BRIDGES 477 N. Fifth St. ∙ Memphis, TN 38105 38174-0240 ∙ (901) 452-5600
BRIDGES is a 501(c)3 organization




 

BRIDGES is hiring

6/9/2008
Bridge Builders film to air on local TV stations

6/9/2008
Two reasons for hope (Commercial Appeal editorial)

6/4/2008
Germantown High student honored for efforts to unite races

5/31/2008
Bridge Builders alumni celebrate 20th anniversary

3/30/2008
80 percent of poor Americans work

3/19/2008
Job fair lets high school students study opportunities

3/16/2008
Help build bridges, not barriers (Commentary by Chris Peck)

8/19/2007
Rival football players join for 'Community Day'

5/11/2007
Wal-Mart joins BRIDGES to sponsor cmp for Humes students

5/10/2007
BRIDGES revs up PeaceJam initiatives

2/25/2007
Betty Williams speaks at Mid-South PeaceJam

2/6/2007
Local Memphis group combats hate crimes
(Originally aired on News Channel 3)

12/14/2006
Bridges Tries to Reach Lofty Fundraising Goal
(Originally aired on FOX 13 News)

11/15/2006
Latricia Nelson's new path is paved with opportunities

11/12/2006
Mid-South students gather to understand world's issues and one another

9/30/2006
Students gather to give peace a voice of diversity

9/13/2006
Local teens headed to PeaceJam, will meet Nobel honorees

8/21/2006
Owl sore, but win feels good


PR/Media Contact:
John Gaskill
Gaskill Strategies LLC
901-299-8133

johngaskill@gmail.com


[MORE NEWS...]

Bridge BuildersŪ

BRIDGES In the News

Bridges game may see change
By Jim Masilak
Originally appeared in the October 12, 2004 edition of the Commercial Appeal


The Bridges Kickoff Classic could be in for a makeover.

For four years, the annual season-opening event at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium has pitted the city's top public-school football teams against the county's top private-school teams.

Now, in a bid to spice things up, organizers are looking to include county public schools and, perhaps, out-of-state schools for the 2005 event.

Bolton, Houston and White Station have been targeted for inclusion in next season's Kickoff Classic, according to Memphis Convention and Visitors Bureau president Kevin Kane.

In addition, preliminary discussions have been held with national powerhouse Shreveport (La.) Evangel Christian about participating, and Batesville (Miss.) South Panola and Hoover (Ala.) are also being mentioned.

"We've had about the same teams in there every year, and we just want to make sure it stays fresh," said Kane, who added that Christian Brothers, Memphis University School and Melrose are all but certain to take part again next season, and White Station is set to join the mix. No official invitations have been extended.

"We don't want to send the message that it's going to be the same six teams indefinitely," Kane said. "We've got a bunch of options. Our first option would be to keep it a Memphis and Shelby County thing, but our second would be to blow it out and make it a national thing."

With the Liberty Bowl set to be fitted with field turf next season, wear and tear will not be as much of a concern, and Kane said moving the event back a week is a possibility if it doesn't conflict with the University of Memphis.

But convincing the county's public schools to take part could prove far more difficult.
Germantown responded to the committee's overtures with an unequivocal letter of rejection, Kane said.

Bolton and Houston, meanwhile, are waiting for the results of next month's Class 5A region realignment for the 2005-09 classification period before responding.

Byrne learns: OT for ties

Bishop Byrne is learning the hard way that there are no ties in Tennessee prep football.
On Friday, the Division 2-A Red Knights traveled to Div. 2-AA Franklin Battle Ground Academy and played the hosts to a 14-14 stalemate at the end of regulation.

At that point, according to the game report filed by officials, Bishop Byrne coach Jack Grannan informed officials that his team would not play the compulsory overtime because it erroneously thought it did not have to do so in a non-region game.

Except that, well, there are no ties, and the Red Knights' draw will now go down as a defeat.

Section II, Rule N of the TSSAA football handbook reads that "all regulation games that end in a tie in Tennessee shall be broken."

As a result, TSSAA executive director Ronnie Carter said BGA would be awarded a 1-0 forfeit victory. In addition, Bishop Byrne will be fined $500 for "removal of its team before the game was completed." Further penalties are also possible.

"Never can I remember one like this happening," Carter said.

But Grannan, while noting he should have known the rule, said the game officials did not seem to know it either.

"My question to the officials was, 'Since this is a non-region game, do we have to finish it?'" Grannan said. "The official said, 'That's your call.'

"If somebody had told me we had to finish the game, we'd have finished the game. Nobody up there gave any indication we were supposed to do anything different. I was thinking about getting the kids home."

Bishop Byrne, which won state titles in 2002-03, is now 2-5.

Briefly

Football: Melrose, ranked No. 1 in The Dandy Dozen, remained unbeaten after Saturday's 13-10 win at Florissant (Mo.) Hazelwood Central. Courtney Madison threw touchdown passes to D'Angelo Nelson and Graig Cooper as the Golden Wildcats improved to 8-0.

Contact reporter Jim Masilak at 529-2311.
 

Copyright 2004, commercialappeal.com - Memphis, TN. All Rights Reserved.