he notes the real-estate business is already booming. “Downtown is going to change because of residential and retail growth. It’s incredible.”

According to Lendermon, other big changes can happen downtown. “When you redo Mud Island [for example], it’s going to be a significant investment.” The money for these projects is coming from a number of different sources: $8 million from the state, $3 million from the federal government, and the rest from the city.

Lendermon believes that Mud Island will eventually become a focal point for downtown activity. He envisions a multi-use park and gathering place at the Island’s southern tip, while the rest of the Island might be converted into retail space, hotels, or a nature preserve with bike and walking trails. Or the final result could be a combination of these things. “You need these types of mixed-use structures,” Lendermon says.

Lendermon says that the RDC must be careful to balance the use of space with market need. “Does that mean we’re going to run out of space?” He asks. “No, we have a long way to go. [However] we have to see what the market will bear.”

Memphis has long suffered a disconnected riverfront. The city has never fully capitalized on the natural resources and beauty inherent to the area. Bringing together two hundred years of developments into one coherent plan is not something that the city should expect one group to accomplish in a short amount of time. Still, the RDC seems off to a smart beginning, one which could enhance the area for generations to come.

(You can write Chris Przybyszewski at chris@memphisflyer.com)

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Wrestling Ring Announcer Publishes Book

Gary Michael Cappetta relates over 21 years of experience in the world of professional wrestling in his new book, Bodyslams! The book is a personal account of Cappetta’s experience in and out of the ring as one of wrestling’s more important in-ring announcers. Cappetta has worked in both the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) and World Championship Wrestling (WCW).

Cappetta sheds light into the mysteriously private world of professional wrestlers that he describes as “a game of deception” in which performers regularly take advantage of each other, promoters ruthlessly lie and cheat to maintain power, and where the ultimate “con” has nothing to do with what goes on inside the ring.

Much of the book relates Cappetta’s experiences traveling with the wrestlers. In one story, Cappetta tells of traveling with a young Mark Calloway, who WWF fans know as the Undertaker. According to Cappetta, Calloway met up with a fellow wrestler who had earlier swindled the younger athlete by running out on a wrestling school contract with Calloway, leaving the future wrestling star with a great deal of debt. Though Calloway never personally exacted revenge, the rogue wrestler that was Calloway’s target died of an overdose 2 years later. Cappetta says that the Calloway story is a good example of how “some of the wrestlers feed on the younger guys.”

In addition to Cappetta’s experiences with the wrestlers, the book describes Cappetta’s own dealings with the television executives who hold a power over the performers. In one instance, Cappetta recounts his falling out with WCW due to the shenanigans of one Eric Bishchoff, then executive vice-president of Turner broadcasting, directly in charge of wrestling operations.

According to Cappetta, Bishchoff repeatedly brushed off Cappetta’s interest in renewing his contract with WCW and even forced Cappetta into an agreement where Cappetta would work with WCW, without a contract. However, Cappetta decided to buck the entire system and walked out on WCW, and the wrestling world.

However, Cappetta is not bitter about his experiences. About Bodyslams!, he says, “It’s my desire that when the public reads Bodyslams! they will think they have read an honest, even account of an industry twisted by personal gain.” He goes on to say, “There are a lot of people I praise.”

Cappetta is currently working on a second book, this one about a fictional wrestler’s rise to the top and eventual fall.

Bodyslams! is available by calling 1-800-BODYSLAMS or through the book’s website, www.bodyslams.com.

(You can write Chris Przybyszewski at chris@memphisflyer.com)

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Maniax Executive Talks Football

Walking into the Memphis Maniax main office is like walking into an abandoned building. However, the squatters here wear suits and work for juggernaut media companies. The only sign that suggests that they work for the XFL are two helmets placed together near the wall. The sleek blue-green seems out of place with a facility that doesn’t even have phone lines completely installed.

It is not enough to say that Memphis’ newest sporting franchise has yet to put on the finishing touches. It would hardly be adequate to say that they have even moved in. Fold-out chairs replace desk chairs, fold-out tables replace desks. The old Armory building, snugged between the Children’s museum and Liberty Bowl Stadium on Southern (and formerly home to both the USFL Showboats and Mad Dogs of the CFL) doesn’t seem a likely focal point for Maniax operations.

But this is just the beginning of a long burrowing-in process, and all the key components are there to make the Maniax big in Memphis. One reason is the explicit support of both NBC and the WWF and the promise of ample national television coverage rife with fireworks, Vaughneresque spectacles, and other forms of sports-entertainment. Another reason is the personnel already on board with the team, such as director of player personnel Steve Ortmayer. He is directly responsible for all transactions concerning players and their contracts.

This is nothing new to the 25-year NFL veteran who has two world championship rings (from his days with the Oakland/L.A. Raiders). Ortmayer has also worked in key positions for the San Diego Chargers and the L.A. Rams and oversaw the transition of the Rams to St. Louis. He is credited with a big role in that organization’s recent Super Bowl success.

His goal is to put together an XFL championship team. Ortmayer says that two factors brought him over from the NFL. “I was contacted by NBC,” he says. “They told me that I should look [at the new league]” The partnership with the media giant added a great deal of credibility to the XFL, according to Ortmayer.

But he wasn’t convinced until Steve Ehrhart, GM of the Maniax and a good friend of Ortmayer’s, gave him a call. Ortmayer recalls, “Steve pushed me over. He added a lot of credibility. There were questions that people had about [the XFL’s] connection with the WWF . . . but Vince McMahon wants a credible football league.”

Ortmayer goes on to say that the XFL’s connections with the WWF are a positive for him. “The WWF is the most successful and brightest promotional machine in sports today.”

Ortmayer believes that the XFL will bring back a more traditional form of football — one that will also benefit families. He says, “The NFL, in its growth and direction over the past 10 years, has become very corporate. There’s a lot of emphasis on things that have taken blue-collar family of four out of the game.” According to Ortmayer, the XFL will concentrate on bringing that family back. He says, “We want to create some civic pride in this team so that we won’t have to take a back-seat to [the Tennessee Titans] in Nashville. We have to make it happen.”

In a city noted for its poverty, Ortmayer believes that ticket price is a key factor in a community’s involvement with a team. “We’re making it very affordable to families.” According to recent ticket information, XFL tickets will be priced from $20 to $40 a game, a far cry from NFL ticket prices.

In addition, Ortmayer would like for the Maniax to become a contributing member of the Memphis community.

“We want to create a fan-base from the local city,” instead of generating support through corporate interests. In addition, the team is looking into a number of community-related activities such as supporting schools and local groups. Ortmayer says, “In conjunction to making this a family friendly event, we want to make this a community friendly organization … help community schools and organizations.”

It will be a better product on the field, at least in terms of rules. “What the XFL has done is borrow rules from college, professional, arena, and Canadian football. We’re going to make the game more exciting,” he says. Though Ortmayer doesn’t think the XFL will feature anything “exotic like the Canadian and arena leagues,” there will be some key differences from the type of football that most Mid-Southerners see in Nashville or in the SEC.

The XFL will feature “live” kicks. In the new league, once a ball is kicked, either team is able to chase it down, pick it up, and run. Fair catches will not be allowed either. This should elevate special-teams to a more important place.

Three changes on offense should spice things up. First, receivers only need one foot in bounds for the catch to be legal. This will increase the number of receptions and put more pressure on the defensive backs.

Second, quarterbacks will be treated more like regular players on the field. In the NFL, QB’s are allowed to slide untouched after they cross the line of scrimmage. In the XFL, defenses will be able to tackle the QB no matter where he is.

Finally, the XFL will offer a variation of an NFL rule that does not allow forward movement by players in the backfield, prior to the snap. In the XFL, one player will be allowed forward motion, creating more offensive opportunities for teams and again putting more pressure on defenses who will now have to cope with a receiver who has an extra step on them.

Ortmayer believes that all these factors will make the XFL “The Game” in Memphis, to borrow from one of the WWF’s super-stars. But he also believes that the XFL will add a significant facet to professional football on the whole. Ortmayer expects the new league will give unprecedented choices for rookies and veteran alike. The XFL will pay the second most lucrative salaries in football, with salaries averaging $60,000 to $70,000.

Giving this edge, Ortmayer is confident of the league will be able to build a good base of talent. Ortmayer will focus on local talent in the first year. Each XFL team has territorial rights for the recruitment of players and the Maniax can draw from alumni of such programs as the University of Memphis, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, and Tennessee.

Starting next year, Ortmayer hopes to draw players from the NFL draft as well. He reasons that the XFL will be an equivalent for the players who would spend most of their time after the end of the college season in draft camps displaying their wares for free. The XFL will give these same players a football team ready to take them a month after the end of the college season, pay them to play, and give them nationally-televised coverage.

The Maniax exec also believes that the XFL will allow those players who have been buried in depth charts or have been released because of NFL salary cap restrictions, to come to their full potential with the new league.

“NFL football people, the coaches, the players, the GM’s, seem to be very supportive of this league,” he says. The corporate offices have been less receptive. “They want to protect their franchise,” he says, though he says that the only competition will be in “contractual restraints” coming from the NFL side. “The XFL is not going to prevent any player from playing in the NFL. We’re going to allow players to play football.”

The Maniax begin the season at Birmingham on February 4th. On Monday, October 16th, the Maniax will unveil the team’s uniforms at the Fox and Hound on Sanderlin. The party starts at 5:30 p.m.

(You can write Chris Przybyszewski at chris@memphisflyer.com)

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Riverfront Website Eliciting Response

The Riverfront Development Corporation (RDC) has a website (http://www.memphisriverfront.com/) that features “pollin’ on the River,” an interactive newsboard that allows visitors to make their voices heard in matters relating to the development of Memphis’ “Big Muddy” western border. Mayor Willie Herenton entrusted the RDC to develop the riverfront with the help of both professional consultants, namely Cooper-Robertson & Partners of New York and Civitas, Inc. of Denver, as well as Memphis citizens.

While the RDC expects the entire analysis for the river to take roughly nine months, the non-profit organization says that the consulting firms will complete the first stage of the river plan by Oct. 19th.

The message board is set up into eight sections, each addressing a specific area on the riverfront. For example, one popular section is the “Mud Island River Park” newsgroup. Visitors are asked to answer questions like “What is special to you about Mud Island?”; “How do you feel about being at Mud Island after dark?”; and “Would you show Mud Island to an out-of-town visitor?”

However, controversy can also be a part of the discussion. Recently, some visitors have expressed concern over the RDC’s decision to work on the cobblestones between Tom Lee Park and Confederate Park. These decisions came before the input from citizens was made possible through the website and comes well in advance of the consultant companies’ date of completion of the first stage of the river plan.

However, Benny Lendermon, President of the RDC, stresses that such measures will not affect the overall scope of the river project. On the website, he posts, “Coopers and Robertson felt the project would provide immediate benefit and be appropriate with any conceivable future plans they might develop.”

The forum also allows some less-serious discussion as well. Recently, there was a suggestion that the famous Memphis bridge with its tell-tale ‘M’ should be lit up in more impressive colors such as red and green or blue. Lendermon’s response was, to say the least, interesting.

According to Lendermon, red and green lights are used by the Coast Guard as navigation lights and are thus prohibited. Blue bridge lights are prohibited by the FAA because landing strips at airports use blue for run-way lights. Lendermon quips, “Just think, a 747 landing on the Memphis Bridge.”

(You can write Chris Przybyszewski at chris@memphisflyer.com

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Maniax Name New Coach

Memphis’ XFL team, the Maniax, today announced its new head coach — Kippy Brown, former University of Memphis quarterback (1975-1977).

Memphians may remember Brown’s role in the Tigers’ victory at 6th ranked Auburn in 1975. After graduation, Brown coached running backs and receivers at his alma mater until 1980. He then coached for Louisville (1982), the University of Tennessee (1983-89, 1993-94), and joined the NFL as an assistant coach for the Jets (1990-92), Buccaneers (1995), Dolphins (1996-1999), and Green Bay Packers (2000).

According to Maniax general manager Steve Ehrhart, one of the best recommendations came from NFL future hall-of-famer Dan Marino, who was under Brown’s direction as Miami’s offensive coordinator from 1998-1999. In fact, sources close to the situation say Brown served as the go-between in the quarterback’s stormy relationship with former Dolphin coach Jimmy Johnson.

“It is unbelievable to see my career come full-circle — from when I was a player in Memphis 28 years ago, now having the honor of being the head coach of the Memphis team in this exciting new league with such a great future,” Brown said.

Since Memphis has territorial rights to the University of Memphis and Tennessee programs, Brown’s ties to both were seen as particularly important. Brown will officially join the team as soon as his current commitment to the Green Bay Packers, where he is the running backs coach, is complete.

(You can write Chris at chris@memphisflyer.com)

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University of Memphis Loses Opener

It was deja vu Saturday for the University of Memphis in front of 34,113 at the Liberty Bowl. For the sixth time under head coach Rip Scherer, the Tigers lost its season opener. For the sixth time a Scherer-coached Memphis team lost to Jackie Sherrill’s Mississippi State Bulldogs. And for the second straight year, Memphis failed to score a touchdown in the season opener. Mississippi State scored 10 first half points and added a late touchdown to win the season opener for both teams 17-3.

The first half went pretty much as expected, with neither team able to muster any offense. Two interceptions by Mississippi State led to both of the Bulldogs’ scores — a 43-yard Scott Westerfield field goal and 1-yard touchdown plunge by Dontae Walker. Sophomore quarterback Travis Anglin led Memphis on a late first-half drive that provided Memphis’ only score, a 36-yard Ryan White field goal.

The 10-3 halftime score held until State’s Dicenzo Miller scored from six yards out with less than two minutes left in the game. Miller’s touchdown followed yet another Memphis turnover, a fumble deep in Tiger territory. Memphis had five turnovers in all — three leading directly to Bulldog scores.

The lackluster Memphis offense spoiled a spectacular debut for new defensive coordinator, Tommy West. The Tigers’ defense held State to 19 total yards in the second half.

The closest Memphis came to getting the ball in the end zone came with 10 minutes to go in the game, and naturally it was the Tiger D that did it. State quarterback Wayne Madkin appeared to fumble the ball while being sacked and Memphis linebacker Kamal Shakir scooped it off the turf and ran into the end zone. But the officials ruled Madkin was down — no fumble, no touchdown.

“That’s a bad missed call,” Scherer said after the game. “It really changed momentum.”

Memphis won most of the statistical battles in the game. The Tigers had 13 first downs to MSU’s 7. They rushed for 87 yards, while holding the Bullies to 45. Memphis had more total yards (168 to 127) and more time of possession (31:57 to 28:03). But five turnovers did them in.

“There is no solace in losing, but I think we have a chance to be the best football team since we’ve been here,” Scherer said. “I think we can be a lot better offensively. People are going to hear that and say ‘168 yards offense.’ But I thought Jimmy [Kiser] called a good game. We did what we said we wanted to do. We didn’t get the ball thrown to our backs as much as we wanted.”

Memphis now prepares to take on Louisiana-Monroe Saturday at the Liberty Bowl.

GAME NOTES

** The game was played in intense heat. The temperature at kickoff was 99 and reached 100 during the game.

** Memphis had two costly turnovers in the first half — both interceptions in their end of the field which led to two Mississippi State scores.

** The Tigers had 16 total yards in the first quarter. A late drive in the second quarter accounted for most of Memphis’ first-half yardage — 84 yards.

** Ryan White’s second quarter field goal moved him into fourth place on the school’s all-time list.

** Scherer is now 0-14 against the three Mississippi schools that Memphis plays regularly (State, Ole Miss, and Southern Miss).

** Next week’s opponent, Louisiana-Monroe, had a long day in the MetroDome, losing its opener to the Minnesota Golden Gophers, 47-10.

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Tigers and Bulldogs Kickoff In Heat

The University of Memphis Tigers open the 2000 football season today at 2:30 p.m. at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. The game, expected to be played in 100-degree heat, will be televised on Fox Sports South. The Tigers have not had a winning season since 1994 and have not won seven games in a season since 1976. Mississippi State is a 4 1/2 point favorite.

The game is expected to be a defensive battle with both teams relying on conservative offenses and good kicking games. This neighborhood rivalry has been dominated in recent years by Mississippi State. Scherer is 0-5 against MSU head coach Jackie Sherill. Both Bulldog coordinators are former Tiger coordinators Ñ Joe Lee Dunn and Sparky Woods. There are no secrets in this series.

Memphis wants to run the ball behind its improved offensive line. With a mobile quarterback Travis Anglin, and three talented if inexperienced running backs (Sugar Sanders, Darche Epting, and Dernice Wherry) the Tigers are betting their house on the rushing attack. Sanders is not expected to start because of a sore ankle.

Memphis coach Rip Scherer wants to play solid defense, run the ball, and let his all-American place kicker, Ryan White, win the game with his foot. Interceptions and fumbles will quickly kill the Tigers’ conservative offensive game plan. If Memphis gets behind and has to throw the ball more than 20 times, look out.

CRUCIAL MATCHUPS:

Both teams vs. the heat.

The game, originally scheduled for 7 p.m. was switched to a 2:30 kickoff for TV. The Mid-South has been under an intense heat wave, with record-shattering three-digit temperatures. Who has the deepest bench? Which team will be able to suck it up in the fourth quarter?

State’s offensive line vs. Memphis’s defensive line.

The Bullie line is huge as usual. The Tigers are two and three deep along the defensive front. Will the big hogs from Starkville be able to handle the quick, experienced Tiger front?

MSU defensive coordinator Joe Lee Dunn vs. Jimmy Kiser, the QB coach who is in charge of the Tiger offense.

Nobody likes to prepare for Dunn with his unorthodox schemes. Kiser who spent the past 14 years at NC State is a bit of an unknown in this series. How will his offense handle Dunn’s creativity?

GAME NOTES

In a dozen games vs. SEC schools, Rip Scherer has won only once (the 1996 upset of Tennessee). Scherer is 0-5 against Mississippi State.

Senior tight end Billy Kendall caught at least one pass in all 11 games last year, including a career high 6 vs. Arkansas State. Kendall’s 53 catches for 601 yards makes him the school career leader in both categories for tight ends.

Senior linebacker Kamal Shakir had 143 total tackles in 1999, second most in Conference USA and the seventh highest single season total in school history. He also led the Tigers in tackles as a sophomore in 1998.

Memphis won its last three road games of 1999 and finished 3-2 on the road.

Memphis finished 4-2 in Conference USA, tied for second. It was the first winning season for the Tigers in C-USA play.

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