Thursday, April 20, 2023

Echoes From Notre Dame: Former Notre Dame Running Back, Lee Becton

 If I can get the ball to be part of the body, it won’t let go. I pride myself on not fumbling.

Even when I’m not actively doing research for a project, I do enjoy poking around in Notre Dame Archives. There are so many great memories recorded there from my four years at Notre Dame, and of course the many years before and since. I can thank my dad for my love of history, both Notre Dame history, and the history of this country. One of my favorite classes at Notre Dame was a class on the Civil War, in which we read the book Killer Angels (which, if you haven’t read it, you should. It’s a great read!) ... but I digress. In my poking around in ND Archives this week, I stumbled across a piece on former Notre Dame Fighting Irish running back, Lee Becton, (from the Scholastic Magazine 1994 Football Review) that I thought I would share excerpts from this week for my Throwback Thursday. Lee is not only a classmate of mine, but a good friend to this day, so it was fun to read this story about Lee Becton.

But before I share that story, I also found this gem in SI’s vault. “It was easy to spot Lee Becton on the Notre Dame campus during his freshman and sophomore years. He was the guy who always carried a football with him, even when he went to class, because he was so concerned about fumbling. “I hold it and play with it and get comfortable with it,” Becton explained. “If I can get the ball to be part of the body, it won’t let go. I pride myself on not fumbling.” (by William F. Reed)

Here’s more on Lee Becton, from the story in Scholastic Magazine, Carried Away: Overcoming injuries, the fabulous number 4 rampaged through his senior season. (By Mark Mitchell)

“I was just lying there on the field. I couldn’t move.” Lee Becton stares into the distance as he remembers the day he suffered what could have been a season ending injury. “It scared me a Iot as I lay there with the trainers all around me because I had no idea of the severity of the injury. I just thought that could be the last day I ever played football.” . Fortunately for the Irish captain, his groin injury did heal, though slowly. He was able to come back to the team late in the season and performed up to his own extraordinary standards at the USC game. ‘’That wasn’t the greatest result as far as games go, but that was the greatest game for me because I really felt that I was finally able to be involved with the offense and to produce on the field.”

Producing big results for the offense has been the tailback’s trademark for the last three years. Becton had outstanding seasons in 1992 and 1993, and was just getting his game going when he got injured. Even before his injury sidelined him for several games, Becton felt that this season started on weak footing: “I fumbled twice in the Michigan game, and that’s very uncharacteristic of me.” So uncharacteristic, in fact, that he had not fumbled in two years. But Becton continued: “After every game we’d second-guess ourselves and my biggest regrets came from how I played. But you can’t let what could have happened get you down.” In his four years with the Fighting Irish, Lee Becton witnessed his team achieve a whole spectrum of results, from its number one ranking last year to the disheartening losses of this year. ‘’The most incredible for me was the comeback against BC last year. We lost the game, but to be down 21 points with eight minutes left and then to take the lead - anything is possible, anything can happen.”

Though his senior season was not the brightest, the events on the football field this year have not dimmed Becton’s memories of his four years at Notre Dame. “I’ve really enjoyed meeting people around campus, doing simple things, having fun, playing SEGA. The greatest thing about all of it is that some of these people that I have met will become famous politicians and presidents of Fortune 500 companies, and someday I can say, ‘Wow, I knew that person.’

“Like many students, Becton’s college career has had its rough spots, especially in his first year. “Coming from North Carolina I had felt cold weather before, but not like this. That first winter -the first time I felt an eighty-below wind chill- I was ready to pack my bags and head home.” It was Becton’s friends who helped him through the chill of his freshman year. “Germaine Holden is my all-time greatest friend, and as a freshman in the same dorm we spent a lot of time talking and crying together. He’s the reason I’m still here.” Again, during the injury scare of his senior year, Becton’s friends showed him their support. ‘’The guys on the team helped me to stay involved, leading the team and showing the guys who filled in for me how to get the job done.”

And this right here is my favorite part of the article ... Whether he goes on to professional football or into business back in North Carolina, Lee Becton can look back on his time at Notre Dame and know that he has achieved something. “Graduation will be my greatest accomplishment That’s what I came to college for, and that’s what I’m going to be proudest of.”

Of course every college football player dreams of playing in the NFL, but getting that degree should be something that every athlete walks away with from college. Sports careers do not last forever, and having that toolbox to carry you through the next forty years is absolutely invaluable. Not only that, the adversity Lee Becton faced during his time at Notre Dame prepared him for adversities he would face later in life, because very few lives come without some challenges. I’m so glad I went to Notre Dame, because the adversity I faced at Notre Dame prepared me for the tough times I would face in my life. I already knew how to shake myself off, get up, and try again; and I thank Notre Dame for that. Okay ... enough of my rambling. I hope you enjoyed this week’s walk down memory lane. Until next week ...

Cheers & GO IRISH!

Thursday, April 6, 2023

Throwback Thursday: Former Notre Dame Running Back, Vagas Ferguson

Never say quit.

For this week’s Throwback Thursday post I'm going to flash back to the first season I actually remember going to Notre Dame for a football game; 1979. I was 8-years-old, and it was the year before my family moved from St. Louis to Los Angeles (at which point it was too far to go back to Notre Dame for games, and we just settled for ND vs. USC games in Los Angeles). I don’t remember much about the game, and I’m not even sure which game we went to that season, but I do vividly remember being at the pep rally in Stepan Center. I remember the rowdy crowd, and the students tossing rolls of toilet paper through the air. For some reason, that left a big impression on 8-year-old me.

Seeing as I can’t remember exactly which game I went to that year, I’m going to talk a little bit today about a player that made some big strides that season, Vagas Ferguson. In 1979, his senior season at Notre Dame, Ferguson was voted to the All-America Team of the American Football Coaches Association. He was the fifth ranked player in the nation in yards per rush and finished fifth in voting for the Heisman Trophy.

Vagas Ferguson (32) Jumping During Play

Notre Dame was nowhere on Vagas’ radar when he began looking for a college. Yet this dashing, slashing, darting, powerful running back finished his career with the Fighting Irish as the nation’s fifth-leading rusher, fifth in Heisman Trophy voting and with All-America honors. (He ranks third all-time for total yards (3,472) among Notre Dame running backs, averaging 5.2 yards per carry. He was a first-round pick in the 1980 NFL Draft and played for five seasons with the New England Patriots, Cleveland Browns, and Houston Oilers; and is a member of the Indiana Football Hall of Fame.) Notre Dame discovered him, in this small town near the Ohio border, and won him over with some Fighting Irish magic. You would assume, if you were a great player and you grew up in Indiana, you were familiar with Notre Dame, but this is not always the case. “To be truthful, I didn’t hear about Notre Dame until my sophomore year of high school. The schools that most of us talked about were Purdue, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio State. Those schools got a lot of local coverage.”

”I had the chance to visit Notre Dame during my sophomore year in high school because my cousin Lamar Lundy, Jr., a tight end, was being recruited by Notre Dame through a Notre Dame alum who lived in Richmond. He was a senior when I was a sophomore and I got to tag along on his visit to Notre Dame. My cousin ended up going to California – Berkeley, but that trip to Notre Dame left quite an impression on me. I took official visits to Big Ten schools primarily. I went to Indiana, Purdue, Ohio State, Michigan and Iowa; Notre Dame was the last school I visited.” The concept that student-athletes at Notre Dame are students first, and athletes second, was very appealing to Vagas and his family. This was a huge selling point used by ND recruiter Brian Bulac, who was the driving force behind Vagas’ decision to attend Notre Dame. “He came to my home to speak to my grandparents (Vagas’ mother died when he was eight, and his father lived nearby). Education was top on my grandparents’ list. They wanted to make sure we got a good education, and that was the first thing he talked about when he walked in the door. ‘You will be a football player at Notre Dame, but you are a student first.’ That impressed my grandparents, and impressed me as well. Most schools only talked about what I could do for them on the field.”

The cultural make-up of Notre Dame in the late 70s was very complicated. While the University, much like the rest of the country, was doing its best to move forward it still had growing pains during the process. “When I was at Notre Dame in the late 1970s, we were in a time of awareness. Racial issues were very much being addressed and it wasn’t any different at Notre Dame than it had been at my high school back home. You tended to hang out with people who looked like you. You congregated as a group, black females and males. Women had not been at Notre Dame very long at that time either, so they had an especially tight bond as well. The black students that I met the first few weeks I was at Notre Dame, guys and girls, we became really close. We were new and didn’t know any of the upperclassmen so we just kind of took each other in. We still stay in touch today. You gravitate to people who are more like you. It’s not a negative thing. You renew yourself through people who have similar experiences as you do. Today, that is changing. I can see it in my kids and grandkids today. I have bi-racial grandkids. They don’t even see that kind of stuff at all.”

The Notre Dame Value Stream became ingrained in Her students’ lives without us even noticing. We all had highlights during our collegiate careers, students and student-athletes alike; whether it was a big play on the football field or a successful presentation in class. But the moments that we hold most dear of our time at Our Lady’s University are really much more basic than any of those big moments. “The most important thing that I took from Notre Dame was the development of relationships, and crossing the barriers of race. Football did that for us. We had to play as a team and support one another and that broke down a lot of racial barriers that we were facing during that time as players.”

Not only did Vagas learn the value of hard work as a Fighting Irish football player, he also learned that quit was not a word in his vocabulary. His favorite on the field moment is a shining example of the never say quit attitude that he and his teammates shared. “My favorite memory on the field had to have been the 1979 Cotton Bowl against Houston. It was below zero; so cold, in fact, that they had to put salt down on the field to thaw it out. In the fourth quarter, we were behind 34-12 with seven minutes left. Late in the game the defense made a big play (a Tony Belden blocked punt) and got points on the board which really changed the momentum for us. (Quarterback Joe) Montana, who had been sick with the flu and missed most of the third quarter fighting below-normal body temperature, returned to execute an unforgettable fourth quarter comeback.”

“Down 34-28 with six seconds remaining, we had just enough time to run two plays. The first play was a pass pattern where myself and receiver Kris Haines went to the flat and we had to get across the goal line from the 20-yard line. With the limited amount of time remaining in the game, if we caught the ball, we had to score. The first play we ran was not successful. At this point there was only two seconds on the clock. On the next play, Montana looks over to the sidelines and the coaches, including Coach Devine, put up their hands as if to say, ‘Do whatever you want to do. Joe, you call it.’ He got down on one knee and drew the play (the same play we had just run), just like you would in the school yard, and told me and Kris Haines how to run it. Haines said he could beat the guy that he was covering. Joe told him, ‘I’ll hit ya in the corner of the end zone.’ We ran the play, scored and won on the last play of the game. Incredible.”

Vagas reminisced about what made Coach Devine such a great Notre Dame football coach. “What made Dan Devine good as a head coach is that he surrounded himself with good position coaches. These guys had great instincts and tremendous knowledge of the game. You dealt with your position coach way more often than you actually dealt with Coach Devine. He was not very outgoing, didn’t talk to people a lot and was kind of withdrawn. He would talk to us, but he didn’t talk to the public very much. He and his family had previously had some bad experiences with the media and I think that was part of why he was so withdrawn. We didn’t know that, we just accepted him the way he was. You have to be able to delegate to people and trust them. Coach (Gerry) Faust, unlike Coach Devine, was not able to do that.”

“I had two backfield coaches when I was at Notre Dame, but my primary coach was Jim Gruden. Indiana had recruited me starting in my sophomore year of high school all the way through, and Coach Gruden was there before he got the job at Notre Dame. During the recruiting process he told me, ‘I’m gonna coach you someday’. During my junior year of college he left Indiana and came to Notre Dame. He taught me more about the running back position than any other coach and took me to another level of play. I absolutely contribute the success I had my junior and senior years at Notre Dame to Coach Gruden. I try to stay in touch with him to this day.”

What was the first Notre Dame game you attended? Were you a child? An adult? Tell me all about it!

Cheers & GO IRISH!

(Vagas Ferguson quotes taken from Vol I of Echoes From the End Zone: The Men We Became.)