Defense scores first TDs

BIRMINGHAM – Midway through the first quarter of Birmingham’s 33-28 win over Houston tonight, the teams had already combined for 16 points.

Only four of them came from an offensive player.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

The Stallions started things off when cornerback Brian Allen stepped in front of a Clayton Thorson pass and returned it 48 yards for a touchdown.

Brandon Aubrey toed the PAT.

The Gamblers responded with a 50-yard field goal courtesy of UAB product Nick Vogel, but then Houston corner Will Likely intercepted J’Mar Smith and took it all the way back for a 63-yard score.

At halftime the Gamblers led 18-13, with all of Birmingham’s offensive points courtesy of Aubrey’s two field goals and extra point.

Then things got fun for Skip Holtz’s squad.

The Stallions’ first major points on offense came in the third quarter when Smith connected with Osirus Mitchell on a 34-yard TD pass at the 13:26 mark.

Birmingham’s offense continued their hot streak the next time they got the ball, with CJ Marable getting 30 yards on seven touches and capping off an 11-play march with a three-yard scamper and helping push the hometown team’s lead to 26-18.

Vogel’s 24-yard field goal with 1:09 to go in the third made it a 26-21 game, suggesting this one might come down to the wire.

Instead, Smith hooked up with a wide-open Marlon Williams on a 65-yard touchdown play and the kick gave the Stallions a 33-21 edge with 12:55 remaining in the game.

But this one was not over.

After an out-of-bounds kickoff gave Houston the ball at midfield, they responded with a TD courtesy of a 44-yard pitch-and-catch between Thorson and Tyler Simmons with 12:13 showing on the clock.

At 33-28, nothing had been decided.

But facing a fourth-and-10 at their 19 with 4:29 to go, the Gamblers punted the ball away in hopes their “D” would give the offense one more shot.

A three-and-out did just that, the after a punt, Houston had 2:32 and 74 yards to travel to improve to 2-0.

Following three incompletions, a fourth-and-10 scamper by Thorson kept the drive alive at the two-minute warning and Kevin Sumlin’s team continued to move the markers.

But after reaching the 27, a Thorson pass bounced off the fingertips of Simmons and was intercepted by Lorenzo Burns, sealing the deal.

“I’ve had the opportunity to watch and come to a lot of these games, and I’ve come away every week thinking, ‘Man, that was a great game, it came all the way down to the last play,’” said Holtz, whose charges improve to 2-0 while Houston drops to 1-1. “I hate these last play games if I’m involved in them. There a lot better when somebody else is playing them rather than us.

“I’ve said this from the beginning … I think the league did a great job of creating a draft that created real quality in this league. Everybody’s got talent and everybody’s got something you’ve got to stop.”

THAT WAS FUN

Fans of wide-open football got all they could want on Saturday. And if you’re into quarterback duels, you had to love Philadelphia’s 30-23 victory over Pittsburgh earlier in the day.

Stars signal caller Bryan Scott made a strong case for Offensive Player of the Week honors, going 26-36-1 for 272 yards and three touchdowns. He also ran for a score and completed the league’s first 3-point conversion pass to Paul Terry, which accounted for the final points of the game.

His counterpart for the Maulers, Josh Love, had a 22-39-2 stat line for 236 yards and two TDs.

The teams combined for 651 yards of total offense.

“I thought that was a really good football game on both sidelines,” Stars coach Bart Andrus said. “It was hard fought and a collision of two philosophies on offense. We were pleased with what we did offensively. We made adjustments from the first week. We still have some issues in the run game. We have to fix those.”

Philadelphia’s Maurice Alexander had eight catches for 87 yards and two touchdowns while Pittsburgh’s Bailey Gaither reeled in seven catches for 117 yards and one touchdown.

“Our offense … we started to click this week at practice,” Scott said. “The more time we spend as a unit, the better. Maurice had a hell of a game. He seized the moment.”

Andrus said the decision to go for three after taking a 27-23 lead made sense.

“It just unfolded that it was the correct decision for us at that moment,” Andrus said. “If we get it, we move ahead by a touchdown, and that’s how it worked out.”

UPON FURTHER REVIEW

If you didn’t know better, you’d think coaches had forgotten to vet kickers after watching sidewinder specialists spend Week One misfiring on field goal tries. Turns out it was the “sensor technology” used inside the footballs that made each kick an adventure.

Instead of just trying to wish the problem away, though, USFL officials made a change.

“Our specialists came to us with concerns about the sensor technology impacting the kicking balls we’re using during the course of the game,” USFL executive vice president of football operations Daryl Johnston said, via Twitter. “Starting this week, we will be going back to a more traditional ‘K ball’ structure in the USFL. All of our specialists will be kicking their own balls when it comes to kickoffs, punts, field goals, and PATS. This will not have any impact on the production value for the fans’ experience as they watch on television.”

Not that many fans want to watch field goal duels, but at least now if it comes down to one the kickers won’t have modern technology to blame if their efforts go wide left or wide right.

SPEAKING OF FANS

A crowd estimated at 17,500 was on hand for last week’s opener between Birmingham and New Jersey, and perfect weather on Saturday brought a similar number of Magic City fans to Protective Stadium to cheer on their Stallions. But with the USFL hub in Birmingham, there was always the danger of folks staying home when the home team isn’t playing.

That has certainly been the case through seven games.

Those who show up to watch clubs not carrying the Birmingham brand can be measured by the hundreds, and televised games – while great from a production standpoint – show largely empty stadiums.

On the one hand Fox has made no bones about the fact that this is a TV-driven league, and gate receipts are basically gravy. Its survival will depend on people tuning in, not turning out. Still, perception can alter reality, and you have to wonder what casual fans watching at home think when they see nothing but aluminum where people are supposed to be.

THE GENERALS’ PLATOON

With only two quarterbacks on the roster, coaches were expected to give both some playing time in the early stages of the season. New Jersey, however, might just stay with their QB1-A and QB1-B attack.

Both Luis Perez and De’Andre Johnson looked good in a close loss to Birmingham, and both split time Friday night as the Generals were able to grind out a 10-6 victory over Michigan.

Perez handled most of the passing – going 13-19-1 for 97 yards – while Johnson called his own number 10 times for 27 rushing yards.

“I really didn’t plan for it … I’ve never done it in all my years of coaching,” New Jersey coach Mike Riley said. “When Luis got here and De’Andre was already here, we’ve alternated them almost play by play. If you look at practice, you’ll find their snaps have been pretty even. I was lying in bed the night before we first played and thought, ‘Why not?’ They’re pretty special guys. A lot of guys wouldn’t let their egos handle it, but they can. You should see them talk to each other on the sidelines. They care a lot about playing the game and being better quarterbacks.

“I think we’re a better team playing both of them.”

It was defense and a strong running game that saved the day against Michigan, however.

“We’re seconds away from being undefeated and seconds away from having no wins,” Riley said. “We came through a lot of tough situations (Friday). Proud of the guys for the fight.”

TODAY IN HISTORY

On this day in 1985 the Birmingham City Council agreed to give the United States Football League’s Birmingham Stallions a $1 million “bailout” to keep the franchise from folding. The stipulation was that they could not spend any of the money until after the league owners met later in the month to discuss going ahead with plans to play in the fall of 1986 or continue a spring schedule. In addition, $100,000 of the money was to be considered an investment in the team, making the State Fair Authority – the agency through which the money would be channeled – a limited partner in the franchise.

Stallions, Gamblers meet in another time, another place

BIRMINGHAM – So, why did tonight’s United States Football League game between the Birmingham Stallions and Houston Gamblers at Protective Stadium make me think about Matt Reeves’ The Batman and Zack Snyder’s Justice League?

Well, for starters, I’m a fanboy, and fanboys think about such things quite a bit. It’s who we are … it’s how we live.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

But also, there is a bit of a parallel if you’ll be kind enough to let me explain.

The Batman is brilliant. It’s gritty, set in the real world, and features characters who must rely on their wits, intelligence, and a bit of cool tech instead of superpowers. To me it’s the magnum opus of comic book movies and my favorite of the genre.

Justice League is also really good. In its world of heroes there are women with the power of gods, men who can fly, and monsters from another dimension. And Batman – he’s a human working with superhumans.

Both movies are enjoyable, even though they take place in different universes. In other words, Robert Pattison’s Batman does not exist where Ben Affleck’s Batman exists.

I see no point in even comparing them.

Keeping that in mind, let’s return to the subject of the Stallions vs. the Gamblers.

Tonight, the score was 33-28 in favor of Birmingham, and it was an incredibly fun game to watch. Fans of defense got to see a pick-6 by each team, and fans of offense saw 61 points and 622 total yards.

If you cheered for the Stallions, you cheered for J’Mar Smith’s two TD passes and 214 yards; the combined 136 yards and two touchdowns of receivers Marlon Williams and Osirus Mitchell; CJ Marable’s 76 rushing yards and score; and Tony Brooks-James 62 yards on just nine totes.

If you go to football games to be entertained, this was a good one to attend.

On June 29, 1985, however, the score was Birmingham 22, Houston 20, in a USFL playoff game at Legion Field. Jim Kelly (USFL Rookie of the Year and Player of the Year in 1984) was 33-40-1 for 319 yards and two TDs for the Gamblers, but Stallions’ kicker Danny Miller nailed five field goals to lead the home team to victory in front of 18,500 fans.

Jack Pardee coached the Gamblers, Rollie Dotsch guided the Stallions, and it was a big money league with big money players. Kelly, in fact, had signed a $3.5 million, five-year deal to come to Houston, and promptly threw for a record 5,219 yards and 44 touchdowns his first season. It was the second time I’d seen Kelly play live; the Gamblers came to town for an exhibition game in February of 1985, winning 20-10.

So, what does that USFL have to do with the 2022 USFL?

Nothing.

Kelly made $700,000 per season, $655,000 more than any “modern” USFL quarterback.

None of the current USFL players were alive when the original USFL played.

Birmingham coach Skip Holtz was at Holy Cross College and a year away from walking on at Notre Dame in 1985, while Houston boss Kevin Sumlin was a starting linebacker at Purdue.

Like The Batman and Justice League, the old USFL does not exist where the new USFL exists.

But you can still enjoy both.

I can stroll through my Fan Cave – glance at my game-used Joe Cribbs jersey and media guides from the 1983, 1984 and 1985 seasons – and relive memories of the best brand of pro football ever played in the Magic City. I doubt there’ll ever be another like it.

But now I can go to the Uptown and see another herd of Stallions. They aren’t the same as the ones that galloped at Legion Field nearly 40 years ago, but they’re still a pro football team that represents my city.

You certainly don’t have to compare them, and you can love one without hating the other.

And that’s what I choose to do, because sometimes I’m in the mood for The Batman and sometimes I’m in the mood for Justice League.

What can I say? I’m a fanboy.

Paige and the Black Barons: Part 2

I’ve never been much into idolizing sports figures, but I made an exception for Satchel Paige. A Mobile native who spent the early part of his career with the Birmingham Black Barons, his exploits on the mound bordered on the unbelievable.

Pitching over four decades – going 112-60 with a 2.36 earned average in the Negro Leagues and 118-80 with a 2.70 ERA in the American League – no one ever did what he did so well for so long.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

I never saw him play, but I was always fascinated by arguably the greatest baseball pitcher of all-time. That being said, I don’t claim to be an expert on the man or the myth, although I thought I had a pretty good working knowledge of his story arc.

I was wrong.

Only recently did I stumble upon the fact that he not only got his start as a professional player during a four-year stint with the Black Barons, but actually managed the club for a very brief time. Well, he managed a club called the Black Barons, which is a pretty interesting story in itself.

On March 15, 1956, the Birmingham Post-Herald reported that Black Barons owner Floyd Meshad had, indeed, signed the ageless superstar in a dual role.

“We are pleased to have Paige handle the club,” Meshad told the newspaper. “We’re tickled to death to have him, the fans will like him, and he says he still has that old fastball for four or five innings.”
Paige was almost 50 when he returned to Birmingham following a career that had taken him from various Negro League clubs (now considered major league franchises) to the Cleveland Indians and St. Louis Browns of Major League Baseball.

By 1953 – his last season in MLB before signing for one game with the Kansas City Athletics in 1965 – Paige had been a World Series champion and eight-time All-Star.

In the Black Barons, he was taking over a club that was in its 38th season and claimed to be the oldest Negro League team in the United States in continuous operation. But after stints in the Negro Southern League, Negro National League and Negro American League, the 1956 Black Barons would play as independents.

And the 38th season claim is in dispute because the “old” Birmingham Barons had been purchased by Dr. Anderson K. Ross of Memphis in early March and renamed the Giants since Meshack had already copyrighted the name “Black Barons.” The original franchise had been taken away from Meshad earlier in the year at an owners meeting due to “league violations.”

Meshad said his club would face such traditional powers as the Indianapolis Clowns and New York Black Yankees. And they had secured Rickwood Field for the season, so the team would play in familiar surroundings.

“The opposition will be tougher than in the Negro American League,” Meshad said. “That league only has four teams now, including one they call the Birmingham Giants, which doesn’t even play here.”

The Black Barons lost to Mobile in its April 2 spring training opener at Rickwood, 10-8. And the team continued to play exhibitions in anticipation for the start of the regular season in May.

But on April 11 Meshad sold the team – and naming rights – to Ross.

“I’ve sold the franchise, equipment, good will, everything,” Meshack said.

Jim Canady, a former Birmingham player, was skipper of the renamed Giants, leaving Paige in limbo. So, the player/manager reportedly took a trip to Mobile on or around April 14 and by all accounts that ended his tenure with the Black Barons.

Canady was replaced by Horse Walker as Barons skipper on June 8, and the Black Barons finished third in the NAL standings.

As for Paige, well, by April 24 he was playing for Bill Veeck’s Miami Marlins in the International League. When the season was over he had compiled an 11-4 record, 1.86 Earned Run Average and struck out 79 batters in 111 innings pitched.

Obviously, he still had that old fastball.