From the
Anchor Desk
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
By Brian
Bailey WNCT-TV 9 Sports
Director |
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Reliving history as it happened
By
Brian Bailey
©2013 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
The summer has flown by.
The best part about working at the same place for so long
is that you accumulate plenty of vacation. The only time to take that
vacation is the summer, and it has been fun.
Now, though, it’s time to get back to work.
Speaking of work, our 11:30 p.m. Sunday sports show, “The
Final Score,” has had a great first year with plenty of Pirate content
and excellent ratings. It has really served as a great way to go more
in-depth with our coverage of East Carolina athletics.
As part of our coverage this summer we are counting down
the top five games in Dowdy-Ficklen stadium history in celebration of
the 50th anniversary of the stadium.
The Pirate Nation has already voted and that list will
come out later this year.
This is our list, and we are cheating a bit because we’re
listing the wins over N.C. State and North Carolina in Greenville as
number two on our list. We are combining all three of those games into
one.
Our number one game is the 1991 win over Pittsburgh. That
also was the infamous cannon game, when I almost had a heart attack
doing a stand-up when the cannon went off at my feet. That fact had
nothing to do with our choice, but it did serve as a nice sidebar.
As we gear up for a brand new season, I take you back to
the number five game on our list, the Pirates 51-49 win over Tulsa in
Ruffin McNeill’s first game as the Pirate head coach.
The two teams combined for 1,117 yards and 100 points.
There were 12 lead changes. To this day I think Coach McNeill made the
decision to have his weight loss surgery after this game, because he
knew he couldn’t take many more like that game.
I don’t think any of us could!
Many Pirate fans forget that the game was on a Sunday
afternoon for television. The Pirates didn’t even announce their
starting quarterback, waiting for that first series to let Dominique
Davis head to the huddle.
Davis certainly didn’t disappoint. He was 27-46 through
the air with five touchdown passes. His fifth touchdown pass of the
afternoon vaulted this game into one of the best in Dowdy-Ficklen
Stadium’s history.
Davis and the Pirates trailed 49-45 with time enough for
one final play. From 33-yards out, Davis rolled to his left and let the
pigskin fly.
A trio of Pirates waited for the football. Big Justin
Jones was surrounded by Dwayne Harris and Lance Lewis. Jones went up and
out-jumped everyone to make the catch.
The crowd went crazy. East Carolina had won Coach Ruff’s
opener on a Hail Mary on the last play of the game.
I’ll never forget it, because that touchdown happened
just before 6 p.m. that night. I was scheduled to be live outside the
stadium and our photographer, Kevin O’Brien, was already outside the
stadium ready to go.
I had the other camera and shot the winning play from
that end zone. I remember watching the ball in the viewfinder, knowing
that if a player in purple came down with the football that I had better
be in focus.
It worked out wonderfully. I got the catch, the reaction
from the players and the fans, and then raced out of the stadium.
We cued up the winning play in the camera, and showed it
to the world literally minutes after it had happened.
East Carolina 51, Tulsa 49 was one of the best games
ever.
It’s number five on our list, but it’s likely number one
for Pirate coach Ruffin McNeill!
Here’s how we ranked the games for “The Final Score” on
WNCT-TV:
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1. 1991 vs. Pittsburgh
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2. 1999 and 2010 vs. N.C. State and 2007 vs. North
Carolina (I know, it’s cheating a little, but it gets us more games
to talk about, and all three were memorable!)
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3. 2008 vs. West Virginia
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4. 2009 vs. Houston in the Conference USA
Championship Game
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5. 2010 vs. Tulsa
We started our rundown this past Sunday and will continue
taking a look at the games throughout the month of August. We’ll be
showing the video and the old interviews that went along with great
parts of Pirate history.
I can tell you this. The 1991 Pittsburgh game will bring
tears to your eyes when you hear Bill Lewis tell his team that they are
winners. It was very emotional, and very enjoyable for me to go back and
relive some of the greatest times in Pirate football history.
BB
E-mail Brian Bailey.
PAGE UPDATED
07/30/13 08:33 AM.
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