the assistant Sonny liked was Workman, who was a player . Workman would stay after practice and go one-on-one with you until he dropped. But Price was some sort of middle-aged PR grad assistant. Sonny didnât know for sure what he was supposed to be.
âIs Coach Gentry coming to this meeting?â asked Sonny.
âNo, heâs not,â answered Gardner. âHe has many duties, but academic compliance isnât one of them.â
Price added, âThis isnât high school, where the head coach does the laundry and brings the extra socks.â
âItâs a big, big program,â Gardner said. âThatâs what weâre trying to impress on you here. Itâs so big that we canât make it work without communication and cooperation. You understand what Iâm saying?â
âI can see your point.â
âEveryone needs to do their job, and everyone else needs to cooperate fully so they can do their job. Thatâs why we always need to work through existing channels.â
âAre you telling me I can never drop a course on my own?â
âWeâre simply asking you to cooperate with the program for everyoneâs benefit.â Gardner paused. He took off his glasses, inserted them in the brown case, then put the case in the inside pocket of his sport coat. He sipped some coffee and closed the folder. âThis is not something we like to talk to players about, Sonny, but we have had some preliminary investigative overtures from the NCAA.â
Sonny wondered what he meant by preliminary investigative overtures but he didnât ask. He remembered his earlier conversation with Warner, his sportswriter friend.
âWe donât believe itâs anything very serious,â Gardner continued. âOr anything to be alarmed about, but it does put us in a position where we have to be especially careful.â
âWe need to know everything thatâs going on,â said Price.
âThatâs it, exactly.â Gardner agreed. âWe need to know because we need to be in control. Can you see where weâre coming from?â
âOf course I can see, do you think Iâm stupid? If you want to break it down, I had an academic problem and I took care of it.â
âWeâll all hope so. In the meantime, can we count on your cooperation?â
Sonnyâs impatience was uncharacteristic. âWhy are you treating me like a hard case? Iâm preregistered for second semester, you know what Iâm taking.â
âOkay then. Weâd like to apologize again for our remarks about your cousin.â
SIUâs first home game was against Arkansas, rated ninth in the nation, in the early part of December. Not even the snowstorm that began in late afternoon could daunt the huge crowd that converged on the arena and overflowed it, yelping and bawling for blood.
Otis Reed, the point guard, went down with a severe ankle sprain late in the first half, which meant more playing time for Robert Lee. It also meant a closer game; the Salukis won the ragged, physical contest by a score of 82â72. Arkansas used a confusing mix of gimmick defenses, in and out of the box and one, the triangle and two, but Sonnyâs frustration, whenever it occurred, was never a match for his intensity. He finished with 29 points to share game-scoring honors with Luther. He also had six steals to lead all players in that department.
Among the horde of postgame backslappers and well-wishers, Uncle Seth and three of his friends were front and center. Aunt Jane, who was also there, seemed to get lost in the congestion.
Two easy wins, one over Chicago State and another over Evansville, both at the arena in front of standing-room-only crowds, followed finals week. The Saluki record was thus pushed to 6â0, and when LSU lost a road game at Illinois, Sonnyâs team found itself ranked third in the nation in the major polls.
The D that Sonny got in
Amy Star
Jenny Offill
Beth Ciotta
Lawrence de Maria
David Pilling
Mary Fox
Roy Glenn
Eric Walters
Matt Betts
Charles Tang