Thursday, October 29, 2015

A perfect example of what being a writer is all about ...

It's 3 a.m. and I'm sitting at my desk having made a very difficult deadline and celebrating with a very adult beverage -- think 14 Year Old Caribbean Cask -- as I try and unwind enough to crash.

For those who wonder about the the process of writing and all this is sort of when everything comes together. I'm tired, I have a book deadline looming on Saturday and this season has kicked me in the holy rear. And I feel great.

The deadline was for the next Alabama game program, and one of the assigned stories was about the upcoming Kenny Stabler tribute. That's a story you don't dare screw up and will hopefully be well received. It's also not much fun writing about someone you met and liked who has died.

I've actually known for quite a while that Alabama was going to do the tribute, and even joked when the Crimson Tide beat writers included in their stories that there would be a special story in the game LSU program: "Well, I guess I better write it."

It turned out to be one of those stories that got delayed by other things and then nearly every person I called to interview called back at the last minute (at least they called -- thank you one and all). I then struggled with it all day and couldn't get it right, couldn't nail down the lede, and just didn't have the right focus. Meanwhile, we've reached that point of the season in which the LSU fight song is going through my head almost non-stop along with "Waterloo" after seeing The Martian a few days ago (Thank you Captain Lewis).

So I did something I've never done before, I took a nap at about 9:45 p.m., and it worked. With the mind cleared and a little less fatigue I cranked it out and another feature that was also due.

Tomorrow I'm sleeping in and will begin the final push on the book deadline while playing anything that might get Abba out of my head. Maybe the Guardians of the Galaxy soundtrack.

Friday, October 9, 2015

10 Things I Think, Week 6

10 Things I Think, Week 6 (with a photo I took at Georgia last Saturday ... yep, Kirby Smart was pretty happy after the 38-10 victory).

1.     Teams in trouble because they can’t run when it really counts: Ole Miss, Miss. State
2.     Teams in trouble because they can’t stop the run: Auburn, Miss. State
3.     Team that will be in trouble if it doesn’t run better: Florida
4.     Team that will be in trouble if it doesn’t stop the run better: Texas A&M
5.     Team that shoots itself in the foot the most in big games: Georgia.
6.     If LSU can’t establish the passing game against South Carolina, it won’t all season.
7.     Stat to keep an eye on: LSU has had one turnover lost.
8.     Team you can last afford to trail against in time of possession: Texas A&M
9.     Teams that have been most/least efficient in the red zone: Kentucky/Arkansas
10. Bring your own guts is the line of the year (Dabo Swinney did go to Alabama)


Friday, October 2, 2015

A radio show that I'll ever forget

My apologies that there will be no "10 Things I Think" this week, but I have a really good excuse. Wednesday was sort of a hell day for me, with lots of deadlines and things, and then Thursday night I was the media guest on The Nick Saban Radio Show.

For those who don't know it's a weekly show broadcast live from a corner stage at Bob's Victory Grille in Tuscaloosa during the football season. As the guest you're responsible for asking a few questions over the course of an hour, and whenever I'm on I like to have a variety prepared depending on his mood.

Hey, it's his show, you know?

Saban always arrives at the last minute and this time it was obvious he was zeroed in on the looming game at Georgia. He was talking about how opponents have been so afraid of the Bulldogs' running game it's really opened things up in the air, how the vanilla play-calling against Louisiana-Monroe sort of handcuffed the Crimson Tide's offensive line, and outside linebackers Jordan Jenkins and Leonard Floyd are the best pass rushers Alabama has faced this season.

And then he took a left turn.

Saban made a comment about the Wonderlic Test, which the NFL uses to test aptitude. I actually took one once and wrote a column about it for the Tuscaloosa News. The coach admitted that if there was a player he really wanted he would bring him in for a retake (it only takes 15 minutes).

"I would actually take the test out, look at it, tutor the guy a little bit, alright, before he took it," he said. "Maybe lose a few minutes on the timing part of it, so he had a little extra time ... and they would do better."

(Credit SEC Country for that quote as I didn't stop to record the show. If interested you can find it on   AL.com).

Wait, it gets better. That was just the first of four segments.

During the second segment Saban started getting back on track after my question about game-day "tells" he looks for about if it's going to be a good day or not. He talked about how the players had too much emotional, "frantic" energy the days leading up to the Ole Miss game, which played a part in the team's fumble-laden start (my words, not his, although he added before anyone could ask that the Crimson Tide had a good week of practice for Georgia). He also mentioned a player in his office that day who was frustrated about his playing time.

And then a man named Mitchell stepped up to the microphone to ask an in-house question. He said he's taking truck-driving course at Shelton State Community College and struggling with the clutch. He'd heard Saban had similar trouble during his younger years and asked: "I'd like to know what part of the process I can take to make me a better truck driver?

It might have been the greatest question ever asked in the history of the Nick Saban Show. For a moment the only thing I could hear was host Eli Gold laughing.

"I think you should do what your instructor is telling you," Saban started with. "He's your coach. But I'll tell you the hardest part is the hills, you know? When the truck wanted to roll back. I mean, when you have a big heavy truck and it rolls back and you have a car behind you and you have one foot on the brake, one foot on the clutch, how are you going to get the gas without taking one of those some other kind of way. So you have to do it quick and if you don't lean on the clutch, you're going to roll backwards."

Then came the punchline: "Hey, I was three-for-three, man. I went three summers, three clutches. And you're asking for my advice?"

(Credit AL.com for that quote).

When we came out of the commercial break I couldn't help myself, especially since Saban's family was in the audience. I asked if the Nick Saban Signature Series Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van he helped create had a clutch.

I always thought of him as a speed guy, you know? Maybe that's next.

However, that wasn't the highlight of third segment. It was Saban's comment on former walk-on Michael Nysewander scoring a touchdown last week.

"I gotta be honest about this: there's a special place in your heart sometimes for some of the players that you have on the team," Saban said. "Here's a guy that's been in the program for four or five years, walk-on, hard worker, I mean works hard every day, overachiever, does everything that any coach would ever want a player to do. And you can never be happier or feel better for someone when something good like that happens for them and they get an opportunity to score a touchdown.

"That almost made me cry, to be honest with you. I mean I just loved it for him and his family. Our players were so happy to see it because they have the same kind of respect for guys that do things that way, as well."

(Credit that one to BamaOnline.com. What can I say, everything is news with Alabama football).

The last segment of the show always ends with Saban's final comments, when he talks about whatever he wants about the upcoming game and fires up the fans. The coach was just getting to the meat of what he wanted to say when he put his bottle of water down right on the headphone cord and it spilled all over him. I grabbed the only thing I had within reach, my notebook, and immediately ripped out pages to help him out.

Here's the amazing part: Saban didn't pause or even hesitate, and kept talking like nothing happened (no one reported this because I was the only media person present, everyone else was listening to the broadcast). He actually handed me back the pages of paper so he wouldn't be distracted and kept going. After the show he talked to fans and and signed autographs like usual, and because he was wearing dark pants it didn't show.

Now that's focus.

[Special thanks to Crimson Tide Sports Marketing for having me on again.]