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MEMPHIS LOSES OPENER TO TEMPLE

The John Calipari era started on a sour note Friday night at The Pyramid as the University of Memphis lost to Temple 67-62. But a crowd of 20,142 did not go home too unhappy, as they saw a Memphis team that hustled, played good defense, and looked like they should be competitive by post-season tournament time.

It was truly a game of two halves. The first was vintage Calipari — tenacious man-to-man defense and a smart offense that looked for good shots almost every trip down the floor. After so much talk about TempleÕs matchup zone, it was the Tiger defense that controlled the game in the first half.

ÒI thought we should have been up 16 or 17 at the half, and if we are, then itÕs our ball game,Ó Calipari said. ÒBut we took two bad shots to start the second half and all the sudden its anybodyÕs ball game. We have to learn how to put people away. We have to learn to play the second half to win versus playing it not to lose. That is going to take time. ThatÕs a mind set, an attitude. But IÕm proud of the way we played.Ó

Memphis grabbed the early lead and built it to 26-20 with 3:44 left. The Tigers then missed several opportunities to extend the lead with poor foul shooting and two ill-timed threes. But Shyrone Chatman nailed a three in the final 30 seconds and Memphis went to the locker room with a 33-24 lead.

The Owls were forced into playing a perimeter game in the first half, shooting 3 our of 12 from beyond the three-point arc. Overall, Temple shot 38 percent in the first half compared to MemphisÕ 44. The Tigers had only four turnovers and 10 assists in the half.

Kelly Wise, making the first start of his career at forward, was especially productive, slashing all over the court and showing surprising quickness. Wise had 8 points and 6 rebounds. Earl Barron matched WiseÕs point total, as the Tiger big men outplayed their extra-large counterparts, Kevin Wyde and Ron Rollerson.

But Temple opened the second half with a 14-4 run and made a defensive adjustment that took Wise completely out of the Tiger offense. With Wise scoring only one point in the second half, Memphis looked to senior guard Marcus Moody, who scored 16 points off the bench, including 5 of 6 three-point shots.

Calipari said he was impressed with the noisy crowd. ÒI feel bad for the team and for those fans,Ó he said. ÒThey were here in droves. I wish we could have rewarded them with a ÔW.Õ I hope they looked at how we were diving on the floor and how hard we played.Ó

ItÕs doubtful that any Memphis fans will ask for their money back.

GAME NOTES

Fans hoping for a fight between Calipari and Temple coach John Chaney were disappointed. The two embraced before and after the game. Chaney stopped by CalipariÕs post-game radio show and showered the coach and the Memphis fans with praise. Chaney said the Tiger fans were the best in the country and that the new coach was Òdoing it the right way.Ó . . . A reporter asked Calipari about the eight Tiger turnovers in the game. ÒWe only had eight? ThatÕs not enough,Ó the coach answered. ÒNo,Ó insisted the puzzled reporter, Òyou only committed eight.Ó ÒThatÕs not enough. It means we werenÕt aggressive enough. I like to have 12 or 13 turnovers a game,Óthe coach responded. . . . Junior Paris London was the only scholarship player not to play in the game. . . . Backup point guard Shyrone Chatman, who suffered a broken nose in practice last week, wore a mask during the first half. The protective device was colorful with blue and white stripes. It would have worked fine as a Halloween mask. In the second half Chatman played without the mask. . . The University of Memphis tipped off its 80th basketball season against Temple. The Tigers are 6-4 in home openers since The Pyramid opened in 1991. . . . PGA golfer Loren Roberts was honored at halftime. Athletic Director R.C. Johnson presented Roberts with a plaque for his support of the university. . . . Calipari is ranked 9th among active coaches with a record of 189-70 (.730). Jerry Tarkanian is first with 733 wins in 29 seasons. Among Tiger head coaches, only Bob Vanatta (.762) and Dana Kirk (.731) have higher career winning percentages. . . . One of the numerous made-for-TV signs seen in the crowd: Ò33rd in the nation? Calipari demands a recount.Ó . . . Bob Carpenter and Larry Conley broadcast the game on ESPN.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)

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Sports Sports Feature

John Calipari: The Man of the Hour

He’s always selling.

Selling what a good salesman always sells — himself. With a youthful appearance and an easy, natural charisma, John Vincent Calipari, at 41, is near the peak of the selling game.

And he’s brought his game to Memphis, a town that knows a little bit about charisma. It also knows about con artists, having seen its share of both. That’s the Calipari conundrum: Is he smooth or is he slick? And, if he wins enough basketball games, will it even matter?

After trying to get an interview with him for several weeks, I am prepared to dislike the man. As I cool my heels for 15 minutes in the lobby to the basketball office, I vow to not be taken in by this allegedly charming fellow. But I discover quickly what many high school recruits (or more precisely, their mothers) have found out — the Calipari charm can be hard to resist.

“Sorry for the delay,” the coach says as I’m escorted into his spacious office in the southwest corner of the new athletic building. “The hot water is off at my house and I’ve been running around all morning, so I thought I ought to take a shower.”

He reaches into the mini-refrigerator for a bottle of water, but the cupboard is bare. Someone has raided his icebox. “Could someone get me a bottle of water?” Calipari wonders aloud. Momentarily the requested bottle arrives. Such is the magic of charisma.

“I don’t know if I’ve been told no yet,” the coach says of his first six months in Memphis. “Now I haven’t gone crazy, but everywhere we’ve turned where we needed something to make the program better and put these players in a better situation, everybody has said yes.”

The honeymoon between the new head basketball coach at the University of Memphis and the city at large is still in full swing. Although Calipari has been trying to keep a low profile (partly in deference to Rip Scherer, his football counterpart at the school) it seems he just can’t stay out of the news.

Take, for instance, his house. When Calipari bought a $1.5 million house in the Galloway neighborhood, just across Poplar from the university campus, it caused heads to turn. Many thought the family would buy a home in Germantown or Collierville.

“One of the reasons we moved close to the campus was for my own family,” explains Calipari, reputed to be a workaholic. He says the reason for buying such an expensive house has to do with the value of the house the family sold in New Jersey and the tax implications involved in such a transaction.

The coach sounds embarrassed. “It’s more [house] than we need or want, and it’s in an area that is probably more exclusive than we are used to,” he says, stressing a theme that he will carry throughout the interview. The Caliparis are just ordinary folk.

“When people meet me they come away thinking, ‘He’s a regular guy. He’s like you and me. He’s no different.’ If they meet my wife they would say, ‘I can see she’s from Oceola, Missouri, a town of 700 people. Their kids are well grounded.’ They understand that everything that we have is borrowed — our house, cars, toys, clothes, everything is borrowed. We’ve always taught them that. I don’t think we are materialistic people.”

His family doesn’t like the attention his job brings. “My wife doesn’t enjoy being in the public eye and neither do my children,” he says, “but they understand the job I have puts us there.”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Ellen Calipari greets me at the door of the family’s home. She is warm and gracious. Although she doesn’t appear nervous, she obviously is not as comfortable with reporters as her husband. She confides that is has been a couple of years since she has been interviewed.

We step down into the large sunken living room. The Caliparis’ youngest child, three-year -old Bradley, is watching a cartoon on the TV. Like the coach’s office, the house and grounds seem to be in a state of transition. Which of course they are. Ellen and the three Calipari children — the two daughters, Erin Sue and Megan Rae, are at school — stayed in New Jersey until the Spring semester ended. They are still settling into their new environs.

She is not particularly happy with the house, which the couple bought before she saw it (“They e-mailed me pictures of it,” she says.). It is pastel pink with open spaces and lots of light coming through the numerous windows. Ellen isn’t sure what style it is, but says a friend described it as a Florida house. The description seems apt.

“I had to warm up to it,” she says. “I’m more conservative. The style of it is very different. The color is different.” She, too, seems embarrassed by the grandness of the house.

Ellen and John met when he was an assistant coach under Larry Brown at Kansas. She worked in the accounting office where John brought in receipts and invoices for the basketball team. It was not love at first sight.

“I grew up with farmers and people who wore boots, and he came in with shoes with tassels on them,” she explains. “It took me a while to get used to that.”

Ellen admits she was wary of the city slicker, but thought he was cute and agreed to go out with him. For their first date they planned to go to a baseball game in Kansas City, but the game was rained out and they went to a movie instead. Afterwards Ellen remembers they talked about how different they were.

“He was a city guy, very outgoing,” she says. “I’m very laid-back. It doesn’t take much to entertain me. I don’t need to do much. I’m very down to earth. He’s very motivated, very driven. I guess that’s why we get along.”

The man who is taking Memphis by storm was not a very romantic suitor. “In fact he would go a week without calling, wouldn’t even call. And when I called him, the line was always busy,” Ellen recalls. “Maybe that was a recruiting technique — playing hard to get.”

Despite their fundamental differences they continued to date and when John got a job at the University of Pittsburgh, she followed him. They soon were married.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

John Calipari sits on the edge of his chair looking me in the eye. His phone rings three or four times during the interview, but he doesn’t even glance at it. He may not be romantic, but for nearly an hour he makes me feel like the most important person in his life.

The topic is his expectation for his first Tiger team. “I feel good about what we’re going to do here. But success is all relative. Part of it will be, what’s the initial success? What’s our success three or four years from now? I don’t know. The base will be set this year. Now, it may not be as high as we want it to be, but it will be set.

“Good players will win despite coaching. They will win anyway,” he continues. “This team hasn’t won, so there’s something wrong. Are they bad kids? No absolutely not. They’re good kids. Nice guys. Good people. Do they have the talent to win? Yeah, they do. Well if they are good people and they have the talent to win, why aren’t they winning? It comes down to do they have the work habits, do they have the inner-toughness to win? No, not at this point. Do they understand the unity that it takes to win — that there can’t be cliques? No.”

Building team chemistry is an important part of the Calipari method. He does it in different ways. The basketball staff meets the entire team for breakfast throughout the year. The players are encouraged to do things together.

“You don’t have to be best friends with everyone on the team, but you’ve got to care about that guy you’re going on the court with because if you don’t, you’re not going to cover his back and he’s not going to cover yours,” explains Memphis assistant Tony Barbee, who played for Calipari at the University of Massachusetts.

Calipari was only 29 when he was hired as the head basketball coach at U Mass in 1988. He had only six years experience as a college assistant when he took the job. After going 10-18 his first year with the Minutemen, Calipari led them to post-season appearances seven consecutive years, including five straight NCAA appearances. His last team in 1996 went to the Final Four and was ranked number one in the nation for much of the year. UMass finished the season with a 35-2 record. Among their 35 wins was a hard-fought 64-61 victory over Larry Finch’s Tigers.

“Its totally a different level of program that he is taking over here as opposed to U Mass,” Barbee says “You have everything built in here to be a Top-Twenty program year in and year out. You’ve got a great city, a great fan base, a great arena, brand-new practice facility that’s unlike any in the country, a great campus. You’ve got great offices, a great conference. Everything is in place to have a great program.

“Now it goes back to the beginning, to the things he had to do at U Mass, teaching the players that losing is not an option. I don’t know how much losing hurt them over the last couple of seasons.”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

While at the University of Massachusetts, Calipari copyrighted the phrase “Refuse to Lose.” It is the title of a book he wrote after the 1996 season with veteran sportswriter Dick Weiss. Calipari enforces his copyright vigorously. When Nebraska’s football team tried to use the phrase, he had his lawyers write them a letter. They could use it on their practice jerseys, but that was all. They couldn’t put it on anything for sale.

He made the phrase more than a cliché at U Mass. It became a way of life, a mantra. “The biggest thing was not accepting failure, whether it was from drill-to-drill, from scrimmage-to-scrimmage, practice-to-practice, or game-to-game,” recalls Barbee of his four years at UMass. “Losing in anything was not an option.”

Sometimes Calipari sounds almost sadistic when he talks about the lengths he goes in refusing to lose. “I told my staff, they’ll be a unit because they will all be trying to survive. You’ve got to lean on eight guys, you can’t lean on just the two next to you because somebody’s got to help them up. I don’t think that will be a problem a month after we start,” he says.

Observers of Tiger basketball over the past 15 years know that the program — even the successful teams — lacked toughness. Not since the days of Sylvester Gray and Marvin Alexander has Memphis put a team on the floor that could really be called tough. Calipari plans on changing that.

“I’m thinking about putting up a heavy bag and teaching them how to box and protect themselves,” he says. “Not that I want to create fights or anything like that, but I want their mental makeup to be: There is no thuggery going on. We’re going to play ball. I can protect myself. If you want to play that game, we can play that game.

“I hate that game. This game is about synergy, it’s about finesse. It’s not about beating up the opponent. But if it’s out there, and you want to compete at the highest level, you’ve got to be able to play that way.”

It is this combative side of Calipari that contributed, in part, to one of the few negative incidents in his career at U Mass.

John Chaney is the coach of the Temple Owls. Before Calipari arrived at U Mass, Temple dominated the Atlantic 10 conference. The last five years Calipari was at U Mass, the Minutemen won the conference title. They became the only team to ever beat Temple three time in a season. A rivalry was born — between the schools and between the coaches. In 1994, it turned ugly.

“There was an incident two years before when we almost fought on the court,” Calipari says. “I told my players that I would never back down from another coach. I’m not backing down. I don’t ever want my players to see me back down. If we’ve got to fight, we’ve got to fight. I want my players to understand when they go out into the world there will be compromises, but you can never just be run over. If you accept it once you’re like railroad tracks, everybody’s going to see that they can run you over.”

On February 13, 1994, after U Mass beat Temple on a last-second shot, Chaney rushed into the media room where Calipari was having his post-game press conference and began shouting. He threatened to kill Calipari and lunged at him, trying to choke him. The two were separated, but the entire incident was caught on videotape and for several days was a staple on national sports reports.

“It was the most embarrassing time for me as a coach. I was embarrassed for the coaching profession,” Calipari says today. “It was embarrassing for me personally. It is a mark on John Chaney’s career that won’t go away. I said at the time he doesn’t deserve to be viewed that way.”

Two weeks after the incident, UMass played Temple again, this time in Philadelphia. When the plane carrying the Minutemen arrived in Philly, a throng of reporters were waiting for Calipari. When a flight attendant offered to sneak the coach off the plane, he responded, “I’m not Tonya Harding– I’m Nancy Kerrigan. I haven’t done anything wrong.”

The story has a happy ending. After the season, Calipari was being roasted at a fund-raiser for American Diabetes Foundation. He invited Chaney to come roast him and the Temple coach accepted. And guess who Calipari lined up for his first game at the U of M? Temple.

“He sent me a nice note when I took this job,” Calipari says. “I wrote back and said, ‘Should we be playing?’”

Chaney agreed, Calipari called some friends at ESPN, and voila, Memphis opens its season on tonight at The Pyramid against John Chaney and the Temple Owls.

Calipari wants it to be a statement game. And if the statement is for the Memphis fans, so be it.

“I want everybody to understand that this is not going to be an easy road. This doesn’t change because I became coach. I don’t walk on water. I’m just a regular guy,” Calipari says. “But I want people to see our players fighting, playing like they’ve never played before, doing things people have never seen them do. Win or lose they leave the building saying ‘Now if this is the era we’ve gone to, I’m excited. We’ll win enough.’ It will be a hard game but a good game. The publicity from it — how many people do you think will watch that game? People won’t remember the win or loss.”

Again the conundrum. Did Calipari make nice with Chaney because it was the right thing to do or because it makes him look good? Or is it a little of both? And does it matter?

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

It matters to Ellen. She can’t bring herself to forgive Chaney for what he did to her husband, to her family, making her daughters cry, making them ask their dad if he was going to be killed when he went to Philly.

It is yet another way in which the two are different. “He is a forgive-and-forget kind of person,” she says. “Things like that are more upsetting to me.”

Although she say she is “very happy” to be in Memphis, where “people are nice,” she and her daughters are having to adjust to being in the spotlight again.

“When were in the pros there wasn’t as much notoriety. At U Mass it started very gradually and it was fun. You felt like you were a part of things,” she recalls. “When he went to the Nets, we weren’t as much a part of things — it was more of a business. Now it’s back to the notoriety. I look at things more as to how they affect my kids.”

She knows that everyday decisions that are made by other Memphians without notice are a big deal for the Calipari family. “I think in the back of your mind you know they are statements,” she says. “I think I understand those statements. That’s why I make the choices I make.”

Like the choice to send their daughters to public schools. “When it comes to schools, I think it goes back to the values I grew up with,” Ellen says. “I really didn’t want to do private schools. I feel like my kids are already in a situation where they are different enough.”

The coach knows about making statements, too. “If I didn’t feel comfortable that my daughters could get a good education in a public school, they would be in a private school,” he says. “You can get what you need in the public school system here. So we felt comfortable. I was public-school educated; my wife was. We’ve both done all right. I work at a state institution. No disrespect for the private schools we looked into, but we felt comfortable with the public schools.”

With a name like Calipari (there are none listed in the current Memphis phone book), the girls will be well known at their schools, especially after the season starts in November. Ellen says she talks to the teachers at the beginning of the school year and talks to her children about how to react when other kids discuss their dad.

“I try to raise my kids with the values that they are no different than anyone else, because they’re not,” Ellen says. “But at the same time, they are. Because what they say can be misconstrued or can be seen differently because of John’s position.”

Another adjustment for Ellen and her kids now that John is back to coaching at a college is his open door policy to his team — for his home and his refrigerator.

“The players know my house is their house. I told them not to feel uncomfortable opening a refrigerator, don’t feel uncomfortable making a sandwich, getting some chips. That’s the way I’ve always lived,” Calipari says. “They’re welcome to watch TV or do whatever they want. I’m not so far removed from it that I don’t remember college.”

Tony Barbee says that’s the way Calipari has always been. “Sure he’s got money now. He was in the NBA and he’s secure, but he was like that before he had money,” Barbee says. “His house is accessible. That’s why he bought a house next to campus with a swimming pool and a tennis court, so his players can come over there anytime they want. That’s how he is. He’s never changed. When I was at UMass, we came over to the house, raided the refrigerator, raided the cabinets, took anything we wanted.”

Of course having a house full of college kids in your home, raiding your refrigerator, can be a little disconcerting. But it’s just another aspect of being married to Coach Cal.

“He wants them to feel comfortable. If I was sending my kid away to someone, I think I would like that,” Ellen says. “The only thing we tell our kids is, if you have anything that you need for a school lunch, if you have Halloween candy — hide it!”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Education is a big deal to John Calipari. He is proud of the fact that he and his sister were the first in their family to attend college. He can talk eloquently about why public colleges exist. When it comes to education, John Calipari is an egalitarian.

Immediately upon arriving on campus, Calipari instituted the same class-attendance policy he had at U Mass. If anyone on the team misses class, the entire team runs at 5 a.m. the next day. “That happened once in the spring,” says assistant coach Steve Rockaforte. “It didn’t happen again. That was it.”

Calipari also got laptop computers donated to the players so they could do homework on the road. And he moved study hall to the athletic building, so that the players would be closer to the coaches. Still, Calipari knows he can’t change the culture immediately.

“It took eight years at U Mass. Eight years!” he says. “This is a process. It doesn’t happen over night.”

In 1994, the U Mass basketball program came under fire when players’ grade point averages were leaked to a Boston paper. The story claimed that four members of the team were on academic probation with grade point averages of less than 2.0. The story was picked up by other publications. Sports Illustrated mentioned it under the caption “U Mess.” The players involved filed a lawsuit against the university because of the leak. The case was settled out of court.

But Calipari remains unapologetic. “We never had a player flunk out of school. We never had a player academically ineligible. We had the highest team grade point average at U Mass since records have been kept,” he says. “We won more games obviously than any other team. We had players go to the NBA. Thirty-three players — 80 percent — graduated. We were never even questioned by the NCAA.”

Following the 1996 Final Four season, just as Calipari was leaving U Mass to take the job of head coach, executive vice president, and chief of basketball operations for the New Jersey Nets, his star center Marcus Camby admitted taking money from an agent. A junior, Camby was leaving school early for the NBA. Seeing the coach and star player leaving just ahead of the NCAA posse did not set well with everyone.

The NCAA ordered the U Mass Final four finish vacated. It was only the sixth time the organization had vacated a finish (Memphis State’s final four trip in 1985 was also wiped off the books). In addition U Mass had to return $151,000 in tournament money.

Calipari has steadfastly denied knowing about Camby’s involvement with agents.

“I did not go to the NBA for that reason. I knew we didn’t do anything,” he says. “The NCAA doesn’t now, nor have they ever had a problem with me.”

Still Calipari takes the Camby incident personally. “In the end, I must have failed at some point for him to do the things, or have his friends do the things they did,” the coach says. “You know the school was exonerated, I was exonerated. We did everything we could to stop something like that from happening. But when it happens you say, ‘Where did I fail?’ I just wish it didn’t happen to him, because I think it cost him $30 or $40 million in terms of endorsements and contract.”

But it didn’t cost Calipari, who signed a five-year, $15 million contract with the Nets. Even though he was fired from New Jersey in 1999, the Nets will pay him through 2001.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

The contract Calipari signed with Memphis is peanuts compared to his NBA deal, but it is the most lavish in school history. The university is paying him $550,000 per year, in addition to incentive clauses worth $380,000. But the coach stands to make even more from endorsements.

“I am only going to endorse three or four things. I’m not going to be selling chips or bread or paint or hot tubs, or anything like that,” Calipari says. “I owe it to my family. I am making a lot less money than I did in the NBA. That’s fine. I did it, I understood. This is an avenue for me to do well financially for my family. But I am going to do things that people in the community would respect.”

He says he has some questions for anyone wanting him to endorse their product. The questions have to be answered to his satisfaction. “Where are you socially in this community? Are you active? Do you give back? What will you do for the university? What are you going to do for me now?”

So far, Powertel, Jillian’s, Methodist Hospital, Bluff City Honda, and a new restaurant called Cal’s Championship Steaks have made the cut. He said he was wary about lending his name to the restaurant, owned by longtime Tiger supporter Pace Cooper. Calipari says he preferred it to be called “Coach’s Steakhouse.” He made the deal for two years and will re-evaluate after that.

“I understand business because I majored in it. I understand that we need to sell and promote ourselves, the program, and the school,” Calipari says. “People are going to want me to endorse their products. I am going to be very limited in that regard.”

Coach Cal is smart. Smart enough to know he is in a lucrative spot. “This position as head coach in this town is probably unique in that it does carry more weight that it would in any other town,” he says. “I want to make sure this position is used in a way to better the university, to better the community. If I do my job, yes we will win enough basketball games, but it will be that this position was used to help this university and this community.”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

So we are back to the Calipari Conundrum. Is he just an ordinary guy who wants to do all the right things? Or does he do all the right things because he knows it makes for good PR? Is he really good, or too good to be true? Is he smooth or is he slick?

Only time — and basketball games — will tell.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)

[This article was originally published in the October issue of MEMPHIS magazine.]

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Sports Sports Feature

Another Losing Season at Memphis

In what is probably Rip Scherer’s last home game at the University of Memphis, the Tigers lost to Cincinnati 13-10 in overtime. It was Memphis’ fourth consecutive loss. Two of the four went to overtime. The average margin of victory in the four games was a field goal — three points.

The game, which was played in front of 21,862 at the Liberty Bowl, ensured Memphis will have a sixth straight losing season under Scherer. That hasn’t happened at the school since 1922.

Scherer alluded to the uncertainty of his job both to the team and to reporters after the game. “We don’t know what the future holds. All we know is we’ve got one game to play,” Scherer said. “You don’t have to be a genius to figure that out.”

Once again the Memphis defense did a tremendous job, holding Cincinnati to 190 yards and no touchdowns. The only Bearcat touchdown came in the first quarter on a 82-yard fumble return. Memphis squandered numerous opportunities to score in the first half and went into the locker room at halftime trailing 7-3. Four first half turnovers came inside Cincinnati territory, including a fumble at the 18 and another at the goal line.

The Tigers had seven turnovers in the game, including one on the last play of the game, a Scott Scherer interception in the first overtime. Jonathan Ruffin kicked a 37-yard field goal on the Bearcats first overtime possession.

“I respect Scott because he was playing with more pressure than anyone out there,” Scherer said of his son. “Everybody out there is playing to win. He’s playing to win and fighting for his dad’s job. That’s a lot of pressure for a 21-year-old kid.”

Memphis had its biggest offensive production of the season against the porous Bearcat defense. Scott Scherer completed 20 of 32 passes for 203 yards. Tailback Sugar Sanders ran 21 times for 122 yards. Ryan Johnson had 73 yards on six receptions and added 92 yards on three punt returns. He set up Memphis’ only touchdown with an 82-yard punt return to the one-yard line late in the third quarter. Sanders ran it in to put Memphis ahead 10-7. Ruffin kicked a field goal from 30 yards out with 10 minutes to tie the game.

Memphis chose to play for overtime late in the fourth quarter when they got the ball on their own 19 with 1:21 and all three time outs left. The crowd booed when Memphis ran the ball and did not call timeout.

“We didn’t want to do anything dumb,” Scherer explained. “I didn’t think they could score a touchdown in overtime. We wanted to make sure that we got it into overtime, that we didn’t make a mistake that took away our opportunity to go into overtime.”

Memphis (4-6) closes out the season next week at New Orleans against Tulane. An announcement about Scherer’s future could come before then, perhaps as early as Monday.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com.)

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Sports Sports Feature

Deja Vu: Vols Beat Tigers in Final Seconds

This is what its like to be in purgatory.

This is what it must have been like to be Sisyphus.

This is Memphis football.

For the second consecutive season, Tennessee scored the winning points in the final minute of the game as the Vols beat the Tigers 19-17 before 63,121 rain-soaked fans at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium Saturday.

After Scott Scherer hit senior tight end Billy Kendall with a 24-yard touchdown pass with 2:56 to go in the game it looked like a repeat of last season’s final score in Knoxville, when Tennessee scored with a minute to go for a 17-16 win. But Memphis couldn’t make the score stick.

As it has for most of this season of disappointment, Memphis had a special teams’ breakdown in a crucial moment. Leonard Scott returned Ryan White’s kickoff 44 yards to the Tennessee 48. Freshman quarterback Casey Clausen then drove the Vols to the Memphis 17 where Alex Walls kicked his fourth field goal of the game with 13 seconds left.

After the game, just as he did following the disappointing loss in Knoxville last season, Memphis head coach Rip Scherer lashed out at certain members of the Memphis media who he thinks have been negative in reporting about his program.

“I can’t tell you how proud I am of this football team. These kids are good kids and they deserve better. I wouldn’t trade this football team for any other team in the country,” an emotional Scherer said after the game. “This week we circled the wagons and hung in there and competed. We didn’t let this negative stuff bother us, divide us, or create doubt.”

Both teams came into the game wanting to play a conservative, ball-control offense. In the first quarter Tennessee did just that, keeping the ball for more than 10 minutes of the period. The Vols average starting position was its own 47; Memphis its own 12.

The Tigers suffered yet another special team mistake when senior punter Ben Graves mishandled a high snap and barely got a punt off from his own end zone. Tennessee got the ball at the Memphis 21-yard-line and Alex Walls kicked a 42-yard field goal with 53 seconds left for a 3-0 lead.

In the second quarter, the table turned. Memphis completely dominated the period with Scott Scherer leading the Tigers on a 82-yard, 14-play drive culminating in a Dernice Wherry touchdown with 9:15 to go in the first half. Tennessee committed a special teams’ mistake of its own and Memphis extended its lead to 10-3 when the Tigers turned a fumbled punt return with 11 seconds to go into a 43-yard Ryan White field goal.

Tennessee came out of the locker room strong in the second half. Walls connected on a 30-yard field goal and Tennessee later drove 93 yards to take a 13-10 lead with 4:54 left in the period. The big play in the drive was a 60-yard Clausen to Donte Stallworth pass.

The Vols seemed about to take control of the game when Clausen hit Memphis native Burney Veazey with a 19-yard scoring strike at the start of the fourth quarter, but the touchdown was nullified by an illegal motion penalty. David Martin fumbled the ball on the next play. Memphis senior Jarvis Slaton recovered at the Tiger 18.

Memphis fumbled the ball back, leading to Walls’ third field goal and a 16-10 lead. But with five minutes to go in the game Ryan Johnson returned a Tennessee punt 50 yards to the Tennessee 36. Five plays later Kendall caught the touchdown pass and Memphis only had to hold the Vols one last time to get their second win in the series.

They couldn’t do it.

Scott Scherer, named the starter just before kickoff, played the entire game completing 15 of 27 for 137 yards. But he often had to run for his life as Tennessee had five sacks. Kendall caught four passes for 57 yards and the touchdown. Sugar Sanders was the leading ball carrier for Memphis with 59 yards.

Neither team could run the ball. Tennessee had 99 yards rushing, with Travis Henry getting 50. Clausen hit 19 of 30 passes for 224 yards and an interception. He was at his best at the end of the game, hitting back-up receiver David Martin three times for 20 yards in the final, decisive drive.

Memphis falls to 4-5, and saw dreams of a seven-win season pass them by. Tennessee, winners of three straight, is now 5-3. Both teams play at home next week, with the Vols hosting Arkansas and Memphis taking on Cincinnati.

GAME NOTES:

As they did in the 1996 upset, Memphis wore blue pants with blue jerseys. It was the first time this season the team had worn all blue. . . . Dernice Wherry’s second-quarter touchdown was the first of the junior’s career. . . . The attendance of 63,121 is the fifth largest at the Liberty Bowl. The record was set in 1996 when the Memphis-Tennessee game drew 65,885. . . . Ben Graves had one of his worst days of the season, averaging 32.4 on 8 punts and mishandling a snap in the Memphis end zone, leading to Walls first field goal. . . . Memphis struggled again converting third-downs, making only 2 of 13. The Tigers were only 43 of 135 (32 percent) on third-down conversions before today. . . . The Tigers rushed for less than 100 yards for the fifth time this season. In those games they are 0-5. In the four games that they surpassed the century mark, Memphis is 4-0. . . . Memphis was worried about containing huge Tennessee defensive lineman John Henderson. The concern was justified. Henderson had two tackles for lost yardage, forced one fumble, and recovered another. . . . Junior Andre Arnold got his 11th sack of the season, setting the single-season record for sacks at the school. . . .Nose tackle Marcus Bell was instrumental in the Vols’ inability to run the football. The senior had four tackles for lost yardage and consistently clogged the middle.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)

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Sports Sports Feature

Tigers Fall in Overtime to Houston

A game which had been sleep-inducing for more than three quarters, erupted into a barn burner as Houston beat Memphis 33-30 in three overtimes. It was the first overtime football game in University of Memphis history and was the longest game ever played between two Conference USA teams.

Memphis (4-4; 2-3 in conference play) either led or were tied throughout regulation, saw quarterback Jason McKinley hit tight end Stephen Cucci with a five-yard touchdown with 3:46 to go in the fourth quarter. That tied the game at 17-17. Ryan White barely missed a 48-yard touchdown at the end of regulation.

In the first overtime, White kicked a 47-yard field goal but Houston’s Mike Clark countered with a 35-yard field goal. In the second overtime McKinley hit Tommie Baldwin on a 3-yard scoring strike. The point after touchdown was blocked and returned for an apparent score by Idrees Bashir. But the officials called Memphis for “illegal batting,” saying that a Tiger player had batted the ball downfield. Houston got to kick again and hit this one, making the score 27-20. When Memphis got the ball back, Scott Scherer passed for a four-yard touchdown to Billy Kendall, sending the game to a third overtime.

On the first play of the third overtime, Scherer was sacked and offensive tackle DeCorye Hampton was called for a 15-yard personal foul penalty. Rip Scherer said after the game that Hampton punched a player. Ryan White ultimately kicked a 43-yard field goal, making the score 30-27 Memphis.

But McKinley would be the hero on this night. He hit Brian Robinson for a 18 yard touchdown over free safety Idrees Bashir and Houston won the game 33-30.

In the locker room, after the game, reporters heard shouting and objects banging, but when the doors opened they only saw a group of quiet, crest fallen football players.

The Tigers had no one to blame but themselves, with 15 penalties for 132 yards. The number of penalties tied a school record. The amount of penalty yardage was the fourth-highest in school history.

“You reap what you sow in life and you reap what you sow as a football team,” said Rip Scherer after the game. “We shot ourselves in the foot with the stupid personal foul penalty in our third overtime possession. That was very stupid. We lost our poise and this is what happens when you lose your poise.”

It was another ineffective game for the Memphis offense. All three scores in regulation came after the defense forced turnovers deep in Houston territory. Even with the extra periods, Memphis could only manage 202 yards on 72 offensive plays. Houston held the Tigers to 73 yards on the ground.

Memphis never threatened in the first quarter, accumulating only 56 yards and two first downs. The Tigers never got beyond the 50-yard line in the period. Houston’s offense could not do much better. Mike Clark attempted a 45-yard field goal, but it was blocked by Memphis cornerback Michael Stone.

Stone set up the game’s first score moments later, picking off a McKinley pass at the Houston 33 and returning it to the 6-yard line. Two plays later Sugar Sanders sprinted around left end from the two for the game’s first touchdown. White’s extra point made it 7-0 with 11:36 to go in the first half.

Houston responded with a 13-play, 80-yard drive with McKinley hitting Tommy Baldwin on a seven-yard pass for the tying touchdown at 7:17.

Special teams again proved a problem for Memphis. The Cougars partially blocked two Ben Graves punts in the first half. But Houston repaid the generosity with a bad snap which was downed at the 12 -yard line. Quarterback Scott Scherer was sacked for a loss of 8 on third down, but Ryan White hit a 38-yard field goal to send the Tigers to the locker room with a 10-7 lead.

Memphis could only muster five first downs in the first half. The Cougars offense only did marginally better. McKinley completed 16 of 24 for 116 yards with one touchdown and one interception. Houston had -7 yards rushing.

Houston tied the game at 10 all with a Clark field goal from 22 yards out late in the third quarter. Memphis nose guard Marcus Bell recovered a fumble at the Houston 25 yard line and Scherer hit Ryan Johnson with a 25 yard touchdown, making the score 17-10.

Memphis now has a week off before playing Tennessee on November 4th.

GAME NOTES:

Joey Gerda was replaced in the starting lineup by Jason Austin at the left guard spot that has been troublesome all year. Last year’s starter, David Sherrod, left the team after the 1999 season. His replacement, Josh Eargle suffered an ACL injury in the second game of the season. Trey Erye and Joey Gerda have started there. Austin becomes the fourth player to start at left guard.

Jared Pigue returned as deep snapper and for the first time in four tries Ryan White successfully completed a field goal. The kick came on the last play of the first half and gave Memphis a 10-7 halftime lead. The Tigers had suffered three consecutive blocked field goals covering the past two games. Pigue injured his knee at Army. It was his first action since then.

freeland@memphisflyer.com

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Sports Sports Feature

The Tigers’ Loss to UAB Was Costly

If last week’s win over East Carolina was one of the biggest wins in Tiger football history, Saturday’s loss at UAB has to be one of the most disappointing. Here’s why:

* Memphis failed, once again, to build momentum after a significant victory. Tiger football could have taken a great stride towards football respectability with a follow-up win after the East Carolina game. They could be 5-2 going into this weekend’s homecoming game against Houston. Instead they lost to a team that didn’t even play football until six years ago.

* For the second game in a row, the Tigers’ all-Conference placekicker, Ryan White, had a field goal blocked. East Carolina blocked two the week before and Memphis has suffered five blocked field goals this year. For a team with as little punch as the Memphis offense, to waste a scoring machine like White is inexcusable. Even the worst teams in college football can kick field goals. Memphis has had this problem since the second game of the year. And they have not fixed it.

“Obviously that’s coaching. The responsibility falls on me,” said a dejected Rip Scherer after the game. “That’s embarrassing, it’s just plain embarrassing.”

* The special teams made plenty of other mistakes besides the blocked field goal. None was more critical than the penalty flag on the fourth quarter kickoff after UAB had taken the lead with a touchdown. Ryan Johnson took the ball one yard deep in the end zone, and ran it back 101 yards for an apparent touchdown. But a penalty flag nullified the run and Memphis never challenged again.

* The offense was again inept, gaining negative yardage in the crucial fourth quarter. The offensive line, which had played so well the week before, was completely dominated by the Blazer defensive line. Scott Scherer rarely had time to throw and the Memphis running backs could only manage 57 yards on 35 carries. The offense hasn’t gotten better. In fact, based on the results at UAB, it may have gotten worse.

* Memphis again fell apart in the fourth quarter, letting a 9-3 lead turn into a 13-9 defeat. While the Memphis offense went backwards, UAB had 52 rushing yards and 38 yards passing and, most importantly, 10 points in the final period.

It was the third consecutive game that the Tigers failed to score in the fourth period. Memphis has been outscored an astonishing 68 to 22 in the fourth period this year.

* It was another missed opportunity. In 1996, after beating Tennessee, the Tigers lost the next game. Now with a big win over East Carolina, Memphis lost a winnable game and failed in one of Scherer’s missions: to win over the hearts and minds of the Memphis sports fans. Missed opportunities are the theme of the six-year Scherer tenure.

The coach was right. It is his fault. The buck stops with him. His team wasn’t ready to play and they seemingly have not gotten better as the season had progressed. Rip Scherer is a man who takes his job personally. He must have had a long, miserable trip home from Birmingham.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)

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Sports Sports Feature

Tigers Lose to UAB

Birmingham — The glass slipper did not fit this time. UAB scored a fourth-quarter touchdown and the Blazer defense held on for a 13-9 Conference USA victory over Memphis here in historic Legion Field Saturday. Scott Scherer, making his second start of his career could not lead the team to victory as he did last week against East Carolina. The Tiger offense had negative yardage in the fourth quarter.

Ryan White, the all-conference kicker for Memphis had another field goal blocked. It was the fifth time this season the Tigers have suffered a blocked field goal. The 43-yard attempt came early in the second quarter and looked big after UAB overcame a 9-3 lead with a fourth-quarter touchdown.

“Obviously that’s coaching. The responsibility falls on me,” head coach Rip Scherer said about the blocked field goal. “That’s embarrassing, it’s just plain embarrassing.”

Memphis also had a 100-yard kickoff return by Ryan Johnson nullified by a penalty in the fourth quarter. “We had too many mistakes on the kicking teams,” said the coach.

After holding the Blazers to negative yardage in the third quarter, the Memphis defense gave up crucial plays in the fourth quarter, yielding the go-ahead touchdown with 8:41 to go and a 41-yard field goal with 1:28. UAB had 52 rushing yards and 38 yards passing in the fourth quarter. It was UAB’s first win against Memphis in three tries.

“Usually in this game the team that plays the best wins and they did,” said a dejected Rip Scherer.

Both teams had trouble moving the ball. Memphis ended the game with 186 total yards, but only 57 on the ground. Scherer completed 10 of 21 for 130 yards. He had one interception. UAB had 200 yards, with 56 coming on the ground

The UAB offense had Memphis on its heels in the first quarter behind junior quarterback Jeff Aaron’s short passes. Aaron, making his first career start, completed six of 12 passes in the first quarter and led the Blazers to a 44-yard field goal by Rhett Gallego. Aaron completed 14 of 27 for 144 yards in the game.

Scott Scherer hit Bunkie Perkins with a 32-yard pass to the UAB two-yard line in the second quarter. Scherer ran it in two plays later and the Tigers led 7-3 midway through the second quarter. No one scored after that and Memphis went to the locker room with a four-point lead.

The first half was the sort of defensive struggle that Memphis has become accustomed to this season. The Tigers managed only five first downs in the first two quarters, gaining just 47 yards on the ground. Scherer was 6 of 11 for 104 yards passing. Memphis did not have any turnovers in the opening half. Meanwhile, UAB could only manage 116 total yards in the half. Aaron completed 9 of 18 passes for 87 yards.

Memphis returns home to play Houston Saturday in the Liberty Bowl.

GAME NOTES:

** It was a bad day for offensive football. Memphis had -7 yards in the fourth quarter. UAB had minus yardage in the third quarter.

** Ben Graves had a career best 64-yard punt in the first quarter. He averaged 43.1 on nine kicks.

** After seeing his streak of having caught a ball in 21 consecutive games end last week against East Carolina, senior tight end Billy Kendall caught a 10-yard pass in the first quarter.

** Dernice Wherry saw his first extended action since being injured in the Southern Miss game. Wherry has been unable to play in three games this year.

** Scott Scherer left the game with an ankle injury midway through the third quarter. He was replaced by Travis Anglin for the remainder of the drive. Scherer returned on the next possession.

** Memphis scored on a safety in the third quarter when a punt snap sailed over UAB punter Ross Stewart’s head. Memphis scored in the same fashion last year in Birmingham against the Blazers.

** UAB has a new athletic director for the first time in 23 years. Herman Frazier was hired in August after Gene Bartow retired. Frazier spent 23 years at Arizona State, his alma mater, moving up to senior associate athletic director for the school. Frazier is the only African-American A.D. in Conference USA.

** UAB lost the coin toss for the sixth time in six games this year. Memphis chose to defer.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)

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Sports Sports Feature

Tigers Fall to UAB

Birmingham — The glass slipper did not fit this time. UAB scored a fourth-quarter touchdown and the Blazer defense held on for a 13-9 Conference USA victory here in historic Legion Field Saturday. Scott Scherer, making his second start of his career could not lead the team to victory as he did last week against East Carolina. The Tiger offense had negative yardage in the fourth quarter.

Ryan White, the all-conference kicker for Memphis had another field goal blocked. It was the fifth time this season the Tigers have suffered a blocked field goal. The 43-yard attempt came early in the second quarter and looked big after UAB overcame a 9-3 lead with a fourth-quarter touchdown.

“Obviously that’s coaching. The responsibility falls on me,” Scherer said regarding the blocked field goal. “That’s embarrassing, it’s just plain embarrassing.”

Memphis also had a 100-yard kickoff return by Ryan Johnson nullified by a penalty in the fourth quarter. “We had too many mistakes on the kicking teams.”

After holding the Blazers to negative yardage in the third quarter, the Memphis defense gave up crucial yardage in the fourth quarter, yielding the go-ahead touchdown with 8:41 to go and a 41-yard field goal with 1:28. UAB had 52 rushing yards and 38 yards passing in the fourth quarter. It was UAB’s first win against Memphis in three tries.

“Usually in this game the team that plays the best wins and they did,” said a dejected Scherer.

Both teams had trouble moving the ball. Memphis ended the game with 186 total yards, but only 57 on the ground. Scherer completed 10 of 21 for 130 yards. He had one interception. UAB had 200 yards, with 56 coming on the ground

The UAB offense had Memphis on its heels in the first quarter behind junior quarterback Jeff Aaron’s short passes. Aaron, making his first career start, completed six of 12 passes in the first quarter and led the Blazers to a 44-yard field goal by Rhett Gallego. Aaron completed 14 of 27 for 144 yards in the game.

Scott Scherer hit Bunkie Perkins with a 32-yard pass to the UAB two-yard line. Scherer ran it in two plays later and the Tigers led 7-3 midway through the second quarter. No one scored after that and Memphis went to the locker room with a four-point lead.

The first half was the sort of defensive struggle that Memphis has become accustomed to this season. The Tigers managed only five first downs in the first two quarters, gaining just 47 yards on the ground. Scherer was 6 of 11 for 104 yards passing. Memphis did not have any turnovers in the opening half. Meanwhile, UAB could only manage 116 total yards in the half. Aaron completed 9 of 18 passes for 87 yards.

Memphis returns home to play Houston Saturday in the Liberty Bowl.

GAME NOTES:

** It was a bad day for offensive football. Memphis had -7 yards in the fourth quarter. UAB had minus yardage in the third quarter.

** Ben Graves had a career best 64-yard punt in the first quarter. He averaged 43.1 on nine kicks.

** After seeing his streak of having caught a ball in 21 consecutive games end last week against East Carolina, senior tight end Billy Kendall caught a 10-yard pass in the first quarter.

** Dernice Wherry saw his first extended action since being injured in the Southern Miss game. Wherry has been unable to in three games this year.

** Scott Scherer left the game with an ankle injury midway through the third quarter. He was replaced by Travis Anglin for the remainder of the drive. Scherer returned on the next possession.

** Memphis scored on a safety in the third quarter when a punt snap sailed over UAB punter Ross Stewart’s head. Memphis scored in the same fashion last year in Birmingham against the Blazers.

** UAB has a new athletic director for the first time in 23 years. Herman Frazier was hired in August after Gene Bartow retired. Frazier spent 23 years at Arizona State, his alma mater, moving up to senior associate athletic director for the school. Frazier is the only African-American A.D. in Conference USA.

** UAB lost the coin toss for the sixth time in six games this year. Memphis chose to defer.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)

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Sports Sports Feature

East Carolina Win Was Scherer’s Most Important

Memphis 17-10 victory over East Carolina was the most important win in recent memory. It ranks right up there with the win over Auburn in 1975, Alabama in 1987, Southern Cal in 1991. Certainly it is the most important of the Rip Scherer era. Yes, even bigger than the 1996 win over the University of Tennessee.

Forget for just a moment the aspects of this story that make it the feel-good sports story of the year. It was the most important win for Scherer because of three other factors.

1. Timing

Scherer needed a victory in the worst sort of way. Many people were about to give up on the team. Others already had. The theme on talk-radio (and isn’t that the forum where we go to take the vital signs of the local sports market?) was: Rip Scherer is not going to get it done at the University of Memphis. Yes, he is a nice guy (always that caveat), but he just isn’t a good football coach.

The win over East Carolina cannot be tossed aside. Memphis won the game without receiving the benefit of questionable calls and lucky bounces. The UT victory was big but it was mostly a fluke. The Tigers played a much more complete game in a 17-16 loss at Knoxville last year.

Rip Scherer never needed a win more than the one he got Saturday.

2. The Competition

East Carolina is one of two dominant teams in Conference USA. To get over the last hurdle at Memphis, Scherer needed a win against ECU or Southern Miss. He got it Saturday. Besides the conference affiliation, East Carolina is a nationally respected team. Beating the Pirates is a big deal. Syracuse couldn’t do it a couple of weeks ago. Miami, North Carolina State, and West Virginia couldn’t do it last year. This is a win about which the Tigers can justifiably feel proud.

Of the 22 wins Scherer has accumulated at the University of Memphis, 14 have come against Arkansas State (4), Tulane (3), Cincinnati (3), Army (2), and UAB (2). Most of the others have been equally mediocre teams like Louisiana-Monroe and Tulsa. The only wins against quality opponents in the past five-and-a-half years came in 1996: Tennessee and Missouri.

3. One Step Closer to a Winning Season

Scherer has to have a winning season in 2000. Even the University of Memphis couldn’t afford to keep a coach who hadn’t won in six seasons. With a 4-2 record, the Tigers now look like a lock for a six-win season. 7-4 is likely. 8-3 is not out of the question. A bowl game will probably be extended if Memphis can finish 6-5. With a winning season, recruiting becomes easier. Other schools cannot tell recruits that Scherer is soon going to be fired. With another solid recruiting season — the 1999 class is looking better all the time with Jeremiah Bonds, Derrick Ballard, and Darren Garcia contributing as true freshmen — the Tigers could finally be close to establishing themselves in C-USA.

Of course the win Saturday was big for Scherer in ways only a father can appreciate. Not only did his son play with poise and confidence, not only did he lead the team efficiently on three first-quarter scoring drives, but his team rallied around him. And that is what a real quarterback does — rally the troops. As a former quarterback himself, Scott Scherer’s old man knows that.

Scott may only be 5-8, and that presented some problems for him Saturday, but he is a natural leader who has earned the respect of the Memphis team. In some ways it couldn’t have been easy. He is the coach’s son. He carries a 4.0 grade point average. There is every reason in the world for his teammates to dislike and resent him. But Scott has overcome all of that.

The kid is smart. He learned a lot carrying his father’s headset all those years in high school. He must have listened in the offensive meetings, too, because you could tell this guy understands the offense. He knows how it is supposed to be run. He threw passes where his receivers could catch the ball and make something happen. He played with the poise of a fifth-year senior and the entire team rallied behind him.

After the offense came off the field following the opening 84-yard drive, his teammates came up to him one-by-one to congratulate the quarterback. The offensive linemen and the defense and the special teams players, even the guys who never get on the field. Scott Scherer led the Tigers to victory Saturday and don’t let anyone tell you it wasn’t a big win.

It was the biggest.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)

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Sports Sports Feature

Memphis Beats ECU 17-10

Scott Scherer, a 5-8 walk-on quarterback, started his first game for the University of Memphis Saturday and promptly led the Tigers on an eight-play, 84-yard scoring drive. The Memphis offense later took advantage of two East Carolina fumbles staking Memphis to a 17-0 first quarter lead that they did not relinquish in a 17-10 upset win over conference rival East Carolina. Memphis is now 4-2 (2-1 in C-USA) and one step closer to the school’s first winning season since 1994.

Scherer, the son of head coach Rip Scherer, started because the two quarterbacks ahead of him on the depth chart, Neil Suber and Travis Anglin, are injured. Scherer showed remarkable poise, completing his first six passes. For the game, he hit I8 of 25 for 175 yards. He was not intercepted.

After the game, in the small room where Rip Scherer meets the press, there were plenty of tears. Michelle Scherer, the quarterback’s mother, had obviously been crying. When the coach entered the room, he said, “You have to get her out of here.” He was stopped by emotion several times.

“That’s a special win in a lot of ways. To have that little guy step up and play the way he did. I’m really proud of him and I’m proud of the way everybody rallied around him,” Scherer said.

After the Tigers drove for the first touchdown (tailback Sugar Sanders on a four-yard run) the entire team went into a joyous celebration. They hadn’t even settled down before Derrick Ballard forced ECU’s Keith Stokes to fumble the ensuing kick-off. The Memphis offense ran back on the field and in six plays punched the ball into the end zone. The touchdown came on a 6-yard quarterback keeper. It was 14-0 before the Pirates ran their first offensive play.

When ECU finally got the ball they turned it over again. Quarterback David Garrard fumbled after being hit by nose tackle Marcus Bell. Calvin Lewis recovered at the East Carolina 41. Thirteen plays later Ryan White nailed a 20-yard field goal and Memphis had an incredible 17-0 lead with six minutes still left in the first quarter.

Sophomore tailback Jeff “Sugar” Sanders and junior wide receiver Reginald “Bunkie” Perkins both had career days for Memphis. Sanders went over the century mark for the first time, carrying the ball 29 times for 132 yards. Perkins, a transfer from Hinds Junior College, continued his improved play catching six passes for 85 yards.

Being staked to an early lead put the Tiger defense — ranked seventh in the country — in an unusual position. The Tiger defenders put pressure on Garrard the entire game, sacking him three times, intercepting him twice, and causing him to fumble once. Garrard threw the ball 41 times, completing 18 for 246 yards (120 coming in the fourth quarter when ECU was forced to pass on almost every down).

Memphis continued to have special team problems. Two Ryan White field goals were blocked, keeping the Tigers from extending their lead. The Pirates got back in the game in the fourth quarter. Garrard hit Rashon Burns for a 17-yard touchdown. Kevin Miller added a 23-yard field goal with four minutes to go. But the Tiger defense held when it had to and Memphis won its first game against East Carolina since 1993.

The Memphis players voted to give the game ball to Scott Scherer. The walk-on with the 4.0 grade point average had turned down numerous scholarship offers from several Division I-AA to play for his father.

“He’s a tough little guy,” said his father. “One of the reasons he has the players’ respect is because he’s a tough little guy.”

Scherer had lots of support. The offensive line played maybe its best game of the season. “We knew we had to protect him,” said senior guard Lou Esposito. “We had a lot of confidence in him.”

“Of course we felt a need to protect him,” laughed sophomore center Jimond Pugh from the locker next to Esposito. “I want to keep my job next week.”

Pugh said Scherer was “calm and cool.”

That neatly summed up the first start of Scott Scherer’s career.

“I knew I could do the job if I got a chance,” Scherer said. “That has been my dream all along, to get an opportunity like this and get a big win. I just can’t explain how good it feels.”

Scherer said his teammates had told him all week that they had confidence in him. “It was great to know that everybody believed in me that much,” Scherer said. “The first drive reflected the preparation we had put in all week.”

Scherer said he surprised even himself with his calmness. “Even this morning on the bus ride, I felt nervous,” he said. “But once I got in there under center, I felt calm. I just tried to play my role.”

Not all the Scherer family could claim they were calm. Scott’s father said he barely slept the night before the game. His mother, Michelle, said, “I was more nervous before this game than I’ve ever been in my whole life.”

GAME NOTES:

Sometimes the best players show up by accident. “Nobody asked me, I just came,” explained center Jimond Pugh, who transferred to Memphis after spending his red shirt freshman year at Florida A&M. For the sixth game this season Pugh played every offensive snap. “It’s understood that the center is going to be in on every snap, unless the game is out of hand,” Pugh said. “You don’t want to get too many centers in the game because of the quarterback exchange.” . . . Glen Sumter picked off his fourth pass of the season. He is among the national leaders in that category. . . . Senior tight end Billy Kendall had his consecutive game streak in which he had caught at least one pass snapped at 21. The streak started in Kendall’s sophomore season. . . . Freshman quarterback Danny Wimprine led the cheers for Scott Scherer. It did not go unnoticed by the senior Scherer. “Danny Wimprine is a great leader. He’s cheering when the defense is on the field. He’s incessant. He has a real magnetism about him,” said the coach, who was prepared to use Wimprine if he needed him. Scherer discussed that decision with Wimprine’s parents in Louisiana during the week. Memphis is hopeful of redshirting the quarterback.

(You can write Dennis Freeland at freeland@memphisflyer.com)