Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Change in plans ...

So just when everything seemed to be going along well 0n the trivia books I got an email today that changed everything.

Ok, not everything, but one-third of things.

The third book, on the Vikings, is going to be put on hold until next year. Considering one of the team executives said about this season: "Dear God. We're just wondering what could possibly happen next," I really can't argue the decision.

So instead I'll be doing the Green Bay Packers, the last NFL team I covered. So it's Cowboys, Steelers and Packers editions hitting stores before the 2011 season.

The good thing is that this means the series is already slated to continue even before I've finished the first edition. Cool.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Progress report on the Cowboys book

It's less than two weeks before Christmas and I'm pretty sure I'm going to miss my self-imposed goal of finishing the Cowboys edition by the end of the month. Considering bowl practices start later this week that's to be expected and I'm not disappointed -- especially with the aggressive schedule I'm attempting: Have a draft done as close to Christmas as possible and proof and edit while in Orlando for the Capital One Bowl.

It might happen, it might not. But I'm on pace to do so. We'll see because that figures to be a hectic trip.

Unfortunately I'll be driving down Christmas Day and driving back New Year's Day after the game, maybe with a manuscript in tow.

Monday, December 6, 2010

First up, the Dallas Cowboys

Work on the first book has begun and I decided to use the Dallas Cowboys version as my test run, if you will.

Basically, I have to come up with 1,000 words a day, which wouldn't be much of an issue if I was writing in any sort of a regular style, but these are trivia books. I also need to get a working draft done by the end of the month, so my work is cut out for me over the next couple of weeks before bowl practices get under way (in addition to that whole Christmas thing).

I haven't come up with a name yet, but will soon. Maybe something with the word ultimate or something similar. My fear is that the questions I'm coming up with are too hard, so I'll try and balance it out a little and make the difficulty more progressive.

In other news, I submitted by Heisman ballot late tonight. Voters are asked not to disclose their ballot and just like last year I will not. Considering all the off-field turmoil it should make for an interesting week.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Finally, a new book deal

So after a nice little break as an author, I'm jumping back into it with three small NFL books that will come out next summer. Basically, my publisher asked me to out together some well-done trivia books for the Minnesota Vikings, Dallas Cowboys and Pittsburgh Steelers.

For those of you who don't know, I hail from Minnesota and have long joked that my dad said "It's a Vikings fan" before "It's a boy." Then again, maybe he did say that. He also had season tickets until the team moved inside the Metrodome.

I have no format, theme or name yet, but I'll start putting that together next week.

I hope it's not a bad omen that two of those three teams have already fired their coaches this season.

For those of you scoring at home, they'll be books No. 15, 16 and 17.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Still waiting on books, but more sales rankings:

Yep, I'm still waiting to hear from some people about the future of the Huddle Up series, but in the meantime here are the latest rankings.

There's new No. 1 in the series:

1. New York Giants
2. Alabama
3. Ohio State
4. Texas
5. Michigan
6. Notre Dame
7. Oklahoma
8. Tennessee

I can't believe Lane Kiffin didn't result in more sales. Yeah, right.

So here are the overall rankings in sales:

1. 100 Things Crimson Tide Fans Should Know or Do Before They Die
2. Where Football is King: A History of the SEC
3. Crimson Storm Surge: Alabama Football Then and Now
4. Huddle Up: New York Giants
5. Huddle Up: Alabama
6. Huddle Up: Ohio State
7. Huddle Up: Texas
8. Huddle Up: Michigan
9. Who's No. 1? 100-Plus Years of Controversial Champions in College Football
10. Huddle Up: Notre Dame
11. Huddle Up: Oklahoma
12. Huddle Up: Tennessee
13. No Time Outs: What It's Really Like to Be a Sportswriter Today
14. Return to Glory: The Story of Alabama's 2008 Season (NA).

Monday, August 23, 2010

Something old, something new ...

Things got a little hectic this summer as I had a couple of projects, and with no decision on the books I accepted an invitation to write the main stories for the game programs this season.

In addition to being good exposure for the web site it'll be nice to have a printed version of something I wrote, and maybe something to frame again. It's been a while.

So far I've cranked out everything for the first two games, which actually gets me through the first month of the season. I'll also be able to post some of the stories on the site on game days.

Hopefully I'll have some book news soon. In the meantime, the Game 1 cover is on the expansion of Bryant-Denny Stadium, and Game is on Joe Paterno vs. Nick Saban.

It's hard to believe the season is already here ...

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Another appearance on College Football Live

So on Tuesday (yesterday) I was a guest on College Football Live as part of the summer's "What if" series, to talk about what might have happened had Rich Rodriguez said yes to Alabama, which instead went on to hire Nick Saban.

I wrote a column about it: http://alabama.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1100623

The funny thing to me, though, was the producers asked for a headshot to use since it was a phone interview, and I really don't have a good one. So I sent three pictures, an old headshot that was cropped too tight, a picture from a book signing, and this picture I took myself to use with potential book promos.

If you look carefully you can tell I took it in a mirror. The UNH Hockey logo is backwards.

Book sales update

Alas, the sales figures from my Taylor Trade books are finally in for July 1, 2009-Dec. 31, 2009. As expected it didn't change the rankings of my 14 books:

1. 100 Things Crimson Tide Fans should Know and Do Before They Die
2. Where Football is King: A History of the SEC
3. Huddle Up: New York Giants
4. Huddle Up: Alabama
5. Huddle Up: Ohio State
6. Huddle Up: Texas
7. Huddle Up: Michigan
8. Crimson Storm Surge: Alabama Football Then and Now
9. Huddle Up: Oklahoma
10. Huddle Up: Notre Dame
11. Who's No. 1? 100-Plus Years of Controversial Champions in College Football
12. Huddle Up: Tennessee
13. No Time Outs: What It's Really Like to be a Sportswriter Today
14. Return to Glory: The Story of Alabama's 2008 Season (contributing writer)

Monday, June 21, 2010

The first official day of summer means that summer's nearly over

In addition to the longest day of the year meaning it's time to celebrate my girlfriend's birthday (you just don't mess around with that), it also signals that the football offseason is about to end.

Seriously, things really start ramping up on the site (BamaOnline.com) July 1, and we're exactly a month away from Day 1 of SEC Media Days.

While you all check out the photo on the right, taken with my iphone Saturday evening on a boat heading back to Portland, Maine, some quick updates:

1) I did get quite a bit done on the novel, just not as much as I had hoped. Hopefully I'll have some more time to work on it over the next month before things get really crazy.

2) There's nothing new on the Huddle Up series but I'm still optimistic. Regardless, the soonest you might see a new edition is next summer.

3) There's a chance one of my older books might be updated and released in paperback. No details yet, though.

Friday, April 16, 2010

My summer project ...

As some of you know I've been sort of tinkering around with a novel for a number of years, and about 20 days ago I picked it back up. With spring football about to wrap up (along with the NFL Draft), the Huddle Up series on hold for a year and law-school genius girlfriend getting ready for finals and then heading out of the country (again!), the timing feels right.

I'll get a vacation in somewhere before things crank back up in July, but no clues when or where yet.

Although I lost four chapters due to computer issues (oops), I've gone back and reworked six of the first eight and tweaked some of the characters as I have a better feel for what I want.

Two things of note:
1) I have no timetable for finishing it.
2) No, I'm not telling anyone anything on what it's about. I'll slowly leak some things out here, but that's about it. We'll see how it goes, but wish me luck.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

The latest during a very busy spring ...

This was my recent column on University of Alabama guard Barrett Jones visiting Haiti.

Strangely, I ended up doing two columns on his visit, one before and one after.

http://alabama.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1070921

More soon ...

Monday, March 22, 2010

My column from the Bowden/Saban banquet

BIRMINGHAM _ We all get phone calls that are impossible to forget.

Too often they're associated with great tragedy, and not enough with the exact opposite. University of Alabama football coach Nick Saban remembers one in particular back in 1973, shortly after his father died when he was a graduate assistant at Kent State.

"This is Bobby Bowden," said the voice talking from West Virginia University, located roughly 25 minutes away from where Saban had grown up. The head football coach had known Saban's father, knew that his mother was having a bit of a tough time and offered more than just condolences.

"If you need to come home, if you want to be a coach, I'll create a graduate assistant position for you so you can do what you need to and be around your mother," Saban recalled Bowden saying.



He's told that story numerous times lately, and again Sunday, which was a special night for Birmingham. Not only had one of its proud sons returned home to be honored when the Over the Mountain Touchdown Club's inaugural coach of the year award was named in Bowden's honor, but the first recipient was that kid he called nearly 37 years ago.

"His rise in coaching is just unsurpassed," Bowden said before a packed room at the Cahaba Grand Conference Center. "This is a no-brainer who this should go to. Nick I think you ran into the same problem I did with the Bear Bryant Award. You come in second?

"We won the national championship in '93 and I went down there for the Bear Bryant Award which I never got, and some guy named Terry Bowden got it. I can't stand him."

The laughter aside, it's difficult not to see the parallels between the man who is a college football legend, arguably one of the top five coaches in the sport's history, and the one who is currently solidifying his legacy at the Capstone. Besides the obvious tie to West Virginia, both have won two national championships and soon Saban too will have a statue of him standing in front of his home stadium.

It also wouldn't be surprising to see Bowden in Bryant-Denny next season, maybe when Joe Paterno and Penn State come calling (how fitting would that be?). The former quarterback at Woodlawn High, who initially enrolled at Alabama and dreamed of playing for the Crimson Tide still holds these parts close to his heart and frequently visits.

"There's nothing you can do better to me than to have your hometown name an award after you," Bowden said. "I've very thankful, appreciative for that."








Although he won't be on the Florida State sideline for the first time in 35 years, where Saban protégé Jimbo Fisher has taken over, that doesn't mean Bowden plans to slow down in retirement. He flew in for the banquet from Baton Rouge, where he was speaking at the Louisiana High School Coaches Association. Last week the 80-year-old was reportedly in Rio de Janeiro talking to insurance salesmen, and before that Hawaii. He joked about recently playing golf with Florida's Urban Meyer and not knowing what was going on with any spring practices. That's why, in part, Bowden meant it when he said he's not missing coaching and all that went into it.

"I tell you, everything's changed so much from when I started, we had nothing," he said about first arriving at Florida State in 1976, the Seminoles nothing like the program that would make the top five final rankings in an unprecedented 14 consecutive seasons. At the time, it was $500,000 in debt, fans weren't attending games and he had to sell FSU football to everyone.

In addition to recruits, Bowden set up a speaking tour throughout the state of Florida to raise money and continually worked the media. In contrast, and perhaps a perfect testament to how the game really has changed, Saban arrived to Sunday's banquet in a helicopter.

"There could be no greater award for me to receive than one that has Coach Bowden's name on it, because of not only his accomplishments, it's not always what you did it's more important how you are," Saban said. "There's no one our profession, or anyone I know as a person, I have more respect for than Bobby Bowden."

He then left the banquet a little early to attend a team meeting with players reporting back from spring break, while Bowden returned to the podium. Before Saban could get out the door, though, a fan yelled out: "We'll see you here again next year, coach."

He stopped and grinned, "I heard that."

(Here's the link: http://alabama.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=1065931)

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Back from what was supposed to be a short break

Well, what I hoped would be a retreat to the beach to look over and work on the novel didn't quite work out the way I had hoped in terms of work, but it was still nice to get away for a couple of days.

Funny, whenever I go to Destin I'm reminded of all the things I liked about living in Florida (ok, the beach) and it brings back a lot of memories and feelings.

But it was a good trip. Good company. Good food. Good shopping at the outlets. Hopefully I'll soon have a little more to tell you all about the novel.

P.S. Nice shot with my iphone, huh?

Friday, March 5, 2010

Still the one ...

I received the Huddle Up sales figures for July 1-Dec. 31, 2009, and they were pretty much what I expected in terms of rankings:

1. Alabama
2. Texas
3. New York Giants
4. Ohio State
5. Michigan
6. Notre Dame
7. Oklahoma
8. Tennessee

For total sales, which began before July, 1 the rankings change a little.

1. New York Giants
2. Alabama
3. Ohio State
4. Texas
5. Michigan
6. Oklahoma
7. Notre Dame
8. Tennessee

So the total rankings of all books (not including sales of the Taylor Trade books from the second half of last year):

1. 100 Things Crimson Tide Fans Should Know and Do Before They Die
2. Where Football is King: A History of the SEC
3. Huddle Up: New York Giants
4. Huddle Up: Alabama
5. Huddle Up: Ohio State
6. Huddle Up: Texas
7. Huddle Up: Michigan
8. Crimson Storm Surge: Alabama Football Then and Now
9. Huddle Up: Oklahoma
10. Huddle Up: Notre Dame
11. Who's No. 1? 100-Plus Years of Controversial Champions in College Football
12. Huddle Up: Tennessee
13. No Time Outs: What It's Really Like to be a Sportswriter Today
NA Return to Glory: The Story of Alabama's 2008 Season

Friday, February 19, 2010

A night with Neil Gaiman

Last night I had the honor and pleasure of not only attending a Neil Gaiman lecture and reading, but I also got a chance to shake hands and briefly meet him.

For those of you who don't know who Neil Gaiman is ("Stardust," "American Gods" and "Coraline"), get to a book store right now and pick up some of his stuff. The book to the right here may be my favorite of his.

During our short discussion we talked about his living just outside of the Twin Cities, Douglas Adams and that the last lecture-type event I had attended was for Graham Chapman before he died way back when I was in college. I also made sure to thank him for making the trip.

During the Q&A part of the night at the Bama Theater he let on that there will be two more Stardust-related stories in the future, he does color-coordinate his wardrobe (all black) and is advice to aspiring writers is to do just that, write.

Incredibly nice guy. Very annoying (yes, that's a joke).

Monday, January 25, 2010

Now this hurts ...

If you don't live in Tuscaloosa you'll probably have no idea what I'm talking about, but I've been told that Strip Teas & Coffee on The Strip will be closing this weekend.

This news was almost as upsetting to me as the way my Vikings lost to the Saints on Sunday (FYI, I'm very happy for Roman Harper and Darren Sharper, though).

Basically, ST&C is where I wrote all of my daily practice reports, a lot of my features, and well, a significant part of my books. When I used to work for another organization in town I affectionately called this both the Downtown Bureau, and my "hiding spot."

I love everything about it, including the atmosphere, coffee and food (but not the parking - that's been awful). So this week I'll be saying goodbye to old friend, and some of you will probably be doing the same.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

The perils of covering a championship run

It's been roughly a week since I returned from Pasadena, and I still have yet to recover. Not only was it one of most exhausting experiences of my life, but things haven't let up yet (coaching comings and goings, etc.) and there have been some extremely late nights to revamp and update all the software on my computers.

Yeah, that upgrade software for Windows 7 worked so well I had to buy the total package version for roughly $200. Not that I'm bitter or anything.

So while Alabama is holding its championship celebration at Bryant-Denny Stadium today, I have another example of how seriously people in the South take college football: While the rest of the nation was focused and horrified by the Haiti earthquake this week, everyone I know has been talking almost non-stop about Lane Kiffin leaving Tennessee and what a *expletive* he is.

On the hopefully good news front, I'll be having some interesting discussions next week about the potential future of the Huddle Up series. Yes, it still has a pulse.