Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FROM MY SEAT: Empty Honors

Here’s a
great mind-bender to play the next time you attend a University of Memphis
football game at the Liberty Bowl. Ask those in your party — or perhaps the
entire seating section — to name the former Tiger players who have had their
numbers retired. And a dish of nachos to the fan who can actually identify the
numbers as well.

U of M
football may not be as tradition-rich as the BCS big boys, but the program has
actually honored four players, three for their exploits on the field and a
fourth as a memorial. But even if you’re a Highland Hundred lifer, in your seat
from kickoff to the final tick of the clock for every Memphis home game, you may
be unaware of these players’ names, much less the numbers they wore as Tigers.
Because, you see, there is no sign, no banner, no plaque, not so much as a
temporary flag displaying the honored names. Has to make you wonder how
“honored” the surviving stars really feel.

Associate athletic director Bob Winn clarifies that the players have had their
jerseys — but not the actual numbers on their jerseys — retired. And the
explanation is perfectly reasonable: with more than 100 players on a college
football roster, a team would simply run out of digits. (This, of course, makes
those nachos so terribly difficult to earn. You may see the “retired number” of
a former star prancing across the goal line for a touchdown.)

When I
asked Winn about the absence of a display — of any sort — at the Liberty Bowl,
he told me I was the first person he can remember even mentioning the perceived
void. “We’ve talked about [putting the numbers up],” said Winn. “We’ve just
never really progressed, and I don’t know why. We’ve discussed a ring of honor,
but just haven’t come up with the appropriate way to do it. It seems like
colleges these days will often honor a [current] player by giving him the number
of a former great, or a special locker, maybe.”

As far
as which players are honored, Winn says the U of M leaves the decision in the
hands of its coaches. Which begs the question: How does a coach in 2007
legitimately consider the impact of a player in, say, 1977? A panel of boosters,
it would seem, might be better equipped — and with longer memories — to define
and recognize a past player’s greatness.

The
city-owned Liberty Bowl has layers of protocol when it comes to decor that the
university wouldn’t have to accommodate if it had complete control of the
facility. (Another arrow in the quiver of the on-campus stadium movement.) But
even with approval needed for any permanent paint display, Winn feels like city
authorities would be receptive if a movement for the display was strong enough
and it didn’t defame the stadium in any way.

“When it
was named Rex Dockery Field,” explains Winn, “there was so much emotion about
Rex being killed in that plane crash, that some of his friends just went
straight to the City Council, and it was done. There was not much of a process.”

Here’s a
cheat sheet for your Tiger Football Legends game:


Charles Greenhill, #8
(played for Memphis in 1983) — A defensive back and
former star at Frayser High School, Greenhill was killed in the plane crash that
also killed Tiger coach Rex Dockery on December 12, 1983. He was the first Tiger
to have his jersey retired.


Dave Casinelli, #30
(1960-63) — Casinelli was the first Tiger player to rush
for 1,000 yards in a season (1,016 in 1963). He was the program’s career rushing
leader for 41 years and was honored posthumously after being killed in a 1987
car accident.


Isaac Bruce, #83
(1992-93) — In 1993, Bruce caught 74 passes for 1,054
yards, records that stand to this day (and really haven’t been challenged). With
more than 900 receptions and over 13,000 yards for the NFL’s St. Louis Rams,
Bruce could become the first former Tiger to reach the Pro Football Hall of
Fame. His jersey was retired in 2003.


DeAngelo Williams, #20
(2002-05) — A member of three bowl teams with
Memphis, Williams became only the fourth player in NCAA history to rush for
6,000 yards in his career. He established NCAA records for all-purpose yards
(7,573) and 100-yard rushing games (34). His number was retired in 2006, his
first season as a Carolina Panther.

Categories
News

Finger, Rooker, Winn Honored by U of M

From the University of Memphis: The University of Memphis Journalism Alumni Club will honor three distinguished alumni at its annual awards banquet Thursday, October 18, at The Racquet Club of Memphis.

Michael Finger, senior editor of the Memphis Flyer and Memphis magazine, and Lynne Rooker, president and part-owner of Chandler Ehrlich Advertising, a public relations and advertising firm, will receive the Charles E. Thornton Outstanding Alumni Award.

Bob Winn, associate athletics director for external affairs at the U of M and the Athletic Department’s media spokesperson, will be honored with the Herbert Lee Williams Award.

Finger has spent nearly 20 years at Memphis magazine and the Memphis Flyer, where he helped steer Contemporary Media’s sister publications with an acute understanding of what constitutes excellent journalism.

He has written many intriguing articles in both publications and has also penned humorous, tongue-in-cheek articles, columns (“Ask Vance”) and opinions under the nom de plume Vance Lauderdale. Finger’s work has informed and entertained, and his editing skills have helped his colleagues maintain high journalistic standards.

Finger earned a bachelor of arts degree in English from the U of M and a master’s degree in English from Louisiana State University. He has received more than a dozen journalism awards, including first place honors from the Memphis Professional Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists and the Atlanta Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. He was presented the Milton Simon Award as writer of the year from the Memphis Advertising Federation.

Lynne Rooker is one of the owners of Chandler Ehrlich Advertising and recently assumed the reins as president of the Memphis-based marketing and communications firm. She has been a partner with the business since 2002 and was senior vice president and director of client services prior to her recent promotion.

Bob Winn is the U of M’s associate athletics director for external affairs and the Athletics Department’s media relations representative. He has kept the University’s athletics programs in the forefront of Memphis’ public eye through his work with local, regional and national media outlets. Winn serves as the administrator for several of the Tiger sports teams, including men’s and women’s golf, and is the department’s liaison with the Memphis Park Commission for use of Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium.

The Charles E. Thornton Award is named in honor of the former Memphis journalist who was killed while on assignment in Afghanistan in 1985. The Herbert L. Williams Award is named for the University of Memphis Journalism Department’s founding chairman, who died in February 2004.

Tickets for the banquet, which is open to the public, are $45 each. A cocktail hour begins at 6 p.m. with dinner following at 7 p.m. Proceeds go to the Journalism Alumni Club’s scholarship fund at the University of Memphis.

Ticket information is available from the U of M Alumni Office at 901-678-3119 or from Paul Jewell at 901-529-2219.