NEW ORLEANS(AP)
Even though he's only 37 and in good health, Nathan Davis
has already made out his will. In it, he bequeaths money to the
University of Alabama athletic department and his ashes to
Bryant-Denny Stadium.
Davis, whose heavily tattooed body is a living tribute to his
beloved school, wants his remains to become an actual part of
it.
"I spell it out in my will," Davis said. "My
first choice is to spread my ashes at the stadium, second is on the
Walk of Champions, and third is on Bear Bryant's
statue."
Davis is one of an apparently large number of people who feel
there's no better place to spend eternity than the place they
cheered on the old home team or otherwise celebrated their favorite
sport.
A couple of years ago Christopher Noteboom ran across the field
during a Philadelphia Eagles game scattering his mother's ashes
as he went. Noteboom said Mom was a big Eagles fan and he
couldn't think of a more fitting tribute.
George Helms' family had the urn holding his ashes strapped
onto a car at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway where it rode during
practice laps. Afterward they scattered some of the NASCAR
fan's ashes over the track so he could remain part of his
favorite sport.
Although most people tend to look for a place of beauty or
serenity to scatter ashes, said Dr. Amy Dickson, an assistant
professor of psychiatry at the LSU Health Sciences Center, some
have other criteria.
"For an avid sports fan, the idea of having their ashes
scattered at a place that made them happy might be very
strong," she said. "For many people, allying with a team
is what drives their week. Those events are what they look forward
to and plan on, so continuing that allegiance after death is just
another step."
When LSU added onto Tiger Stadium, where the football team has
played since 1924, the contractor faced a steady stream of fans
carrying urns, said Senior Associate Athletic Director Herb
Vincent.
"It was a very regular thing," Vincent said. "The
contractor would call and say, `We've got another one,' and
it would be someone with an urn of ashes they wanted to put into
the stadium before the walls were sealed up. We had at least 40
people ask."
In addition, LSU gets several requests a year to spread ashes at
Tiger Stadium, all of which they turn down.
"We feel it might be a little bit of a health issue,"
Vincent said. "After all, we are talking about human
remains."
Rules for the disposal of ashes vary from state to state,
although Louisiana has no restrictions of how or where they may be
dumped, according to Bob Johannessen, spokesman for the Louisiana
Department of Health and Hospitals.
"There are regulations for disposing of bodies, but not
ashes," Johannessen said. "There's no health risk
involved in ashes."
There are other reasons organizations discourage the spreading
of ashes.
"It probably happens and we sort of turn a blind eye if
people are discreet," said Rich Dalrymple, spokesman for the
Dallas Cowboys. "But we don't really feel it's
appropriate. And besides, these things have a way of turning into
elaborate ceremonies and we don't want a stream of hearses
pulling up to the stadium."
Al Everest, now the special teams coach for the San Francisco
49ers, ran into _ and around _ the Cowboys' no scattering
policy years ago.
Everest's namesake uncle Al, was a big Cowboy fan and knew
his football-oriented family _ his brother Andy was a coach and his
nephews played and coached football _ would always think of him
when they saw Texas Stadium if his ashes were scattered there.
"I'd had his ashes for a couple of years and my sister
Kathy and brother Tom finally decided to do something about
it," Al Everest said. "There might have been some liquid
refreshment involved, but they took Uncle Al's ashes to the
stadium and scattered them on the flowers outside the gate. It
worked: I never see the Cowboys but what I think of Uncle
Al."
When Conrad Rehling, who coached the University of Alabama golf
team for 17 years and was a member of the College Golf Coaches Hall
of Fame, died, his daughters moved quickly to see that his last
wishes would be carried out.
Half of Rehling's ashes were scattered off the practice tee
at the Alabama facility, said Jay Seawell, the current Tide coach.
The rest were taken care of by golfer Jerry Pate, who played for
Rehling before turning pro.
"I had never spread anyone's ashes before, and at first
it seemed kind of eerie," Pate said. "But when I had the
opportunity to spread Conrad's it was a real honor."
As requested by his old coach, Pate spread the ashes on the golf
course at St. Andrews, while at the British Open.
"Later my son showed me a picture he had found that my wife
took of Conrad and me at Swilkin Bridge in 1972," Pate said.
"I had forgotten all about it, but that's exactly where I
scattered his ashes."
Golf courses appear to be among the favorite sports venues for
ashes scattering.
At the Furman University course there have been dozens of
departed golfers' ashes scattered along the greens, said Willie
Miller, who has run the golf club for the past dozen years.
Unlike Alabama's Seawell, who mused that Rehling's ashes
might be helping his highly rated team, Miller doesn't count on
the spirits of departed golfers to help Furman.
"Not at all," he said. "I know how they
played."
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