Bill Curry shares wit, wisdom, hope, intensity - as usual - in stirring Macon TD Club talk (with audio and video)
By Michael A. Lough
The Sports Report
centralgasports@gmail.com
When Bill Curry talks, people listen.
Macon TD Club honors trio from Northeast, Mount de Sales, and Stratford
Three schools are represented by this weekâs Macon Touchdown Club players of the week.
Northeast quarterback Nolan Ussery is the back of the week, after completing 5 of 10 passes for 128 yards and score while rushing for 186 yards and two touchdowns in the win over Bleckley County.
Mount de Sales end Dane Frier is the lineman of the week, after racking up 12 tackles and three sacks in the Cavsâ overtime win over Stratford.
Stratford kicker Jonathan Siegel is the special teams player of the week after averaging about 41 yards per punt against Mount de Sales.
The audience at the Macon Touchdown Club knew that. It had listened intently before.
And for nearly 45 minutes Monday night, there was no clinking of silverware while dallying over dessert, no early departures, and no quiet side conversations.
Curryâs voice doesnât boom and he doesnât necessarily have that much Southern preacher in him, but his life experiences and passion and a voice that sometimes drops to a whisper during a story lead to silence and focus from his listeners.
Curry was, as always, alternately funny, but always heartfelt.
Macon has been a more regular stop on Curryâs travels, with friends and business associates. His connection to the city is a long one.
âMy high school basketball team, 1959, College Park High School defeated Gainesville High School,â Curry said of the 1959 GHSA Class AA boys basketball championship game, at the Macon City Auditorium. âAll the Super Bowls, the rings, all the stuff that goes with it ⊠I mean this sincerely, and itâs surprising, but all that pales next to something that happened when I was a junior in high school, in Macon, Georgia, with my high school basketball team.â
He also is connected business-wise with Jeff Battcher, who has spearheaded a local movement to increase baseball participation in the city as part of the Macon RBI (Revitalizing Baseball in Inner Cities) program.
âHeâs a brilliant guy, formerly in charge of public relations for BellSouth and Delta Air Lines,â said Curry, who also acknowledged FPD head coach Greg Moore, who was a manager at Alabama when Curry was the Tideâs head coach. âNot perhaps coincidentally, both of them were in Chapter 11 while he was handling them.â
Curry recalled the sluggish start to his athletics career and football career as a 12 year old. He wanted to give up football to focus on his eventual destiny of pitcher for the New York Yankees, but figured he might have find alternative housing because his father wouldnât let him quit.
âA fate worse than death,â he said, âfor short, fat, lazy Bill Curry, future New York Yankee pitcher, stuck in this ridiculous sport, where we actually screamed and smashed and ran into each other. â
His general lack of athletic ability led him to be pushed into the center position.
âThe center, our job is to hike the ball and be run over slowly,â he said. âIf you can do that, you can play football for a long, long time.â
It was a struggle for football to overtake football in his heart and mind.
âIf I can stand 60 feet, six inches from you and throw something at you,â he said, âwhy would I want to run into you and risk injury?
âIt was the worst experience of my life. I have never felt so bad. I have never been so smashed and beat up, and nasty equipment. You could smell the locker room from two blocks away. The CDC could have done studies on the cultures that were developing in the air conditioning.â
He survived, and eventually thrived, playing for legendary coaches Bobby Dodd, Vince Lombardi, and Don Shula.
Lombardi was of transformational impact in Curryâs life, and still is, 48 years after his death, for opening Curryâs eyes, mind, and heart. Lombardi, for all of his perceived toughness, didnât tolerate racism, or most other âisms.
He talked of, as a coach, taking a player from south-central Los Angeles and one from north Georgia, two different backgrounds, and changing outlooks.
âAnd our sick, racist culture has taught them to hate each otherâs guts, and I can put them in the same locker room, and I can make them dress next to each other,â he said. âYou have to teach people to hate. We donât show up hating anybody. We have to be taught hatred.â
If they canât handle it, they can leave. Day by day, outlooks change, he said. Experiences, like how you need a teammate to help you on and off with the jersey and shoulder pads, and how youâre sharing the experiences of two-a-days and injuries and sweat and a common goal.
âThose two guys who thought they hated each otherâs guts, they found out a basic thing,â he said. âSweat smells the same on everybody. When I get busted in my mouth, my bloodâs the same color as my brother. âI cannot hate him. I need him. We got to stick together.ââ
No, Curry wasnât lessening the impact of winning and losing, but that both are lessons for a long life, how losing teaches how life truly works
âAlabamaâs going to lose another football game, I guarantee you,â the former Tide head coach said. âIt might be 15 years from now.â
Curry crossed paths with Nick Saban one day and asked if all this winning was getting boring.
âHe said, âOh, you wouldnât believe the pressure,ââ Curry said, to laughter from a crowd aware that Curry went 25-10 in three years at Alabama and had a brick thrown through his office window, among other indignities for being a Tide coach not named Bear.
â âOh, you donât think I know?
â âOK, well, maybe you do understand. Youâre the only one who understands.ââ
Curryâs life would have been so different if he had been a little better athlete and not gone through those negotiations as a 12 year old in need of a position. There was one position left.
Coach: âWell, Bill, I guess youâre going to be the center.â
Curry: âNo s---.â
Then came the discussions about what the skillset entailed.
Coach: âWell, Bill, I guess youâre gonna have to learn how to hike that ball.â
Curry: âNo s---.â
And Curry wanted to talk immediately about that necessary skill.
âIâm going to take this really hard, oblate spheroid, 13 pounds per square inch, and Iâm gonna put it on the ground, and Iâm gonna pull it up right here?ââ he said. âAre you kidding me? You want the ball to (be pulled) up really hard? And Tommy Fields is going to put his hands where? I donât want his hands there.
âWe need to discuss this. This is a complex transaction weâre contemplating here.â
The contemplating started and ended, and a so commenced a Hall of Fame career and full life in which Curry bent over and snapped to a list of Hall of Famers at nearly every stop.
âI had the privilege of being in the huddle with them, delivering the football to them and protecting them,â he said. âAnd finally realizing that offensive center is the only position in all of professional sport that would have allowed Bill Curry to have a career ⊠. So what does football teach us at its very outset?
âThat what seems to be adversity, what seems to be the worst thing that could happen to you might be the best thing that could happen to you, if you just wonât quit. If you wonât look down your nose at another human being because of the color of the skin. If you wonât look down your nose at another human being because of their national origin.
âIf you donât make up funny names to call (people). If you donât tell racist jokes, which are not funny, by the way, theyâve never been funny. Theyâre not funny. Theyâre killers.
âYou canât be a racist and step in the huddle any more. âŠâ
The life-changing lessons he learned from Lombardi in his early days as pro remain strong five decades later.
âYou know what made our nation great?,â he asked. âValues. Values. There are five basic treasures that are valued worldwide. Every known religion, every socio-economic political system accepts these five values:
âHonesty. Fairness. Respect. Responsibility. Compassion. Those five values are treasured and appreciated. With all screw-ups weâve had in the United States of America, by and large, we have tried to come back to that set of values. We have tried and tried. Weâve forgotten that now how, and it will cost us dearly.â
He recalled a drive toward Birmingham a few days after Sept. 11, 2001, when the decision had not been made yet to play college games that weekend. He stopped for gas in Attalla, Ala., and talked to the counter worker, saying he might get the call about the decision any minute, and he did. There would be no college football that weekend.
The man got a little angry and intense, and told him that yes, there would be football that Friday night in Attalla, Ala., and it got Curry thinking.
âThis ridiculous kids game that Iâve played my entire life, itâs just a game, why does it matter so much?â Curry said. âIt come to me, just a little bit at a time.
âBecause they are high school football games. Because thatâs our night to huddle. America huddles on Friday night, donât we? People sit together in those stands that never sit together any other time of the week. What do we do when somebodyâs kid scores a touchdown?
âWe hug. We donât turn to see what the pigmentation is or what the religious background is. We hug. ⊠We become a team, if for only 3 Âœ hours. ⊠Every human heart has the potential for greatness.â