I
miss Daddy most when Auburn wins.
I
miss him every day. I miss him at Christmas. I miss him when we are at his lake
cabin. I miss him when I attend the funerals of his friends who lived to old
age.
But
I miss him most when Auburn wins, especially
when they win spectacularly.
He
was a likeable feller who was passionate about Auburn University in the 60s and
70s, when it seemed everybody was a Bama fan. We listened to “Your Auburn Radio
Network” from our backyard on Decatur Street, while Daddy cleaned the catfish
that he had caught that morning, which Mama would later fry for supper. Auburn
would score, and he and his three girls would whoop and holler. He would
throw his arms up, dance a jig, and yell, “Touchdown, Auburn!” (His right arm was crooked
from a childhood break that was set incorrectly.)
He
was devoted to his Tigers (both Auburn and Dothan High), but he was generally and
genuinely a fan of football. He shouted Roll Tide at least twice. He and Mama
went to New Orleans with Bama friends to watch Alabama win in the Sugar Bowl in
1975 (v. Penn State) and in 1977 (v. Ohio State). I remember watching the game at
home with Little Granny and cheering for Penn State. He taught me later, “We
want Bama to win. It wouldn’t be fun to beat them if they weren’t good.”
He
was a gracious loser and a gosh-awful winner. He could take it (he was faithful
in 1976 when Doug Barfield’s team won only three games); but, boy howdy, he
could dish it out. (God bless the friends who suffered through “Punt, Bama,
Punt!” ad nauseam in 1972, when
Auburn won 17-16.)
The
friends, in turn, righteously harassed him the next year when Bama won 35 to zip.
He
never saw an AU win in the Iron Bowl again.
He
never heard Jim Fyffe holler, “TOUCHDOWWWN AUBUUURN!!! He never said, “Fear the
thumb.” He didn’t know Bo.
“If
Daddy had lived . . .” is a mantra that my sisters and I have hummed for 35
years. If Daddy had lived past 1978, I am certain that he would not be alive
today. I am certain he would not have survived past January 2011. First, his
Auburn elected one of his granddaughters (whom he never knew) to be their Miss
Homecoming that season. Then, they rallied from a 21-point deficit at halftime to surprise Alabama (and everybody else) with an Iron Bowl upset. Finally, they went on to beat the Oregon Ducks in the Fiesta
Bowl for the BCS National Championship. The jubilation of those combined events would have taken him straight to Glory; for without a doubt, life on Earth could not surpass that. He would not have lived to fall to his
knees at the Hail Mary against Georgia nor praise the Miracle against Alabama.
He would not have been here to toot his horn over the triumph of the Great Comeback Year.
So,
regardless, I would be missing him tremendously right now.
‘Cause
I miss him most when Auburn wins.
War Eagle, Daddy.
War Eagle, Daddy.
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