Memphis-area baseball fan becomes finalist for MLB Fan Cave competition

Could the biggest baseball fan in the country live in basketball-obsessed Memphis, Tennessee? Maybe.

Germantown resident and baseball superfan Drew Fleming is one of 52 finalists in the 2013 MLB Fan Cave competition. The winner will have the opportunity to watch and tweet about all 2,430 MLB games in the New York-based MLB Fan Cave.

“I saw a few other video entries and thought ‘hey I do this for a living, I love baseball,’ and I tweet way too much,” said Fleming. “I figured the MLB  Fan Cave was right up my ally.”

Vote for Fleming here.

UPDATE:  Listen to Drew Fleming’s MSL interview here.

Watch his 2013 MLB Fan Cave video submission:


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Email: kevin@memphisport.com
Twitter: @cerrito

Inspired by Manti Te’o: Where is the best catfish in Memphis?

Thanks to Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o the word catfish is now a mainstream term meaning something different than just a delicious entree found at soul food restaurants.

catfish beetle Per Urban Dictionary, a catfish  is “someone who pretends to be someone they’re not using Facebook or other social media to create false identities, particularly to pursue deceptive online romances.” Catfish is the name of a 2010 documentary that was recently turned into a MTV reality series.

All this talk has some people craving some actual catfish on a plate.  Where is the best place to go for catfish in Memphis? The trusted Memphis Flyer Best of Memphis poll doesn’t have a category for Best Catfish and there is only one catfish dish on The Commercial Appeal’s list of ’100 things to eat in Memphis before you die.’

We took to Twitter for an informal survey of Memphians to find out the best places that serve catfish in the Bluff City. Here are some responses:

Where is your favorite place to eat catfish in Memphis? Comment below if you agree or disagree with this list.

Kevin Cerrito is the managing editor of MemphiSport and host of MSL every Saturday from 11:00 am – 1:00 pm on Sports 56 & 87.7 FM. MSL was voted 3rd Best Sports Radio Show in the 2010, 2011 & 2012 Memphis Flyer Best of Memphis poll.  Follow him @cerrito.

Former world champ Roy Jones, Jr. considering a return to the ring in Memphis

Roy Jones, Jr., who last fought in Memphis in September 2004, was in the Bluff City Friday to discuss a possible return to the ring here. The 43-year-old has won multiple world titles in various weight classes during his 23-year career.

Roy Jones, Jr.’s illustrious boxing career could likely end in Memphis in early 2013.

At least, that is what longtime Mid-South All-Star Boxing promoter Malcolm Terry said Friday during Jones’ surprise appearance at Memphis Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins’ Charities Day event to benefit Le Bonheur Children Hospital at Walmart Neighborhood Market in Southeast Memphis.

Jones, 43, arrived in Memphis Friday morning to speak at an anti-bullying rally at a local community center. A former world champion in multiple weight divisions, Jones also met with Terry to discuss plans of fighting twice in Memphis in the coming months, the first of which would be a 10-round cruiserweight main event title bout against Covington native Donnell Wiggins (24-13-4) at the Cook Convention Center in late-February or early-March.

“We’re almost a hundred percent he’s going to fight,” Terry said of Jones, whom he said will retire after his fights in Memphis. “He’s determined he’s going to fight here. He’s going to get in the ring and he’s going to leave a statement here.”

Sitting at a table alongside Hollins and Grizzlies players Darrell Arthur and Wayne Ellington to greet fans and sign autographs, Jones said he has visited Memphis several times in recent months, in part to become acclimated to the city and help Terry promote his regular fight card at Omni New Daisy Theater. Now he said he’s ready to atone for his last fight here, a ninth-round knockout defeat to Glen Johnson for the IBF light heavyweight title.

“When I came to Memphis the last time, the fight didn’t turn out the way I wanted it to come out,” Jones said. “But the fan support was still there. They supported me the whole week. And they were there to support the fight. They always showed me much love and respect, so I feel I owe it to them to come back and give my support.”

While Jones, who owns a 55-8 record, including 40 knockouts, said nothing is “carved in stone” in terms of finalizing plans to fight in Memphis, he said he’s almost certain his next fight will take place here. Since his loss to Tarver in FedExForum on September 9, 2004, Jones has fought 11 times, compiling a 7-4 record. The Pensacola, Fla. native has won his last two fights, including a split decision win in Lodz, Poland, against three-time Polish Senior champion Pawel Glazewski back in June.

“I actually came to watch a fight last month (at New Daisy Theatre) and (Terry) said to me, ‘We want you to fight in Memphis,’” said Jones, who turns 44 January 16. “So I said, ‘Let me come and see what’s going on and if some good things are happening, I may do it.’ It feels like a good marriage.”

Terry, who has been promoting fights in Memphis since 1998, said because Jones has remained in top-notch shape despite having fought once this year, he’s confident the UBO Intercontinental Cruiserweight champion will erase the memory of his last showing here. Among the reasons is that many fans felt the sport had passed Jones by in the wake of his first loss to Tarver and subsequent setback in Memphis to Johnson. In a rematch with Tarver in Tampa approximately a year later, for instance, Jones lost a 12-round unanimous decision bout, his third consecutive defeat in less than two years.

“Let me say this,” Terry said. “Boxing has not passed him by. Roy has won his last two fights against top competition. My phone is ringing off the hook. People are calling from all around the world asking, ‘Can I book a Roy Jones fight?’ They want him in China. They want him in Ireland. They want him in Russia. Roy is a megastar. Roy was light heavyweight champion. He was super middleweight champion. He was named fighter of the decade (in the 1990s). He was named pound for pound champion. (Mike) Tyson went in and knocked people out. But Roy is a show .”

Having twice won the WBC and WBA light heavyweight titles during a professional career that spans 23 years, Jones emerged as one of the world’s elite fighters when he won 34 consecutive bouts to start his career before being disqualified 33 seconds into the ninth round of a WBC light heavyweight title bout against Montell Griffin for hitting Griffin while he was on the canvas. In a rematch against Griffin five months later, Jones regained his WBC title with a first-round knockout. He won his next 14 fights before losing three consecutive bouts in a span of 17 months, two of which came to Tarver.

Besides the overwhelming support from Memphians in 2004, Jones said among the reasons he’s contemplating fighting in Memphis is because of his strong ties with Grizzlies power forward Zach Randolph. Jones, who was in attendance for the Grizzlies’ game against Denver Saturday night, said he and Randolph became close acquaintances when Randolph played for the New York Knicks during the 2007-08 season.

“I love the Grizzlies,” Jones said. “Me and Zach Randolph go way back when he played in New York. I thought (the Knicks) were stupid for getting rid of him. He’s one of the best, non-jumping athletes in basketball. He doesn’t jump that high. But he gets the job done.”

If plans are finalized for Jones to fight in Memphis, he will likely be a heavy favorite against Wiggins, who hasn’t fought in over two years. The 32-year-old Wiggins won his first six fights after turning pro in 1999, but has struggled in recent years. Wiggins’ last win came in July 2005 when he won by unanimous decision over Anthony Greeley in Memphis.

Sports writer Andre Johnson is a regular contributor for MemphiSport. To reach Johnson, email him at andre@memphisport.net. Also, follow him on Twitter @AJ_Journalist.

 

Memphis-area Race For The Cure participant Tonya Lyons breaks her three-year silence about the ‘untold story’ of breast cancer

 

Dr. Tonya Lyons, owner of New Image Family Dentistry in Southeast Memphis, was declared cancer-free exactly four months after she had been diagnosed with breast cancer in April 2009. She is a fixture in the Susan G. Komen 5K Race For The Cure that will take place Saturday morning at Saddle Creek in East Memphis. (Photo by Erica Coleman)

Two weeks ago, Dr. Tonya Lyons attended a seminar on Breast Cancer Awareness at a nearby church in Southaven, Miss. Considering she is a longtime health professional, she sensed it would be just another informative session in which she would acquire some additional knowledge to share with others who are perhaps fighting the dreaded disease.

But what she and others discovered during the brief session was something Lyons admittedly will remember for the rest of her life.

A breast cancer patient stood up and spoke about how her husband, who isn’t experiencing any form of cancer, would routinely convince doctors to allow him to sign a release form and join his wife in the radiation machine whenever she went in for treatment.

Lyons, clinging to the edge of her seat, was in awe as the woman continued to share what apparently was an emotional story with the audience.

“That blessed me,” Lyons said. “But my situation was not like that. “You’re like, ‘What was so wrong with me that my situation didn’t turn out like that?’”

That the woman felt it was the appropriate setting to break her silence about a seemingly personal situation that left a majority of the attendees fighting back tears, Lyons sensed it was time that she break hers.

Sitting in a conference room Monday afternoon at her New Image Family Dentistry facility in Southeast Memphis on what would have been her thirteenth wedding anniversary, Lyons told MemphiSport Magazine during its salute of Breast Cancer Awareness how her husband, former pastor Bill Anderson, abandoned their marriage within months of their tenth anniversary. Lyons, who has two children with Anderson, found it difficult to come to grips with what had transpired, in part because doctors had declared her cancer free at the time.

“He said, ‘We’re going to beat it,’” said Lyons, when asked what was her husband’s initial reaction after learning she had been stricken by breast cancer. “And he said we’ve got to tell the church. And then he preached on, ‘This Battle Is Not Yours, It’s The Lord’s.’”

Lyons said she even recalls days after she had been diagnosed how she and her husband were locked “arm in arm” as they paced back and forth across the pulpit, as if to say that they would persevere during her battle with the disease. Five months later, however, Lyons’ husband chose to go his separate way, leaving his wife to care after their two children who, at the time, were two and six years old.

Anderson eventually resigned as pastor of the East Memphis church he and his wife had established along with 40 individuals in June 2002.

“I thought I knew what I had,” Lyons said as she prepares to participate in the Susan G. Komen 5K Race For The Cure at Saddle Creek Saturday at 8 a.m. “He had been a good husband for almost 10 years. So getting sick was the last thing I thought would have caused that. Not only did I feel deceived, but the church felt deceived.”

Lyons, in fact, said that while speaking publicly for the first time about her broken marriage — the divorce is pending and is expected to be final by month’s end — is not an attempt to bring about criticism to her estranged husband, she stressed she is only revealing what she describes as the “untold story” surrounding married women who become breast cancer victims.

Things are holding up well nowadays for Lyons, although she battled breast cancer and faced divorce simultaneously in 2009. During last year’s Race For The Cure event, Lyons posed for a photo with several members of the University of Memphis women’s basketball team. (Photo by Kelli Nicole Anderson)

“I actually did some (online) studies,” Lyons explains.

What she discovered, she said, was that seven out of 10 married women who become diagnosed with breast cancer ultimately witness their marriage end in divorce.

“I guess spiritually, you look at it like, ‘Wow!’ Especially with him being a pastor. “I had, really, almost two trials, two tragedies going on at the same time. In the midst of my sickness, my spouse couldn’t deal with me being sick. In his mind, he had written me off.”

Lyons, who is a native of Cairo, Ill. and has been practicing dentistry in Memphis for the past 18 years since graduating from Jackson State University, learned she had been diagnosed with breast cancer in April 2009 when she decided she needed to lose weight. While in the shower one morning, she discovered a lump on her breast, which prompted her to schedule a visit with her physician.

Oddly, she had an annual exam performed by her primary specialist 17 days prior to meeting with a physician. But according to her, her doctor “missed the lump.” Fortunately for Lyons, she managed to reduce her weight by 35 pounds over three months through dieting and regular exercise. That’s because doctors informed her had she not lost weight, it would have been difficult to detect the lump, which could have potentially increased the risk of her entering Stage 4 of breast cancer.

In other words, the cancer could have spread throughout other areas of her body, most notably the bones, brains, lungs, and liver.

After doctors located the lump, Lyons was at Stage 2, a slightly more advanced form of breast cancer, although the cancer customarily had not spread to a distant part of the body. Lyons sensed her diagnosis had stemmed from having four miscarriages between 1999 and 2006 or from giving birth during what she deems a late stage in her life.

She gave birth to her first child when she was 35, her second when she was 40.

 

Despite an array of hardships in recent years, Lyons said she is as happy as she has been is some time. “Life is good now, even after divorce, even after breast cancer,” she said. (Photo by Kelli Nicole Anderson)

“They were like, ‘Come back in two weeks for your biopsy,’” Lyons said. “The radiologist knew what he was looking at when he asked me did anyone drive with me to have the mammogram. Being a health professional, I knew that he knew it was cancer. It was a tremendous amount of fear. When you hear the word cancer, you automatically think that you’re going to die. I called one of my distant cousins in Jackson (Miss.), who is an 11-year (breast cancer) survivor, and she told me to relax, breath, and that it’s not a death sentence.”

Still, Lyons’ husband, whose mother died of colon cancer in January 2000, wasn’t convinced that his wife would survive what undoubtedly was the biggest crisis during their marriage. The couple, in fact, attempted to salvage their union, traveling as far as to Los Angeles for counseling.

In reality, the flight to L. A. was a huge time-waster, of sorts.

“He started crying when the doctors said I was cancer free,” Lyons said. “He told the (marriage) counselor he stayed those months because he was waiting for me to die.”

Anderson, one of Memphis’ most successful young pastors at the time, abandoned his family roughly one month after his wife had taken her final round of chemotherapy. Prior to his marriage to Lyons, he had been married three previous times.

Consequently, Lyons’ mother, Martha Sanders, became her primary care-giver. And, with the support of fellow church members, other family members, and close acquaintances, she ultimately weathered the storm of arguably the most tumultuous moments of her life.

Surely, the healing process seemed downright unbearable at times, Lyons admits. But just like her four-month battle with breast cancer, she overcame it.

Never mind that she and her husband would have celebrated 13 years of marriage on Monday.

“I’m thinking more so about how God is,” Lyons said as she sat back in her chair, wiping away tears. “When God said He wanted me to be a spokesperson for something, I thought it was going to be for miscarriages. Life is good for me now even after divorce, even after cancer. I’m just loving life.”

Loving life, as she quickly pointed out, certainly isn’t a time-waster.

Not by a long shot.

Andre Johnson is a regular  contributor for MemphiSport. To reach Johnson, email him at andre@memphisport.net. Also, follow him on Twitter @AJ_Journalist.

Local identical twin breast cancer victims to host Twins Race For The Cure in hometown

 

Identical twins LaTonya McKinney and LaSonya Thomas both were diagnosed with breast cancer at different stages in their lives. McKinney (right)is now cancer-free, while Thomas is still in remission.

LaTonya McKinney and LaSonya Thomas are identical twins who were born five minutes apart in December 1969. Ever since, they have been virtually inseparable.

Growing up in a two-bedroom house in Coldwater, Miss., McKinney and Thomas slept in the same bed. From the time they started school until they graduated from Memphis Hillcrest High in 1988, they enrolled in the same classes. When they grew old enough to move out of their parents’ home, they became roommates in their first apartment. Ironically, after meeting the love of their lives, they had a double wedding in 2001.

“We have a special bond,” Thomas, the youngest of the two, told MemphiSport in its salute to Breast Cancer Awareness Month. “It’s the norm for us to be together everyday, all day.”
Oddly, a little more than six years ago, McKinney and Thomas’s close-knit relationship took a shocking, demoralizing twist.
McKinney, who was 36 at the time, had been complaining about recurring chest pains. She sensed that such discomfort might have stemmed from excessive lifting and fatigue in the shipping department at her job.
“A young lady and I was talking and I was complaining of chest pains,” McKinney recalls. “So when the pain continued, she said, ‘Girl, you need to gone and go get checked out.”
McKinney eventually met with her personal physician, who arranged for her to visit with a cancer specialist. Consequently, the specialist suggested that she have a mammogram performed. What transpired afterward is something about which McKinney admittedly left her at a loss for words. Two weeks later, while driving home from work, McKinney fielded a phone call from her doctor, who told her she had been diagnosed with breast cancer.
After learning of such news, McKinney was downright bewildered.
“I didn’t have a response at all,” said McKinney, explaining her initial reaction. “I didn’t know how to respond, didn’t feel any anger. It was just some information that was given to me. My mom came over and then asked me if I wanted to cry. But I didn’t feel like crying.”
Conversely, McKinney’s twin responded much differently after learning she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. Thomas, in fact, got news that she had been stricken by the disease in August 2009, a little more than three years after McKinney’s diagnosis.
It all started with a tear-jerking dream, she recalls.
“My mom had a dream of someone who had cancer, but she didn’t see a face,” Thomas said. “So she suggested that my younger sister, Stephanie, and I had better go get checked and both of us did.”

Thomas, the youngest of the twins, is undergoing chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer at UT Medical-DeSoto in 2010. Doctors expect her to become cancer-free as early as 2013.

One minute, she’s born five minutes after McKinney. Nearly four decades later, she discovered she had been swindled by the same deadly disease her older twin had acquired three years prior.

“I was the one who had the cancer,” Thomas, who was 39 at the time, said. “I was the face (her mom) didn’t see. Fortunately for me, I was at the cancer center and not driving. I tried to hold it together because I don’t like to see my mom cry. But in the lobby, I was in a ball.”
Nevertheless, McKinney and Thomas ultimately came to grips with having attracted breast cancer. Because of their faith, support from their mother, Juanita Massey (a longtime minister), their father, Rosebur Thomas (the former mayor of Coldwater), let alone the resilence they have exhibited in fighting the disease, they have joined forces to share their life-changing story and offer community service throughout Tate County and neighboring areas.
On Saturday at 10 am, the twins will host their second annual “Twins Race For The Cure Walk/Run” at Coldwater High. The event, which will cover between two-to-three miles, is expected to attract an estimated 200 participants, twice as many that turned out last year. In year’s past, McKinney said their event, which is funded through the Susan G. Komen Foundation, didn’t produce a large turnout, largely because they don’t function as if they are cancer patients.
Last September, for instance, the twins established Mid-South Steerler Nation, an organization that aims to attract local die-hard Pittburgh Steelers fans to participate in various community-related activities. The group, which currently consists of 214 members, occasionally take charter bus trips to watch the Steelers play. Their latest tour was to Nashville for the October 11 Steelers versus the Tennessee Titans game.
As for their ongoing battle with breast cancer, it’s safe to assume these inseparable twins essentially are at the halfway point of conquering a disease that, according to a 2011 report on komencentralva.org, resulted in nearly a quarter of a million new cases among American women last year. That’s because after undergoing six months of chemotherapy in 2006 and an additional five years of medical treatment, doctors declared McKinney cancer-free in January 2011.

Despite their battles with breast cancer, among McKinney and Thomas’ recent projects is establishing Mid-South Steeler Nation, an organization comprised of more than 200 Pittsburgh Steeler fans.

Of course, Thomas, just like at birth, isn’t too far behind her sister.
She has undergone chemotherapy for the past three years and is currently in remission. Like McKinney, doctors anticipate she will make a full recovery as early as 2013. Which, of course, is among the reasons they don’t function like cancer patients. In two years, both will be free of breast cancer. However, their mission to help fight the disease will continue.
“We want to let people know who we are and to let them know we went through other people’s tragedy,”  McKinney said. “When people come up to me, I tell them I am a cancer survivor. And they say, ‘I’m sorry.’ They look at it as a tragedy. But I’m a survivor.”
Just like at birth, her twin sister isn’t too far behind.
Andre Johnson is a regular contributor for MemphiSport. To reach Johnson, email him at andre@memphisport.net. Also, follow him on Twitter @AJ_Journalist.

Countdown to 3rd Annual Cooper-Young Regional Beerfest

Andy Ashby joined Kevin Cerrito and Marcus Hunter on MSL to preview the 3rd Annual Cooper-Young Regional Beerfest coming this Saturday, October 13, 2012.

AUDIO:

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Click here to download the Cooper-Young Regional Beerfest conversation from the October 6, 2012 MSL

MSL is a proud sponsor of the Cooper-Young Regional Beerfest.

Click here for more MSL interviews.

Kevin Cerrito and Marcus Hunter host MemphiSport Live (MSL) on Sports 56 & 87.7 FM every Saturday from 11:00 am – 1:00 pm. MSL was voted 3rd Best Sports Radio Show in the 2010, 2011 & 2012 Memphis Flyer Best of Memphis poll.

Follow the MSL hosts on Twitter @cerrito @marcus_hunter

Countdown to the 1st Ever Best Memphis Burger Fest

Seth Agranov joined Kevin Cerrito and Marcus Hunter on MSL for a final preview of the 1st Ever Best Memphis Burger Fest coming this Sunday, September 30 at Minglewood Hall.

AUDIO:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Click here to download the Best Memphis Burger Fest conversation from the September 24, 2012 MSL

MSL is a proud sponsor of the 1st Ever Best Memphis Burger Fest.

Click here for more MSL interviews.

Kevin Cerrito and Marcus Hunter host MemphiSport Live (MSL) on Sports 56 & 87.7 FM every Saturday from 11:00 am – 1:00 pm. MSL was voted 3rd Best Sports Radio Show in the 2010 & 2011 Memphis Flyer Best of Memphis poll.

Follow the MSL hosts on Twitter @cerrito @marcus_hunter

VIDEO: What was happening on RAW when Jerry ‘The King’ Lawler collapsed

Here is the video of what was happening on WWE Monday Night RAW when wrestling legend Jerry “The King” Lawler collapsed while doing commentary on the match between Kane & Daniel Bryan and The Prime Time Players (Viewer Discretion is Advised):

UPDATE:  Click here for an update on Jerry ‘The King’ Lawler’s health status from his girlfriend

MORE VIDEO: Click here for fan footage of Jerry ‘The King’ Lawler being stretchered out following his collapse

-The King says something about a sledgehammer at the beginning, then nothing else

-Can see The King around the :57 mark

-”Jerry! Jerry! Jerry!” chants start around 2:17 mark

We will have more information as it develops.

Follow @memphisport & @cerrito on Twitter for instant updates.