September, 2012


15
Sep 12

ULM at Auburn

Coates

Redshirt freshman Sammie Coates propels his 6-2 frame into the air for a catch that might help reshape the season.

It took 10 full quarters, two-and-a-half games into the season, but Auburn finally found a moment where they could take control of a game. Sophomore quarterback Kiehl Frazier was flushed from the pocket, spun out to his left and heaved a hope to the back of the end zone.

After losing the opener in Atlanta to Clemson, and losing badly in their conference opener to Mississippi State in Starkville, Auburn finally had some momentum.

This being the 2012 Tigers, and their opponent being a gamey Louisiana-Monroe, it wouldn’t end there. A turnover late and solid play in the second half found Auburn and ULM going to overtime at 28-28. But a bit of natural balance returned after that. Frazier started to look like a game manager, his coordinator finally seemed to realize what he has at quarterback and what he longs for. Frazier might have finally found a third receiver in Coates. Maybe and perhaps. Or maybe he is the third receiver; Frazier caught a touchdown pass early in the game a receiver throwback. The running game showed up.

Sure, there were some spotty calls coming from the booth, but the Tigers managed to find a way.

Coates

Auburn won 31-28 after one overtime. It did, as I said to my wife at the beginning of the game, come down to a special teams victory. Two ULM field goal attempts were blocked.

Sunburns should mean more than this.

And now on comes LSU.

Elsewhere, Alabama toiled in their task of heading to the sea, surrounding and drowning Arkansas 52-0. UAB could not facilitate my eighth-ranked curse. They fell 49-6 to number eight South Carolina, the first number eight to win this year. Samford remains a perfect 3-0 after upending Gardener-Webb 44-23.

Much more tomorrow.


15
Sep 12

Catember, Day 15

Catember


14
Sep 12

What did you do today?

This evening I met a caterpillar:

caterpillar

He was exploring the bricks on the side of a building:

caterpillar

I managed to get four quick shots to make his acquaintance. And then he fell off the wall. Kids looked for him, but he’d gone into hiding before they could seek him out.

We also met a tiger:

Ceylon

I took a picture of our friends Kim and Murph:

tigerpic

Ceylon and Fatima live at the Alabama Gulf Coast Zoo. They visited Auburn tonight as part of a fund raiser. You stand in line for a few hours, make a small donation and you get to pet the tiger cubs and take a picture or two.

They had a dark setup, and they wouldn’t let you pop a flash. These are the pictures their photographer shot:

tigerpic

tigerpic

Turns out they raised $7,100 for the zoo.

We spent the evening hanging out with friends, and then had pizza just before Mellow Mushroom closed. It was a great evening. There was a caterpillar after all.

How was your day?


14
Sep 12

Catember, Day 14

Catember


13
Sep 12

High School Journalism Workshop

Each fall we host several hundred students from across the region for a day on the Samford campus. We bring in industry leaders, mix them with our faculty and try to give the high school students a day of fun and a little learning.

Here are a few pictures.

Dr. Dennis Jones talks about newspaper design:

workshop

Samford alumnae, and CBS 42 reporter, Kaitlin McCulley leads a large session on broadcast reporting:

workshop

Kyle Whitmire, who recently joined The Birmingham News and al.com, talks about online journalism to this group:

workshop

Samford’s senior photographer, Caroline Summers talks about digital photojournalism. (Naturally I take a shaky picture of this.)

workshop

Buddy Roberts of The Leeds News & St. Clair News-Aegis has a full house for his sports reporting session.

workshop

Birmingham News business reporter Marty Swant discusses intermediate reporting.

workshop

Finally, and joined in progress, here is Dr. Julie Williams, who leads a session on beginning writing. She illustrates her first point by making peanut butter sandwiches. The people in the session have to help her.

What you don’t see is their order to open the bread. She grabs the back and rips it apart, flinging the bread everywhere. They tell her to tear off a paper towel, and she pinches off a corner of one sheet.

I edited that on my phone, while walking from one building to the next. This technology still amazes me.

There were other sessions, but they were all opposite mine, so I could not visit them. I talked about building an organization, staffing the newsroom and the various challenges and successes you have in school newsrooms. It was so gripped my room stayed three extra minutes.