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NEW COACH MEETS THE PRESS

Tommy West was named the new head football coach at the University of Memphis at a press conference Thursday. West was hired as defensive coordinator before the 2000 season by former head coach Rip Scherer. Scherer endorsed West for the head job.

“I don’t care what names are bantered around, there is no better candidate for this job than Tommy West,” Scherer said after his firing. “The players believe in him. He is a heck of a football coach.”

West opened his remarks by thanking his former boss. “I don’t know if I could have done that,” West said. “That took a big man.”

Under West the Tiger defense finished the season first in the country in rushing defense. Overall, Memphis ranked sixth in total defense.

From 1993 to 1998, West was the head coach at Clemson. During that time he had only one losing season. It came in 1998 and it cost him his job. He took Clemson to four bowl games (becoming only the second coach at the school to go to three consecutive bowl games). Twenty players at Clemson went into the NFL under West and 29 were named to the All-ACC team. Sixty-one of his players made the ACC academic honor roll.

West said his feelings for the Tiger players — many of whom actively lobbied for him to get the job — made the day special. “I had a strong attachment to the players I left a couple of years ago [at Clemson]. I promised myself it wouldn’t happen again,” said West who is know as a players’ coach. “I was not going to let myself become attached. But I couldn’t help it.”

Memphis has ranked in the bottom quartile of Division I offenses for the past seven years, so naturally West’s offensive philosophy was a key component of the press conference.

“Productive.” Was the new coach’s answer to what type of offense he wanted. “I know the popular thing is to stand here and say that we are going to throw it 70 times a game. But I don’t want to throw it 70 times a game and lose,” he said. “On the other hand, I don’t want to run it 70 times and lose. We have to be able to take advantage of what the defense gives us. We have to be effective doing both. I don’t want to stand here and say that we are going to throw the ball more than anybody else in the country. But we are certainly going to be good at throwing the ball.

“I’m not going to run from the question: We have to improve our offense. We have to. We’ve got to score more points. That’s easy to say, but we’ve got to find a way to do it.”

West said his first priority is to hire a staff and he had some people in mind, but wouldn’t mention any names. He said he would hire both an offensive and defensive coordinator and would not micro-manage either side. He joked about the new defensive coordinator: “He has got some pretty big shoes to fill.”

His experience at Clemson taught him several lessons. “You’ve got to have a plan and you better be willing to stick to it because there are going to be some bumps in the road. You can’t be wishy-washy and start second-guessing,” he said. “The second thing I learned there is make good hires and get out of their way. I was a head coach for one year at UT Chattanooga. I wasn’t ready for the head coaching job at Clemson. No way, no how was I ready for that job. I told them, ‘You just fired a lot better head coach than you hired five years ago.’

“As a young head coach, I wanted to do everything myself. I didn’t know how to delegate. I wasn’t very good at it,” West said. “I am comfortable with it now.”

In many ways the new coach is old-school. He has coached under Bill Battle, Johnny Majors, and Danny Ford. You could hear any of the three in some of the things West said.

“I like to start a program by building the interior lines,” he said. “If you’re good there, you’ve got a chance to be a pretty good football team.”

The offensive line has been a particular weakness at the University of Memphis. West admits it might take some time to build the line the way he wants it. “We want big nasty human beings. We want some guys who can go out there and can take a game over physically,” he continued. “A lot of people think you have to run the ball to be physical, you don’t have to run it. I want to be physical everywhere. I think that is the heart of your team — the offensive and defensive line.”

After coaching for one year in Conference USA, West said he was surprised at how good the young league is. “What do I expect from our program? I expect us to be at the top of it,” West said. “I wouldn’t be standing here if I didn’t have those kinds of goals.”

HIring a coach from within the staff provides some advantages in recruiting. “I know the needs of this team right now. So we won’t have to go through a signing period and go through Spring ball and say ‘Gee I wish we would have signed two more of this position and two less at that position,” the new coach said. “I think I know the needs of this team right now. Where we need depth, where we need the majority of our players.”

In Conference USA, only Army and Tulane do not recruit heavily from the junior college ranks. Under Scherer, Memphis was in that category but that will change under West.

“Sometimes I think there is a stereotype of junior college players. Just because a guy goes to junior college does not mean he’s not a class or character guy,” West said. “We’re going to recruit the junior colleges. We are not going to sign a whole class of junior-college players, but I think that’s the direction we will go to fill some of the immediate needs.”

He promised the school’s fans that he would operate the football team in a manner that would make them proud. “This program will be run in the right way. It will be a very hard-nosed physical football team,” he said. “I can promise all of our people we will put a team on the field that will play with the kind of effort and play the game the way it should be played.”

There is only one answer to the problems at the U of M. “We need to win. Seriously that’s what we need to do. R.C. can build all the facilities he wants to build, I can stand up here and talk all I want to talk, and I can go speak to every civic club fifteen times a year and do every seventh grade football banquet but we need to win. Winning will fill the stadium.”

West is from Carrolton, Georgia. He played tight end for Bill Battle in the mid ‘70s at Tennessee. He began his coaching career as a graduate assistant to Battle in 1977. Most of his career has been spent in East Tennessee and the Carolinas (at Appalachian State, South Carolina, and Clemson). He has been both an offensive and defensive coordinator during his career.

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

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Sports Sports Feature

TIGERS WIN BIG; CAL NOT HAPPY

John Calipari was mad.

Really, really mad.

He didn’t care that his basketball team had just beaten its opponent 81-49. He didn’t care that they outscored UT Martin 52-21 in the second half. He didn’t care that the Tigers limited UT Martin to 25 percent shooting in the second half.

He was still thinking about the first half when Memphis only led by one — 29-28, about all the soft play, all the poor shots and selfish play.

“I’m not worried about the opponent. I’m worried about this team,” Calipari said. “We’re scared to death to play. I want to throw up, I’m so sick.”

Kelly Wise led all scorers with 15 points. Four other Tigers scored in double figures: John Grice 12, Shannon Forman and Modibo Diarra 11, and Scooter McFadgon 10. Wise added a game-high nine rebounds, four blocks, and two steals.

After leading for most of the first half, UT Martin was completely shut down in the second half, hitting just 8 of 31 shots in the period. Calipari said he lost his temper in the locker room at the half.

“You wouldn’t have wanted to have been in there at halftime,” the first-year coach told reporters. “If we go to Arkansas and play this way, we will get beat by 40.”

Memphis, now 2-3 on the season, plays at Arkansas Saturday and then travels to Knoxville to take on Tennessee on Tuesday.

“I just want five tough guys, the tough guys are going to play. If I have to play five guys 40 minutes at Arkansas, that’s what I will do,” Calipari said. “We have the ability to be better than we are. We should be 4-1. We should have beaten Utah and Temple. I’m not used to losing.”

The coach singled out Forman and Diarra for praise. “If we don’t have Shannon Forman in the first half, we’re down by 10 at halftime,” said Calipari. “We have to find more playing time for ‘Dibo.”

The win over UT-Martin was Calipari’s first at The Pyramid, but the coach was in no mood to celebrate.

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

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Sports Sports Feature

ALI STEVENS: A CONVERSATION PART II


What do you think of WCW releasing a lot of talent, especially older talent?

Well, my honest opinion of that is that you have to look at the person, the individual themselves because there were people who said that I needed to step aside in power pro. There are people who said that, but as the champion, whenever I came out there was a packed studio and I had 200 kids in my face, that’s who makes the decisions.

As far as the older guys, I don’t know. I don’t know how big a pop Kevin Nash gets. To me I will always be a Hulk Hogan fan. Whether I think hulk Hogan can wrestle, I don’t know and I’m not really going to comment on that. But I will say the man has sold out buildings and the man puts butts in the seats. But whether or not I think he deserves to step down so somebody else can step up, even he said on his interview, yes he would if a person came along who could do what he did, what he does which is put butts in those seats. I think the people who dogged Hogan out forgot the fact that Hogan had no problem stepping aside for Goldberg. Matter fact, he’s one of the only ones who did at first, so now I think it’s a point that do I think the older guys need to step aside or do they need to step up the pace; that’s the question. For instance everybody’s looking at Rock and HHH for instance the matches they’ve had; you take that match and you look at a WCW main event. But now you got Booker T. and Jeff Jarret, guys who will go and they will go and they will you know, Booker T. will work his ass off and Jarret will work his ass off, so can you compare that main event to a Rock and HHH main event? Yeah, so I don’t know if that’s an older guy stepping down if you take Kevin Nash out of the picture or Rick Steiner out of the picture I don’t know; I guess it depends on how you look at it?

Do you have any idea when we’ll see you on TV with WCW?

The story was supposed to be things were supposed to happen mid- to late-September probably after the Pay Per View, but something a lot of people don’t know I blew out my knee and I have a torn Lateral Meniscus that has to be repaired. That’s why I’m home now. I got the MRIs yesterday and they’re going to look at them and let me know if I have to be operated on so I could be out for 2-3 weeks. Which will pretty much blow my September start date. There was an opportunity that looked like it may have happened soon but it probably will be moved back until I’m completely healed, so it’s hard to say. But I can definitely say will be before the end of the year. Put it this way: after the knee is healed I’m going to push even harder and do everything I can to get that spot going, so I don’t plan on waiting any longer than I have to.

Everybody in Memphis knows you’re going to be on TV in no time!

I’m hoping so, I mean they pulled me off of TV there so, I’m hoping so. I’ll admit I’ll miss working down there–the fans are great there and like I said in my last interview, I think we shocked a lot of people, by we I mean myself and the fans, and PPW we shocked a lot of people being able to keep our heads afloat and things built up with what we were up against. I would like to see how things go now with the PPW and the MCW situation. Competition is good.

I would like to give an opinion on something:

This has been totally bothering me that I’ve been reading about and I don’t know how many people are into your newspaper or whatever, but you know this is something …

First of all, a lot of people nowadays say that Randy and MCW certain older people from wrestling are talking about Randy and MCW are killing of this business. That’s a bunch of bull. First of all they’re killing off the business by saying these things. The fact of the matter is, wrestling is show business it always has been from Day One; way back to the days when it was a shoot, it was still entertainment.

When wrestling first started it was a carnival attraction and a guy first had to let one or two people beat him before they put the big bets out there. It was a wrestling attraction back then — then he kicked the guys butt. The fact is this: as we grow up, as you and I have grown what we saw and caught our attention does not catch the eye of the fans these days. You know, we got up the guy worked a hold for 20 minutes worked up, got back in the hold, if it was a good guy We were totally in that phase of good guy/bad guy. These days it doesn’t work like that because half the people nowadays cheer for the bad guys more than they cheer for the good guys.

And I heard about an interview that a certain person did on one of these major Internet things and everybody talked about. If we went out there. I do think there’s not enough wrestling in pro wrestling these days but I also know that without those high spots and stuff like that it wouldn’t be no different than it was 10 years ago and people wouldn’t watch it. Its like a car; there are people out there saying they made a new Corvette they messed it up but if you say that to a 16 year old kid, he’ll say what the hell you talking about? The new corvettes are the funk!! That’s the same thing here. The people who barely watch wrestling anymore — you got to think about wrestling is geared to people 16-35 or 40 years old people. And they try to keep the wrestling in it for the 25 and up. But the rest of the biggest people who buy those t-shirts are kids. And they want to see stuff that’s going to make them go ooohhh and ahhhhhhhh so that crap about we’re killing wrestling; no the reason why Randy ‘n’em can’t draw is because there are two national TV shows, and when these guys are talking all that shit, what’s his name Kenny Wayne or whatever his name was–Buddy Wayne, I told Buddy to his face the fact is “I’m not the Rock.”

You’ve got to give people what they want to see, yes that is true, but Lawler doesn’t even pull anymore. And that’s in Memphis! MCW’s been running shows with Lawler’s name on posters forever and they don’t draw. The fact is, if you’re not an national TV; if you’re not something that people want to see with the posters up in their rooms and all that kind of stuff, it’s hard to draw down there. That’s all there is to it. There’s a lot of competition now.

When they talk about how many people they used to draw, that’s where there was territories; they didn’t’ have the WWF to deal with…I’d like to see Buddy Wayne — now remember Buddy Wayne has drawn some shows, his own shows. I suppose he was putting the shows together the way he said they should be down. He doesn’t draw shit. I know; we worked some of them. He didn’t draw nothing! That’s the bottom line to it. When the WWF of the WCW comes somewhere you’re talking about thousands and thousands of dollars of advertising money. Randy doesn’t have that; MCW doesn’t have that. You’re also talking about what you’re you going to do, you’re going to save your $10 and have $20 to go to a WWF show or spend your $10 to go to a PPW show? You’re going to save and go to those WWF shows and get you a front seat ticket. And that’s the bottom line to it.

So all these people going around talking that crap about, you know they forget back then it was territories and people waited for it because it wasn’t on national TV. I think there were only two shows out: Wrestling at the Chase, AWA, and USWA. Neither of them was on national broadcast. So when you came to a town it was something to see. That’s why they drew back then. And Harley Race will tell you that; that’s where I got it from. Harley Race, Jake the Snake any of those guys will tell you the difference now than the difference then. So when all those people are talking all that trash, No–that’s a bunch of trash. They make it sound like the young guys are killing off the business because we do–shit man come on, that made me mad, I’m sorry I was just venting on that one cause I keep hearing about this stuff and it’s like man we’re not killing anything, we’re trying to keep it alive.

Yeah, it’s pretty obvious that people’s tastes have changed otherwise there would be no ECW.

Ain’t that the truth I mean people want realism, and if I don’t like you and you and I are really fighting and we’re fighting for the title, I’m going to hit your ass with a chair. Buddy Wayne refereed a match I did in Nashville and he got real upset about the sleeper hold. Well, first of all, Buddy, people don’t go to sleep on a sleeper hold anymore. First of all nobody is going to sit there and let you hold them long enough to do it. It’s just my opinion, but it seems to be the opinion of a lot of the young wrestlers coming up and as far as when they’re talking PPW and MCW suck and they draw fleas its not a point they can’t draw fleas. It’s the fact that most towns you go to people don’t know about the shows #1 there’s not enough advertising out there. #2 depending on what else is going on, PPW you can watch that stuff for free on TV. It’s a whole different. I don’t know, that’s just my opinion. I would like to see everybody quit dogging the independents out saying that they can’t draw; no you can’t draw compared to the WWF and WCW and I would love to see any of those guys who are talking all that trash about how they used to draw because, shit, Ohio Valley doesn’t draw like they had how many WWF stars on their last big show and what did the draw 5 or 6 hundred? Building will hold 3000?

So do you think independents are still needed with the popularity of the WCW and WWF?

Oh yeah, cause without them where would we come from? Your new stars if you look at both of the shows there’s a lot of new talent and there’s a lot of people who never wrestled before. I mean look at Kurt Angle he did Olympic wrestling, but where did he learn his trade? Last I remember he was down there at power pro with us? Where did he learn to work the mike? Last I remember he was down at Power Pro with us. Where would I come from? Where would half those guys come from? You know. You need independents, even though both of the big two have their own wrestling schools, they really don’t like the idea of starting fresh with somebody. Kevin Northcutt and me came into the Power Plant and were proud to be there. But we’re also helping guys that are new learn, so you need that, you know? You need guys that have been around and know that basics, that way, the coaches themselves, Like the Sarge, would be going through a lot if he had to deal with all the guys that come through there by himself. He’d be taking bump, after bump, after bump, after bump.

So there’s definitely a place for Indies. Without them, you wouldn’t have the superstars. But the problem is, there people that run independents that need to understand that, “Hey look, when I’m looking at something on TV, when I go to an independent show, that’s what I want to see — not some fat ass ‘Jug-a-lug’–” When a woman comes to a show, she wants to see a Rock, or a HHH–you know, a well built man! She doesn’t want to see her husband.

That’s the problem with Indies nowadays. The only people I know who [really encourages the wrestlers to get in shape] are Harley Race–and Bert [Prentis] –And down South, you have so many wrestling groups that think they know something–They all think they have what it takes to be a star–but ask they how many times they have been to a gym. You see them in the locker room smoking cigarettes, and drinking in the locker room–and they can’t cut a promo to save their life!

(You can e-mail James Haley at jhaley@memphisflyer.com)

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ALI STEVENS: A CONVERSATION

I met Ali Stevens back in February, 2000, when Randy Hales, the founder, owner, and president of Power Pro Wrestling (PPW) invited the fans from the Memphis Wrestling Internet Mailing list to attend a TV taping at the WMC-TV studio, and to come backstage after the show and meet the wrestlers. He is not only one of the most talented wrestlers to come through the Memphis area, but also one of the most down-to-earth people you will ever meet. I got a chance to talk to Ali while he was at home recovering from an injury. We talked about a variety of subjects including his start in wrestling, Memphis Championship Wrestling (MCW) becoming one of the World Wrestling Federation’s developmental territories, and how he made it to the “Big Time” with World Championship Wrestling (WCW).

How did you get started?

I went to a family reunion and Sylvester Ritter was there … and he gave me the names of some people running shows in ST. Louis. I was trained by those guys for about a year. Then I went on the road with a guy by the name of Bill AsheÉand from there that was it.

Back in St. Louis, did you work with any wrestlers that anyone would know now?

No, it was an independent circuit. King Kong Brody was one of the main guys that helped put the group together before he died. The only person who had actually made it out of one of the groups I worked in St. Louis was Kane (Glenn Jacobs) but like everyone else he had to go down to Memphis to make it.

How did you get to Memphis?

Now you have a story! I went down to Power Pro a year or so ago. Not long after they got started. On older tapes with Jackie on them, you can see me sitting in the audience. It was really weird because I came to meet [Jerry] Lawler and [Bill] Dundee, but I never got to meet Randy [Hales]. Dundee told me — and this is after I had been working for Harley Race, Jake Roberts, Bill Ashe, and of course, Sylvester — but Dundee told me I didn’t have what it would take to make it in Memphis. He told me if I wanted to work for Power Pro, I’d have attend his school, his training center, and pay him money to train there. So I ended up going to Dyersburg with those guys, and I was doing Atomic Dog gimmick. Then after Lawler and Dundee left, I went down [to Power Pro Wrestling] again and I got in touch with Brandon [Baxter], and I actually got to meet Randy this time and we talked to Jim Cornett, and we talked about a gimmick that had been kicked around up north for a while, and Brandon had a good idea as to how it should go, and Ali just came out of there.

What was it like working with the WWF guy when Power Pro had the development deal?

A lot of people have their different opinions on it, but to me, it was great. I saw it as an opportunity to meet people like Jim Ross, and Bruce Pritchard, and get an opportunity to work with Jim Cornett closely, and the talent — I don’t think you can get any better than [Steve Bradley] on the Indy scene — and the same goes for some of the others. So, to me, it was a learning experience. When you get with guys like that, who’ve been around, who’ve been trained up North by people like Dory Funk — it was great! I know there were a lot of rumors about problems. I think the guys that were not happy were not unhappy about being in [Power Pro,] but they were just not happy about being in Memphis period, you know? They wanted to be at home, like I am here [in Atlanta].

Do you keep in touch with the WWF guys who just got promoted?

Here and there. I talk to Viscera on a regular basis. I pretty much do emails with the guys up in Ohio Valley. I have not talked to Kurt [Angle], but if I see them at a show or at the airport we’ll sit down and talk and grab a soda or something. We do that a lot. I’ve run into a lot of those guys at the airport. Everybody’s pretty cool, but we don’t call each other just to shoot the shit a lot; it’s not that kind of situation. I thought me and Bradley would have kept in touch but they sent him to Puerto Rico. So I haven’t heard from him since

Yeah I miss him in Memphis —

[Laughter] I think everybody does, That was a talented dude. He knew all the aspects. I wish I knew why he’s not on TV now.

Yeah I’d like to know myself. How do you think this move, the WWF taking the development deal away from PPW affect it?

I think it was for the better. I read a lot on the Internet that a lot of the guys give Randy a hard time about Randy not running house shows. But see, what they don’t understand is that regardless of what anybody has ever told you, house shows don’t make money. If you don’t pull 2,000-3,000 people, you don’t make money. If you got a guy like Bill Dundee or somebody like myself coming from St. Louis, who you’re paying 150-200 bucks or you have 5-6 guys you’re paying 50 bucks, and 2-3 you’re paying $150 or more, then you’ve got to pay for the building and the ring rental. If you’ve done any type of advertising you’ve got to pay for that. What people don’t understand is just because you’ve put 300 people in a building doesn’t mean you’ve made your money. If you only put 300 people at $8 a head it’s a good chance between all your rental stuff and paying your guys the set up the ring, and your concessions and everything else, you’ve probably lost money.

Randy right now is trying to make a little bit of money, so see if he’s making money from the sponsorship he’s actually making some money. Compared to how we were doing, it’s not that you can’t make money on house shows but like I said, if you’re not drawing nice numbers you’re not making any money. So in my opinion when they took the deal from randy they took a lot of the pressure off. If you had been there the second week after it was done, it was a whole new locker room. We all had fun, nobody was bitchin’, it was like a whole new set up. I’ll admit I miss Jim Cornett being there, I miss the wrestlers, but I don’t miss the politics. And of course, they are people who will say ‘yea, he didn’t miss it because it shot him up to the top.’ Wrong, because I was being shot up to the top anyway; but it really didn’t matter.

But I think for Power Pro itself that was the best thing that could happen because no matter what anybody says — I’ve seen the sheets — if you got look at the sheets of the ratings PPW has more than held their own against the WWF farm league who is using WWF TV talent, and that’s pretty good if you ask me. That’s pretty good. I think without the pressure of having to put on house shows and that kind of stuff it just made for a better. We were all happy. If you had been backstage a couple of times it was horrible.

Speaking of sheets and all, what do you think of the Internet and it’s impact on wrestling?

I am not one of those guys who thinks the Internet has hurt wrestling, but I don’t think it has made it any better. The widespread use of cable has made it what it is today. I do think that like what they call the ‘smart marks.’ I think a smart mark is nothing but a person who has common sense. A person who is smart enough to know we’re not really out there to kill each other. Just like a person who likes soap operas is smart enough to know that a person didn’t really die last week — you know that type of shit. But I also think you got a lot of guys out there who couldn’t make it in this business because they’re too lazy and they tell stuff that nobody should know. And it’s the same thing; I feel the same way about those TV shows, what are those shows? “The Secrets of Pro Wrestling,” about how we do stuff. See that’s the same thing.

But I think the widespread Internet thing where you can look on here and see what happens on a show and you guys can give your opinions, so I think that’s great. I think the wrestling boards are some of the biggest ones out there, right? I mean, I think it’s good because I’m not going to lie; I get a lot of press. So I think it’s great. I do think the problem is not guys like you or guys like Chris Bell or things like that, I think it’s wrestlers who worked on Indy scenes and couldn’t make it or they come down to places like the Power Plant and they couldn’t make it and they get on there and they tell a bunch of crap or that type of stuff.

Speaking of the Power Plant, tell us how you got hooked up with WCW?

In all honesty, it was Jim Cornett [that helped me get to WCW.] I owe everything right now to Jim Cornett, Harley Race and Terry Taylor. Through Jim Cornett, I got to speak to Terry Taylor when he was leaving the WWF. And my situation with the WWF — when they switched over — it blew my situation with them. And Terry stayed in touch and Cornett stayed on top of Terry and from what I understand I was invited down to the Power Plant; Terry Taylor brought me — you know everybody builds their groups — so Terry came in and wanted to bring in as much good talent as he could and he wanted to do a lot with new talent and I was one of the first ones that he picked to bring in as one of his boys, so to speak.

I’ve seen a few of specials on the Power Plant, saying how it’s so tough and how a bunch of people start in the class, and it ends with a few. Is it really that bad?

Well, let me tell you, the first day, I had to call home and my girlfriend had to talk me into staying — that’s how bad it was. The second day, I called her and she tried to talk me into staying and I about told her to kiss my ass. The first day I was like ‘Man I’m not doing this’ because when I came down I’m thinking I’ve been wrestling for seven years; I shouldn’t have to go through this.

But let me tell you; at that time I turned into the same guys I just told you about. They come down, they come into places now and they talk about how bad WCW is right now, but when you look at what’s happening now — a lot of new faces, a lot of new hungry guys, a lot of new guys who are going to get in there and you know what? We will do whatever it takes. Will come off a 20 feet cage; you know what kind of stuff I would do in PPW, and they wouldn’t even let me do half the stuff I wanted to do. So, you know we’re not making $1 million a year, yet. Stuff like that so, you can look for a lot of changes to happen and that’s what they wanted. So when they run you through those drills they’re running you through those drills for one thing: number 1 stay. number 2 you have the drive, and that’s what it’s about. Anybody can walk into a place — you guys don’t know enough about wrestling — you could walk into a wrestling thing and get a job if you wanted. But does that make you a wrestler and will that make you a star? Hell, no. You’re just another guy on the card.

Whom have you worked with in the Power Plant?

Today, all the girls were down there, we see them on a regular basis. David Flair, on my web site there will be a picture of me and David Flair. Johnny “The Bull” as soon as he finishes up his rehab, he should be back [wrestling] soon. I talked to Scott Steiner a few days ago and showed me his new motorcycle. [Laughter]

Pretty much all of the new talent is on a deal where they have to come to the Power Plant at least once a month.

I’ve been hearing rumors about you and a guy named Tony Norris.

Ahmed Johnson. I really can’t answer that right now. For one, I really don’t know what the game plan is; I understand there could be three different scenarios: there’s a tag team situation of course, and I guess that might be that one that everybody’s talking about. And in my opinion that would probably be my choice, because I know tagging with him, with our size and everything we would surely rocket to the top. You’re definitely talking about it Doom…with the way they did the Road Warriors I mean you’re talking about; I mean that would be my first choice. But they there’s this thing going on with the Power Plant guys, [The Natural Born Thrillers stable] and they’re missing a little color in that group, [laughter] so that could happen. Then of course there’s the whole thing that when I first came in there’s the possibility of Ali staying and doing the same character I was doing at PPW, so it could go 3 or 4 ways and it could go another way. I don’t want to say anything and then it changes or switches and I look stupid…

Yeah, stuff could change at a moment’s notice–

[Laughter] that’s the truth. That is the truth…

Tell me, how have you improved since you walked in the Power Plant?

Well, basically, I feel my improvement more in my attitude #1 because there are no superstars in this company anymore, they tell you that when you walk in the door — not that I thought I was a superstar while I was in Memphis or nothing like that — but you have to have a totally different attitude. It’s more of a working attitude. I’m here to work and have a great time you know and that’s it.

Basically my style of wrestling has changed. I’m sure you saw my last couple of matches in PPW they were a bit off. The one I had with Spellbinder was really off because if you notice at certain points I was getting ready to go into wrestling compared to the brawling style that I was doing before and that he does. At one point I think I even went into a Russian Suplex. I was getting ready to go into a hold and work some stuff and I had to catch myself and say ‘wait a minute this ain’t right now.’ Basically now I consider myself more of a worker and if I get the opportunity to actually work a match on Memphis TV I would like that, but I mean I do a lot of stuff now like I do that Spring Elbow that Bradley used to do off the second turnbuckle out of a corner. I do that now. Summersault leg drop, I did get to do that on PPW before I left.

I’ve got a new finisher which I think I got to do on that one kid but Spellbinder was coming in the ring that day, so there are a hand full of new moves that they’ve put together for my character that way you’re looking at a big guy, 275-280, who can wrestle and can also brawl. Compared to now most of WCW guys the big guys, they’re coming in and they’re brawling — it’s the let’s kill — they look like finna come kill somebody. But to a wrestling fan like yourself, you’re seeing 275 pound Rock and HHH wrestling so then when you see Brian Adams or Kronik yeah, they in there kicking ass but can they ‘work’? Don’t get me wrong, now when you’re talking about Brian Adams or Brian Clarke they can work their asses off. That’s the sense of how people talk about WCW talent; Kevin Nash doesn’t do nothing; Hulk Hogan didn’t do nothing; that type of stuff. So we’ve building the big guys who can work an arm drag if I have to. That’s pretty much they way that they’re making everybody in the power plant work now.

[TOMORROW: Older wrestlers, WCW and TV, and the problem with “Indies.”]

(You can e-mail James Haley at jhaley@jhaley.com)

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Sports Sports Feature

WHY RIP SCHERER FAILED

Rip Scherer called me last Thursday. “I don’t know how the next few days are going to play out,” he said, “but I wanted to call you and apologize for the things I said to you.”

The coach was referring to a conversation we had three weeks previous. Scherer had been upset after I wrote a column saying that maybe it would be better for him to resign than to go through the ordeal of being fired. But here he was, two days away from the last game he would ever coach at the University of Memphis, calling to apologize.

Even at the end, Rip was Rip.

Monday at a press conference to announce his firing, Scherer wanted to make it clear that he had not quit. He wanted in the worst way to remain the Tigers’ head coach. Nothing could make him give up. Not six straight losing seasons, not talk radio shows calling for his ouster, not newspaper columnists speculating on his future.

“I know it will be an upset if we are allowed to come back,” Scherer said during that telephone conversation, “but upsets do happen.”

Not this time, Coach, not this time. His team that had played so gallantly all season long ran out of steam against a Tulane squad playing for a winning season and a possible bowl invitation. When Memphis scored a touchdown in the first quarter on a 25-yard pass from Scott Scherer to Ryan Johnson only to see it nullified by a penalty, what little wind left in the Tigers’ sails dissipated. By halftime the score was 17-0. There was nothing left to do but fire the coach. U of M Athletic Director R.C. Johnson did that on Sunday morning.

Monday the coach stayed and talked to reporters, trying to put the past six years in some kind of perspective.

“It’s been a tough four weeks, it’s been a tough week, and it’s been a tough 24 hours,” Scherer said. “You put your heart and soul into something like we have here — so much of your existence, your family, every waking moment for the last six years. It is frustrating that you couldn’t bring it to fruition.”

Why did this coach– whose work habits are as unquestioned as his integrity — fail? Here are three reasons:

* QUARTERBACK

Scherer started eight different quarterbacks in six seasons. He staked his future on Westwood’s Kenton Evans and by the end he was playing his son, a 5’8” walk-on, at the position. But it is Bernard Oden who sums up Scherer’s quarterback problems.

Recruited by Chuck Stobart’s staff, Oden had to sit out his freshman season as a non-qualifier. When Scherer arrived in 1995, Oden was a sophomore battling Qadry Anderson and Joe Borich for the starting quarterback job. Oden entered the first game of the Rip Scherer era at Mississippi State as the third-string quarterback. But when Anderson went down with a knee injury and Borich had trouble moving the team, Oden came in and almost sparked the team to a come-from-behind victory.

The next week, at Michigan, Oden again came on in relief of Borich and put on a magnificent display of courage. He took a physical beating; they kept carrying him off the field, but Oden kept coming back.

The next week, Oden got his first start and Scherer got his first win over Southwest Louisiana, 33-19. It was an ugly win, the kind Memphis fans would see often — although in retrospect, not often enough — during the next six years. Scherer was disappointed that Oden made several mistakes and did not start him for the next 19 games. The next season Oden was moved to flanker, but rarely played. He pouted and talked about quitting.

But in the spring before his senior year, Oden had a change of heart and won the coach over with his hard work. He started every game in 1997 — the only quarterback to do so in the past six years — and set the single season passing mark with 2,249 yards. Memphis went 4-7 but three of the losses were by a total of nine points and Oden was voted a team captain.

Oden had a chance to play another season because he would graduate in four years (a NCAA rule allows non-qualifiers to regain the year that they lost if they can graduate in four years). But Scherer said, “No thanks.” The coach told associates that Memphis would never be better than a 4-7 team with Oden as their quarterback. The next season the Tigers were 2-9 and started three different quarterbacks.

Scherer could have had the same starting quarterback for his first four years. Who knows how good Oden would have become if he had been given the chance to play early in his career? But Bernard Oden was not a Scherer-type player. He wasn’t poised and articulate. He was tough and athletic, but that wasn’t enough for Scherer and they both suffered for it.

Scherer wasted a lot of time hoping that Evans would be his quarterback. It didn’t pan out. Evans would repeatedly disappoint Scherer before transferring to Tennessee State. Last season Neil Suber and Travis Anglin played musical chairs at quarterback. Scherer kept concentrating on what they didn’t do well — running for Suber; passing for Anglin. Coming into this pivotal season, Scherer’s sixth, the quarterback position was still unsettled.

Add Danny Wimprine to the mix. During the first week of practice it was clear the freshman from John Curtis High School in Louisiana was the best quarterback on the team, even Scherer said so privately. But the coach thought that the contract extension he received in 1999 meant he would not be fired this season, so he redshirted the best quarterback he’d ever recruited to Memphis.

“There is a saying among coaches that you don’t redshirt players for the next coach,” Scherer said on Monday. “Had we had any idea that this was a possibility, I might have played some of those guys. By the end of the year, they might have had an impact on some of those games. I had made a commitment to Danny Wimprine and I just couldn’t renege on that.”

Scherer said he promised the player and his parents that he would only play him in an emergency. Thus the dilemma for the coach. Keep your word or keep your job. For Scherer that was an easy call.

* OFFENSIVE LINE

Other than quarterback, no position was as difficult for Scherer as offensive line. The primary reasons for this were: 1) a lack of talent at the position when Scherer arrived; 2) an inability to recruit to the position; 3) an unwillingness to move some of the excellent defensive linemen to the other side of the ball; 4) six offensive line coaches in six years.

Of these the last is by far the most devastating. Scherer had trouble keeping a staff together in general, but six offensive line coaches is ridiculous. The worst may have been this summer when Joe Susan left after being in Memphis less than six months. Rick Mallory was brought in and had to pull a line together with little time. The players had been under three different line coaches in the past 12 months! No wonder they had trouble.

The strong suit of the team this year was defensive line, with eight or 10 quality players. If Scherer had moved guys like Jarvis Slaton, Patrick Willis, and Boris Penchion to offense when they were freshmen, who knows how good the line could have been? It seemed a waste to have so many good defensive linemen on the bench when the offensive line was suffering.

Without a good offensive line, Memphis could not run or pass. They finished 111 out of 114 teams in total offense. If the line play had been better, Scherer might have won an extra two games a year. In that case I wouldn’t be writing this column and Scherer would still have a job.

* LOCAL RECRUITING

With his first full recruiting class in 1996, Rip Scherer pulled in as good a group of Memphis players as the Tiger program had seen in a decade. Highlighted by Damien Dodson and Kenton Evans, the record-setting passing duo from Westwood, the class also included running back Teofilo Riley from Central and tight end Reid Hedgepeth from CBHS.

Dodson became the second leading receiver in school history and Riley, when he got a chance to run the ball, was excellent. But Evans was a bust and Hedgepeth left the team suddenly because of a dispute with one of the many offensive line coaches, Dave Magazu. After 1996, Scherer was unable to get the big-name local kids to sign. Only Willis and Marcus Bell, both from Kingsbury, and DeCorye Hampton from Westwood were key local signees and two of them, Hampton and Willis, had to sit out their first year because of academics.

After that Scherer seemed to give up on Memphis and instead turned his sites on the lucrative high schools of Georgia and Texas. But the program suffered because Memphis could not be competitive in its own city. Of course every Tiger coach has had this problem, but probably none to the extent Scherer did.

In his typically classy final press conference Scherer talked about how with a few more wins they would have drawn more fans and created the kind of winning atmosphere it will take to lure the local high school stars. He still thinks it can be done.

“I really think this has a chance to be a turnaround program like a Tulane, an Arkansas, or a Louisville, where someone comes in and is able to have success early. And I hope they do,” Scherer said. “These kids deserve to be successful.”

The former coach had this piece of advice on his way out. “Put a 10, 12, $14 million facility over there [on the South Campus]. Put more money in the budget,” he said. “And I am saying this not as a bitter person at all. I am saying do it for the next guy so that you are not sitting here five or six years from now with the same kind of meeting. That’s the only way this cycle will stop.”

Rip Scherer is no longer the head football coach of the University of Memphis. His constant optimism and steadfastness will be missed. It is easier to write about what went wrong under his regime than it is to fix the inherent problems. R.C. Johnson has an important job in finding a replacement for Scherer. But that is just the beginning. To be competitive, even in Conference USA, the university needs to make a lot of changes. But it all starts with winning. It’s a cliché, but after all is said and done, that is the bottom line.

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Sports Sports Feature

Memphis Fires Rip Scherer

Rip Scherer was fired from his job as the University of Memphis head football coach Sunday after completing his sixth season at the school. Memphis athletic director R.C. Johnson made the announcement at an 11:30 press conference Monday morning.

Scherer will receive the remaining $485,000 for the two-and-a-half years left on his contract, according the Johnson. The total cost of the buyout, including assistants’ salaries and benefits is $1.1 million, Johnson said. The money will come from boosters of the school’s athletic program and no state money will be used, according to the athletic director.

“Coach Scherer is one of the classiest individuals I have ever had the opportunity to work with and that made the decision even more difficult,” Johnson said. “The final decision was based on lack of wins over the six-year period. There was nothing else.”

Johnson said he wanted to find a replacement as soon as possible. “I think there are three things: someone who has come from a successful program, someone who has been in Division IA either as the head coach or as an assistant, and someone who has recruited in Division IA. I think those are the three areas I am looking at.”

The athletic director said he had contacted the first candidate on his list Monday morning before the press conference. He would not name any of the candidates on the list of “a half dozen to a dozen” names. He said any of the current assistants on Scherer’s staff were welcome to apply for the job.

“I think it is a pretty good job. Conference USA has made it a better job,” Johnson said. “We have four bowl tie-ins, we have much more exposure than we’ve ever had before, we are about to get a better TV package than we’ve ever had before, we have a higher profile than we’ve ever had before. Internally, I think Rip has left this program better than it was the day he arrived. I think that’s a tribute to Rip and his staff.”

“We want to get the best coach we can possibly find. Whoever that is. Vince Lombardi is not coming. Knute Rockne and Bear Bryant are not coming to Memphis,” Johnson said.

Johnson said he thought he could get enough money to hire a good coach. Scherer was paid about $240,000 per year, including radio and TV shows. His compensation package was lower than the average salary of C-USA coaches which is about $300,000.

Scherer, who took the job in January of 1995, had a record of 22-44 and never enjoyed a winning season at the school. His team lost at Tulane Saturday night 37-14 closing out the season on a five-game losing streak. Memphis finished 4-7 in 2000. Less than 24 hours after the game in New Orleans, Scherer was fired.

Scherer met with reporters in the football conference room about 30 minutes after Johnson’s press conference concluded.

“It’s been a tough four weeks, it’s been a tough week, and it’s been a tough 24 hours,” Scherer said. “You put your heart and soul into something like we have here, so much of your existence, your family, every waking moment for the last six years. It is frustrating that you couldn’t bring it to fruition.

“I don’t blame anyone but myself,” the coach continued. “This is a bottom line in this business and unfortunately that bottom line is strictly wins and losses. Six years in most cases is an equitable amount of time. In the case of this program and where it was . . . this is a tough job. The decision was made by R.C. I don’t agree with it and yet I understand it.”

Scherer said his only regret was the way his firing was handled. “I don’t think R.C. was fair to our program, our players, our coaches’ families, our coaches, and me and my family by letting us hang out there for the last four weeks,” he said.

The coach said he thought the next coach would have a chance to be successful. “I really think this has a chance to be a turnaround program like a Tulane, an Arkansas, or a Louisville, where someone comes in and is able to have success early. And I hope they do,” Scherer said. “These kids deserve to be successful.”

Scherer said his on future is uncertain. “I don’t know what I am going to do. I’ve had some calls from some coaches, I don’t have any job offers,” he said. “My inclination right now is to stay in coaching. I have some career decisions to make. Do I want to go into administration? Do I want to stay in coaching? I am not sure what I want to do yet.”

Whatever he decides, he won’t be doing it in Shelby County. “We love this community and yet I think it is time for us to move on,” Scherer said, “and I think it would be in the best interest of me and my family to do that.”

Scherer said he had advised his son to transfer, but Scott was planning to stay at the U of M.

Scherer endorsed his defensive coordinator for the head-coaching job. “I don’t care what names are bantered around, there is no better candidate for this job than Tommy West,” Scherer said. “The players believe in him. He is a heck of a football coach.”

The former coach had one piece of advice on his way out. “Put a $10, $12, $14 million facility over there [on the South Campus]. Put more money in the budget,” he said. “And I am saying this not as a bitter person at all. I am saying do it for the next guy so that you are not sitting here five years or six years from now with the same kind of meeting. That’s the only way this cycle will stop.”

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

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Sports Sports Feature

TIGERS LOSE; SCHERER OUT

NEW ORLEANS — The University of Memphis closed out the 2000 football season with a whimper, bowing to Tulane 37-14 Saturday night in the Superdome. It was the final game of head coach Rip Scherer’s six-year career at Memphis. School officials will announce a coaching change soon, perhaps as early as today. Tulane’s one-sided victory made the decision to relieve Scherer easier for athletic director R.C. Johnson.

Memphis played a lifeless first half. Even the vaunted Tiger defense seemed a step slow and the offense was inept as usual. Against a Tulane team giving up more than 419 yard per game, Memphis could muster only 72 yards in the half and just 11 in the second quarter. Meanwhile Tulane was piling up 266 yards, 205 in the air. Memphis had 8 penalties for 71 yards and committed two turnovers. The 17-0 deficit was the largest of the season for Memphis.

Idrees Bashir got the Tigers on the scoreboard midway through the third quarter, returning a fumble 66 yards for a touchdown. The fumble was forced by Tony Brown. It was the second longest fumble return for touchdown in school history. The touchdown made the score 17-7 and gave the Tigers their first spark of the game.

But the next Memphis drive was stopped when Scherer fumbled while being sacked. The Green Wave built the lead back to 17 moments later when Adrian Burnette hauled in his third touchdown pass from Patrick Ramsey, making the score 14-7 with 4:54 to go in the third quarter. A minute later the Green Wave put the game out of reach when safety Quentin Brown ran a Scherer interception back 48 yards for a 31-7 lead.

It was the first time this season in which Memphis had not been competitive. While the Tigers were playing for pride, Tulane became the sixth Conference USA team to become bowl eligible with the victory. The league has four bowl slots available. Tulane dominated the statistics, outgaining Memphis 483 yards to 301. Green Wave quarterback Patrick Ramsey had a great game hitting 29 of 56 for 360 yards and three touchdowns.

“I’m really sorry the way this thing ended,” Rip Scherer said after the game, the Tigers’ fifth consecutive loss. “We kept snapping back ten times, but we didn’t snap back quite the way we had the other ten.”

Scherer said the defense was on the field entirely too long (70 plays in the first half. “You just can’t leave any defense out there that long,” he said.

“I have no way of knowing that. It is a question I cannot answer,” Scherer said when asked if he thought he would be back for a seventh season. “To be honest with you it will be a relief whenever it comes to an end, one way or another.”

——————————-

SCORE BY QUARTERS

MEMPHIS 0 0 7 7 (14)

TULANE 3 14 17 3 (37)

——————————

GAME NOTES

After turning the ball over seven times in their last game, Memphis had six turnovers vs. Tulane. Quarterbacks Neil Suber and Scott Scherer both suffered interceptions while Scherer, tailback Dernice Wherry and tight end Billy Kendall had fumbles. . . . Suber made his first appearance since injuring a shoulder in the Southern Miss game six weeks ago. Suber replaced Scherer in the second quarter. . . . The game was hardly a hard ticket in New Orleans. A former Memphian approached a scalper outside the Superdome and asked how much he wanted for a ticket. “Oh, just buy me a beer when you get inside,” replied the man. The attendance was announced as 17,259, probably close the 1,000 Tiger fans made the trip. . . . Despite a contingent of Tulane supporters who sang and cheered throughout the game, it was mostly a sterile atmosphere in the cavernous arena, as artifical as the plastic Superdome turf. In the absence of a band, Tulane piped in marching-band music. The Memphis band, “The Mighty Sound of the South” made the trip and performed at halftime. They showed more vitality than the team they came to support. . . . Tigers wore all white uniforms for the first time this year. . . . Darren Garcia a speedy freshman receiver from Millington Central had his first kickoff return in the first quarter. He returned it 33 yards.

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

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Sports Sports Feature

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.”

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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?

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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!”

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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.

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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.”

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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.]

Categories
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.)