By Zach Tigert

HOOVER – Everywhere you look this week in the Wynfrey hotel in Hoover, Ala., you see a familiar blue screen with the SEC Network’s logo staggered from left to right.

The network, which is nearing its anniversary on air, is a known presence at this years’ SEC Media Days. While Spurrier’s one-liners and the kicks that adorned the feet of Dan Mullen and Bret Bielema stole the show, the SEC network quietly announced how the network is rapidly expanding.

First off, a new show will be added to the programming schedule. SEC Inside will provide a new look at the ins and outs of college football.

“The show will deliver unique perspectives in a highly produced cinematic style,” as Stephanie Druley, ESPN senior vice president, college networks production reports. “New camera angles are supported by previously unheard sounds from the coaches and players on game day. The combination creates a more complete picture of the game, and compelling television.”

 

The SEC Network also plans on continuing SEC Inside in the winter and spring, shifting the focus to Men’s and Women’s basketball tournaments. The show will air on Wednesday nights.

That wasn’t the only big news the network had while in Hoover. The announcement was also made that five new SEC Storied films would be produced and aired in consecutive weeks in September.

 

The mini documentaries are produced by the same people that brought us the ESPN 30-for-30 series, ESPN Films. Alabama legend Derrick Thomas will be featured in, “In Search of Derrick Thomas presented by Belk” on Tuesday, September 29.

 

A full schedule and detailed preview of each film can be found below. (Source: SEC)

The September Lineup (all debut at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT)

Tuesday, September 1 – “Wuerffel’s Way presented by Chick-fil-A” (special premiere on ESPN, Friday, Aug. 28 at 7:30 p.m. ET)

Tuesday, September 8 – “Miracles on the Plains presented by Regions Bank”

Tuesday, September 15 – “The Bo You Don’t Know ”

Tuesday, September 22 – “SAM presented by Dr Pepper”

Tuesday, September 29 – “In Search of Derrick Thomas presented by Belk”

 

Film Summaries

 

“Wuerffel’s Way” – Directed by Jim Jorden

Danny Wuerffel was on top of the world at the end of the 1996 college football season. The University of Florida quarterback had just won the Heisman Trophy and led the Gators to a National Championship.  But drafted by the New Orleans Saints in the spring of 1997, he struggled to attain the same kind of success in the NFL. It was in that first year as a pro that he began volunteering in New Orleans’ Desire neighborhood, one of the poorest locales in the country.  After Hurricane Katrina devastated his Desire Street Academy in late August 2005, Wuerffel took the lead in tracking down his students, established a new location for the school in Florida, and expanded his outreach to help several more communities in the southeastern United States.  He continued his efforts while battling a life-threatening illness.  Now, ten years removed from the costliest natural disaster in American history, Wuerffel returns to New Orleans to dedicate the rebuilding of the Desire Community Square and further the cause he joined two decades ago.

 

“Miracles on the Plains” – Directed by Rory Karpf

On April 23, 2013, the oaks at Toomer’s Corner had to be removed. More than two years earlier, those trees at Auburn University’s historic landmark had been poisoned, casting a dark shadow over the school.  Meanwhile, the Auburn football team went from National Champions in 2010 to the bottom of the SEC by 2012. Head coach Gene Chizik was fired and replaced by Gus Malzahn, the offensive coordinator of that national title team.  Expectations were bleak entering the 2013 season, as Malzahn inherited a team coming off its worst season in 60 years.  What followed was one of the biggest single-season turnarounds in college football history – a year of implausible finishes, cinematic heroics, games for the ages…and, eventually, the symbolic return of those mighty oaks.

 

“The Bo You Don’t Know” – Directed by Brian Goodwin

When the name “Bo” is uttered in SEC circles, images of Bo Jackson’s domination at Auburn quickly come to mind.  But there is another Bo who is likely far less familiar to SEC followers.  That would be Robert “Bo” Rein, whose pedigree could be traced to stints under Woody Hayes, Lou Holtz, and Frank Broyles.  A former baseball and football standout at Ohio State, Rein was building a reputation as an innovator who inspired those around him.  He became the youngest head coach in major college football when he took over at NC State at the age of 30. He brought the Wolfpack national rankings, bowl wins and an ACC title.  At the end of the 1979 season, LSU hired Rein, hoping that his youthful energy could revitalize its program.  But the unthinkable happened.  Returning from a recruiting trip on January 10, 1980, the small plane in which he was flying crashed in the Atlantic Ocean, roughly 1,000 miles off course.  That tragedy devastated his family and friends and left so many others wondering, “What might have been?”

 

“SAM” – Directed by Marquis Daisy

When Michael Sam announced on February 9, 2014 that he was gay, he became football’s first openly gay active player.  For most, the revelation was a surprise.  For his teammates in Columbia Missouri, it was not news.  In the Tigers football family, Michael had found acceptance. The extraordinary bond Sam forged with wide receiver L’Damian Washington and defensive tackle Marvin Foster was bigger than football – they became brothers.  That brotherhood helped bring the Tigers together on the field in 2013 and fueled the 12-2 SEC East Championship season.

 

“In Search of Derrick Thomas” – Directed by Joe Lavine

Life was never easy for Derrick Thomas.  At the age of 5, his father, an Air Force pilot, was lost in Vietnam during a flying mission.  As an adolescent growing up in a rough Miami neighborhood, Thomas ran afoul of the law and found himself in front of a judge who would give him a second chance.  He turned his life around, became a star on the gridiron and attracted the attention of the University of Alabama, where he established himself as arguably the greatest pass rusher in college football history.  He went on to an outstanding career as a linebacker with the Kansas City Chiefs, and in 1993, he was named the NFL’s Man of the Year for his charitable contributions to the community.  But at the age of 33, he was paralyzed in a car accident and died shortly thereafter, leaving behind a towering legacy that would put him in both the College and Pro Football Halls of Fame.  He also had a son he never knew, Matt Naylor, who narrates this moving testament of discovery.”