Auburn


29
Sep 12

A Saturday mishmash

Something I wrote, and photographs I took, last spring made it on to the Smithsonian Magazine’s website.

It has some formatting problems that weren’t there in my submission or the version they returned to double check. No matter. There’s a better, longer version, published here, but, still, Smithsonian.

This is hardly the biggest thing in the world or even the best publication news I’ve had in the last month. But I get to say I’m published on the Smithsonian’s site.

Again.

Back in the old days — and I mean about 1996, which is in no way old, or far enough removed to suggest they are the old days — I perfected my dry sarcasm and speed typing on a chatroom site that doesn’t seem to exist anymore. As we have learned is the norm, a bigger company bought the little company. They made changes, ruined the aesthetic and people left. Some of those people stuck together on ICQ. My ICQ number, which I can’t grab at just this moment, was shockingly low. But the friends stuck together, from Maryland and out west and the Deep South and somewhere in London and in Australia.

One by one they all sort of fell away. Life demanded them. They grew bored. They lost their password or their Internet connection. And finally that group was down to just two people. So there was me and this Australian lady. We’d talked for a couple of years by then. Carol was friendly, and liked folk music and all manner of interesting decorative styles. She worked in the government in Canberra and had a big burly husband who sounded hysterical.

We even talked on the phone a few times. We discussed the virtues of the Australian accent in the United States and my accent, which she found charming, in Australia. I was well underway in my broadcast career by then and thinking a lot about sound. Carol figured I could do very well in Australia. I hatched the sort of plan that you never even try to implement — summer in Australia wooing girls with my southern accent and then running from the winter there to have summer at home in the States, wooing girls with a blended Aussie, Southern accent.

She was my mother’s age, almost. So I jokingly called her my Internet mom. Or, mum, being Australian and all. Her parents were English, but she was raised in Australia, so she had a terrific mixture of both sense of humor. She was a sweet lady.

And yesterday she found me on Twitter.

“You remember me!” she said.

It was the biggest, dumbest smile of the day, lasting into the afternoon.

Saw that this is closing.

HeartofAuburn

Sent the picture to The War Eagle Reader. They made a few calls and turned it into a story.

I have claimed DIBS! on the neon sign out front. You. Can’t. Have. It.

Legendary Auburn quarterback Pat Sullivan told me his Heart of Auburn story last year:

Sullivan looks at his career through those relationships he’s cultivated along the way. His Heisman Trophy experience was no different.

Back in those days the announcement came as a halftime feature during the Georgia-Georgia Tech game. Instead of being on the front row in New York, Sullivan was in Auburn.

“We were actually at practice that day because we had Alabama on Saturday. My parents had come down to hear the announcement … Our TV went on the blink so we had to go rent a room at the Heart of Auburn. We watched it on TV just like everybody else,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan, perhaps the last Heisman Trophy winner to stay at the Heart of Auburn, says his room number has been lost to history. There are plenty of clear memories from the night, though.

“After the announcement we went back over to (Beard-Eaves-Memorial) Coliseum and all my teammates, coaches and their families, (Auburn President Dr. Harry) Philpot and Coach Jeff Beard (then the Auburn athletic director) were all there and I was able to share that with them. That was something that I’ll never forget because I know I didn’t win it by myself, they were a part of it.”

Remember, I’m claiming the neon sign out front.

Links: Iranian news agency uses The Onion. And that says pretty much everything about the gulf between two cultures.

Hints that water once flowed on Mars. In every previous instance of water in human history scientists have found life. Does that project out to Mars?

Sadly, Birmingham News staffers depart as paper ceases daily publication. On Monday the new company, Alabama Media Group opens for business. I have friends and colleagues at both. There are plenty of talented and caring people involved. I project, after a slow start, big things.

Presidential ad spending soars past $700 million means I’m glad I don’t live in a battleground state.

More on Tumblr! And Twitter!

Auburn / football / weekendComments Off on Catching up
23
Sep 12

Catching up

The all pictures Sunday feature, this time in a pleasing all football format.

When the second-ranked team in the country comes to town, and the home team has started their season 1-2, the tickets are easy to come by. And they are hard to sell. There were a lot of after-market opportunities on Saturday:

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The ever popular crowd shots:

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This guy can wear this as a team shirt, or as a bowling jersey. Nice to know LSU has the same priorities. Actually, when the LSU fans we were talking with asked everyone in our section to beat Bama, and all of the Auburn people asked for the same favor. That’s as good a way to say goodbye as any, I guess.

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Aubie fills in on the drumline from time to time.

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Nova in flight during the pregame ceremonies:

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The game itself was energetic affair. LSU is not as good as their ranking would seem, it seems. Auburn is, perhaps, not as bad their start would suggest.

Michael Ford gained 42 yards on eight carries and added the only touchdown of the game for LSU:

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You’d run far away, if you were Ford, and big Angelo Blackson was bearing down on you. He’s 6-foot-4, 308 pounds and can move. He’s just a sophomore:

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Zach Mettenberger flips a ball out to Spencer Ware. Ware ran for 90 yards on 16 carries and caught two passes for 44 yards. That guy was almost the only productive part of the entire sputtering LSU offense. Mettenberger went 15 of 27 for 169 yards, not the road game debut he’d hoped for.

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Kiehl Frazier was 13 of 22 for only 97 yards and two interceptions. Not the home game he was hoping for:

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It doesn’t look like it here, but Gabe Wright, 90, just delivered a forearm to the LSU running back. And the running back bounced backward two yards. Can’t wait to see Wright play more, he’s a beast:

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More crowd shots:

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A member of the Tiger Paws:

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Russell Shepard only had two carries for seven yards, but they came on the decisive drive as LSU moved down into field goal position.

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Onterio McCalebb had a slow night, but despite that he moved into seventh place all time at Auburn in career yards. He also became the first Auburn player ever to earn 2,000 yards rushing, 1,000 yards on kick returns and 500 yards receiving. Not bad for a guy generously listed at 5 foot 11 and 173 pounds:

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Tre Mason led Auburn in rushing, with 54 yards on nine carries:

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Barkevious Mingo and Eric Reid combine on the tackle to bring down Mason after a gain of eight yards near midfield:

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Kiehl Frazier surveys the field as he tries to move Auburn across midfield and into field goal range to try to win the game. He was unfortunately unsuccessful.

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The Golden Band from Tigerland are always great performers:

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22
Sep 12

LSU at Auburn

Second-ranked LSU visited Auburn. The good Tigers were three touchdown underdogs. We always win the pregame:

Nova

Auburn played LSU extremely tough. The defense moved faster and forced a few key turnovers. Our Tigers were leading at the half, despite a still-struggling offense:

Frazier

Some odd play calling and an offense that can’t move the ball means LSU wins, every time, despite an Auburn defense that refused to give in. LSU won 12-10, but it felt a lot like Auburn should be able to take the victory, so the gratification of not watching them get beaten up was replaced by the frustration of what should have been.

At least we got to enjoy the Golden Band from Tigerland.

LSU

Up next for Auburn is a bye week, and then Arkansas, who lost at home to Rutgers tonight. Elsewhere, Alabama defeated the mighty Florida Atlantic 40-7. UAB almost ruined Ohio State’s season. Looking at the stats, it is hard to see how the Buckeyes managed to win, but they held off UAB 29-15. Samford, meanwhile, came from behind on the road to beat Western Carolina 25-21, giving them a 4-0 start for the first time since 1995.


21
Sep 12

College town atmosphere

Last week we saw a tiger. Some weeks we go see the raptors fly. There’s not much to beat a college town during the fall, and precious few are as great as Auburn. The town is full of great atmosphere, and the night before a game you can feel the buzz work its way under your skin. Every small town has their wonderful and unique personalities. We get that plus lots of visitors and lots of athletics. The fall is a special time.

These are the football gameday buttons from last week:

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This week’s say Sad Hatter, in honor of LSU’s Les Miles, who has been dubbed a mad hatter. See? Wordplay.

There’s also the joke about LSU fans and corn dogs. Four years ago I saw this as we walked into the stadium:

corn dog

Tonight, though, while dining out with a friend who’s returned to town for the weekend we saw this creation from Dr. Magical Balloons at Niffer’s:

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Jeremy wrote about this tonight. Already it is the third return on Google when searching “Balloon guy Auburn, AL.”

A few more examples of his work can be found here and here and here. Someday I’ll shoot a video interview with him. “Recreate your most unusual request. Fastest trick in your bag. Can we play stump the balloonist?”

What would stump a balloon bender?


16
Sep 12

Catching up

More pictures from this past week which, sadly, haven’t appeared here yet.

First, two more of the caterpillar we found Friday:

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I managed to get four shots of him before he realized he was camera shy and threw himself into the grass below. (He was OK.)

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James Owens was the second African-American athlete at Auburn and the first football player. The university has this year created the James Owens Courage Award and presented the first such honor to its namesake. Before the ULM game yesterday he met with many of his old teammates on the sideline.

They remembered the obstacles he overcame, and the way he’s always loved to laugh. (The comments on that story are great.) His nephew, by the way, plays for Auburn today.

“Someone with my blood went through that and was strong enough to stand and come out on top” Ladarius Owens said in an interview this week. Pretty inspiring idea.

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And now, a few shots of the crowd:

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Nova made the pre-game flight to midfield:

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The roving sideline TV lift comes right by our seats:

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Everybody cheer:

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Kiehl Frazier hands off to Onterio McCalebb:

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Spirit on the sideline:

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Quan Bray handled the punt returns:

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Frazier was 10-for-18 for 130 yards with one TD pass, one TD catch and an interception.

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Aubie has his own eagle these days.

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Halftime featured the marching band and the high school honor band. So, with a packed field, less marching, more standing in place and playing. The flag corps did twirl, however:

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Tre Mason, the almost forgotten tailback, gained 90 yards on 22 carries.

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Kiehl Frazier rocks and fires. See how wide his feet are here? He’s already got a big arm, but the footwork hurts him here. He overthrew his receiver because of that big stride. If only I had less depth of field in this shot …

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Cheer! All of you cheer!

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Onterio McCalebb, who had 128 yards and a score on 11 carries, demands you cheer:

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Why isn’t she cheering?

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Aubie’s eight ball says the ULM quarterback is about to get drilled:

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Dee Ford, making Aubie look like a prophet.

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Kolton Browning was 28-of-46, for 237 yards and three TDs, two of which came in the game’s closing moments. He also ran 14 times for 58 yards, but the Warhawks couldn’t steal another win.

Elsewhere, at Samford, Reid Chapel on a beautiful late summer afternoon:

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Hodges Chapel, as evening falls onto the Samford campus:

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I wonder where he’s riding. Home, I’d hope. And I hope it makes it there soon:

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