Subj : RIP LYNYRD
To   : All
From : Mike Roberts
Date : Mon Sep 20 2010 09:52 pm

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. � Leonard Skinner, the basketball coach and gym teacher who
inspired the name of the Southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd, died Monday in
Florida, his daughter said. He was 77.

Skinner died in his sleep at the St. Catherine Laboure Manor in Jacksonville,
where he had been living for about a year, his daughter Susie Moore said.
Skinner had Alzheimer's disease.

He was working at Robert E. Lee High School in Jacksonville in the late 1960s
when he sent a group of students to the principal's office because their hair
was too long. Those students later formed a band, using a variation of
Skinner's name for their own.

During an interview in January 2009, Skinner said he was always bothered by
the way the legend grew to say he was particularly tough on the band members
or that he had kicked them out of school, according to The Florida
Times-Union, which first reported Skinner's death.

"It was against the school rules," Skinner said then. "I don't particularly
like long hair on men, but again, it wasn't my rule."

The band became popular in the mid-1970s, with hits such as "Sweet Home
Alabama" and "Free Bird." Three of the band members, including lead singer
Ronnie Van Zant, were killed in a 1977 plane crash. The band regrouped and
continues to perform today.

Years after sending the young students to the office, Skinner found his son
listening to an album called "Pronounced Leh-Nerd Skin-Nerd." The son, also
named Leonard, said his father wasn't particularly impressed.

After discovering the connection, Skinner eventually made friends with some of
the band members, according to the paper. They even performed at a
Jacksonville bar the former coach owned.

Skinner later allowed the band to use a photo of his Leonard Skinner Realty
sign for the inside of their third album, and he once introduced them at a
Jacksonville concert.

Skinner's children said their father was never completely comfortable with
being linked to the band but did grow to embrace it.

"He made a lot of new friends," Moore said. "That in itself really brought a
lot of wonderful people in our family's lives, simply because they were Lynyrd
Skynyrd fans, and they wanted to meet Dad. They loved him. They're part of our
extended family now."
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