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One
Last Miracle for Lavell
by Thomas C. Baggaley
I
love sports, especially BYU football, but I really don't like
most sports documentaries - especially when they are of the
NFL Films variety. I'm just not interested in watching a documentary
comprised of 90% slow motion footage and 10% a narrator showing
off his knowledge of the thesaurus while trying to hype up some
athletic event that is already over and everyone already knows
the result. The result is corny at best. If you want to know
what I'm talking about, just take a peek at the special bonus
footage on the Last Miracle for LaVell DVD that Excel Entertainment
released last month. I have fond memories of the four games
which are highlighted in this footage (the 1980 "Miracle
Bowl" - yes I DID watch the entire game that night, Jim
McMahon's final game in the 1981 Holiday Bowl, the 1983 Holiday
Bowl victory which featured the winning reception by quarterback
Steve Young, and of course the 1984 National Championship-clinching
Holiday Bowl victory) but the short mini-documentaries on these
games included in the DVD are almost unwatchable. The closest
they come to entertaining is during the 1980 "Miracle Bowl"
footage, when the Cougars begin their comeback in the last 5
minutes of the game and some music begins to play that is reminiscent
of some lone gunman in a classic western right out of High Noon.
And that just cracked me up.
The
reason I say this is to contrast with the main feature on the
DVD - the actual Last Miracle for LaVell documentary, which
I found to be a very interesting viewing. At first you've got
to wonder, how interesting can a documentary about a season
where the team lost half of its games be? Wouldn't it be better
to chronicle the entire 1984 national championship season or
any number of other seasons where the team soared to new winning
heights and national prestige? Perhaps that's what filmmaker
Kevin Mitchell thought (or at least hoped) he was going to be
doing when he started to record footage of a team with high
expectations and the added motivation of winning for a legendary
coach in his final season.
But after watching the documentary, I have to say I think I'd
rather see a documentary about this 6-6 team than one of the
winning seasons. In a way it's more compelling to hear and see
the players deal with losses, unfulfilled expectations and the
desire to send their coach out on a winning note.
Dealing with Adversity
Any time I've heard LaVell Edwards talk, he's talked about dealing
with adversity. I've heard him use examples from Steve Young's
loss to Georgia, in which he threw several interceptions in
the first half, to Sean Covey's disappointment at being replaced
as the starting quarterback by eventual Heisman Trophy winner
Ty Detmer. But it always seems his talks have carried the same
general theme - what to do when things don't go the way you'd
hoped or planned. In a way, this theme epitomizes his final
season as a head coach, and this documentary gives you a look
inside the locker room and on the sideline to see how Coach
Edwards teaches this important life's lesson to his players.
This was a season where the players had many opportunities to
"dial it in" and give up. But, as a credit to their
coaching and to the character of these players, they never did.
The documentary is well-produced. Commentary by the players
is insightful and helps to develop a simple, understandable
story line. Especially interesting to me was the opportunity
to hear some of LaVell's before-game and half-time pep talks,
something I'm sure many a BYU fan has wished for the opportunity
to experience and also something that, I think, helps to give
further insight into the character of this man as a coach and
a teacher. (And all through his career he kept telling the marching
band he would slip out of the locker room to hear the halftime
show - but maybe that was after giving his speech.) The only
thing that seems to be missing is footage of LaVell being interviewed
himself. Although the story is about him, it is told mostly
by the people around him - the players and other coaches.
Happily, Mitchell seems to find the right balance as to how
much of which games to show in the documentary as well. He doesn't
overdo it with the slow motion (for which I am VERY grateful),
and really the games are just a backdrop for the real story
- the players and coaches and how they dealt with both the successes
and the disappointments as well as the reality of saying goodbye
to and honoring a coach they all had grown to love. By the same
token, the season did provide some very exciting games, with
some amazing comebacks, and Mitchell appropriately dwells a
little bit longer on these, so those who are most interested
in seeing footage from these memorable games themselves will
not be disappointed.
In the end, I really only have one major complaint about the
DVD (besides the silliness of the bonus footage), and that is
the recording of the fight song that plays over the opening
menu. Surely there is a better recording available than the
one they used! It sounds like someone just stuck a microphone
into the middle of the band near the woodwinds and percussion.
It is seriously the worst recording of the fight song I have
ever heard. On the other hand, if that's my main complaint about
this DVD, you've got to know that on the whole, I'm pretty pleased
with the documentary. It keeps you entertained, rarely dragging
despite it's nearly two-hour length, and provides some good
insight for fans of LaVell Edwards and Brigham Young University
football.
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© 2003 Meridian Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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About
the Author:
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About the author
- Film composer Thomas C. Baggaley received a master's degree
in music from UCLA, where he studied film scoring with highly
regarded composer, Jerry Goldsmith. He recently released a CD
of inspirational music titled "Spirit of the Sabbath",
which is available at Deseret
Book and LDSvideostore.com.
Thomas is also the co-webmaster of LDSfilm.com, a
research web site about LDS films and filmmakers. He is currently
working on his next CD release, "Healing Showers: Music
for a Rainy Evening" which is scheduled to be released in
July. Thomas is a husband and father to three wonderful children
and serves as the teacher development coordinator in his ward.
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