
Vince D. and Mike A., good buddies of long standing, share a hearty laugh. (AP photo)
Michael Adams is set to leave the University of Georgia in June 2013, which would mean he’ll have outlasted Vince Dooley by nine years. In the overheated summer of 2003, it wasn’t clear who would lose (or win, depending on your slant) the race to be last out the door.
At an institution of higher education, there was little edifying about their bitter struggle. Dooley, the athletic director, wanted to stay a little longer. Adams, who could never give a compelling reason as to why Georgia needed a new AD, wanted this one gone. Two smart and powerful men were reduced to bickering over half-years.
Dooley loyalists rallied, and such was their outrage that it seemed possible the president would be forced out before Dooley. But Adams managed to hold his job, mostly because he was, as a college president, delivering the goods. Dooley left quietly on June 30, 2004, to be succeeded by Damon Evans, and the bizarre saga reached its end.
Dooley lost his job but claimed overwhelming victory in the court of public opinion. He stamped himself as the wronged party, and when he gave the nod for his supporters to cool it — the 2003 summer convocation of the Bulldog Club of Greater Atlanta had been an embarrassment of pro-Vince overkill — he came away as statesmanlike. In the years since, Dooley has taken solace in having weakened his nemesis on campus and off. (If not for the memory of the Dooley feud, Adams might have received greater consideration to succeed Myles Brand as NCAA president.)
To say that the two men hated one another would not be overstating. Dooley considered Adams a meddler and a hothead, and Adams resented Dooley for trying to use a moment of presidential weakness — the AD asked for a contract extension not long after Adams had run off football coach Jim Donnan — as personal leverage. To suggest that either man has forgotten, much less forgiven, is a stretch.
Asked by colleague Chip Towers for a reaction to Adams’ announced departure, Dooley offered this beautifully meager kiss-off: “First of all, I commend President Adams on his retirement, his service and his contributions to the University of Georgia. I do believe it is time for a change and I look forward to the Bulldog Nation uniting under new leadership in the near future.”
Note that commendation for Adams’ “retirement” came two spots ahead of any note of his “contributions.” Note also that “time for a change” came in Sentence No. 2.
Dooley has always taken pains to note that Adams’ doctorate is in political communication, as if the only game the president had ever mastered was one that valued style over substance. But here’s where Dr. Adams can spring the ultimate bit of political jiu-jitsu: As a parting gift, he can name the football stadium after his adversary.
There were those of us who believed that should have happened a decade ago, but there was no way Adams would grant that favor at a time when Dooley’s forces were trying to get him fired. But now it’s 2012, and there could be no gesture more statesmanlike that this.
The school did affix Dooley’s name to the facilities on the southwest corner of campus in 2008, but that was thin gruel: It involved little more than transporting a statue someone had already made and holding a dedication ceremony on the morning Georgia played Tech. (Further indignity: Tech won the game.) Asked back then about naming the stadium for Dooley, Adams sniffed that the stadium “already has a name.”
But few Bulldogs fans would recoil at the notion of Sanford Stadium becoming Sanford-Dooley Stadium. (I’m of the opinion that “Dooley-Sanford Stadium” would sound funny. But maybe that’s just me.) It would be the right way to honor the greatest figure in the school’s athletic history, and it would be the right political move for a president who hasn’t always been seen as presidential.
Honoring his enemy would be a way for Adams to show that, this once if not always, he’s capable of being the bigger man. It would enhance Dooley’s legacy, but it would burnish Adams’ more. If this president left today, he’d be known as the guy who was right on academics but wrong in his handling of a popular AD. If he leaves after renaming the stadium for that AD, he’d become the guy who, in his final act, was wise enough to admit he’d gotten one big thing wrong.
That would, as even Dooley would be forced to admit, be one heck of an exit line.
By Mark Bradley
529 comments Add your comment
John
May 7th, 2012
8:26 am
Oh, I forgot, we could just go ahead and re-name Athens for him. Maybe Barbara could live with that !
maxdog
May 7th, 2012
8:34 am
when will mcgarity get the money for a huge statue of dooley and walker outside the stadium??
AltamahaDawg
May 7th, 2012
8:47 am
NO! renaming stadiums is so yesterday. Why do we want to imitate somebody else? Somebody living in previous decades at that.
That would have been something for Davidson, Or Knapp to consider. When the timing was more appropriate and it was more in vogue.
The premise is flawed as well. Your suggestionand explaination has a lot more to do with Adams, than it does Dooley.
PALADIN DEATH DEALER
May 7th, 2012
10:05 am
Great idea Mark….Hope it gets done, it is long overdue….Like Sanford-Dooley better that the Dooley Field idea….
TossSweep
May 7th, 2012
10:26 am
Why? Isn’t a statue enough? Sanford Stadium…let’s leave it.
TossSweep
May 7th, 2012
10:28 am
It’s like adding “Jackson” after Hartsfield International….just didn’t make sense.
byron
May 7th, 2012
11:36 am
Adams has plenty of class-its just all low. No way he swallows his ego and does the right thing. This is the guy who claims to have single-handedly raised UGA’s academic standards, which are a direct result of the thousands of applicants and students trying to maintain a Hope scholarship.
Marvin Mangrum
May 7th, 2012
12:14 pm
It could be oreo stadium for all I care, but expecting a loser to name it after Dooley is quite silly!
Dogs Smell
May 7th, 2012
12:15 pm
Why not as he will have been the only coach to have ever won a National Championship at UGA.
Canton Dawg
May 7th, 2012
12:30 pm
AMEN! But, don’t hold your breath.
DawginTX
May 7th, 2012
12:34 pm
God, I love the caption under the photo. Of course, either the field or the stadium should be named for Dooley. Regarding Adams “delivering the goods” as university president, I think he is getting too much credit. The academic rise came mostly under Chuck Knapp, due in large part to the Hope Scholarship. When he was hired from Centre College, Adams was touted as a master fundraiser, and today Georgia’s endowment still lags its peers. Adams main achievement is as a big spender, and his management style is certainly less than collegial.
Sid
May 7th, 2012
12:41 pm
On another note………….it took Ben Roethlisberger 10 years to complete 4 classes to get his diploma. I guess too many trips to Milledgeville slowed him down.
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1:23 pm
[...] Bradley of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution thinks that departing Georgia president Michael Adams should rename Sanford Stadium in honor of [...]
hottie
May 7th, 2012
2:11 pm
anyone who would diss Roddy Jones for an award because he played for GT is a coward and a lunatic. But the bigger gutless wonders are the sportswriters for AJC that do not have the guts to ask DooDoolee about it. Bet cha this man could not even name one charity Roddy was part of even though he was part of several, half of which were in this newspaper with photos.
sooooooooooo inmpressed NOT
aprilglaspie
May 7th, 2012
3:03 pm
Mike Addington: Pretty sure Bear was dronk as a skonk when he said that.
Where have you gone Bill Stanfill?
May 7th, 2012
3:15 pm
Seriously, are we actually discussing this stupid idea? Hyphenated names are the most absurd invention of the “loserless” “feel good” society of wimps that we have become. Sanford built the stadium and brought UGA athletics to the national scene. Dooley just happened to fall ass-backwards into a wonderful facility. Why don’t they rename East Campus Road that runs behind the stadium Dooley Road. East Campus Road doesn’t sound very creative in the first place. This would shut up all of you blind rear view looking bedwetters and preserve the honor of a great stadium.
Also, the last time some fool lost his mind and brought this topic up didn’t we find out that renaming the stadium would need an act of the General Assembly? If it is infact left up to that bunch it will be named Andrew Young-Bill Campbell- Maynard Jackson – Insert any other crooked Atlanta Politician’s Name Here-Sanford Stadium.
To those that bring up all these other schools with loser sounding “Idiot Field at Moron Stadium” and “Im With – Stupid Stadium” please look at your examples. They have been Tech, Bama, Auburn, Florida. Do you see a trend here? Do you really want to follow a trend that includes this bunch? Please go right out and say you are a sheep!
truedawg
May 7th, 2012
3:29 pm
Really??!! Too much ego on both sides. Atleast Dooley in his old age has learned something..shut up and move on. Adams would never do it…never! I say honnor #34 first. Walker is the face of UGA football not Dooley, Admnas, Richt,etc. Dooley has a statue, let it go…Don’t make naming building and stadiums like the uniforms at UGA…stcik with what we have!! Want a stadium named after you, win a few titles…then we’ll talk! Goodbye Adams, now stop being so self centered and leave before 13 months!!! Go Dawgs!!
Oh and by the way…Richt is twice the leader Adams is and twice the coach Dooley was…
Jim
May 7th, 2012
6:30 pm
Should name it Spurrior-field because he owned us. The only name I want to see is WINNER FIELD!!
SEC Football Morning Coffee: Kameel Jackson Could Be Transferring to Texas A&M | SEC Football
May 7th, 2012
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[...] Bradley of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution thinks that departing Georgia president Michael Adams should rename Sanford Stadium in honor of [...]
TA
May 7th, 2012
7:38 pm
How about the Cesspool field at Doody stadium!
ugarph85
May 8th, 2012
9:31 am
Dooley did a lot for UGA football but he had nothing to do with building the field or the stadium. I do not think UGA should change heritage for name sake. If UGA wants to memorialize Dooley we should add his name to The Butts-Meyer building or the practice field. Just a Big Dawg fans opinion. He is not Bear Bryant, Dooley only won one National Championship with all the talent he had year after year.
bubba4dawgs
May 8th, 2012
10:29 am
Hey Dawg Guy, UGA won the Sugar Bowl in ‘81. UGA beat Notre Dame 17-10. UGA lost to Pittsburgh in ‘82, 24-20 and lost to Penn State in ‘83, 27-23. Check it out!
bubba4dawgs
May 8th, 2012
10:35 am
Hey, I’m for naming the school Dooley U! He deserves more than Adams is capable of giving him! I say wait until the farthead leaves, then honor him without any connection from Adams. Dooley will appreciate that much more as he gets his due, long over due!
G-Dawg
May 8th, 2012
4:43 pm
Dooley didnt do squat. Hershel made Dooley. Hershel Field at Sanford Stadium. Rode Hershel into the ground making him tote the rock 30-40 carries a game for 3 years!!
TheTruthHurts
May 8th, 2012
5:24 pm
If you want to give credit where credit is due, then Sanford Stadium….Walker Field. Does anybody ever think UGA would have won a national championship in 1980 without Herschel Walker carrying the ball? I know because I was there. It wasn’t Dooley who won that game.
aw
May 9th, 2012
8:21 am
Wally Butts makes more sense, but I guess you would probably the butt of jokes. (no pun intended)
dawg fan
May 9th, 2012
3:07 pm
Leave it like it is. Dooley Can have something else named after him – not Sanford Stadium – We are not Auburn or Alabama, lets not drop to their level of overnaming.
Dale
May 9th, 2012
6:50 pm
DO NOT rename the stadium. Please. Just leave it.
Dawg Fever
May 9th, 2012
11:09 pm
Will never happen. Adams is too immature. Once his forner asst Victor Wilson (currently at College of Charleston) is named new president it will happen. And I see nothing wrong with Dooley-Sanford Stadium. Nobody complaining about Bryant-Denny.