Something from nothing

Birmingham Stallions coach Skip Holtz (left) and New Jersey Generals coach Mike Riley look over data during the USFL draft in February. (Scott Adamson photo)

One of the reasons I’m drawn to alternative football leagues is because, usually, Birmingham has been linked to them. The Magic City’s gridiron history is tied to the World Football League, original United States Football League, World League of American Football, the Canadian Football League during its “American experiment,” the first XFL and Alliance of American Football. (It did miss out on the United Football League and the second XFL).

Beyond the home team angle, however, is the fact that any new league offers a fresh start for everyone involved. The players and coaches get a new avenue of opportunity, and football fans get more football.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

And after living through these various circuits I’ve discovered that’s the one aspect of alt-football (and any upstart sports venture, for that matter) that intrigues me most – the initial build itself.

Before the February draft, the eight coaches of the 2022 United States Football League had little more than a general idea of the kind of players they wanted. After the supplemental draft in March, they had 45 flesh and blood athletes – 38 who’ll be on the active roster once the season begins a week from Saturday.

And the opening weekend is exciting for me because I’ll finally get to see the “something” that coaches made from “nothing.”

“This isn’t rebuild, this is build,” Birmingham Stallions head coach Skip Holtz said following a light workout in Hoover last week. “When we get into next year we’ll still have a good nucleus of this team back, and you’ll then have ‘rookies’ … you’ll have new guys. But in this case, everybody was a rookie, everybody was a freshman coming into this year. Now they’ve got a lot more background and been around a lot more football (than college freshmen), and have a lot more knowledge with their age and how much football they’ve played, but they’re all freshmen in this defense and rookies in this offense.”

The Stallions and New Jersey Generals will launch the USFL on April 16 with a 6:30 p.m. CDT kickoff at Protective Stadium, a game that will be simulcast by Fox – which owns the league – as well as NBC and Peacock. On Sunday at the same venue, the Houston Gamblers meet the Michigan Panthers at 11 a.m.; the Philadelphia Stars play the New Orleans Breakers at 3 p.m.; and the Tampa Bay Bandits and Pittsburgh Maulers close out Week One action with a 7 p.m. contest.

While Holtz has put together the Stallions roster and Mike Riley is architect of the Generals lineup, the other league coaches charged with construction are Kevin Sumlin (Houston), Jeff Fisher (Michigan), Bart Andrus (Philadelphia), Larry Fedora (New Orleans), Todd Haley (Tampa Bay) and Kirby Wilson (Pittsburgh).

Once Sunday night is done, everyone will have at least some idea of how successful the build has been across the league.

“That part of it has been pretty fun, and all us coaches are in the same boat,” Holtz said. “It’s a little longer and a little painstaking because some are at different levels than others, and some guys learn in different ways than others, so you’ve just got to make sure you get to know these young men and give them the opportunity to get out here and learn what we’re starting to do so we can go out and put our best foot forward on April 16.”

Obviously getting a head start was important to all the staffs, and Holtz says he and quarterback Alex McGough stayed in frequent contact after McGough was selected as Stallions signal caller.

“I had an opportunity to meet with Alex quite a bit after we drafted him and told him what we were going to call everything, and every time we’d FaceTime or Zoom and he’d be going, ‘Coach, look, I’ve got them right here,’ looking at flash cards,” Holtz said. “He’s learning calls, he’s learning plays, and he’s done a nice job picking it up, and I think J’Mar (backup quarterback J’Mar Smith, who played for Holtz at Louisiana Tech) has done a nice job helping him because he knows the offense as well as he does.”

McGough says Holtz has made the transition easier for all the Stallions players due in large part to his enthusiasm.

“He’s very energetic and very uptempo, always has energy and he’s running around trying to get everybody more energy,” McGough said. “I was with Pete Carroll in Seattle, so he’ll probably match Coach Holtz’s energy. But he’s a great coach, knows his stuff and is a player’s coach. That’s what you want.”

Birmingham cornerback Brian Allen agrees.

“Coach Holtz is full of energy, great guy … he starts us off at eight in the morning full of life,” he said. “We might come in sleepy but by the time we hit the field we’re ready to go. That energy he gives us translates to the field and makes us want to come out here and have great days every single day.”

And while Holtz and all the coaches are trying to build a championship team in the USFL’s inaugural season, Allen says it’s up the players to build their resumes.

“Everybody has real intensity to the point where Coach Holtz has had to tell us sometimes, ‘Guys, slow down,’ because everybody’s so excited and energetic,” Allen said. “You can see it in their eyes – the guys are hungry. This USFL season is gonna be great for everybody. Most of us are striving for one goal, which is to get back in the NFL.

“A lot of guys have old teammates on other teams so there’s a lot of trash talk in the hotel, but at the same time a lot of us are making friends and trying to build a bond, not just with our team but other teams as well.”

Glorious Rickwood Field

Editor’s note: This story originally ran on April 2, 2022.

When I walked into Rickwood Field on Wednesday to watch the inaugural Rickwood College Classic baseball game between UAB and Birmingham-Southern, it marked the first time I’d been to “America’s Oldest Baseball Park” since June 4, 1998. That was the third year of the Rickwood Classic, an annual throwback game contested between the Birmingham Barons and another Southern League opponent.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

A quick bit of research shows that in this particular clash the Greenville Braves defeated the Barons, 12-8, before 6,873 fans.

That I didn’t remember.

What I do recall is that it was brutally hot that day, made even worse by the fact that I was wearing a heavy, old school New York Yankees baseball jersey (fans were invited to wear “turn back the clock” attire and the Barons had once been a Yankees farm club so, you know, I was trying to dress the part).

The uncomfortable heat, however, was no match for how cool it was to be inside this working museum.

It opened in 1910, so obviously it’s rich in sports history. And since Major League Baseball finally righted a wrong in 2020 and gave the Negro Leagues big league status, Rickwood Field is a major league park thanks to the Birmingham Black Barons (who started playing there in 1920).

That makes it even more exciting to claim the venue as a huge part of my history.

Fun fact: my first trip to Rickwood wasn’t as a spectator, but as a player. A member of the L.M. Smith School Cougars 70-pound football team, I was part of the squad that played a team called the Browns there in September of 1971. It wasn’t the Cleveland Browns, of course – that would’ve been a bloodbath – but rather some kids who wore orange helmets and white jerseys. When you think about it, they probably should’ve been called the Oranges.

Anyway, I was a scrub on that team (it would be a couple of years before I transformed from a scrappy young athlete with limited skills to a scrappy older athlete with limited skills) so my only playing time was on kicking teams. I never made a block or tackle, but I did inhale a lot of dust because our field was lined off on the infield, which had most recently been used by the Birmingham A’s.

And that leads me to my first visit as a spectator – although I didn’t get to actually see a game.

On March 15, 1975, the defending World Series champion Oakland A’s were slated to play their Southern League farm club at Rickwood, which was to be the first time I had ever watched a live game involving a major or minor league team. But lightning knocked out a bank of lights at the stadium, and inclement weather prevented the game from being played.

But, I got second baseman Phil Garner’s autograph, watched Reggie Jackson and Billy Williams take BP, and saw Vida Blue throw some pitches, so it was hardly a wasted trip.

On the drive home I mentioned to my dad how neat it was that I had played on the same field as those guys. When he told me it was also the former home of legends such as Willie Mays and Satchel Paige and had hosted everyone from Babe Ruth to Dizzy Dean, well, I felt downright special.

And why not? You should feel special at a place that’s always been a special place for you.

I saw UAB beat Alabama, 12-2, there on April 29, 1980, which was the first college baseball game I ever attended.

I watched the St. Louis Cardinals beat UAB, 7-2, in an exhibition on April 8, 1981, and was almost hit by Keith Hernandez’s two-run homer while perched in the right field stands. Fortunately, my flaming speed allowed me to run away while the ball banged against the aluminum seating a couple of times before being snatched by a youngster.

I was in the house on April 14, 1981, when the Barons were reborn after relocating from Montgomery; shook hands with the San Diego Chicken, aka Ted Giannoulas, after crashing into him while making a beer run during the Barons’ 1983 championship season; and even hung around for a post-game Beach Boys concert after meeting a young woman at a game, even though I have never at any point in my existence been a fan of the Beach Boys.

It all came back to me during the Classic. I watched it with good friend and BirminghamProSports.com guru Gene Crowley, who does a better job chronicling Magic City sports history than anyone. I even got to reconnect with another old buddy, Joe DeLeonard, who – along with the rest of the members of the Friends of Rickwood organization – helps keep this baseball cathedral up and running.

Gene indulged me as we walked through the facility and I pointed to seating areas I’d occupied and told tales of the good old days.

And the good old days at Rickwood always seemed great to me.

With UAB safely in front (the Blazers won, 10-4, jumping out to a 5-0 lead in the first inning), we wrapped up our visit at the on-site museum and gift shop. I got an up-close look at memorabilia from 42, Soul of the Game, and Cobb, movies which were filmed at Rickwood Field, and eyed some old seats from New York’s Polo Grounds, which were bought in 1964 and reused at the Birmingham stadium.

And even though a T-Shirt is the last thing I need, I snagged one with the Birmingham A’s logo and the phrase: “Rickwood Field 1967-1975.”

I think of it as a memento from the first baseball game I almost saw there.

I would’ve bought one that reads: “Cougars vs. Browns 70-Pound Football Game 1971,” but none were available.

I’m gonna pretend they were sold out of those.

For more information about Rickwood Field, go to rickwood.com.