To Merle or Moody? That was the Question

Disclaimer:  This week I told my students about my desire to throw the nearest inanimate object I can find in disgust when I discover a typo on these pages.  I do not have a spell check mechanism on this page, by choice.  Just walked more than five miles and am in a hurry to write this.  I apologize if there is a blatant faux pas.  

Twenty-three years ago today, my dear wife, Carrie, and I had a dilema.  Well, I had a dilema.  And we settled on Merle.  You can tell by the purchase date on the tickets.

Imagine, on the same day, Merle Haggard is playing at The Ryman Auditorium in Nashville and The Moody Blues are playing at Freedom Hall during the Kenucky State Fair.  We had tickets to see Merle when much later we learn of The Moodies’ Louisville date.

We decided on Merle.  Who can turn down Merle Haggard at The Ryman?  Maybe me.

Still, it was the right thing to do.  Carrie was really wanting to hear him and so was I.  Less than two weeks before the concert, we got word that Merle’s show had been cancelled.  Our money was refunded.  I did have a chance to eventually see Merle with my dear friend Kelly Samons at the Little Nashville Opry in Nashville, Indiana.  Merle was as great as I expected.  He’d turn around yell out a song title to his band, hit a chord on that Telecaster, and we were transcended to another place, another story, another dimension that only those rare legends can take you.

As fate would have it, when we purchased tickets for The Moody Blues’ show at Freedom Hall eleven days before it was scheduled, we found ourselves sitting on the fourth row at center stage.  Oh those good old state fair concerts that were $20 bucks.

The Moodies’ return to Freedom Hall was twenty-six years in the making.  They had last played there in 1973.  My friend Dan Goins was there.  I was not.  I was five.

The day of concert 1999, were from three days removed from the release of The Moody Blues’ new album Strange Times.  At the time, The Moodies were on a tour that featured them playing with orchestras at nearly all the venues they were to visit.  Not so for the Freedom Hall show.  There was no orchestra constraint that night.  They turned loose and rocked the house.

Though it is raining as I type these words, I did get in more than five miles on a hearty walk earlier today.

I am convinced there is a humidity on a lane between two soybean fields that can only be realized if you walking there.  There is a sensation that includes feeling like the back of one’s neck is being grabbed.  Something like that.

BIG SHOUT OUT TO THE NORTH HARRISON COUGAR FOOTBALL TEAM for defeating the Salem Lions last night 40-7.  When the rain subsides, I am heading over to show the game footage to my Dad.  He will love the way the offensive line of North pushed around the boys on Homer Street.

Next week the Cougars will be hosting Scottsburg.  It should be a good one.

I don’t usually quote someone withour permission.  I suppose Barry Hall, pictured with my Dad above on what was one of the last days old Blevins Memorial Stadium was standing at Brownstown Central, can chew me later.

Barry sent me text this morning.  I will paraphrase.  Barry was at a funeral home in Brownstown where Tom Weaver’s death arrangements were being handled.  Tom Weaver was a good guy.  Ironically, the last time my Dad and I saw him was at the funeral of Barry’s mother.  At the funeral home recently, Barry ran into another old player from the early to mid-seventies.  He name is Grant.  Grant told Barry stories about my Dad and his teammate, Tom.  Barry wanted me to know how Grant appreciated my Dad coaching him.  Barry said their is still a great deal of love and respect out there for my Dad.

Thank you, Barry Hall.  I know you guys had a good time at BC in those days.  I am just glad I was able to watch and learn as a youngster.  I watched you guys with great interest and admiration.  Never dreamed we would be here talking about it now.

Not a bad way or place to spend a childhood.

Speaking the rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

Walking to a Supergroup Through Fields of my Mind

In 2008 the supergroup, Asia, release the album titled Phoenix.

The original line-up of John Wetton, Carl Palmer, Geoff Downes, and Steve Howe were at it again.  Sounding just as forward as they did with their debut record in 1982 that featured the hit Heat of the Moment, Phoenix was indeed a rising up again.

Downes, one of the greatest technical key players on earth.  Wetton from King Crimson.  Palmer from Emerson, Lake, and Palmer.  Howe a veteran of Yes.  Together they are one of the tighest group I have ever heard and I just plain like their sound.

John Wetton’s voice may be my favorite in all of rock and roll.  There is just a smooth, ‘come along as I tell this tale’ in his voice. Wetton’s voice is a straightforward instrument with inflections that most singers only dream of locating.  For him, it just came out.  John Wetton passed away in 2017 at age 67 after a battle with cancer.  I never heard him sing in person.

I rediscovered this album this weekend and listened to it as I walked four miles and change.  When it came out in 2008, I listened to it on Friday nights on the back porch with my grilling buddy, Luther.

I listened and I walked.

One last trip up the hill toward the house and then on to the soybean fields behind the house.

I walked and I listened.

The beans look good.

I am blessed to have peaceful roads and a bean field to walk next to.

NIL deals notwithstanding, thanks to the IU Athletic Department for parting with a couple schedule posters.  They didn’t need to explain anything to me.  I still look at that end zone and see pictures ini black and white.  Some of you remember.  There was a raised up piece of turf and a simple scoreboard.  The only pictures were the ones we saw on the field with our own eyes.

The 1988 Indiana University Football Media Guide tells us that in the nine year tenure of Head Football Coach Lee Corso, the Hoosiers only appeared on televison seven times in the nine years he was head coach.  Look at that list.  Heading into the 1988 season, Indiana had only played five nationally televised games in school history.  Times have changed slightly.

These days I can see it both, like this photo of Coach Bill Mallory. If I choose to see the pictures that were only on that field, they are still with me and this ironclad memory of mine.  If I choose to do otherwise, Youtube is a good source.  I watched the Iowa game from 1988 not long ago.  Gary Bender and Dick Vermeil were there calling the game for ABC.  That is still my favorite game.  IU beat Iowa 45-34.  The game lasted forever.  Chuck Hartleib was 44-60 for 551 yards for the Hawkeyes.  Anthony Thompson carried the call 47 times for Indiana.  It was wonderful.

Head Coach Tom Allen is driving the team bus now.  I believed in him the day Indiana hired him.  I still believe.

For me, an old disgruntled Mallory fan who walked away at one time, Indiana is finally easy to root for again.  The coaches and the AD are a breath of fresh air, as was Fred Glass, the Athletic Director who preceeded current AD Scott Dolson.  They are easy to root for.  I know.  I know.  I was there.  I was in Bowling Green for the last Hoosier football victory and left glad we were playing quarters and not fifths.  Yes, it has been a while.  And yes, the schedule is brutal.  Things will be better this season.

Me, I will always been torn between the seasonal green fields in my mind, the seasonal green fields before me now, and the ones I walk next to that bring me closer to the earth and reasons to keep walking and listening.

Speaking the Rights…

Danny Johnson

 

The 2022 speaktherights.com College Football Preview

May the youngsters tossing a football outside Indiana’s Memorial Stadium have much to cheer about this season.  Believe me kids, things at IU can only get better this season for the Hoosiers.   I plan on seeing most of this year’s games at Memorial Stadium.  Late in October there is a plan to go back to Huntington to check on the Herd when they play host to Coastal Carolina.  That is one of the FBS teams I have not seen play in live action.  I have seen most of them.

Where do we start?  Do we have the time?  What a crazy offseason.  Or is there such a thing anymore in college athletics including football.

The Athletic Department of a major college or university has to deal with two major facets these days:

  1.  Show Business          2.  Athletics

With players getting remuneration in the world of NIL, the glitzameter is higher than ever trying to promote programs and attract not only athletes but perhaps the ones out there that can help to pay them.  ADs, you have my sympathy.

Did anyone catch the Notre Dame infomercial where new Head Football Coach Marcus Freeman has a couple of his players running around Las Vegas in some fancy car in hopes that they can find out what kind of uniform they will be wearing in Vegas when they face BYU?  What in the name of Brigham Young and Knute Rockne is going on here?  Lights Camera  Action!  In the irony department, Notre Dame has never scheduled an FCS opponent until making a date with Tennesse State in 2023.  Perhaps they will be playing on a makeshift field on Broadway in Nashville.

There’s still hope us old football purist.  There will still be a 4th down and 3 yards to go at the opponent’s 7 yard line when the team with the ball is down by 5 with less than a minute to play.  Your eleven against our eleven and none of the show business bluster can save a team when a situation like this is on the line.  Football is still football, however it has evolved.  You may be like me and miss seeing the Power-I.  Or the likes of Thomas Lott playing keep away for Oklahoma in the wishbone.  Talk about a worn out defense after a day of that.  Yes, it is still football.  Some poor kid is going to we wide left on a field goal with the game on the line and it will haunt him forever.  Just like there will be an unlikely hero that will intercept a pass subbing for an injured All-American linebacker and this kid will find himself in the end zone looking at the ball wondering what just happened.  Yes, it is still football.  We can’t turn away from it.  Even in all its dirty laundry.  That is nothing new.

The great Keith Jackson was rather prophetic in his last appearance on a nationally televised game.

Keith Jackson showed up at The Rose Bowl one last time in 2017.  The game was between Penn State and USC.  I saw both of those teams play that year.  USC against UCLA in November and in December I saw Penn State defeat Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship game.  I watched with great anticipation.  This game too was a classic.  The final score was 52-49.  USC scored 17 unanswered points in the 4th quarter to put it away.

I still think about the exchange Keith Jackson had with ABC game announcers Kirk Herbstreit and Chris Fowler.  Keith Jackson had been invited into the booth and the once strong tenor was a voice much softer and weaker.  Deliberate in speech, Keith Jackson gave a final commentary on the state of the game of college football on January 1, 2017 and a portent of what we see today.

The smiles all around the booth at this point went away rather quickly when Keith Jackson spoke his mind.

The exchange went like this:

Keith JacksonOne thing that bothers me a little bit and an old timer down in Texas who coached a lot of football games…about the future…and what may be the next major problem and he said very quietly and firmly “Too much coverage”…meaning saturation.

At this point Chris Fowler is relegated to some defense mechanism laughter…and Kirk Herbstreit, who is obviously very respectful of Keith Jackson says, “Yeah…yeah.”

Keith Jackson: I think he (the old coach) may be right as I see it evolving.

Kirk Herbstriet: Yeah.  That’s a good point.

Chris FowlerMany would probably not argue.  On that note we’ll say thank you once again not only for joining us but for what you’ve done over the years, what you’ve meant, and your continued good health at age 88 and Happy New Year to you Keith Jackson, we appreciate it.

Keith Jackson: Thank you very much.  I appreciate that.

I will give Herbstreit credit.  He looked like he knew who he was talking to.

If you don’t miss Keith Jackson, I’m afraid you either got here a little late or you really missed out.

2022 is out there!  Let’s take a look.

New Coaches Galore.  Here’s a few.

Southern Cal stuck in a thumb and picked out a plumb in Lincoln Riley.

Miami, FL convinced Mario Crisobal to come back home.

The Florida faithful better give Billy Napier a chance.  Gator fans are incorrigible.

Washington picked an apple from the Indiana Coaching Tree in Kalen DeBoer.  They paid the last coach as much to pack his bags as DeBoer will earn working for three years.  Hope it works out for him.

LSU hired Brian Kelly away from Notre Dame.  Nothing lasts forever.  But, Brian Kelly at LSU?  Nothing lasts forever.  This is a place that can’t hang on to National Championship winning coaches.  The Red Stick seems to whiff from time to time.

A couple guys I hated to see go were Skip Holtz and David Cutcliffe.  Holtz had a great run at Louisiana Tech.  Nothing lasts forever.  The folks in Ruston will be missing him soon after all.  Coach Cut brought Duke out of the bowels of lethargy, my apologies to Reno Hightower, and they won some games.  Have you been to Durham lately?  That place is as football hungry as Iona.  Coach Cut worked a miracle.

I ran the photo above in last year’s college football preview because I was so looking forward to the Indiana Hoosiers and the Ole Miss Rebels continuing their progress.  Yes, these two met in a January 1 Outback Bowl after the 2020 Covid-stricken season.  I hated that game.  Had to root against the Rebs for the first time ever.  Ugly time.  Ugly time.  Well, 2021 was kind to the Rebs.  They won ten games.  2021 was unkind to the Hoosiers.  They lost ten games.

The Big Ten

I am a child of this conference.  Been watching Hoosiers games in Bloomington all my life.  I have told the story many times of how in 1975 I remember Hoosier kicker Frank Stavroff knocking one through from 52 yards away.  That, though I eventually kicked points that changed a scoreboard, was not what impressed me the most that day.  Seeing the Utah helmets on the players.  It gave me tangible proof that Utah existed beyond a map in an elementary school classroom.  Utah was suddenly real for me.

Dave Kornowa.  The only Hoosier to score in the Rose Bowl.  In November of 2020, Dave and I spoke on the phone for more than an hour as I was looking at the Atlantic Ocean on Topsail Island, North Carolia.  A boy from Toledo told his folks he wanted to play for Indiana because they could get to the Rose Bowl.  The family laughed.  Dave scored on a 27 yard FG in The Rose Bowl.  My heart was full looking at this photo.  When Dave and I spoke, he told me about Coach Pont and so many of his teammates.  I was able to relive a Hoosier season that got here four months before I did.  And I am so grateful.

 

 

Overused as it is, to know that Dave Kornowa and I were true fifty years apart still makes me smile. His kick meant more.

BIG TEN (14) PREDICTIONS

 

The Big Ten East

  1.  Michigan…Why?  I despise Ohio State!  JIm Harbaugh may be more apt to negotiate success than most others in the The BIG TEN (14) (16).
  2. Penn State…If grandpa Sean Clifford is coming back for a 34th season, he knows something we don’t.
  3. Ohio State…(Can’t say anything good so…)
  4. Indiana…Ya know, had McFadden not been tossed from the Cincy game on a phantom targeting call, the Hoosiers don’t go 2-10 last year. Don’t get me started.

An IU kickoff in Bowling Green against WKU last September.  This was win #2 in an 0-9 Big Ten season.  Connor Bazelak at QB will help.  Tiawan Mullen on defense will elevate some games.  Coach Tom Allen hasn’t misplaced the secret sauce like so many pundits think.  The Hoosiers have a brutal schedule.  But such is life in the Big Ten East.

5. Michigan State...I know. I know.  I agree, Mel Tucker has done a great job.  But history is not on Sparty’s side. Peyton Thorne is a good one.  The lost some key guys on the O-line.

6. Maryland…With Tualia Tagovailoa at QB there is offense potential.  Good WRs.  Defense is a question mark and health is a must.

7. Rutgers…Yes I know they pasted the Hoosiers in Bloomington last year in the safest place in America.  By the fourth quarter you could hear anyone in Memorial Stadium sneeze.

Don’t look for much more than New York market dollars for the Big Ten out of Piscataway.

The Big Ten West

  1.  Iowa…Look, when UCLA gets here, the Hawkeyes will have to be my third favorite Big Ten team.  A QB under center.  A team that understands what I preached on high school radio broadcasts that field position and turnovers are the key.  Iowa is my conduit to the past.  I love these guys.  QB and receivers are true which means the running game will be there.  Ronnie Harmon will be proud.
  2. Nebraska…Yes, I know what their record was.  They lost each game by single digits.  That is hard to do.  And this is still Nebraska.  No team will work harder with no one paying attention.  If they win the West, I will not be shocked.  The  O-Line will be improved, in the name of Steinkulher and Rimington, you read it here.
  3. Purdue…Aidan Connell is back for a sixth or seventh year.  Jeff Brohm is for real.  He did not leave PU for Louisville and that was a smart move.
  4. Minnesota…Row the Boat or however that goes.  Line play on both sides will be improved and Goldy will be bowling again.
  5. Northwestern…Pat FItzgerald knows a good gig.  And he works like a dog to keep Evanston relative and that is not an easy thing.  History has not been on their side.  Most of that time was without Coach Fitz at the helm.  A QB will rise in purple.
  6. Illinois…The Illini open the Big Ten against the Hoosiers in Bloomington on a Friday Night.  Friday Night Lights in a Big Ten opener in Bloomington.  TV is in more dire straits than I thought.  But, I will be there!
  7. Swissconsin…This is the sorriest bunch in the conference.  Don’t let all that “Sure Sure and Don’t Ya Know” fool you.  Hope they finish 0-12.  Now and forever.  Nasty folks.

Speaking of nasty, I was dismayed beyond belief with some of the behavior in Indiana’s Memorial Stadium during games last year.  When the UC Bearcats came calling last year, my wife went to find a place to cool off.  A lady from Cincinnati had the same idea.  They met.  My dear wife, Carrie, was upset at what she heard from the Bearcat lady.  She thanked Carrie for being kind to her.  She said many a Hoosier football fan had been rather vile toward her.  Carrie was very hurt.  I told her Hoosier football fans are trying to learn how to act after two January bowls in a row.  So much for that.  2-10 gets you the toilet bowl.  I hope Hoosier fans come back to Memorial Stadium and fill the place up.

And I hope the fans at IU games act like they have been there before!  Some of us have.

Go Hoosiers!

The Southeastern Conference

The SEC West has been the strongest division in football for a long time, that includes the NFL.

I hope Lane Kiffin and the Ole Miss Rebels will do well again.  The Rebs were 10-2 last year before losing 21-7 to a strong Baylor team in The Sugar Bowl.

Everyone knows I love the Rebels.  My mother and father were both born in Mississippi.  Many of my kinfolk “finished” at Ole Miss.  My mother had sixteen siblings.  Hotty Toddy means something.

I have said it before and I will say it again, after watching Tua throw for six TDs for the Tide against the Rebels in 2019, which was a school record, I heard a Tide fan say, “Tua left a few balls out there today.  Could have been better.”  That is when I knew Tuscaloosa was the set of the football “Twilight Zone.”  That is not right.

THE SEC EAST

  1. Georgia…Stetson Bennett is back and so is Kirby Smart.  They will find a way.
  2. Kentucky...Delighted to say so.  I live in the Louisville television market.  The longer we can talk football, basketball is not so prevalent.  Wait your turn.  HEALTH IS A MUST.
  3. Florida…Not because I am rooting for Billy Napier.  I just think they will get some breaks.
  4. South Carolina…Look out for Shane Beamer.  Those folks in South Carolina love their football too.
  5. Tennessee…Yes, most have UT higher.  I don’t see it.  The offense is there.  The defense is suspect.  Look for a frestrating loss or four ala Nebraska last year.
  6. Mizzou…Bless their hearts.  The misplaced Big Ten School.  They may shock someone.  The nonconference is kind.  Defense returns some real players.
  7.  Vandy…Vandy is going to have their troubles and the new college football horizon looks stormy from Music Row.

THE SEC WEST

  1. Alabama…Remount and reload with more consultants than most places have coaches.  This is a football factory.  Saban rules.
  2. Ole Miss…Yes.  I do have faith in Lane Kiffin.  He will keep you guessing and I think his analytics might give way to three more punts this year.  Jaxson Dart should be a good one at QB.  In less than a month, the Rebs have Auburn, LSU, Texas A&M, and Alabama.  Ice pack, please!
  3. Texas A&M…A good defense will be Jimbo Fisher’s calling card again.
  4. Mississippi State…If you fall asleep on Mike Leach, he will take a sword to you.  Look for that to happen at least three times as he brings Starkville a nice season.
  5. Arkansas…Sam Pitman has the Hogs in place to make me look foolish here.  They are a wildcard indeed.  Jefferson at QB.  If he stayes healthy, look out.
  6.  LSU…How dare I!  I will believe Brian Kelly’s SEC metal when I see it.  Till then, no dice.  This ain’t Notre Dame.
  7.  Auburn…My friend Brother Tim Petty, Tide Fan from way back, will like this pick.  All is not happy on the plains.

Othe Conference Predictions:

The AACCincinnati– I don’t like this bunch and I hope Indiana can go to Nippert and grab one.  Great place to watch a game for sure.

The ACC:  Yes, I know, I used to give this conference more space and detail here.  This would be a moratorium in honor of former Duke Coach David Cutcliffe.  I was allowed into a closed scrimmage at Vaught-Hemmingway Stadium during spring practice while he was the Head Coach at Ole Miss in 2003.  Eli Manning was a senior.  The grass turf was still there in March.  The season was played on an artificial surface.  Great memory.  Shout out to Walker Jones for helping me out then too.

With that said….NC State– This is going to be your year.  Not a case of Clemson hate at all.  All Things Must Pass.

Louisville…providing Malik Cunningham stays healty, will be improved.  Look for 7 or 8 wins.  Seems Scott Satterfield has taken a heap in his tenure from U of L fans.  The school is finding itself with a new AD and leadership at the top.  Many wanted Tom Jurich back iin town.  Hang in there, Coach Satterfield.

The Big 12: …Look for Brent Venables to make I’m a Man, I’m 40 unhinged.  Translation: The Oklahoma Sooners make it happen in a Big 12 with 10 members.  You gotta love college football.

The MAC:  Chuck Martin left Notre Dame as their OC in 2014 to coach the Miami, OH Redhawks and he has stayed the course.  2022 will be kind to him.  I hope his team does well.

The Mountain West:  Do you want to pick against Jeff Tedford?  Heck no!  Did Kalen DeBoer leave Fresno for Washington with an empty cupboard?  Heck no!  Fresno State wins the Mountain West.

The PAC 12:  I feel under-dressed here.  When UCLA gets to The Big Ten, they will supplant Iowa as my 2nd favorite Big Ten team!  BUT…my faithometer in Lincoln Riley and the trove of transfers he is bringing to the men of Troy and USC will leave Westwood and Utah and Oregon and (fill in the blank) wondering what hit them.  Hope I eat these words and UCLA wins every game!

The Sun BeltMarshall.  Yes.  This is a sentimental pick.  But I think the Sun Belt will be a good fit for The Herd.  Outside of the Indiana Hoosiers, I have not seen a team play more times in person in the last fifteen years than the Marshall Thundering Herd.  Losing Grant Wells will hurt at QB.  That pesky tranfer portal.

The C-USA Western Kentucky.  Not the popular choice.  Coach Tyson Helton has done a great job.  Jarrett Doege, a transfer from WVU,  will lead at QB.

Here’s to a great 2022 College Football Season!

We could use it.

Have fun and take care of each other!

YES, I WILL SAY IT AGAIN!  GO HOOSIERS!

Can’t wait to hear the Marching Hundred play “INDIANA FIGHT!”

Speaking the Rights…

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here We Go Now

Here We Go Now.

The title of the first track off my friend Tim Krekel’s posthumous album Sings up the Sun released ten years ago this past June.  Imagine how I felt listening to tunes from a guy I made music with three years after his death.  The first time I listened to this album, I was on the back porch alone.  I listened and I cried like a baby.

Tim’s track on this album called Perfect Flaw changed my life.  And I didn’t get to tell him.

Carrie and I saw Tim two weeks before he died in 2009.  We told him we loved him.  Ten years later, I needed to rediscover this album, that sits on my shelf, on Amazon Music.  I had never looked for it on a streaming service.  It was too personal. My own tunes are on Amazon and other streaming services.  I don’t look for those either.  They are too personal.

My 2022-2023 classroom is ready.  I am so looking forward to meeting my new students and the opportunity to help them make progress.   

I am so ready.  I am so excited to begin the school year.

I am blessed.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

Ft. Harrison just off 465

Gads.  I get put off with myself on occasion when I think about my home state of Indiana.  I should know more about it.  I don’t know enough.  I admit it.  Geography has something to do with that.  Living in a county that runs into the Ohio River can do that.  You can’t get more Southern Indiana than that.  We get our television news from Louisville, Kentucky.  I can name more Kentucky polticians than I can Indiana.

I have seen more miles of North Carolina than I have Indiana.  I know Asheville to Wilmington like the back of my hand.  Outer Banks?  Know it.  Research Triangle?  Been there and done that.  Mt. Airy aka Mayberry?  Pilot Mountain aka Mt. Pilot?  Been there many times.  Boone, the home of App State?  How they found 120 flat yards for a football field is a miracle.

The past couple of days,  my dear wife,Carrie, and I spent time at Fort Harrison State Park not far from the I-465 “runaround” that circles Indianapolis.  Ft. Harrison was an Army Post from 1906 to 1991.  In 1996 it gained State Park staus.  I am glad it did.

Fort Harrison State Park is not your regular in the wilderness out of the way place.  The State Park Inn faces a busy street where businesses seem to bustle and living quarters for troops are now home to civilans of all walks of life.

She needs a coat of paint.  Otherwise, the place is a treasure. Once the post hospital, the inn is a peaceful place to land for a couple days.  12 foot ceilings and 12 inch concrete walls see to that.  When you walk in the place, history just whispers to you.

Carrie and I drove through the park and found the visitors center in a remote location.  I must say Carrie and I have stayed at Ft. Harrison in either the inn or the Harrison House, now off limits to single room occupancy for nearly twenty years.  This was the first time we ventured into the “park” side of the place.  There were open spaces and a lake that was more a pond.  But it was quite nice.

Inside the vistors center, we were the only ones in the building.  No one acknowlegded us.  That was fine.  Just quaint.

History and more history there on display.  It was humbling to see all that went on in a space we were now enjoying.

There we were.  All this preserved history and Carrie and me in one room together.  It felt lonely.  Oh I am sure there are times when school groups come in, at least I hope so.  But I wonder.  It took Carrie and me twenty years to get here.  Yes, we had been to the inn for winter getaways.  Stayed there more than once when we went to Indy for Moody Blues concerts.  That we had not made it back to see this visitors center, albeit we did not know what was there, made me a bit sad.  So much history.  So much great service to learn from.  So much sacrifice.

As a child, I listened to my great-grandmother in Brownstown tell me stories about how my grandfather, Herbert Daniel Johnson was in the THREE Cs.  As an eight-year-old, I thought grandma was talking about three seas!  I imagined my grandfather hanging on to the side of a great ship that was taking on water and in peril.

The Civil Conservation Corps  was about putting guys to work in tough times and had nothing to do with the ocean.  I learned that many years ago.  But only now have I seen tangible CCC proof and I enjoyed looking at it.

Seeing this interactive room made me feel better.  Perhaps the word is getting out after all.

At a restroom near the “lake”, I found this:

I had to investigate.  I had not seen a pay phone in a while.

urt

It was still wired.  But there was no dial tone.  Just a low hum.  And no change to be found.

Thankful we got here once again to learn a little more about the Hoosier State.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

While We Are Not On The Subject

I watched The Open Championship from St. Andrews today.  Like most of the folks watching, I was rooting for Rory McIlroy.  He didn’t putt well.  There is an old adage out there about putting for dough.  That rang true today.  Hard to root against Cameron Smith.  He is the Aussie who won it.  He did putt well.  Did he ever.

I have said it many times.  When the light is right you can get a fine picture.  I took this one recently as I was walking around the North Harrison campus.  Did not plan it.  Just looked to my right and stopped in my tracks.  Glad I did.

Along my regular walking trail around home, I took these pictures recently.

Nothing like an Indiana hay field.

This steak was on the grill the day the Ole Miss Rebels won the College Baseball World Series last month.  I think it tasted better than it looks.  It was a good one. So was the College World Series.  Hotty Toddy!

Upstairs in Crestview Hall on the campus of Indiana University Southeast.  I took this photo not long ago.   It was in one of these rooms where I had class with old friend Millard Dunn leading the charge.  I was late for class (and I was NEVER late) and he rode me like a old mule.  The whole class sat up and opened their eyes wide.  They couldn’t believe it either.  After Millard had humilitated me, and class was back to order as he needed, the door to the room opened again.  A lady named Constance was later than I was.  I looked back and yelled, “It’s about damn time!”  And the class erupted in laughter.  In earnest, I never saw Millard laugh and smile like he did that day.  Priceless.  I love this place.

My room location changed.  I have moved to Room 127 at North Harrison.  This is my little corner of it.  I am so looking forward to getting the school year started.  Teaching English full time again this year.  Good times.

Recently I brought this photo out of moth balls.  I told #19, Jim Titus standing next to my Dad on the left, that while the peons were celebrating he and my Dad were concentrating on what to do next.  It was a nice night for the Cougars.

In 1993, The Moody Blues embarked on a tour pairing them with orchestras all over the world.  They were apprehensive at first.  Did it work?  Yes.  I heard more orchestras play with The Moody Blues from 1993 to 1999 than I ever expected to hear in my life.

The photo above was taken during the Days of Future Passed 50th Anniversary Tour in 2017.   This show was at The Fraze Pavilion near Dayton on July 1.  I finally got my sister to a Moodies show before it was too late.  She does have one hard head.  Most of us do.

Have a great week and speak the rights!

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

College Football Season…Get Here If You Can!

I know I wrote about the news about USC and UCLA  joining the Big Ten in the coming years.

Truth is, I can’t wait that long!  I am ready for college football now!

Yes, I did enjoy the USFL.  And I was delighted that Skip Holtz’ Birmingham Stallions took the Championship.   The last time I saw Skip he was coaching Louisiana Tech at Marshall in 2019.  The Herd won that won handily.

Though the speaktherights.com College Football Preview is a month away, I hope my students are paying attention!  I am so ready for college football to begin.  I am excited about seeing another FBS school in Idaho.  They will be coming to Bloomington to take on the Indiana Hoosiers in September.  Having seen more than 70 FBS schools play football in person, I have never seen Idaho.  Yes, I know about the Vandals.  I watched them many times on crazy satellite feeds over the years.  Yes, I know the name John Friesz.  Some of you may have to look that one up.  Seeing the Vandals in Bloomington, I could not make the game last year, will be a treat.

I am ready to make this walk into Memorial Stadium again.

Memorial Stadium is a great place to be on college football Saturdays.

Look, I know what I am talking about.

I was in Iowa City last year for the Hoosiers’ season opening debacle.  This was a portent of doom.

Yes, I was the guy who made hotel reservations in Pasadena for The Rose Bowl for a team who finished 2-10.  Thankfully, my dear wife, Carrie, and I were at the last Indiana Hoosiers Football victory last September in Bowling Green against Western Kentucky.

It was a long season.

Guess what?  The pressure is off.  Coach Allen has a multi-year contract that no one will touch in Bloomington, Indiana.  The staff and the players have had time to look around.  And my guess is they like what they see.

The 2020 season was an anomaly.  Yes, the Hoosiers did well.  Heck, maybe they had an advantage by playing in front of small to no crowds.

Here’s what I do know.  Last year when the Cincinnati Bearcats came calling to Bloomington, and the Hoosiers got hosed with a phantom targeting call against McFadden, my dear wife, Carrie, met a lady from Cincinnati who was glad to talk to her.  She Bearat lady found refuge in my Hoosier wife.  The Bearcat lady told Carrie of how nasty the Indiana fans were to her.  That is too bad.  We are not Wisconsin or Ohio State!  I was so disappointed when Carrie told me of this.

Act like you have been there before.  That is what we were always taught, in case we scored a touchdown in high school. Me, I kicked points and field goals and played center.  Indiana Football fans had not been there in their lifetimes.  I know I hadn’t.  Two bowl games in a row and expectations beyond belief. Walking on the moon seems more practical.

Here is what I do know.  I believe in Tom Allen and his ability to bring the boys back.  He knows what he is doing.  Yes, I know, Washington and South Alabama have good head coaches.  Indiana does too.

Me, I am looking forward to the 2022 College Football Season.

This is going to be fun.  We can talk about how it all pans out in about a month!

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

English Teachers I Will Miss

On these pages I have made mention of some English teachers I know were very important to me during my formative years.

In high school there was Mrs. Kain and Mrs. Englehardt.  And we could not forget Mrs. Miller.  They all played a part in my English teaching life long before it got here.

Millard Dunn has been the subject of multiple pages here along the way.  He was my English mentor in college and in life.  Many a day I go back to words that I caught in his classroom and never let go of.  I was better for doing so.  Hopefully some of that will rub off on students I teach today.

Referencing these venerable folks from the past is the natural order of things I suppose.  That is the way it goes right?  You look back and you look far enough behind you where things are safe and mostly in monthballs now.

Today we are going to get a little closer to home and talk about a couple of English teachers that have made a great impression on me as fellow educators. Now there is some territory you rarely read about.  Many reasons dictate this I think.  You are afraid you might offend someone else.  Or you just don’t take the time to introspectively peel back layers that are not about the next lesson.  Maybe they really are.

On June 10th I finished an ambitious piece of narrative nonfiction that is my Long and Winding Road.   Two people I gave treatment to when I wrote this tome were Cathy Clouse and Bart Bigham.  If my tome never sees the light of day, let me tell you a little about these two now.

I worked with Cathy Clouse at Medora Schools longer than I can remember.  Well, not really; it all started in March of 1998.  That was when I began a 15-plus year stint at Medora that came in two parts.  March 1998 to May 2000 and August 2002 to June 2015.  Yes, I left them and they called me back.

Cathy and I worked well together.  We sat around more school improvement meeting tables together than I want to remember.  But I am sure I want to remember Cathy being there.  We never had a cross word.  She vented to me when she needed to and I’m sure I bent her ear a few times too.

Cathy gave me my greatest triumph in teaching.  I never told her that.  I was hoping she would one day read about it when my tome gets published.  Little did we know, that less than two weeks after I placed the last piece of punctuation on my chunky writing, Cathy passed away.  She died on June 23rd. I was taken aback.

Once upon a time Cathy was working with some students on what we called End of Course Assessment practice.  The ECA was one of many Indiana testing snafus over the years.  What happened was that Cathy was getting frustrated with a group of nine juniors and seniors who had yet to “pass” their English ECA.  I’m sure this was yet another task she was heaped on.  Small schools are quaint to those in bigger schools whose work load is lesser than the case load of the teacher at the small school.  I taught four levels of English at Medora once upon a time in the same school year.  Cathy understood this too well.  She had been there.

Cathy had the guts to come to me and ask me if I would work with these juniors and seniors to see if I could help them pass their English End of Course Assessment, again, this was one of Indiana’s educational farts.  I told Cathy I would help them and in the process I was helping her.

Cathy Clouse did not let her ego get in the way.  She knew of my proclivity for writing and thought she could tune into it and let me help these nine upperclassmen.

“Do you think you can help us?”

That was Cathy’s question to me.  I told her to send them my way.  She did.  This was in early October.  The next retest was in early December.  I looked at every one of those kids and told them how Mrs. Clouse had their best interest at heart.  Cathy could probably diagram sentences that would give me a headache.  But she knew I could help kids be better writers.  And that is all we did.  We met once or twice a week for an hour at a time and talked about writing.  When we were not talking about writing, we were writing.   And writing.  And writing.  Those kids were delighted to see December roll around.

Those nine took the ECA over again, as was required by the mighty tower to the North in Indianapolis.  Six of the nine passed both the reading and the writing sections.  Eight of the nine passed the writing sections.  We didn’t have time to reinvent reading comprehension and writing.  But what writing does is open a door to the mind that was not there seven minutes ago.  Thankfully, these kids were like Mrs. Clouse.  They had open minds.

A few hours ago I was in Mr. Bart Bigham’s classroom at North Harrison High School.  Room 134.  The room just feels good to me walking inside it.  Bart Bigham did that.

When I left Medora School as a counselor and English teacher, I came home to North Harrison in August of 2015 as a full time counselor.  Some things I never learn.  Just as I left Medora for a couple of years before I came back, I left North in March of 2020 for a year and change.  In the fall of 2021, I was on the NH campus again.  This time teaching English full time. Thank you, Mr. Kellems.

As soon as I landed in Cougarville the first time in 2015, I gravitated to Mr. Bigham.  His class room walls were filled with literary and musical references I understood.  I knew.  We just hit it off.  As a counselor with English teaching experience, Bart let me come in and guest lecture on subjects that lent to the significance of utilizing the English language.  I talked to his students about the importance of influences in our lives and how we can influence others.  Another year I talked to his students about songwriting and how ubiquitous songs are in our lives in every season and every holiday.  We wrote our own songs.  In the fall of 2018, I pondered what to share with his students in the coming spring.  I decided on the power of the written word.  This prompted me to write a letter to folks at The Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.  I told them my dear wife, Carrie, and I were coming out for a game.  This led me to kicking field goals in an empty Rose Bowl and I did not miss.  Talk about a thrill.  Talk about a tangible truth to share.  Thank you, Mr. Bigham and your 11th graders.  I would never have gotten there without you.

Bart Bigham is moving on.  He too is heading home.  He has accepted a job in Oakland City, Indiana at Wood Memorial Jr-Sr High School.  Bart would NEVER tell you he was a member of the Greater Evansville Basketball Hall of Fame Induction Class of 2017.  He never told me.  I did what writers do.  I looked it up!

Last school year Bart and I were English teachers together.  But, we always were.

Bart Bigham was tireless in his endeavors to support and lead students and athletes at North Harrison.  A man for all seasons, Bart coached boys tennis in the fall, girls tennis in the spring, and was an assistant basketball coach for a sport that knows no down time in Indiana.

That I was able to talk to Bart today in his room one last time will stay with me as long as I have a memory in good working order.  And when I think about it I will smile and know thanksgiving and camaraderie and respect.  I’m sad.  But I am so happy for Bart.  Thomas Wolfe had it wrong, Bart.  You can go home again.

Speaking the rights.

Danny Johnson

 

 

I Knew You When

When I heard the news of the impending 2024 jump of the University of Southern California and the University of California-Los Angeles to The Big Ten, I was turning my head sideways.

USC and UCLA in The Big Ten?  Ummmm…aren’t those the guys we hoped to play AGAINST in The Rose Bowl one day?  At first, I didn’t like it.  My ancient Big Ten running roots felt a twinge.  Then suddenly I thought about Rutgers and Maryland.  Uh, last I checked these teams were in The Big Ten too.  USC and UCLA!  Welcome aboard!  I don’t give a rat’s bladder (my apologies to Frank Furillio) if you are in California or not!  Glad to have you!

Look, I have been attending Big Ten football games all my life.  Unfortunately, though I love the place and always will as my season tickets indicate, my allegiance has been to the Indiana Hoosiers Football (I have seen more than 70 FBS schools in person and have yet to see a college basketball game).  Being born in Columbus, Indiana some thirty-six miles to the East of Bloomington via Indiana Highway 46, I ‘m not sure I have had a grand choice.  Some things we are just born into.

I was born into a love of college football when I pushed my way into the world in 1968.  My Dad was a high school coach for a very long time.  That meant when we weren’t going to see The Hoosiers play, we watched college football on televison.  That meant I knew of USC greats Anthony Davis. Ricky Bell, Charles White, Marcus Allen, Anthony Munoz, Lynn Swann, Pat Haden, John Robinson, and so many more.  That meant I knew of UCLA greats Freeman McNeil, Randy Cross, Jerry Robinson, Kenny Easley, Dick Vermeil, Troy Aikman, Ken Norton, Jr, and Carnell Lake.

If asked of my ten all time favorite college football traditions, I would tell you Notre Dame vs. USC and the cross-town rivalry USC vs. UCLA.  If I don’t see both of these games on televison, my football season is not complete.  So, with that said, USC and UCLA can’t make it to the Big Ten fast enough for me.  That is so easy for me to say.  The logistical nightmare that is college football scheduling probably made more than one athletic director throw up their hands.  But guess what? They, like you and I, know that there are probably more to be invited to the Big Ten party eventually.  Why not?

When USC and UCLA do get here in Big Ten country in 2024, I will be able to say I knew you when.

My dear wife, Carrie, and I saw UCLA beat USC 34-27 the last time there was a crowd for this game at The Rose Bowl.  What a game it was.

A couple days before these two kicked off that Saturday, Carrie and I were on the field.

Who knew we were scoping out Big Ten country so long ago?

I can tell you the goal posts in The Rose Bowl are true!

I was 2 for 2 at age 50.  I knew when to quit.

In 2016, I took my Dad to see USC-UCLA at The Rose Bowl.  I think this may be my favorite picture of them all.  Sitting on a floor of carpet in the home of my childhood in Brownstown, Indiana or the family room of the same house where my parents’ reside to this day in Ramsey, Indiana, watching games in this stadium were so important to us.  To see my Dad walk toward to the light of this field was, well, special.  Dreams don’t usually come true.

I still have this game on my DVR.  Sam Darnell was too much for the Bruins.

I suppose I had some affection to the Iowa Hawkeyes that has led me to referring to them as my second favorite team in the Big Ten over the years.  After all, the Hoosiers win over Iowa in 1988 when Chuck Hartlieb completed 44 passes for 558 yards for the losing Hawkeyes is still my favorite Memorial Stadium memory;  Austin Starr hitting that field goal against Purdue to send them bowling in 2007 is in the neighborhood.

I would be remiss if I did not mention Anthony Thompson’s 168 yards rushing on 47 carries in that Iowa game in 1988.  I caught up with AT thirty years later before a game at IU.  The Hoosiers were playing Ohio State.  I asked him if he had any eligibility left.  He told me he didn’t want any.  Smart man, as always.

I took this picture on a new turf that was still being painted (you don’t see any hashmarks).  That this will one day be the BIG 10 logo is something I am still processing.  But it sure is fun.

When the Bruins come calling to Bloomington for the first time or the Trojans come calling for the first time since 1981 when they defeated IU 21-3, I will be able to say, “Welcome.  I knew you when.”

And the Bruins, not the Hawkeyes, will be my second favorite Big Ten team.

Danny Johnson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A McCormick Gem Revisited

Twenty-two years ago today, my dear wife, Carrie, and I pushed our way through the turnstile at McCormick Field in Asheville, North Carolina to take in a game Class A Minor League Baseball game between the Asheville Tourists and the Cape Fear Crocs hailing from downstate Fayetteville.

I have long been a fan of minor league baseball.  The fans.  The stadiums.  The cheaper concessions.  The goofy and enjoyable promotional gigs in between innings, be it racing a mascot or making a participant dizzy by making them  bend forward and hold their forehead to the end of a bat handle and go around in circles and then try to run to a target and invariably one of them stumbles and falls and it is all good fun.  Myron Noodleman may have played your stadium.  I saw his act at many a minor league park.

June 26, 2000 was different.  The game lasted all of 1 hour and 49 minutes.  Yes, this was a nine inning game.  Julio de Paula was pitching for the Tourists and Cristobal Rodriquez was tossing for the Crocs.  Rodriquez threw a complete game giving up one run on only five hits.  de Paula did better.  Coming into the evening with a 2-7 record that could get you a visit to see the manager for the “toughest thing a manager has to do,”  Julio de Paula threw a no-hitter.  He gave up one walk.  The Tourists won the game and dePaula was carried off the field.  It was a thrill to behold and that evening has not been lost on me twenty-two years later.

Carrie and I have made more visits to McCormick Field over the years.  This one is still the gem on that diamond for us.   The headline in the Asheville Citizen -Times sports page the next day was A McCormick Gem.  That it was.  That it was.  Thank you to Tyler Norris-Goode for a great write-up of the game and to photographer Steve Dixon for capturing a photo that gives a great account of the moment we so enjoyed that evening.

If you can make it to Asheville for a game, McCormick Stadium is a sight to behold.  Up the hill off the main road, when you walk out and see that tree-lined outfield, you know you are somewhere special.  You don’t have to decide in the sixth inning.

Today the Ole Miss Rebels bring a 1-0 series advantage in the best 2 out of three College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.  I have some kin there watching.

Go Rebs Go!

A few days ago, as I was walking on the North Harrison campus, I took a stroll inside the fence of the baseball park.  There is plenty of room to walk!  The centerfield wall is 380 feet out there.

For a few seasons this was my vantage point as I was the DJ and the Public Address Announcer.

Well, the Rebs play in a few hours.  Hope they can pull it off in two.  Hotty Toddy to you!

Speaking the Rights.

Danny Johnson