Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Tigers Face Dangerous Foe in Arkansas State

The Memphis Tigers have won 10 of the last 11 meetings with Arkansas State on the gridiron (though the Indians took last year’s game at the Liberty Bowl).

This annual contest has traditionally served as an early-season stepping stone for the U of M, as conference play awaits later in the month.

But that trend may be over. Arkansas State narrowly dropped its season opener at Texas (yes, that’s Austin, Texas, home of the 7th-ranked Longhorns), while the U of M lost at home to Ole Miss, a lower-tier SEC school.

Perhaps most intimidating of all are these words from ASU coach Steve Roberts: “Texas didn’t beat us [Saturday.] We beat ourselves.” Read more on the Tigers’ next opponent.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

A Memphis Wolverine’s Lament

Taking defeat like a man …

What do you do when your alma mater goes from national championship contender to national joke the first week of the football season by losing 34-32 to Appalachian State?

Withhold your $100 annual contribution to the University of Michigan alumni fund? Yeah, that’ll hurt a lot.

Take the maize-and-blue sticker off your car? That will show them.

Stop making a once-a-decade trip to Ann Arbor to catch a game at The Big House? Ditto.

Quit going to Gill’s Bar and Grill on Highland Avenue to watch Michigan games on the big screen with other alumni and fans? Spiteful and misdirected. Nice place, nice group, and it was fun, or at least it was until last November when Ohio State fans took over the place and their team beat us on the field for the 25th time in a row or whatever.

Cheer for Appalachian State? An interesting possibility. A good team, and Boone, North Carolina, is a beautiful place in the Blue Ridge Mountains. But lifetime allegiances are not easily altered. And it’s 600 miles away and probably a tough ticket now since their stadium has about 90,000 fewer seats than Michigan’s.

Cheer for your kid’s alma mater, the University of Tennessee? They lost by two touchdowns to Cal last week and appear to be on a parallel track to mediocrity with Michigan.

Cheer for your in-laws’ alma mater, Mississippi State? Slaughtered by LSU in the opener and unlikely to win a game in the tough Southeastern Conference this year.

Cheer for the hometown team, the University of Memphis? Lost to Ole Miss at home last week and play a no-name schedule.

Suck it up, take it like a man, and continue to cheer for the Wolverines and embattled head coach Lloyd Carr to make a comeback against cupcakes like Oregon, Notre Dame, and Penn State in the coming weeks? Much too mature, not to mention risky.

No, the answer is to take refuge in the glorious past. A Memphis friend and fellow Michigan alumnus who shall remain nameless has a collection of Michigan football videotapes dating back to the mid-1970s. Needless to say, there are no tapes of Michigan defeats to the likes of Texas, USC, and Ohio State. At least, not in this collection.

In our little world, the boys in maize and blue, come rain or snow or sunshine, always prevail. Michigan State, Ohio State, Nebraska, Notre Dame, and Wisconsin always get crushed. Appalachian State does not exist.

So on crisp autumn afternoons, I’ll go over to my buddy’s house and crack open a beer and sit down in front of the television and watch a little football. We’re adults. We’re grown men. We have real lives. We know how to keep sports in perspective.

We’re not going to let one loss get in the way of an undefeated season and another national championship.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FROM MY SEAT: Early Lessons

When God
(or Bear Bryant, I’m not sure which) invented football, the first commandment
handed down was the following: “Thou shalt not turn the ball over inside the
opponent’s 10-yard-line.” When the Memphis Tigers committed this sin not once,
but twice in their 2007 season opener Saturday against Ole Miss, their penalty
was a 20-0 halftime deficit that proved too much to overcome, even with a
spirited second-half comeback fueled by a record-setting passing attack and a
Tiger defense that stood toe-to-toe with an SEC offensive line and came away
with a notch in its belt.

“I had
no idea that our football team would play like it did in the first 40 minutes of
this game,” said coach Tommy West after the contest. “I never saw it coming.
That’s as bad as I’ve ever had a team play since I’ve been here. It was
embarrassing. It’s my responsibility. We can’t play any worse than that, I know.

Had
Miguel Barnes not fumbled at the Rebel 8-yard-line late in the first quarter and
had Tiger quarterback Martin Hankins not been intercepted at the Rebel
1-yard-line (a pass that was returned 99 yards for a touchdown by Ole Miss
cornerback Dustin Mouzon, the final score of 23-21 may well have been reversed,
if not padded in the home team’s favor. (Add a blocked-punt also returned for
six points by the Rebs and Memphis really had three game-turning plays in a
single afternoon.)

As a
result of the early deficit, Memphis was forced to take flight with its offense,
which led to quarterback Martin Hankins establishing new school records for
attempts (60, tying Danny Wimprine’s mark) and completions (41, shattering
Wimprine’s standard of 32) in a game. Among the most obvious silver linings to
the loss was the performance of the much-ballyhooed Tiger receiving corps.
Maurice Jones averaged almost nine yards for his five catches. Skyscraping
Carlos Singleton (he’s 6’8″) hauled in eight passes for 91 yards, including a
pair of jumpballs Hankins must have thrown 10 feet in the air. And sophomore
Duke Calhoun — the prince of this bunch — pulled down 10 passes for 87 yards,
scoring twice (once for a touchdown, once for a two-point conversion) on
well-executed cut-back screens. Were it not for the four extra completions
Hankins had — to Ole Miss defenders — the Tigers’ Davey O’Brien Award candidate
would have earned top billing for the opener.

Considering only nine of the Rebels’ 23 points were scored against the U of M’s
defensive unit, that top billing actually goes to the run stoppers and pass
defenders who held Ole Miss to 275 total yards (a fraction of the Tigers’ 467).
It’s unlikely Memphis will face an offensive line as massive as the Ole Miss
unit (average weight: 321 pounds), combined with a tailback as talented as
BenJarvus Green-Ellis (1,000 rushing yards a season ago, including 127 in the
opener against Memphis). With linebacker Winston Bowens and end Greg Terrell
leading the way, the Tigers held Ole Miss to a total of 74 rushing yards. A pair
of early drive-extending penalties were the most damaging marks against new
defensive coordinator Rick Kravitz’s crew.

“I’m
extremely proud of our defense,” noted West, who actually came as close to
ebullience during his postgame comments as you’ll see from a coach on the wrong
end of the final score. “They played their tails off, the whole game.”

It was
the other side of the line of scrimmage where West sees the most room for
improvement. “I’m not pleased with the play of our offensive line,” he noted.
“The difference in the game was we couldn’t block their defensive line on the
pass rush. That’s not gonna be us.”

With all
that went wrong Saturday afternoon, and yet still almost made right by the
steady defensive play and offensive resolve, Tiger fans have every reason to
believe nine-game losing streaks are a distant memory. “This could be a pretty
good football team,” stressed West. “That game was fixing to get out of hand,
and our kids wouldn’t let it. I’m never happy when we lose. But we looked like
what I thought we could look like over the last 20 minutes of the game. With six
turnovers? We shouldn’t have a chance to win the game with six turnovers.”

One game
down and 11 to go for the 2007 Memphis Tigers. Which brings us back to that
football scripture, and our second commandment: “Thou shalt not dwell on last
week’s defeat.”

Categories
Cover Feature News

Roaring Back?

However hot, hazy, and humid, August in Memphis is a time for optimism if you’re a football fan. Before the season’s opening kickoff — this Saturday for the University of Memphis, in the Liberty Bowl against Ole Miss — every team from UCF to UCLA is undefeated. For the 2007 Memphis Tigers, optimism is a welcome tonic.

Having survived a 2-10 trainwreck in 2006, head coach Tommy West turned his staff inside out over the off-season. Six of West’s nine full-time staffers are new to the program, the lone holdovers being offensive coordinator Clay Helton, offensive line coach Rick Mallory, and linebackers coach Kenny Ingram. Add the requisite hope and optimism of a new job to the mix and this year’s squad will take its lead from a staff that has little tolerance for any aftertaste from last season.

“They’re good teachers,” says West of his new assistants. “And that’s what coaching is: teaching. I’m really excited about it.”

West dismisses any thoughts of the risk in such a dramatic turnover in staff. “I keep a good grip on things,” he says. “And I do what I think is necessary to move us forward. The [challenge] has been to get everybody on the same page. We know how to win. That’s what I had to impress on them: You’re not coming into a program that hasn’t won. We’re not here to get on your page. You need to get on our page. We’ve been to more bowl games than all of them. And they’ve done a good job of understanding what we do and how we do it.

“When you’ve had a staff together for four or five years,” he continues, “it’s easier for the head coach. The other coaches know what’s expected. That’s my job, to coach the coaches. It’s their job to coach the players.”

Here’s a look at the season ahead through the eyes of three of the new coaches.

Brent Pry (Defensive Line)

The 37-year-old Pry arrives in Memphis having spent the last five seasons at Louisiana-Lafayette (ULL). During Pry’s time at ULL, the Ragin’ Cajuns won a Sun Belt Conference championship and saw three defensive players selected in the NFL draft. Having played collegiately as a safety at Buffalo, Pry has taken a unique path to overseeing defensive linemen.

“I’ve coached them all,” Pry stresses. “When I went to Virginia Tech as a grad assistant, I coached the line for three years. I coached the secondary at Western Carolina, and I’ve also coached linebackers. We had some great defenses at Virginia Tech, and that was primarily because of our front four. You can take a ball game over from the defensive line. If they can’t block you up front, they can’t do much of anything.”

Pry seems every bit as happy to be in Memphis as West is to add him to the mix. “I wanted to work for Tommy West six years ago,” he explains, “and it didn’t work out, but I’ve always had a great amount of respect for him. Coming from Virginia Tech and knowing Tommy when he was at Clemson, I’ve got a lot of respect for the kind of defensive coach he was. I also had a close relationship with [new defensive coordinator] Rick Kravitz.”

Though new to the Mid-South, Pry has a feel for the lay of the land. And he has a unique perspective — optimism, remember — on the team he inherits. “Coming from the Sun Belt Conference,” Pry reflects, “we played a lot of Conference USA schools, so I had an idea of what was good and what wasn’t in this league, and I was very impressed with the talent on this football team. [Last year’s] record was not indicative of the talent.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Darin Hinshaw

Pry has a different angle — again, coming from the Sun Belt — from fans who continue to insist this is SEC country. “Conference USA has a bigger, better athlete,” Pry notes. “There was speed in the Sun Belt, though not as much. The overall makeup of your roster has much greater potential in this league. In the Sun Belt, maybe the top 10 guys could play in this league. I also think there’s a greater commitment from the administration in this league.”

Considering last year’s Tiger team suffered a nine-game losing streak — one that didn’t include the season-opening loss to Ole Miss — how can Pry carry his rosy outlook with a straight face? “Anytime you make a change at the coordinator position, it’s tough,” he stresses. “You’re going from a very different scheme. Joe Lee Dunn’s scheme was atypical. To change from that scheme was difficult. The kids had to be exposed to new adjustments and things they didn’t have to deal with under the old system.

“We had a head start this spring, really diving into the 4-3 and what Tommy and Rick Kravitz want to do,” Pry says. “I expect to see a lot of improvement. The first thing that comes to mind when I look at a defensive line is mentality. Along with coaching technique with this group, I’ve coached the heck out of them when it comes to mentality. The more maturity I can get out of this group, the more commitment. It’s a tough position to play, especially on first and second down. You’ve got to have a mature bunch. Do they understand the work involved? Do they understand the commitment, the unselfish approach? They have to get the most out of every rep, every practice. It’s an image that they’re forming, to be respected by their teammates and their coaches.”

In identifying a leader among his unit, Pry points to a rookie defensive tackle: “Freddie Barnett, the junior-college transfer, has been a real inspiration. He has tremendous ability and all the intangibles. He’s unselfish, talented, and a very big team player. He’s constantly pushing the rest of the group.”

Greg Terrell — a C-USA All-Freshman selection a year ago — is another player fans should spotlight this fall. “Greg has put on about 30 pounds,” Pry says. “He’s bigger and stronger. He’s growing into the new system, and there’s a lot of competition at the [defensive end] position. Greg’s had to work harder than he ever has before. He’s beginning to understand that you’re not going to get by on ability alone.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Rick Kravitz

Darin Hinshaw (wide receivers)

Led by sophomore Duke Calhoun (42 receptions for 681 yards in ’06), the Tiger receiving corps should be a strength this fall, particularly if senior quarterback Martin Hankins builds on his strong finish last season and tailback Joseph Doss keeps opposing defenses honest against the run. The pass-catchers will be guided by 35-year-old Darin Hinshaw, a record-breaking quarterback at Central Florida during his playing days and most recently the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Georgia Southern. Hinshaw also spent five years at Middle Tennessee State, where the Blue Raiders developed into one of the highest-scoring offenses in the Sun Belt.

Ask Hinshaw about his unit and the coach has to take a breath before reeling off the names he expects to make an impact: Calhoun, Carlos Singleton, Earnest Williams, Steven Black (a junior-college transfer), Carlton Robinzine (recovered from a knee injury that cost him the 2006 season). It’s a case of strength in numbers that the Tiger passing game hasn’t always enjoyed.

“Through the course of a season,” Hinshaw explains, “you’re going to use all your receivers, and they’re gonna have to rotate. When you can rotate a starter and backup and not lose anything, that’s huge. Normally, defensive backs don’t rotate at all, so you have a chance to run some deep routes, tire them out, and not lose anything at receiver.

Larry Kuzniewski

Tommy West

“We run sets with three and four receivers,” Hinshaw continues. “We’re going to move them around, to get them in position to get mismatches. When you have one great receiver, the defense will roll coverage to him. But when you have good receivers on both sides, it creates one-on-one matches. We’ve got to make plays.”

Hinshaw loves the leadership Calhoun has shown at the start of his second college season. “Duke’s always the first in line for sprints,” Hinshaw says. “When you have a guy with talent like his wanting to work, it gets everybody focused.”

Whether it’s size, speed, strength, or versatility, Hinshaw feels the Tiger wideouts are equipped to create their share of headaches for the opposition. “We’ve gained a lot of experience at the position,” he notes. “We’re gonna move Duke around a lot, and we’ll have depth with Maurice Jones. Earnest Williams is going to be one of the top inside receivers in the conference. Usually you have one guy, then you have a bunch of average players that you’re trying to get better. I feel like we have weapons that can catch the ball and score. We’ve got strong receivers: Jones broke the school squat record [for receivers] this summer.”

A quarterback’s blood still pulsing through his veins, Hinshaw recognizes the development of Martin Hankins as critical to his unit’s performance in the season ahead. And he likes what he sees thus far. “[Hankins] has really come along from where he was last year,” Hinshaw says. “He’s gotten bigger, stronger, and he’s gotten a lot more confident with the receivers. When a bunch of guys get hurt, you lose that relationship. [Backup quarterback] Will Hudgens is a leader, too. And he’s had a good summer.”

With seven or eight receivers in the mix, Hankins had better become familiar with faces before he starts gazing downfield. And those receivers he ultimately sees had better catch the ball, because a ready-and-able replacement will be on the sideline.

“That’s what’s great about making each other better, the competition,” Hinshaw says. “If you don’t have someone pushing you from behind, you can get stagnant. As a group, we’re working to make each other better and win as a team. Some games you may catch 10 balls, others you may catch three. It depends on what the defense is doing. Everybody’s gotta be ready to perform and to make plays.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Brent Pry

Rick Kravitz
(defensive coordinator)

It’s almost a universal truth among Tiger fans that the 2006 season was all but compromised with the midseason dismissal of defensive coordinator Joe Lee Dunn. As Pry notes, the adjustments forced upon players — while preparing for the next week’s foe — proved too much for the Tiger defense. With West himself overseeing the scheme transition, important details were lost in translation. The end result: an average of more than 30 points allowed per game.

To the rescue comes Rick Kravitz. Having first filled the role of defensive coordinator in 1986 (at Florida A&M), Kravitz brings a single-minded determination for defensive improvement to the 2007 Tigers. During a decade spent at South Florida, Kravitz coordinated a unit that ranked among the top 20 defenses nationally three times. (Last year — his only season at North Carolina State — the Wolfpack finished 13th in the country against the pass.)

Having been on the opposite sideline, Kravitz welcomes the chance to mold a defense at West’s side. “Knowing Coach West’s defensive background,” Kravitz says, “it was exciting to get the chance to come here and learn some things from him. He’s a fundamentals coach, which I like. He’s a guy who lets you coach. He wants things done his way, which is natural. He’s straightforward.”

Larry Kuzniewski

#22: sophomore wide receiver Duke Calhoun

He won’t go so far as to describe a “Rick Kravitz philosophy to defense,” but the 53-year-old Florida native does believe there is value in change. “I bring — along with the other new coaches — some enthusiasm and excitement. Defensively, we’re developing an attitude. If the ball’s on the one-yard line, you know, we still have a yard to go. We’re being positive, aggressive. If we can improve 2 percent a day, after 20 days we’ve improved 40 percent.”

How is a defense that was so staggered a year ago reshaped into a unit capable of beating Division I-A competition? Kravitz considers the answer elementary. “We have to continue to work on fundamentals and get better at what we do. If we do that, no matter what we run, we’re going to be a better defensive team. Kids have bought into my fundamentals, and that’s how you get better and better.”

Kravitz echoes Pry’s sentiments about Barnett when describing the off-season leaders of his defense. He also says defensive back Dontae Reed — a transfer from Ole Miss — has made a difference. “They encourage each other,” Kravitz notes. “Dontae has gathered players for workouts, taking responsibility and getting things done.”

A new season, a new schedule, and lots of new faces. Why not be optimistic as year seven of the Tommy West era dawns in Memphis?

“With six new coaches,” Pry says, “it forces you to move forward. We weren’t here for [the 2-10 season]. It’s been a breath of fresh air, a renewal.

“This is the most well-disciplined football team I’ve ever been around,” he adds. “And it starts at the top with Coach West. These players — and the coaches — have a tremendous respect for him and how he wants to run this program. The whole group is coming together as a football team.”

The first exam is Saturday against Ole Miss.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Seth Adams to Start Opener for Ole Miss Against Tigers

(AP) — Former walk-on Seth Adams will be the starting quarterback when Mississippi takes the field September 1st against Memphis, coach Ed Orgeron announced Friday.

Kickoff for the team’s season opener is 2:37 p.m. at the Liberty Bowl.

Adams, who has been running with the first unit during the preseason, was selected over last year’s starter, Brent Schaeffer, and redshirt freshman Michael Herrick.

“Since we opened the quarterback position in the spring, Seth has been the most consistent, both in the spring and in fall camp,” Orgeron said in a statement. “Our quarterback position will be treated like any other position on the team. You have to earn your starting spot on a daily basis.”

Adams, a 6-foot-4, 225-pounder from Holly Springs, walked on at Ole Miss in January of 2006 after transferring from Hinds Community College and participated in spring football drills.

Adams appeared in six games last year with significant time against LSU and Mississippi State. He completed 17 of 31 passes for 177 yards. But more significantly he showed the ability to calmly run the offense.

Schaeffer was inconsistent much of last season, completing 47.1 percent of his passes and throwing 10 interceptions and nine touchdowns.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Inaugural Whitehaven Classic Kicks Off Saturday

The inaugural Whitehaven Classic football jamboree kicks off Saturday, August 25th at 3 p.m. at Whitehaven High School.

The tournament will feature the six major high schools in the Whitehaven area playing each other, as well as performances by each school’s band.

Special awards for each school’s
top academic athlete and the Coaches Hall of Fame will be also be announced. For more info, call Vincent Hunter, principal at Whitehaven High School at 359-8827.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Damn the Torpedoes!

Harold Byrd, suited up to the nines, his mane of gone-white hair crowning his tanned, smiling face, is being hit on by two matrons who recognize him from the Bank of Bartlett commercials which he, the bank’s president, is spokesman for. The three of them are standing in line at Piccadilly cafeteria on Poplar near Highland, waiting to pay their lunch checks.

“Oh, he looks just like he does on television,” coos one of the women, while the other nods with what is either real or mock mournfulness. “And his wife came and took him away from us! Isn’t that a shame?”

At 56, Byrd is unmarried, but he does not correct this misapprehension. He merely keeps the smile on — the characteristically toothy one which, together with his quite evident fitness, a product of daily runs and workouts, makes him look younger than his age — and says, “Thank you.”

Later, as he is leaving the restaurant, Byrd observes, with evident sincerity, “They made my day.” And just in case his companion might have missed it, he notes with a wink the greeting he got from another, younger woman.

All this attention and well-wishing has to be a welcome consolation for Byrd, given the predicament he now finds himself in: Horatio at the Gate against what he sees as Mayor Willie Herenton’s expensive and ill-conceived scheme to develop the Fairgrounds, with a brand-new football stadium as the pièce de résistance.

Justin Fox Burks

Byrd is on a mission to demonstrate that a better solution is at hand, one long overdue — namely, the long-deferred construction of a quality football stadium on campus at the University of Memphis, one which he says would cost no more than $100 million, as against the vaguely calculated sums, ranging from $125 million upwards, associated with the mayor’s plan.

Byrd is more than just another citizen with an opinion. He is a member of the university’s Board of Visitors, he is a former president of its Alumni Association, and he was the first president of the Tiger Scholarship Fund. More than all of that, Byrd — the holder himself of undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Memphis — has been, for decades now, one of the best-known public faces associated with university causes, athletic and otherwise.

His annual bank-sponsored pre-game buffets, held at the Fairgrounds before every Tiger home opener, draw huge crowds, teeming with the high and mighty and hoi polloi alike. He is either the host or the featured speaker at literally scores of university-related occasions each year, and there is no such thing as a fund-raising campaign for the university in which he does not figure largely.

Byrd’s prominence on the University of Memphis booster scene rivals that of athletic director R.C. Johnson or U of M president Shirley Raines and precedes the coming of either.

It must be painful, Byrd’s companion suggests, as they head for an on-campus tour of the site Byrd favors for a new stadium, that he now finds himself somewhat at loggerheads with both of these figures.

He agrees. He expresses what sounds like sincere regret that he doesn’t have the kind of impressively remote bearing that he associates with a variety of other civic figures — cases in point being Michael Rose, the longtime local entrepreneur and new chairman of First Tennessee Bank, and Otis Sanford, editorial director of The Commercial Appeal.

“I wish I could play my cards closer to the vest,” he laments. “I guess I’m too Clintonesque. I tell everybody everything!”

Byrd admits, “I may make people nervous,” but, as he says, by way of reminding both himself and his companion, “I think people are still talking to me, I think people still like me.”

Byrd is doubtless correct in that assumption, though there is no doubting that he does, in fact, “make people nervous” — and will continue to, so long as Athletic Director Johnson maintains his public stance of support for a Fairgrounds stadium (one, however, as Byrd notes, that has undergone some modification of late) and President Raines keeps her cautious distance from any particular proposal.

Harold Byrd’s diagram of his preferred site for an on-campus football stadium at the University of Memphis. All facilities are shown as they currently exist except for the stadium itself, which would occupy an expanse now filled by four dormitories all due for demolition, according to U of M officials.

At a recent meeting of the university Board of Visitors, Byrd laid out his vision for an on-campus arena — specifying no less than five acceptable sites.

Site Number One, which Byrd prefers, is a terrain adjoining Zach Curlin Drive on the eastern fringe of the university’s main campus. It would stretch from an open parkland in the vicinity of the Ned R. McWherter Library on the north down to the area of the old University Fieldhouse on the south. As Byrd notes, four dormitory buildings which now occupy the land are shortly to be razed.

“There’s our Grove!” he says excitedly of the available open expanse near the library — evoking the pre-game gatherings of fans on the campus of the University of Mississippi before games at the school’s on-campus Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

Site Number Two, “which I like almost as much,” Byrd says, is a roomy area along Southern Avenue south of the university’s main administration buildings. Adjacent to an existing athletic complex and athletic dorms, the area consists mainly of parking lots right now.

Site Number Three is the large area that stretches from Patterson west to Highland and northward to Central. “The university owns most of the houses in this area,” says Byrd, and a tour of the zone indicates that, just as he says, most of the edifices, some now used as fraternity houses, many rented out to students, have seen their better days.

Site Number Four is the area just north of Central, partially university-owned, partially requiring some eminent-domain clearance. “I think that one would be more complicated,” Byrd says, though he notes that other university figures, who for the moment are keeping their own counsel, are more keen on it.

And Site Number Five, lastly, is the relatively sprawling area of the university’s South Campus, bordered on the north by Park Avenue. “That wouldn’t be as good as one located directly on the main campus, where most of the students are, but even it would be better by far than the Liberty Bowl.”

Byrd’s enthusiasm for the on-campus sites — especially for the Zach Curlin Drive alternative — is somewhat contagious, but when he made two elaborate presentations recently, one to a meeting of the Board of Visitors, another to an alumni group, there were few among his hearers who were willing to put themselves on the line as being in agreement with him.

“But you wouldn’t believe how many people came up to me afterward and said they thought I had the right idea,” Byrd says. He provides a list of influential people, both on and off campus. “I have no right to speak in their name,” he says, but they are likely to concur.

The first two contacted are much as advertised. Lawyer Jim Strickland, a member of the university alumni group who has launched a campaign for the City Council, is almost as keen on the Zach Curlin site as Byrd is, and Jim Phillips, president of the biometric firm Luminetx, takes time out from a meeting of his board to extol Byrd’s thinking in general terms.

At a recent gathering, prominent developer Henry Turley and University of Memphis professor David Acey were in conversation and were asked what they thought of Byrd’s proposals. “He’s passionate!” Turley exclaimed appreciatively, but the developer, who has interests of his own in the university, wondered where the money would come from. Acey’s concern had to do with space.

Justin Fox Burks

Apprised of this, Byrd noted that the same objections might apply, to greater or lesser degree, to the Fairgrounds site, and he insisted that better solutions were at hand at the university once people began to join him in thinking in that direction. Only a dearth of leadership has kept that from happening so far, Byrd says.

Byrd expresses admiration for both Herenton and his Shelby County mayoral counterpart, A C Wharton, though he finds the former figure a bit imperious and the latter one inclined to be more a “moderator” than a leader per se. He still hopes that both can be converted to a vision something like his own for a regeneration of the university campus that becomes the springboard for progress in the community at large.

“Every other university in the state has on-campus football and basketball sites,” Byrd notes, and he reels off a list of universities in the nation that have in the last few years constructed such facilities: “Louisville, Connecticut, Missouri, Central Florida, Florida Atlantic, North Texas, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, Minnesota, Gonzaga … Those are just a few. There have to be 20 or more of them. Have we done it right or has everybody else done it wrong?”

It is the experience of the University of Louisville, in particular, that most animates Byrd. As he points out, that school had, until a generation ago, been primarily an urban-based commuter school with an athletic reputation in basketball. As Memphis fans well know, in fact, the Louisville Cardinals were the basketball Tigers’ chief rivals until recently — when they left Conference-USA for richer pickings in the more prestigious Big East conference, where the Cardinals now figure as a power in both basketball and football.

And there, Byrd contends, but for the aforesaid lack of vision on the part of university and civic officials, would have gone the Tigers and their supporters and the larger community served by the university. As Byrd sees it, Louisville launched its Great Leap Forward in 1992 when Howard Schellenberger became football coach and declared that his goal was for Louisville to play for a national championship.

“For $63 million — that’s all — they built a 40,000-seat stadium on campus. It replaced an old one several miles away, kind of like the Liberty Bowl. They’ve just made a quantum leap, and now they do contend for the national championship!”

How much would it cost for the University of Memphis to build a facility that might lead to the same result? Byrd reflects. “As a banker, I contend that we could build a first-rate collegiate stadium seating something like 50,000 people on campus for $100 million.” He contrasts that figure to estimates as high as $150 million for the facility Mayor Herenton envisions for the Fairgrounds.

And how would an on-campus stadium be financed?

Obligingly, Byrd does the arithmetic. There will be so much for naming rights (à la Louisville’s Papa John’s Stadium or, for that matter, FedExForum). So much from student fees. (“They’re building a new $45 million University Center right now on the basis of a modest increase in student tuition,” Byrd says. “Don’t you think students would be totally excited to walk to an on-campus facility? And our fees would still be the lowest in the state.”) So much from signage and from sale of suites and from organized fund-raising campaigns of the sort Byrd is a seasoned veteran of.

The problem, as Byrd sees it, is that the university has historically let itself get sidetracked from the clear and evident duty of completing its on-campus presence, which is what the fact of self-contained athletic facilities would amount to. Memphis’ state-supported university, he notes again, is the only facility in Tennessee so deprived.

With some chagrin, he acknowledges that he himself, both as chairman of the Shelby County delegation during his service as a state representative in the 1970s and later as an active university booster, acceded to the series of athletic structures and arenas built elsewhere — the Liberty Bowl (then known as Memorial Stadium) and the Mid-South Coliseum in the mid-’60s and, more reluctantly, the Pyramid downtown.

“Downtown was always the only other location for putting a first-class facility, where there was an infrastructure in place that could profit from it, but the Pyramid was NBA-unacceptable from the inception, and I told them so.”

Byrd sighs. “The leaders of government at that time were fearful of the taxpayers and more worried about that rather than building the facility like it should have been built. The result was that it ended up costing us more rather than less.”

And the irony, Byrd says, is that the university was then, as it would be now under Herenton’s proposed Fairgrounds development, the prime source of revenue support for all these city facilities — up to as much as 90 percent, and 50 percent even for FedExForum, which is totally under the control of the NBA’s Grizzlies.

“Flying into Memphis, you notice the Pyramid, the Liberty Bowl, and the Coliseum,” says Byrd. “They represent over $500 million in today’s dollars if you had to replace those facilities, and they’re all about to be either mothballed or destroyed. They’re not in imminent danger of encountering footballs or basketballs — they’re in danger of the wrecking ball! They must not have been in the right place to begin with if they need to be torn down now.”

Why, then, repeat that error by rebuilding something else new and shiny and expensive, but doomed to obsolescence, at the Fairgrounds? Byrd recalls city councilman Dedrick Brittenum saying, in a discussion about the proposed new venues, that whatever went in at the Fairgrounds should be built to last 30 or 40 years.

“Thirty or 40 years! That’s no time at all. What we need is to create a traditional site — like Neyland Stadium at the University of Tennessee. That goes all the way back to the 1920s!”

Byrd recalls that the old University Fieldhouse, adjacent to his preferred site for a stadium on the eastern edge of the U of M campus, once served as an on-site facility for Tiger basketball games during the period in the late 1950s and early 1960s when the university was coming of age as a national power in that sport. “What if they’d kept on going and expanded it and built a state-of-the-art facility there?”

He acknowledges having signed off as a state legislator on construction of both the Mid-South Coliseum as a replacement for the fieldhouse and the Liberty Bowl.

“If we’d put them in the right place, on campus, 20 million people would have visited that campus in the years since 1965. What would be the effect of having 20 million on the University of Memphis campus during that time?”

He ticks off several imagined consequences — increased donations, an enlarged study body, a developed social-fraternity infrastructure, a better-paid and more prestigious faculty. In short, a big-league university instead of the perpetually hand-to-mouth institution that is the University of Memphis today.

“We’ve got wonderful programs there. A speech and hearing center, a new school of music, a beautiful library.” He lists several other glories of the university, all, he contends, hidden more or less under a bushel. “When I talk to my fellow members of the Board of Visitors or the other university groups I belong to, I ask them, how many times have you actually visited the university when it wasn’t in the line of duty? It’s almost always very seldom or never.”

Byrd is realistic. He knows it’s too late to create a basketball arena on campus. FedExForum, which, as he sees it, has its own virtues, will serve that purpose. But football is another matter. Not only would it have enormous impact on the university itself with eight football dates a year, including the annual Southern Heritage Classic and Liberty Bowl events, plus innumerable concerts. “As a state facility, the stadium would be exempt from all those restrictions the Grizzlies put on other facilities,” he says. “Altogether, we should attract a million people the first year alone.”

As for the surrounding community, says Byrd, “The mayor talks about using tax-increment financing to redevelop the area around the Fairgrounds. Why not use it instead to build up the area around the university? The only thing that’s been built around the Fairgrounds in recent years is Will’s Barbecue, and it closed years ago. There are lots of existing businesses in the university area. They’ve paid their dues, and they deserve the support this would give.”

Like someone reluctantly confiding a secret, Byrd says, “Most people think the university is operating on a plan, but they’re not. They don’t have the kind of Teddy Roosevelt, damn-the-torpedoes, full-speed-ahead outlook that we had under Sonny Humphreys [university president during its major expansion era in the 1950s and 1960s]. We’ve had a dearth of leadership. R.C. and President Raines are waiting on Herenton. They should have their own vision, to get everybody together … .”

He takes a breath and continues:

“If that were allowed to happen, it would be amazing.”

Harold Byrd makes it clear that he is prepared to damn the torpedoes and go full-speed ahead and to keep on recommending, and seeking, that kind of amazement. And, sooner or later, he fully expects to have some serious company in that endeavor.

Categories
Editorial Opinion

Willie for President?

Almost despite himself, Mayor Herenton has occasioned some useful discourse about the matter of civic priorities. We say “despite himself” because we’re not sure the latest Big Idea floated by the mayor — a new football stadium to be financed by a $60 million bond issue — was ever meant to be taken seriously. It is characteristic of Hizzoner to advance sweeping proposals, let them simmer for a while on the front burner, then allow both them and his own appetite for pursuing them to cool off while the same-old same-old civic problems — urban blight, crime, neighborhood redevelopment — and some worsening new ones — corruption in local government prominent among them — continue to languish with inattention.

The stadium proposal, announced by Herenton on the occasion of his annual New Year’s Day prayer breakfast, already seems like a leftover item from last year, or the year before that, another in a long list of forgotten or neglected issues, like the mayor’s perennial call for city/county consolidation, a long-shot issue that gets ever longer as real needs go unaddressed and public confidence wanes among those both inside and outside the city line.

Herenton is no fool, to be sure. He was canny enough to go beyond a mere welcoming address at last weekend’s National Conference for Media Reform and to align a blast or two at his local critics with the issue of media bias, one of the forum’s dominant concerns. For his pains, he was accorded the status of an unfairly maligned executive by one of the event’s organizers, who went so far as to suggest that, but for the aforesaid bias, Herenton might have become a perfectly legitimate presidential contender. (No, we’re not making this up.)

Well, good for him. We’ve always respected Mayor Herenton for the large and even inspiring figure he cuts when he chooses to — just as we’ve always discounted his disingenuous claim that he is “not a politician.” The last time we looked, successful politicians are the ones who know how to get the numbers at election time, and that category certainly includes Willie Herenton.

As we stand on the precipice of yet another city election, one that will evidently see Herenton’s attempt at winning a fifth four-year mayoral term, we indulge the hope that, this time around, the mayor is challenged to go beyond bromides, bait-and-switch proposals, and election-year rhetoric. One more-than-likely opponent is City Council member Carol Chumney, who if nothing else knows how to find the sore that’s festering and pick it. There are plenty sores around on our urban and governmental landscape for her to choose from. Another possible entrant is former MLGW president Herman Morris, a longtime insider who is no doubt capable of great revelations concerning possible back-burner (and back-room) issues.

We look forward to a real and meaningful contest this year between Herenton, Chumney, Morris, and whomever else, and whoever wins may well get our own nomination for president if they go on to do something about the real problems and — who knows? — maybe even fix them.

Categories
Opinion

Cheaper, Better, Sooner

1) Go to some football games at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. Buy a ticket at the gate. Don’t use your parking pass. Haggle with the guys on East Parkway instead. Sit with the ordinary fans at a Conference USA game. Use the public bathrooms at least twice even if you don’t have to go. Buy something to eat and drink but don’t send someone else to get it. Walk all the way around the stadium from the inside and the outside.

2) Go to a special game that draws a bigger crowd. Sit in a skybox. Eat the food. Talk to the other people. Visit the locker room and the press box. Say hi to the poor, suffering reporters in their terribly cramped quarters and see if you can honestly generate one ounce of sympathy for them. Talk to the coach of the visiting team. If you are not a football fan and never go to games, that’s fine, but of course you don’t advertise that. Uh, right?

3) Watch a game on television, which is where most of the revenue comes from. Notice how the cameras are focused on the players and the field, not the empty seats, locker rooms, concessions, or bathrooms.

4) Go to a high school football playoff game at the field on Central Avenue in the Mid-South Fairgrounds. Stand in line for 20 minutes with 100 other people while a single ticket-seller in a cage behind a window collects your $6 and a single ticket-taker lets you through the single four-foot-wide gate that is open. Watch most of the first quarter through the fence behind the end zone while standing in this line. Imagine you rode three hours from Brentwood on a bus. Then ask yourself what the hell is wrong with this picture.

5) If you’re not going to football games, watch Trading Spaces on television. A designer and some carpenters with more creativity and energy than money ($1,000) turn an ordinary room in an ordinary house into a cool room. The owners cry when they see it. Usually they’re glad, sometimes they’re mortified, but either way, they get a makeover on the cheap.

6) Get the University of Memphis and promoter Fred Jones to choose half a dozen architects and designers to play Trading Spaces with the skyboxes. Give them each $10,000 and free publicity. Then get the U of M to hire half a dozen caterers to compete for the title of Best Caterer for the skyboxes. Give them each $1,000 and free publicity. Total outlay: $66,000.

7) Spend $1 million to buy up blighted property near the stadium. It’s a start. Hire a landscape architecture firm to demolish the old cattle stalls outside the stadium and replace them with something that looks nice. Now. Remember, it’s just a start. Then tear down the Coliseum, which has nothing to do with the stadium. This will take a little longer, but it’s worth it. Tell anyone who complains that they can have a free ticket to The Pyramid.

8) Instead of trashing it, try the adjectives “historic” and “different” on for size when describing the stadium and its graceful curves. At 41 years old, it’s younger than Soldier Field, the Big House in Ann Arbor, the Coliseum in L.A., the Rose Bowl, and thousands of perfectly good buildings and houses in Memphis. Think trash into treasure. Make sarcastic remarks about “cookie-cutter” stadiums built on the cheap. Then ask why this stadium isn’t just fine for eight or nine games a year against the likes of Chattanooga and Tulsa and Central Florida.

9) Imitate AutoZone Park and have too many concessions and staff people at games instead of too few.

10) After you do this, invite Memphians to come to the “New and Improved Liberty Bowl Game” and see the results for themselves and decide whether they really need a new stadium in the same location as the old one. Give everyone a free hot dog and a Coke to make them feel good. It worked for Boss Crump.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Royal Flush?

On December 28th, just three days before Memphis mayor Willie Herenton announced his plans for a new football stadium, a work crew began renovations on the old one. After a 2004 facilities analysis of the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, the mayor and the City Council committed to $15 million in upgrades to the aging facility, including improvements to the sound system and restrooms and making it more Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) compliant. The City Council appropriated $3.6 million last fall to pay for the first phase of those upgrades — a renovation and expansion of restroom facilities — and work began late December.

“Some of the facilities that are there now are 40 years old,” says city architect Mel Scheuerman. “The new restrooms were going to provide an additional 84 fixtures for women. We wanted to get the fixture count up to a more appropriate level.”

Unfortunately, the 84 toilets weren’t the only bowls in question.

During a New Year’s Day prayer breakfast, Herenton proposed building a brand-new stadium to replace the Liberty Bowl as the home the University of Memphis Tigers. The mayor said he would present financing details and the economic impact of such a stadium to the City Council in 45 days. The next day, the Liberty Bowl renovation project, in which supplies and equipment had already been ordered and contractors hired, was postponed while the administration decided what to do. Ultimately, however, the city couldn’t afford the time-out.

“I can’t stop the project for 45 or 60 days and get it done before football season,” says Scheuerman. “In a perfect world, we would stop and say, what are we going to do? But we have a timing issue. We need to have it ready by next fall.”

By the end of last week, work resumed at the Liberty Bowl. Because of the possibility for a new stadium, the administration eliminated the project’s 84 new toilets, deciding to only renovate the existing restrooms in the lower concourse.

“The restrooms haven’t had any true upgrades in many years. The money invested in them will make them more ADA compliant,” says Scheuerman. “It may take five or six years for a new stadium to be built, so it’s not a bad investment.”

But without vandalism or abuse, the fixtures have a lifespan of 10 to 20 years.

“We’re not going to get the full life out of the renovation, but there’s a lot of uncertainty with the new stadium,” says Scheuerman. “Since we had already started [the project], this was a good fall-back position.”

I don’t know if the city should build a new stadium or not. The 2004 study said the Liberty Bowl could use between $115 million and $148 million in upgrades. Though some work has already been done, it might make more sense to build something akin to the Papa John’s Stadium in Louisville, which cost $63 million. If we’re saving money by doing new construction, maybe we could even afford something a little nicer.

But I’m confused about how and when the mayor decided a stadium was what the city needs. In other goals for 2007, the mayor mentioned a cleaner city, a safer city, and a better-educated city. I think we can all agree that those would be beneficial, but somehow I can’t see a $100 million stadium having a positive impact on crime, sanitation, or education.

If the mayor wanted to present a solid case for a new stadium, shouldn’t the administration have done its 45 days of study before the mayor told everyone it was a good idea? How does Herenton know it’s a good idea if he doesn’t have the data to back it up?

And if Herenton knew that he was serious about building a new stadium a year ago — even if he knew it a month ago — why let the city go forward with building brand-new bathrooms in an old stadium?

It might be worth it to build a new stadium. It might be worth it to have renovated restrooms at the Liberty Bowl. But with Herenton pursuing an agenda counter to that of his staff, city money is being flushed down the toilets.