CHRONICLING EAST
CAROLINA & CONFERENCE USA
SPORTS
-----
View from the East
Thursday, October 18, 2012
By Al Myatt |
|
Pirates venture to historic venue
By
Al Myatt
©2012 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
View the Mobile Alpha version of this page.
Despite its age, there
is still a majestic quality about Legion Field in Birmingham. Built
in the roaring 1920s with an initial capacity of 21,000, it grew to
81,000 seats and was the neutral site where ultra-rivals Alabama and
Auburn met to stage their annual football showdown.
The initial cost was
$439,000.
You couldn't even put
another synthetic playing surface in there now for double that amount,
much less the concrete and steel.
"The Old Gray Lady," as
the stadium is sometimes called, has diminished in terms of prestige and
size. An upper deck that seated 9,000 was removed in 2005 after it was
deemed structurally unsafe. It can presently accommodate 72,000,
although it never approaches sold-out status these days.
Legion Field is now
operated by the City of Birmingham Recreation Department and is home to
the UAB Blazers football program.
Alabama and Auburn played
their last Iron Bowl there in 1998. UAB would like to leave the old
structure behind, too, but its plans to build a smaller stadium on
campus ran aground politically.
Still, the facility off
Graymont Avenue with its spiraling walkways for spectators commands a
certain homage. Crimson Tide coach Bear Bryant walked the sidelines
there. Heisman Trophy winner Bo Jackson carried the ball there. Keith
Jackson called games there.
Joe Willie Namath looked
for receivers — and probably cheerleaders — there.
The stadium became host to
the PapaJohns.com Bowl in 2006 with former East Carolina coach Skip
Holtz taking the Pirates in to meet the South Florida program, which,
coincidentally, he now coaches, in the inaugural contest. The Bulls
took a 24-7 win. The matchup is
now called the BBVA Compass Bowl and will send a Big East team against
an SEC entry this season on Jan. 5 at Legion Field.
In his football coaching
travels from Clemson to Texas Tech and many points in between and
beyond, East Carolina coach Ruffin McNeill had not been to Legion Field
until the Pirates played there in 2010.
"I had watched it (on
television) when Coach Bryant and all those were in there, but that was
my first game," said the ECU coach. "I didn't realize it was in a
neighborhood. It's not out in a fancy place but I liked that. It was in
a community. ... When you went in the locker room, you thought about
what team had dressed there and what coaches had been in the lockers you
were in. I know they've refurbished them. You look at the field and
think about the past games before we had stepped foot out there."
Pat Dye, once an Alabama
assistant and McNeill's coach at ECU in the 1970s, probably did his
share of strutting and fretting in the visitors' digs as Auburn's coach
from 1981 to 1992.
McNeill found the facility
acceptable.
"To have the experience
that the stadium has on it, it's all pretty good to me," McNeill said.
"I've been in some locker rooms that were really tough duty. If my
memory serves me right, I thought everything was very good."
The outcome certainly
agreed with Ruff as
a 54-42 win on a Thursday night
made the Pirates bowl eligible in his first season. ECU outscored UAB
27-7 in the fourth quarter after back-up quarterback Brad Wornick had
spelled starter Dominique Davis when the current Atlanta Falcon rookie
dinged a shoulder.
"Yeah, it was a scrap,"
McNeill said. "Dominique was running and got hit on the sideline. Dwayne
Harris (Dallas Cowboys) took a return back to give us great field
position. I can remember Michael Bowman catching a (touchdown) pass. We
caused a fumble on special teams and James Craig recovered. There were a
lot of things that happened. There were five or six big plays in the
game and we were able to capitalize on those plays that night."
Article continues below
the following image.
Satellite photo of Legion Field taken for
the U.S. Geological Survey in 2004.
(Courtesy of the Wikipedia Commons)
That was only the Pirates'
second win in five trips to play UAB.
ECU's first trip to Legion
Field was in 1998 to play Alabama. The Pirates scored three touchdowns
and kicked a field goal. The Crimson Tide scored three touchdowns and
returned a blocked conversion kick for two points to win 23-22.
Attendance at that game was 80,079. The Pirates made just one of three
PATs.
The crowd the next year
when ECU returned to take on UAB for the first time at Legion Field was
announced at 18,062 but appeared smaller. The Pirates were ranked No. 17
at the time, having beaten West Virginia, South Carolina and Miami of
Florida. ECU got out to a 17-3 lead but the Blazers rallied for their
first win ever against a ranked team. Former Pirates graduate assistant
Watson Brown was coaching UAB. Bonesville columnist and Pirates radio
analyst Kevin Monroe had a 25-yard fumble return for a score in that
game to give ECU the lead.
Blazers corner Rodregis
Brooks was taken off the field on a stretcher for a possible neck injury
in the first half in 1999. X-rays in the Legion Field training room
proved negative and medical personnel said Brooks could return to the
game. His No. 21 jersey had been cut away during the examination process
but his mother, Cathey, had worn his 1998 jersey to the game.
Brooks put on the jersey
his mother was wearing. She donned a UAB T-shirt and he returned to
action. Brooks was relieved that sensitivity had returned to his left
arm and his teammates were inspired. He had a 59-yard punt return to set
up a score and a 91-yard interception return for a touchdown as the
Blazers came back for a stunning 36-17 win.
The Pirates, who had
played before several sizeable crowds that season, including 82,605 at
South Carolina, talked about the lack of energy at Legion Field.
That's not the kind of
history the Pirates want to repeat. Neither is
a 17-12 loss to the Blazers at Legion Field in
2006 in which Pirates receiver Philip Henry was stripped
of the ball just short of the end zone in the closing seconds.
ECU will have to focus on
remaining in contention in
the Conference USA race for
motivation with another relatively-small crowd expected for the 7 p.m.
kickoff at the 85-year old stadium.
McNeill isn't looking for
excuses.
"We can only worry about
the things we can control," said the Pirates coach. "That's us and how
we prepare and how we play. If we play well, it will be because we
practiced well. ... We need to practice well (Thursday) and have great
meetings on Friday once we arrive — walk-throughs and those things. We
can't worry about who's there, whether it's 70- or 80-thousand or what
have you. I know they'll be fired up and ready to go, UAB will."
First-year UAB coach
Garrick McGee has said changes are in store after a 1-5 start. A lot of
the Blazers struggles appear to have emanated from an inexperienced
offensive line.
The Pirates will follow
their usual routine, which means a movie on Friday night.
"It will be something with
some action in it," McNeill said. "It will be action, not scary movies.
I want the guys to sleep at night.
"We'll have something with
some action in it. I think 'Alex Cross' is out. We've been seeing the
previews. It's something with some action.
"If that's out and
available, we may go see that."
That will take care of
Friday night.
Saturday night, ECU has a
date with "The Old Gray Lady."
E-mail Al Myatt
Al Myatt Archives
10/18/2012 04:58 AM
----- |