Two years ago, when I first met Jim, I knew I'd be in for a treat. A wonderful man with a winning smile and a strong devotion to LSU sports. The LSU bond proved to be one that helped Jim and his wonderful wife Becky grow close to our family. Jim and Becky would come over to watch our Tigers together many times, and I always enjoyed the traditions he's created even for his TV watching. Tigers on offense, hat goes this way. Tigers on defense, turn that hat around. He was never phased by the fact that he had to carry that God-awful machine around with him everywhere, Becky faithfully toting along extra batteries to stop that "annoying alarm" from going off. He'd cheer right along though, never letting something like a little machine get in the way. Especially during the BCS Title game.
A Tiger fan through and through, Jim and I would talk about our joys and our heartaches (mostly those given out by John Brady) and who the next big thing would be to wear the Purple and Gold.
Our last conversation was about recruiting. "Looks like a good class might be coming in. Hope none of them turn out like Perrilloux." I found a bit of solace in knowing LSU landed a No. 1 ranked class on the day he died. Sure, it may not seem like much, but Jim would have been thrilled by it.
We're going to miss you Jim.