Now that's sad.  It was really bad that the break occurred in the Florida
game too.  

There was no foul or dirty hit, but just that it happened in our game made
it especially bad.

 

Oliver Barry CRS,GRI

Real Estate Broker

Bob Parks Realty

1517 Hunt Club Blvd

Gallatin TN 37066

Phone: 615-826-4040

Fax: 615-822-2027

Mobile: 615-972-4239

 

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of John Vega
Sent: Monday, November 02, 2009 1:25 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two
Lives Forever

 

 

On Nov 2, 2009, at 2:22 PM, Helen Huntley wrote:





Rodney Stowers

http://www.nytimes.com/1991/10/04/sports/mississippi-state-player-dies.html

 

and here

 

http://articles.latimes.com/1991-10-21/sports/sp-226_1_jackie-sherrill

 

His Other Side - Sherrill's Mystique Is Built on Arrogance, Insolence, but
Stowers' Death Made Him Let His Guard Down

By GENE WOJCIECHOWSKI, TIMES STAFF WRITER|October 21, 1991

STARKVILLE, Miss. - Tears do not come easily for Jackie Sherrill. If
anything, they are a last resort, a reluctant concession, a luxury Sherrill
rarely allows himself.

But on Oct. 5, with about 2,000 mourners squeezed into Mississippi State
University's aging Lee Hall auditorium, Sherrill's eyes betrayed him. He
wept. Like a baby.

Two days earlier, Sherrill had walked into his office shortly before 7 a.m.
and was met by a Mississippi State team trainer, who, his voice unsteady,
told him Rodney Stowers, a 20-year-old junior defensive end, had died.

Stowers had entered nearby Golden Triangle Medical Center Sept. 29 to allow
team physicians to insert a pin to help heal his right leg, broken the day
before in a game against Florida. But four days later, Stowers suffered a
hemorrhaging of the lungs, a side effect, doctors said, sometimes associated
with such an injury.

Sherrill couldn't believe it. This was the same Stowers he had wrapped his
arm around minutes before a recent game and told that he needed his best
effort. Stowers had happily delivered.

Now he was gone.

Sherrill and the trainer drove to the hospital, where Athletic Director
Larry Templeton and Stowers' mother were waiting. At 1 p.m. a team meeting
was held and later, Sherrill conducted a news conference so charged with
emotion that the Mississippi State football coach had to pause several times
to compose himself.

The next day, on a chilly, gray October afternoon in Starkville, where a
tiny college town grieved for one of its adopted own, Sherrill stood in
front of the memorial service congregation and searched for the proper
words. The man who, critics say, cornered the market on arrogance and raised
insolence to an art form, appeared very human and vulnerable. For a change,
Sherrill wasn't in total control. His heart ached, and for once, he allowed
the pain to be seen by all.

This wasn't the same Sherrill who, in 13 seasons at such places as
Washington State, Pittsburgh and troubled Texas A&M, had a 105-45-2 record,
and in the process, angered such traditionalists as Penn State's Joe
Paterno, attracted the attention of the NCAA and generally treated everyone
as his royal subjects.





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