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After 7 Years, Finally, A Football Field Of Their Own

In Detroit, members of the Cody High School Comets start the football season on their own field.
Tracy Samilton
/
Michigan Radio
In Detroit, members of the Cody High School Comets start the football season on their own field.

The virgin Astroturf is springy underfoot, and the neon yellow goal posts stretch up into the blue September sky. The Comets should be playing well.

They're not.

After seven years of away-games, the football team at Cody High School in Detroit has their own field. The facility at Cody was in such terrible shape that they couldn't play there.

That changed Friday night. Unfortunately, the Comets homecoming did not start well.

At halftime, the score was 0-0. They were playing against their arch-rivals from Henry Ford High School, which was supposed to be an inferior team.

Coach Calvin Norman dressed down his all-volunteer assistant coaches, telling them not to blame the players. Team captain Jayvonte Ball was disappointed in his teammates, exhorting them to "play like we want it."

"The people who made the field worked harder than us," he says. "They worked way harder than us. Come on, you gotta wake up, man."

A Fundraising Field Goal

Ball is right — it was hard work to raise nearly a million dollars for the field. It almost didn't happen.

Chris Lambert is the CEO of Life Remodeled, the group in charge of an ambitious volunteer makeover of Cody High School and its surrounding neighborhoods. He says a new football field was a priority, but they were still $300,000 short the day fundraising ended.

"Forty-five minutes before I get on stage, a family comes up to me and says, 'Do you still need that $300,000?' "

They got out their checkbook. Lambert says he expected them to want it named Walrich Field after their family, but they had something else in mind.

A Comeback For The Comets

When halftime ended, the Cody Comets charged back out.

Maybe it was the stern speeches by the coach and captain. Maybe it was the appeal by Senior Pastor Bob Shirock, whose Oak Pointe Church in suburban Novi, Mich., has adopted Cody High: "We pray the world would hear that Detroit is rising from the ashes, and that stories like Cody would prove that."

Whatever it is, the Comets came out a different team. They quickly scored. And scored again, and again and again.

Those corny movies about a team picking itself up and coming back to win? This was just like that. The Comets ended up winning the game 24-0.

And just like that, a field named Hope earned its name.

Copyright 2014 Michigan Radio

Tracy Samilton covers the auto beat for Michigan Radio. She has worked for the station for 12 years, and started out as an intern before becoming a part-time and, later, a full-time reporter. Tracy's reports on the auto industry can frequently be heard on Morning Edition and All Things Considered, as well as on Michigan Radio. She considers her coverage of the landmark lawsuit against the University of Michigan for its use of affirmative action a highlight of her reporting career.