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Former Showboats Coach Pepper Rodgers Dies



Pepper Rodgers, who was head coach of the Memphis Showboats of the USFL in the mid-1980s, has died at age 88. A former football player, Rodgers also was head coach of the Canadian Football League’s expansion Memphis Mad Dogs in the mid-1990s.

He and his wife, Livingston, lived in Reston, Virginia.

Born in Atlanta, Rodgers was a quarterback and kicker for Georgia Tech. He was later the head coach at  Kansas, UCLA, and Georgia Tech.

He’s the author of the 1985 novel, Fourth and Long Gone, and his autobiography, Pepper, which he wrote with Al Thorny.

Longtime friend Steve Ehrhart, AutoZone Liberty Bowl executive director, says, “He was one of the most creative and clever and ingenious people — not just a football coach. He was a very bright and intelligent guy. He always shook up the coaching world wherever he was.”

And Ehrhart says, “He could tell stories and make you laugh better than anybody else could. He could spin a story better than anybody. He connected with the players wonderfully. Better than any coach I’ve ever seen. He could speak the language, bust their tail at practice, and make them laugh. He created an atmosphere where everyone was having fun, even though they were working hard.”

Ehrhart hadn’t seen Rodgers in three months. “I tried to get them to come back to Memphis recently, but he wasn’t ready to travel.”

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From My Seat Sports

Memphis: Hoop City, Indeed

Perspective can be challenging when it comes to basketball in Memphis, Tennessee. That talented team at East High School aside, you’d think soul-crushing roundballs were falling from the sky these days, at least from FedExForum to the Larry Finch Center on the University of Memphis campus.

The Memphis Tigers lost six of their last eight games, the last two by 41 and 30 points, to finish the season 19-13 and shut out of postseason play a third straight year. The honeymoon for Hall of Fame-bound coach Tubby Smith ended around Valentine’s Day. Can he recruit? Can he manage a game? Can he fill empty seats at FedExForum?

A recent five-game losing streak had followers of the Memphis Grizzlies questioning everything from rotation dysfunction to Chandler Parsons’ social life. When Parsons’ on-court struggles came to an end with the announcement last week he requires knee surgery, the loss of a starter seemed like a blessing. Related or not, the Grizzlies now find themselves on a four-game winning streak, the latest a takedown of the mighty San Antonio Spurs Saturday night. Exhale.

However trying this winter has been in our fair city, this week should prove palliative, and considerably so. Three other cities may be hosting regional finals in the NCAA tournament, but make no mistake: Memphis will be playing in the center ring.

Larry Kuzniewski

Headed to FedExForum for games this Friday are three of the top eight teams in the country (according to the AP rankings): 8th-ranked UCLA (31-4), 6th-ranked North Carolina (29-7, the region’s top seed), and 5th-ranked Kentucky (31-5, coached by one John Vincent Calipari). The Ringo Starr of the South’s foursome is Butler (25-8), a team that has been to the championship game twice this very decade. With Memphis transfer Avery Woodson a key member of the Bulldogs’ rotation, this is the closest the Tigers have gotten to the Sweet 16 since 2009 (when, yes, Calipari called FedExForum his home arena).

But pull back for the broad perspective of this weekend’s three games. North Carolina is seeking its 20th trip to the Final Four and sixth national championship. UCLA is aiming for a 19th Final Four appearance and 12th crown. Calipari’s Wildcats are clawing their way toward an 18th Final Four slot (fifth under Calipari) and hope to raise their ninth championship banner at Rupp Arena in Lexington. If college basketball teams were Avengers, Memphis will host Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor this weekend.

Phoenix hosts the actual Final Four next weekend and won’t come close to the historical weight under FedExForum’s roof come Friday. A confluence of this magnitude is extraordinarily rare. We saw a similar gathering at the 2008 Final Four (remember that one, Memphis fans?), when UCLA, North Carolina, and Kansas were all there. You have to go back to 2005 to find a regional (hosted that year by Austin, Texas) that approximates what we’ll have in Memphis this week. Duke, Kentucky, and Michigan State played that weekend in Texas. The Spartans have been championship contenders for most of Tom Izzo’s tenure in East Lansing, but they’d be in the Falcon category on our team of Avengers.

On top of all the history, we have Calipari’s return to Memphis. (Has it really been eight years?) Do Memphians celebrate the Kentucky coach for the remarkable heights his Tigers reached under his watch for nine years? Or do Memphis basketball fans curse Calipari for setting a standard that cannot be matched, whatever the expectations or hopes? Even when you subtract his 38 wins from the 2007-08 Final Four season (those vacated for the Derrick Rose test-taking affair), Calipari is one of two Memphis coaches to win 200 games here. He would not be Kentucky’s coach were it not for the success he enjoyed in the Bluff City.

Enjoy this week of basketball, Memphis. Cheer and jeer like it matters (because it does). UCLA’s Lonzo Ball will be a top-three pick in this year’s NBA draft and he may play his final college game at FedExForum (as Blake Griffin did in the 2009 South Regional). Malik Monk (Kentucky) and Justin Jackson (North Carolina) will soon be wearing pro uniforms, too. So relish this chance sighting. And go ahead and let the rest of the country know where Hoop City can be found this Friday.

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Cover Feature News

Is This the Year for Memphis Football?

Wait ’til this year.

As far as teases are measured, the University of Memphis football program couldn’t have picked four more tantalizing words than their marketing slogan for 2014. The Tiger fan base is accustomed to waiting: It’s been five years now since a bowl appearance, and six seasons since a winning campaign (7-6 in 2007). And it’s been worse in the recent past: eight consecutive losing seasons from 1995 through 2002. If you’re counting — and we have to include the 2-10 mess of 2006 that ended a three-year winning streak — that’s 15 losing football seasons over the past 19. Memphis football fans wait. And wait.

Until this year?

The first step in this process — for Tiger players, coaches, and fans — is putting the dreadful end to last season behind for good. Sorry to open the wound, but to summarize: After winning three games and losing four others by less than eight points, the Tigers were declawed in their last two (a 41-25 loss to Temple at the Liberty Bowl and a 45-10 drubbing at UConn). These are not the kind of memories that help an off-season. To a man, the Tiger players say they have put those losses in history’s dustbin, but within motivational reach.

“[Those losses] motivate the team a lot,” says senior cornerback Bobby McCain, one of the potential team stars who will determine how quickly the lingering memories can be erased. “We wanted to finish strong, and we didn’t. Mentally, physically, emotionally, we just weren’t there. It was somewhat fatigue. But morale had shifted. We knew after the Louisville game, there would be no bowl game. We have to do better. That’s not a good look.”

“Let’s just scrap that [2013 season],” adds senior tailback Brandon Hayes, back after being granted a sixth year of eligibility by the NCAA. “We could have had a much better season. We’re taking Austin Peay [Saturday] first, not looking ahead. If we start looking ahead at UCLA [September 6th], who knows what might happen?”

Larry Kuzniewski

Defensive end Martin Ifedi leads a veteran Tiger line

The 2014 Tigers will be a veteran team. (It’s been a while since those words were written.) In addition to familiar faces in the offensive skill positions — we’ll get to those later — the Tigers will have a defense built around three players with more than 20 career starts (defensive end Martin Ifedi, linebacker Charles Harris, and McCain) and four more with at least 12 (linemen Ricky Hunter and Terry Redden, linebacker Ryan Coleman, and cornerback Andrew Gaines). This is a unit that, through 10 games last season, ranked 16th in the country in total defense (and 23rd in points allowed). Of course, it’s a defense that — after the blowouts against Temple and UConn — fell to 39th in the country (44th in points allowed). Coach Justin Fuente, defensive coordinator Barry Odom, and an entire fan base are betting on that 10-game sampling being the real deal, and those final two an ugly anomaly.

“We showed last season that we can compete against any team we line up to play,” says the senior Ifedi, a candidate for the Bednarik Award (given to the nation’s top defender) and the Lombardi Award (top lineman or linebacker). “No matter the name — Louisville, UCF — we were close. We just fell short.”

Senior tailback Brandon Hayes and cornerback Bobby McCain (21) will play prominent roles for Coach Justin Fuente

Ifedi enters the season one sack shy of the Memphis career record (Tramont Lawless had 21 from 1996 to 1999), and he isn’t shy about the preseason recognition he’s received or the thought of improving on his sack total of a year ago (11.5). “When I got here as a freshman,” he says, “I thought about that sack record to myself, jokingly. But now it’s reality. It will be a big accomplishment for me. I need to dominate every game, play up to my ability. I want to win one of those awards; show the nation and the conference that I’m definitely one of the best.”

Says Fuente, “[Martin] has got to be a really good player on a good defense that, in turn, becomes a good football team. Then he’ll get every accolade he deserves. If you start freelancing, that’s when you struggle. I don’t think he’ll do that.”

Larry Kuzniewski

Coach Justin Fuente

Ifedi should combine with Redden and Hunter to give Memphis one of its strongest defensive lines in years. Add freshman Ernest Suttles to the group — Suttles impressed Fuente with his off-season work — and Memphis, dare we suggest it, has depth on the defensive front. “Terry Redden’s as good a defensive player as we have,” says Fuente. “When he’s in there, it’s a different ball game, because you can’t single-block him.”

“We have high hopes and high expectations for the defense,” says McCain, who led the Tigers with six interceptions (in just nine games) last season, the most by a Memphis player in 12 years. “We want to have a chip on our shoulder, to have the game in our hands in the fourth quarter.”

Joe Murphy

Bobby McCain

McCain and Gaines will be joined in the secondary by two more upper-classmen: safeties Reggis Ball and Fritz Etienne. McCain sees his unit as a complementary piece to the line and, not incidentally, the linebackers. (The Tigers’ hardest hitter may be senior linebacker Tank Jakes.) “You can win ball games by cutting down on big plays,” says McCain. “The three units work together well. We know we’re going to get pressure from the front seven. And if we’re leading in the fourth quarter, they’re gonna throw the ball.”

The Tiger schedule is packed with game-changing quarterbacks, ready and able to stretch the field early and late: UCLA’s Brett Hundley, Houston’s John O’Korn, Temple’s P.J. Walker. Will Ifedi and friends be able to reduce the time these signal-callers have to gaze down field? And will McCain and friends be able to pounce once the ball is in the air? These are questions that, when answered, will determine how close the U of M may be to bowl eligibility.

Larry Kuzniewski

Paxton Lynch (in red) and Brandon Hayes offer hope from the Tiger backfield.

There will also be familiar faces on offense, but Fuente cautions against using the same “veteran” tag his defense has earned. “I worry about the balance,” he says. “[The defense and offense] are two different groups. An older, veteran group on defense, but still a young group offensively, if you look at them as a whole. There are guys who have played, but they’re still young. We don’t have to pull them right out of high school and put them on the field anymore. But there’s a different balance there.”

Hayes will provide leadership from his tailback position, and there’s probably no player on the Tiger roster more grateful to be in uniform for the 2014 season. Having gone through the standard farewell rites of departing seniors last fall, he learned during the off-season that the NCAA had awarded him a sixth year of eligibility (in addition to a redshirt season, Hayes missed the 2010 campaign with a knee injury). He’s climbed his way to the top of the running back depth chart with a work ethic Fuente has cited as an example for two years now.

“It’s a blessing,” says Hayes. “I told myself that if I get a year back, I’m going to train differently, eat differently. I’ve got my body right, up to 210 pounds [from 198]. A lot of speed work, a lot of hills; working on my breakaway speed. I need to finish runs better. What might be a 26-yard run, I need to make it 56. Or if it’s 35, I need to take it the whole way.”

Of course, for the Tigers to succeed, the inspirational components of Hayes’ story need to translate to the field. After leading the team in rushing in 2012 (576 yards), Hayes ran for 860 yards last season and carried the ball 201 times without fumbling. He aims to become the first player since DeAngelo Williams (2002-05) to lead Memphis in rushing three straight seasons.

The receiving corps will feature no fewer than five veterans (Keiwone Malone, Joe Craig, Sam Craft, Mose Frazier, and Tevin Jones) and a redshirt freshman (Anthony Miller, a record-breaker at Christian Brothers High School) Fuente is convinced will stretch the field. But who will be quarterback Paxton Lynch’s primary target? Craig’s yardage total last season (338) was the lowest to lead Memphis since Bunkie Perkins (remember him?) had 314 in 2000. The best hope would seem to be competition driving six receivers hungry for footballs slung their way.

Fuente emphasizes this very priority, suggesting the receivers have to play better as a group this fall. And the same goes for the entire squad. “Will we be able to eliminate the petty jealousies that tear away from an organization or team?” he asks. “Will we be disciplined enough to hold the rope and prepare every single week?”

No position will be scrutinized more than quarterback, and Lynch returns as one of those “veteran-but-young” players, a redshirt sophomore who started all 12 games a year ago, to somewhat mixed results. His 2,056 passing yards were more than Danny Wimprine had as a redshirt-freshman in 2001. But Lynch averaged only 5.9 yards per attempt (Wimprine’s figure was 6.8 in ’01). He threw nine touchdown passes and was intercepted 10 times. Fuente is convinced Lynch is the quarterback this team needs.

“He’s continued to get stronger,” says Fuente. “He feels more comfortable in his own skin, his role, comfortable with the older players. He’s more athletic than anyone talks about, especially being so tall [6’6″]. He’s gotten better mechanically throwing the football, and he’s got good vision. He can see everything.”

Lynch feels comfortable in his quarterback shoes, but intends to make his impact felt team-wide in 2014. “I need to be more confident in myself,” says Lynch. “As a leader, everyone is looking at you. I could have prepared myself more [last year], and I’ve been working on that. When I make a mistake, I can’t put my head down. I’m diving into the playbook pretty hard. I have to know what everyone else on the field is doing … and everyone on the other side of the ball, too.”

“Paxton has matured,” says Hayes. “He knows what everybody is doing. He’s not timid. He’s got veteran qualities. Somebody messes up, he lets you know. I’m really excited to have seen him grow.”

Adds Fuente, “I’m just as interested in the other 10 around him playing better, to help him out. I’ve been encouraged by what I’ve seen so far.” Tackle Al Bond is the only senior in the offensive-line mix, a unit that must gain traction — literally and otherwise — for the offense to improve measurably. “They just have to get used to the [fast] tempo,” says Lynch. “It’s harder on those big guys. If they get in shape, we’ll be all right. I trust them. We just have to keep pushing each other to get better.”

Despite the loss of record-setting punter Tom Hornsey — the 2013 Ray Guy Award winner — the Tigers’ special teams should help win a game or two. Four capable return men are back (Craig, Craft, Malone, and McCain), and in sophomore Jake Elliott, the Tigers have one of the best young kickers in the country. Elliott earned first-team all-conference recognition last fall when he converted 16 of 18 field-goal attempts, including eight of nine from beyond 40 yards. A still-growing program must win the close games before it starts dreaming of any laughers.

“Nobody thinks we can beat [UCLA or Ole Miss],” says Ifedi with an audible snarl. “This is good. We’ll punch them in the mouth and they won’t know what hit them. Memphis is not going to be an easy game for you; I guarantee that.”

Adds McCain, “I’m gonna make sure the mindset of the whole team is to win ball games. Not just go in and put up a fight, lose by three. We want to win the ball game. I want to go to a bowl game. Doesn’t matter which one, as long as we get into the postseason mix.”

“My expectations for this squad are higher,” says Fuente. “But you have to balance that. The nonconference schedule is a stretch for us. We’re still teaching our guys how to lead, what a football program is supposed to be on a consistent basis. I think we’ve made huge strides.”

So … wait ’til this year? “It’s year,” emphasizes Fuente. “The entire season. It’s not wait for the second game or third game. Let’s get to the end of it and see how it stacks up. Our kids are ready to go. Let’s go see how good we can get. We’d love to take another step in front of a lot of fans.”

What the Schedule Holds

With Ole Miss back on the schedule, the SEC is again on the Memphis radar after a two-year hiatus. Dating back to 1997 (the year after the Tigers’ upset of Tennessee at the Liberty Bowl), the Tigers are 2-25 against the country’s most powerful conference. Whether or not the SEC stays on the schedule remains to be seen. “I’m okay with playing one stretch game,” says Fuente. “That’s what you’ll see from us in the future. My concern is the league; where are we in the league? Can we build our facilities and compete in this league? I have no inferiority complex with the Southeastern Conference. Our job is to be Sprite, not Coke and not Pepsi. To build a program that’s competitive in our realm.” — FM

August 30 — Austin Peay (6 p.m.)

September 6 — at UCLA (9 p.m.)

September 20 — Middle Tennessee

September 27 — at Ole Miss

October 4 — at Cincinnati

October 11 — Houston

October 25 — at SMU

October 31 (Fri) — Tulsa (7 p.m.)

November 7 (Fri) — at Temple (6:30 p.m.)

November 15 — at Tulane

November 22 — USF

November 29 — UConn