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News Nuggets, 08.03.04
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NOTES FROM ECU AND BEYOND...
Previous Day Nuggets...
Next Day Nuggets...
Compiled from staff reports
and electronic dispatches
Disease traps Grambling football icon in silence
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PREVIOUS NUGGETS |
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08.02.04: Ballard
set for wide-ranging radio, TV interview ... Pirate Radio
1250 unveils new programming lineup ...
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08.01.04: Pirates'
former league speeds up expansion ... Cowboys owner to be
enshrined by Arkansas ...
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07.31.04: ECU's
first foe ranked 11th in coaches poll ... New bowl, legal
squabble on Big East agenda ...
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07.30.04: ECU
hires Georgia. Southern's McClellan as media boss ... Fox
Sports Net bolsters college football ties ...
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07.29.04: WVU
top dog in Miami-less Big East ... ACC pushes to replace
redshirt year with 5th year of competition ...
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07.28.04: ACC
partial to long-term home for football title game ...
Houston, Memphis stars on Maxwell list ...
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07.27.04: Chopper
ride for hearing-impaired will have a 'Voice' ... Fulmer
shuns SEC gathering in hostile Alabama ...
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07.26.04: Boyce
to ride herd on Pirates' classroom pursuits ... IU fans'
suit over Knight firing gets new life ...
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07.25.04: Controversy-ridden
Clemons seeks exile at Livingstone ... USM honors grad with
N.C. business ties ...
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07.24.04: ECU
harrier coach hired by Longhorns ... .. Tulane, Florida A&M
pair up for Superdome extravaganza ...
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07.23.04: Future
Pirate sprints to glory at World meet ... .. Legendary 'Big
O' subs for sidelined Huggins ... .. Rattlers' I-A vision
buried under avalanche of penalties ...
More... |
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07.22.04: NCAA
panel endorses major recruiting reforms ... Clemens honor
gives Weaver sweep of baseball awards ...
More... |
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GRAMBLING, LA � Eddie Robinson shuffles
into the room, hunched over a cane � a shadow of the charismatic coach who
made little Grambling State University famous.
Then he catches the eye of a visitor,
and a familiar smile lights his face, just as it always has.
"I feel good," Robinson said, before
drifting off into silence.
The smile is almost all that remains of
one of the greatest coaches in college football history.
Once the most ebullient of men,
Robinson has become quiet and distant as Alzheimer's disease isolates him
from all that was once important to him.
"We tried to watch the Bayou Classic �
he founded that game," said Robinson's wife, Doris, referring to the annual
game between Grambling and archrival Southern played at the Superdome in New
Orleans. "But he couldn't stay with it."
Robinson, 85, now sits quietly,
answering questions with short replies or looks of consternation.
He retired in 1997 as the winningest
coach in college football history with 408 victories at Grambling. Shortly
after his 56-year coaching career at the historically black school ended,
symptoms of the disease began to show.
"He just didn't feel too well," Doris
said. "Then it was like he was just slipping away. Every day a little more
was gone."
These days, Robinson lives in a gray
twilight. His wife of 63 years and his son are the only things that break
into his conscience.
"This is the hardest thing I've ever
gone through in my life," Doris said. "We had such a great marriage. We did
everything with such enthusiasm. We had our kids, we had his football, and
he took me with him all the way."
Doris is still with the man she fell in
love with when they were eighth-graders in a segregated school.
Robinson was selling newspapers and
shining shoes to make money when Doris' aunt, on a visit to what was then
called the Louisiana Negro Normal and Industrial Institute, spoke to the
school's president about her niece's fiance. The school needed a coach, and
she suggested Robinson for the job.
Robinson scraped together the money to
go to a coaching school in Chicago. Then he returned to Grambling and gave
the football program and the little town an identity.
"When I go to conventions, everyone
knows about Grambling because of Coach Rob," said Jean Smith, a longtime
Grambling resident and friend of the Robinsons. "Now that word about his
condition is out, people ask about him."
There was more to Robinson's career
than his incredible 408-165-15 record, however.
James Harris played quarterback for
Robinson from 1965-69, before a long career in the NFL as a player and then
an executive. He is now vice president of player personnel for the
Jacksonville Jaguars.
"Most players that played for him truly
felt he is the person outside their families that influenced them most,"
Harris said. "You always hear about the football players he turned out, but
he turned out a lot of doctors and lawyers and college graduates. Because of
him, a lot of men can support families better because they got educations."
Robinson spends his days in the
red-brick house he and his wife built in 1953.
"He still comes to the table for meals,
but he wants to go right back to bed," Doris said.
The couple's son, Eddie Jr., visits
every day, helping his father walk around the house or taking him for car
rides.
"He just gets tired quickly," the
younger Robinson said.
People still visit the Robinson house
almost daily � fans, reporters, former players.
"Most times they can't see him because
he's in bed," Doris says. "People still want him to autograph things, but he
can't do that any more."
The Robinson house is still full of
memorabilia: pictures with players, coaches, Alabama coach Bear Bryant and
President Clinton. Enough to fill two 18-wheelers has been put in storage.
There's been talk of a museum for years.
"We're hopeful," Doris says. "The state
said they were going to build one."
One memory, at least, remains for
Robinson.
"He always wants me with him," Doris
said. "We still sleep together. Sometimes he calls me during the day: 'Babe,
come here, I don't feel good.' And when I get there, there's nothing wrong.
He just wants me there. So I lie down beside him and stay there."
Air Force promotes civilian to AD position
AIR FORCE ACADEMY, CO � The Air Force
Academy named Hans Mueh as its new athletic director last week, the first
civilian to fill the post and one taking over in the middle of a steroid
scandal in the football program.
Col. Hans J. Mueh, who has served as
chemistry department director since 1987 and as vice dean of faculty the
past two years, takes over for Col. Randy Spetman, the school announced
Thursday.
Spetman stepped down in January and his
replacement, academy alumnus Mike Bloomfield declined the position in May.
Spetman was a candidate for East Carolina's vacant AD position before being
named athletic director at Utah State in June.
Mueh takes over a program that has been
hit by allegations of steroid use by two football players.
"I do believe it's an isolated
incident," Mueh said, adding he believes the school's athletics program is
among the healthiest in the country.
Mueh was among the top two candidates
to oversee instruction for the 4,000 cadets at the elite school, which is
being filled by Col. Dana Born. He hadn't applied for the AD job.
"To be honest I was disappointed when I
wasn't chosen. But then having gone through that interview process with the
Secretary of the Air Force and with (Air Force Academy Superintendent Lt.)
General (John) Rosa, putting a package together, I think everybody got to
know me a bit.
"So when this offer came up, it came
out of the blue," Mueh said.
Mueh will be promoted to brigadier
general when he retires Saturday. When he takes the post on Tuesday, he will
be the school's ninth athletic director and first civilian to hold the post.
"Randy Spetman and I have talked about
this because there were times when Randy's uniform � when dealing with other
ADs and commissioners throughout the NCAA � turned out to be a detriment
because there was a certain perception that if you're in the military you
have a certain mind-set," Mueh, who holds a doctorate, said. "There are
certain times and places where the title Dr. Mueh will let me have a foot in
the door."
In the late 1980s, Mueh served as
officer representative for the football team.
"The thing that was foremost on his
mind as an officer representative was to serve the players, and do what's
best for them," Air Force football coach Fisher DeBerry said.
Mueh has served as a faculty
representative to the Western Athletic and Mountain West conferences. For
the past four years, Mueh has been chairman of Region VIII for the NCAA's
Postgraduate Scholarship Committee.
News Nuggets are
compiled periodically from staff, ECU, Conference USA and its member
schools, and from Associated Press and
other reports. Copyright 2004
Bonesville.net and other publishers. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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