OK, Oprah, are you listening? I'd like to interest you in buying
the Chicago Cubs, who will be sold later this year. That, at
least, is what recent news accounts indicate. For reasons I can't quite
comprehend, Sam Zell, the Chicago billionaire who bought the
Tribune Company media empire and its holdings, which include the Cubs,
has said he will put the team up for sale.
A couple of deep-pocketed NBA tycoons, Mark Cuban, who owns the
Dallas Mavericks, and Jerry Colangelo, the chairman of the Phoenix
Suns, are rumored to be among the possible bidders, along with several local businessmen. But they're not the well-known representatives of the city that you are, Oprah, plus isn't it time a woman took the
reins of a major-league baseball team to see what she can do as the
principal owner?
Let's face it, the Cubs' on-field fortunes surely wouldn't suffer,
not when you consider how frustrated the team has been, lo, these many
decades. Last season the Cubs were the worst team in the National
League, and even this season a liberal investment in free agents is no
guarantee of improvement.
Sure, the price of the team could be more than you'd want to pay.
After all, even as the richest female entertainer and the
world's only black billionaire, with personal wealth of $1.5 billion,
you might not want to fork over $600 million, the franchise's estimated
value.
But maybe you could lure other celebrities into an
ownership group consisting mostly, if not entirely, of
African-Americans. Michael Jordan's name leaps to mind, because of his years with the Chicago Bulls, and also because he once tried his hand at professional baseball, playing with a White Sox farm team briefly. And any number of other black athletes (past and present) might jump at the opportunity to be part of something that you'd put your name to. The list of candidates could include Venus and Serena Williams, Magic Johnson, and LeBron James, who recently bought a stake in the bicycle maker Cannondale Corp and has tapped multibillionaire Warren Buffett for investment advice. And let's not forget Ernie Banks, Mr. Cub himself, the Hall of Fame shortstop who said last year he wanted to buy the team.
Why put together a black ownership group? Because it represents one of the last frontiers in American sport, one that Jackie Robinson himself saw as important in achieving the full integration of baseball.
Last month, Major League Baseball celebrated the 60th anniversary of Robinson's historic entry into the majors. In doing so, it was able to point to progress in some areas. For example, black and minority managers are no longer rare, (there are nine presently). Teams are required to consider a diverse talent pool in filling executive positions, minority- and women-owned businesses increasingly are awarded "supplier" contracts, and in February the Major League Baseball Urban Youth Academy was opened in Compton, Calif. Located in an area that is 55 percent Hispanic and 40 percent African-American, it is viewed as a template for other academies like it that presumably would attract more minority youngsters (especially blacks) to play the game. (The percentage of black Americans in the majors has fallen from 20 percent in 1972, when Robinson died, to about 8 percent today.)
Despite Robinson's landmark status in the civil rights movement, the game has lost its allure for many black athletes. There are even reports that some historically black colleges like Florida A&M and Miles College are looking to white players to fill their rosters, the black talent pool is so limited.
Be that as it may, Oprah, there is still something more troubling in my mind, namely the paucity of black fans at many major league games. It probably is better in Chicago, but when I attended a Red Sox game recently in Boston, I'd guess that African-Americans made up only 2 or 3 percent of the crowd. And the really sad part was I don't remember seeing any black youngsters.
It needn't be this way. After all, baseball used to have a grip on the black community, with pre-integration Negro League games often serving as major attractions. And even after Robinson broke the color line, many black fans kept up their interest by attending major-league games. Over time, however, black fans dropped away. I don't have the statistics to back this up, but I trust that my eyes aren't deceiving me, at least not in the majority of major-league markets.
Some people might argue that the White Sox, who have a black general manager and are more associated with the inner city than the Cubs, would be a more logical team to have black ownership. That may be, but I'd argue that the Cubs, in storied Wrigley Field, are more of a national institution. So, Oprah, it requires someone of your stature to assume control of such an American icon and give it fresh life, socially as well as athletically.
Having a woman in charge would be exciting, especially one as visibly successful as you, and with obvious cross-racial appeal. You wouldn't be the only black female to be a sports team owner. Sheila Johnson, who co-foundeded the Black Entertainment Television with her ex-husband, is a co-owner of three Washington teams - the NBA's Wizards, the NHL's Capitals, and the WNBA's Washington Mystics. But to find a black woman owner in baseball you probably have to go back to Effa Manley, co-owner and business manager of the Newark Eagles from 1936 to 1948. Manley was a real mover and shaker in the Negro Leagues, so much so that she was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., last year.
According to the hall's website, Manley made the Eagles "a social force off the field and a baseball force on it." That's just what your presence could provide baseball today, Oprah. And, here, let me say that baseball has already shown some signs of opening its doors to women. Jane Forbes Clark is the Baseball Hall of Fame's chairman of the board, and Phyllis Merhige and Katy Feeney, are vice-presidents in Major League Baseball's executive offices.
But Oprah, you could take things to a new level, bring more women and blacks into the daily operation of the Cubs, and by extension into baseball generally. And something tells me that if you put your mind to it, you'd find ways to bring far greater numbers of black fans to the games, and especially minority youngsters, even if it meant distributing 10 percent of all tickets to Boys and Girls Clubs and other youth organizations that well serve city kids.
Of course, you also could be cutting edge in other ways, too. One, I'd suggest, is to ban Cubs players from spitting on the field or in the dugout, both home or away, and eliminating spitting by visiting players as well at Wrigley Field.
Depending on how things break in the 2008 presidential election, you might even line up Hillary Rodham Clinton, a Cubs fan, to be the first woman president to throw out the a ceremonial Opening Day pitch.
But you better hurry. Martha Stewart, a Yankees fan, might be talked into buying the pinstripers first and leaving her stamp on the national pastime. And who knows what that might lead to?
• Until last Friday night I hadn't seen a Red Sox game in person in about seven years. Some of my impressions of the experience:
- Tickets sure have gotten expensive. The face value of my seat
was $80, which is about triple what I
remember a similar seat costing the last time I was in Fenway Park.
- Having grown accustomed to watching games on TV, I felt more
removed from the action than I would have anticipated in the oldest and
perhaps most intimate ballpark in the majors. I had a good, if not
great, seat about halfway up in the grandstand and about halfway along
the right-field line. There's really no seat in the park, though, where
you can enjoy the steady diet of closeups that TV can provide, and there are no
announcers to fill in the yawning gaps between pitches with
interesting facts, analyses, and anecdotes. I found myself much more
aware of the slow pace of the game, and even though a big replay board
supplies enlarged footage of selected action, it doesn't begin to
compete with TV.
- One advantage of actually "being there," I was reminded, is that
you're able to better follow the flight of a flyball. No camerawork
ever seems to do justice to this aspect of the game. Also, the
panoramic view a spectator has of the field and environs is something
television can't match.
- There's so much information being fed to spectators that it takes
awhile to know where to look, for what, and when. For example, it was interesting to me that the speed of every pitch was posted on a center field
digital display that also notes what kind of pitch was thrown
(fastball, curve, etc.), a pitcher's total number of deliveries,and
percentage of strikes.
- The Red Sox have done a nice job of expanding the seating
capacity of Fenway Park while remaining true to the stadium's existing
architecture. That doesn't mean the that there's much more, if any, leg
room. My seat had none, with my knees up against the seat in front of
me, and my shoulders were squeezed between those on either side of me.
- Bostonians may not have to worry about Fenway being renamed in
favor of some deep-pocketed corporate sponsor, but like many ballparks
these days, ads are plastered everywhere. In fact, the whole park
begins to look like one big NASCAR race car, there is so much
commercial messaging. One of the most prominent locations reportedly
was sold to a medical devices company that paid seven figures for a
multiyear placement in the middle of the Green Monster.
• When I saw that Mark Buehrle of the White Sox had hurled the first
no-hitter of the season, I was curious about two things: Was the game
in Chicago? And what was the temperature? That's because an unusually
cold spring may have handicapped hitters. Buehrle's gem (a near perfect game) was, in fact, pitched in
Chicago, with the temperature at US Cellular Field only in the 40s. The
Texas Rangers managed to get just one runner to first base, that being
former Chicago Cub Sammy Sosa, who proceeded to get picked
off right away.
• The National Football League, which is intensely brand loyal to
its sponsors, didn't like the fact that Chicago Bears middle
linebacker Brian Urlacher wore a cap at a pre-Super Bowl media event
that touted a nonsponsor's product, Vitaminwater. Consequently the NFL
slapped Urlacher with a fine - 10 times the regular-season rate - for promoting
his affiliation with an unofficial company rather than Gatorade, the NFL's
official drink. Not surprisingly, Vitaminwater said it would pick up
the tab for Urlacher's indiscretion. When he declined the offer, the company said it would make a matching donation to the United Way.
• Surely, Dick Butkus and the Downtown Athletic Club, based in
Orlando, Fla., ought to be able to work out their differences. The
former University of Illinois and Chicago Bears star reportedly wants
the club to quit using his name for its Butkus Award. He wants the name
association to benefit charities of his choosing, not those of the
club. Also, he claims in a lawsuit that he only informally agreed to
let the award, which is given to the nation's best college linebacker, carry his
name, and that nothing specifies how long the the arrangement can
continue. It would be a simple enough thing to find a new name for the
award, but that hardly seems an ideal solution, since the honor has
enjoyed the same identity for 21 years now and Butkus gains nothing from ending the tradition. I'd think a compromise not only is
possible, but mutually beneficial for both parties. So let common
sense prevail, even if it means locking the lawyers out of the room.
• It takes a pretty self-assured person to referee in the National
Basketball Association. But it's one thing to stand one's ground in the
face of some superstar player's howling protest, and it's quite another to
invite a seven-footer to duke it out with you. Figuring that Joey Crawford
had crossed the line in offering to fight San Antonio's Tim Duncan, the
NBA suspended him indefinitely. Crawford didn't like Duncan's reaction
to being called for a technical (he laughed from the bench), so he ejected
him. The league fined Duncan $25,000 for his verbal abuse of Crawford,
who has more playoff experience than any other active official. Crawford won't be used during the current playoffs, since the NBA figures a referee's job is
to bend without breaking. In "light of similar prior acts" by
Crawford, the league wants him to sit out until there can be an off season discussion about what's next for the feisty ref.
• If college soccer isn't careful, or maybe more proactive in
promoting itself, I predict that lacrosse will enjoy a higher profile
on campuses 10 or 20 years from now. The growing popularity of lacrosse
could also pose a threat to intercollegiate baseball as the spring
sport of choice for spectators. Why? It's a faster-paced game played by
both male and female student-athletes, plus lacrosse seems to fit the
college calendar better than baseball, its main spring rival, which
often seems forced in March and early April.
• Speaking of lacrosse, it will be interesting to see if the
University of Albany's emerging success in the sport will tempt the
school to hitch its athletic wagon to the men's team. Albany has never
been known known as a sports power, but the men's lacrosse program
benefits from its location in upstate New York, a regional hotbed for
talented players. The Great Danes (11-1) are third-ranked nationally, which is
pretty heady stuff, especially for a team that didn't even have a home
field until this year, according to The New York Times. If Albany wants
to join the sport's elite on a regular basis, it surely needs to be
prepared to greatly increase its institutional commitment. Once
lacrosse grows as a major sport at schools across the country, the ante
to remain near the top will be raised considerably. Just look at what
happened when large state universities got going in football. Yale,
Harvard, and Penn, once national powers, couldn't or didn't care to
keep up and have long since been eclipsed by big-time,
scholarship-awarding programs. For the record, Albany awards three
full-time lacrosse scholarships and lots of partial grants.
• You've gotta love the friendly, sporting use made of the
US-Mexican border recently during a binational goodwill festival that
brought together residents of Naco, Ariz., and its namesake in the
Mexican state of Sonora. The organizers set up a volleyball court that
straddled the dividing line so youngsters could meet, literally, at the
net.
• The Tampa Bay Devil Rays didn't go through with a name change, at
least not this year, but they've considered one. Focus groups revealed
that there's a negative association with "devil." They could drop the
word and just use "Rays," or come up with a new nickname. The last time
that occurred for a baseball team that didn't change cities was in
1965, when the expansion Houston Colt .45s switched to Astros.
• A tip of the hat to baseball's new and improved caps, which have
gone from wool to polyester this season without looking any different.
This is good news for traditionalists, who cringe thinking about the
double-knit uniforms with elasticized waistbands that ruined
the classic look of uniforms in the 1970s. The polyester blend used
in the new caps incorporates – are you ready for this? – superior
"vapor management technology." Translation: they wick away perspiration
better. They also shrink and fade less. The last time Major League
Baseball altered the cap in any significant way was in 1954, when a
six-panel design was adopted.
• A number of thoughts crossed my mind after reading that Chicago was selected as the US bid city for the 2016 Olympics:
- It's hard to imagine Chicago being up against a more powerful
lineup of candidate cities than the ones the International Olympic
Committee must choose from in 2009: Tokyo, Madrid, Rome, Rio de
Janeiro, and Prague, among other possible suitors. Rome and Tokyo have
previous experience as Olympic hosts, in 1960 and 1964 respectively.
Olympic officials may figure it's high time South America finally gets
the Games, so Rio would seem to stand a decent shot. Madrid and Prague
sound intriguing too, although with London hosting the 2012 Olympics,
I'm guessing the selectors will avoid any other cities within the
European Union until at least 2020.
- If Chicago gets the nod, I wonder if Mayor Richard M. Daley will
still be in office when the Games are held nine years from now. By
being elected to his sixth term earlier this year, he stands
to become the longest-serving mayor in city history. Should he remain
in office, he would surpass his father's 21 years at the helm. And with
the Olympics on the horizon, the current mayor might want to stick
around long enough to make the Games his last political hurrah.
- It had to be a bittersweet moment when Peter Ueberroth, chairman
of the US Olympic Committee, announced that Chicago had earned the
committee's selection over Los Angeles, the city where he presided over
the local organizing committee for the successful 1984 Olympics, the
first privately financed Games and only the second to ever make a
profit.
- Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and the city's Olympic
delegation exhibited a lot of class and sportsmanship as the gracious
losers. After the news of Chicago's
selection was made, Villaraigosa said he would support Chicago's
ongoing bid and was quoted as saying, "This is a proud moment for every
Chicagoan, but it's also a proud moment for all of us."
- If Chicago's plan to build a 80,000-seat "temporary" Olympic
stadium isn't the ultimate symbol of our throwaway society, I don't
know what is.
- Concentrating the Games as much as possible along Chicago's
lakefront is viewed by the US Olympic Committee as a way to create a
"certain magic," maybe something akin to the atmosphere at the 1893 World's
Columbian Exposition, perhaps the greatest world's fair ever held.
• Whether or not you're a Yankees fan, you' got to admire the
pitching demeanor of closer Mariano Rivera. When he comes into the game
in the late innings, he usually gets the "save," but when he doesn't he
maintains his composure. A sure test of that came the other day when he
gave up a walkoff, three-run homer with two out in the bottom of the
ninth to Oakland's Marco Scutaro. The hit gave Oakland a 5-4 victory,
which was bad enough for Rivera, but making matters worse was that
Scutaro's batting average at the time was a miserable .050. Still,
Rivera strode off the field, seemingly unfazed, no doubt confident that
over the long haul, he'll see far more up than down days.
• Congratulations to Jessica Long, the first Paralympic athlete to
ever win the Sullivan Award, which the Amateur Athletic Union annually
presents to the top US amateur athlete. A double amputee, Long, who was
born in Russia - where she was orphaned - but now lives in Baltimore, won nine gold medals at
last year's world Paralympic swimming championships for disabled athletes.
• Also, three cheers for American astronaut Sunita "Suni" Williams who ran a marathon in space as the Boston Marathon, which she was registered to run, took place Monday. Williams completed 26.2 miles tethered to a treadmill in the international space station in 4 hours, 24 minutes, or about as long as it took to complete three orbits. Because she had to be held down with a harness to avoid floating off, her shoulders took more of a beating than her feet and legs. Delays in getting a shuttle ready to retrieve her from the station mean Williams faces another kind of space marathon this summer, when her extended duty is expected to set a record for the longest space tour by an American astronaut, with roughly eight months aloft.
• I can't imagine anyone's widowed spouse doing a better job of
representing a departed athlete than Rachel Robinson, the
wife of Jackie Robinson. Her class and dignity in public have long shone through in public life. It was gratifying, therefore, to see Bud
Selig present her with the Commissioner's Historic Achievement Award
last Sunday, on the 60th anniversary of Jackie's integration of
major-league baseball. The award was given for her work in using the
Jackie Robinson Foundation to grant scholarships to minority students.
Their daughter, Sharon, by the way, is an educational consultant to Major League Baseball.
• To protect against letting nonsponsors associate themselves with
the Olympics, a practice known as ambush marketing, the Canadian
government has already introduced legislation to trademark certain
common words during the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver. Unaffiliated
companies that used "gold medals" or even "Vancouver 2010," for
example, could be asking for legal trouble.
• Hey, just because it's Little League doesn't mean you can leave
the coffers unguarded. The mayor of Adelanto, Calif., and his wife
were just charged with embezzling more than $20,000 from the local
Little League. And in Tewksbury, Mass., not long ago, the president of the town's youth baseball league was charged with siphoning off $423,000 from the treasury over four years. That sounds like the payroll for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.
• In future years, Latino ballplayers
surely will see their presence in the Baseball Hall of Fame grow
significantly. For now, though, only seven Latinos have made the
Cooperstown, N.Y., shrine, beginning with Roberto Clemente in 1973. He
was followed in 1977 by Martin Dihigo,
a Cuban who played all nine positions at various times in various Latin
American countries and in the American Negro leagues. The other
honorees, in order of induction, are Juan Marichal
of the Dominican Republic, Luis Aparicio of Venezuela, Rod Carew of
Panama, Orlando Cepeda of Puerto Rico, and Tony Perez of Cuba. As odd
at it sounds, one writer has made a case that Ted Williams was the first Latino member of the hall since, unbeknownst to most fans, he said his heritage was "part Mexican."
• I would have thought every Heisman Trophy winner would automatically be enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame upon becoming eligible. Not so. Louisiana State's Billy Cannon,
the 1959 Heisman winner, is still on the outside looking in, not
because he wasn't a good enough player, but because he served time in a
federal penitentiary for counterfeiting. Whether Cannon will someday
join O.J. Simpson and his fellow Heisman winners in the South Bend,
Ind., shrine is hard to say, but it's a lock that Doug Flutie and Tim
Brown will go in this year. They qualify by being out of the intercollegiate ranks for more than 10 years, retired from pro football, and by being former First Team All-America selections with good citizenship records. The National Football Foundation, which conducts the hall's multi-tiered selection process, will announce May 9 which players will be enshrined.
• Joe Sheehan provides an interesting analysis in The New York
Times of why starting pitchers are pulled sooner than they once were.
It has to do with the increased power at the bottom of many batting
orders, which once was where you found good-fielding, but
lighter-hitting batters. Now, with more weight training and more
homer-friendly ballparks, even the 7, 8, and 9 hitters (especially in
the American League with the designated-hitter rule) are threats. With no "breaks" in the lineup, pitchers have to go all out against
virtually every batter, meaning the same amount of effort doesn't carry
the starter as deep into games as it used to.
• I always remember Jim Marshall,
the retired Minnesota Viking defensive lineman, for one thing: his
66-yard wrong-way run with a recovered fumble in 1964. That led to a
safety and a permanent place in many football blooper reels. Fans long
ago pardoned him for this miscue. After all, he went on to set an NFL
career record by recovering 29 opponent fumbles, a mark that still
stands, plus he was a member of the team's famous Purple People Eaters
defensive line. Ironically, a misstep of a quite different kind - a
1990 conviction on cocaine possession - was only recently pardoned, in
a St. Paul courtroom.
It was small, easily overlooked news on most sports pages, but when
I saw it I became curious to find out more. I was glad I did, because
this was not just a run-of-the-mill police blotter account of an
athlete's indiscretion, the sort of thing the public has become jaded
to. Instead, there was something uplifting about this report, which
was fleshed out on the website of the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Marshall has been a model citizen in many ways, but according to his
attorney, he was led to abuse drugs as he tried to cope with an
accumulation of old football injuries. He was arrested in Duluth 17
years ago, pleaded guilty, spent 90 days at home wearing an electronic
monitoring device and five more on probation. The shame of it all
continued to follow him, and complicated matters when he applied for
travel visas. The uplifting aspect of this story was not only
Marshall's desire to be free of this "one blemish" on his record and
the state's willingness to grant it, but the faithful support and
encouragement of Marshall's former coach, Bud Grant.
Grant, a Hall of Famer, essentially served as a character witness at
the Board of Pardons hearing. He vouched for Marshall's leadership,
integrity, and honesty, adding that he was "the image of the Vikings."
Certainly he was as dependable any coach could ever want. He played in
282 straight games, making him the Cal Ripken of football. This record
was finally surpassed in 2005 by New York Giants punter Jeff Feagles,
but many still consider Marshall, who battled in the trenches, the
sport's true ironman.
The board that Marshall petitioned to consisted of the governor,
attorney general, and chief justice of the state Supreme Court, a body
that includes one of his former defensive line mates, Alan Page. The
pardon, however, was not a matter of who Marshall knows or who knows
him, said Gov. Tim Pawlenty, who told the Star Tribune, "On the merits,
it's the kind of care we would have granted a pardon for anybody,
whether they were a Viking or whether they worked in South St. Paul."
• It's always encouraging when the justice system works as it's
supposed to, even if slowly and haltingly as it did in the case of the
former Duke University lacrosse players. All three of the young men
charged of sexually assaulting a stripper at a team party last year
were exonerated after a torturous road to this outcome. College
athletic departments generally learned a lot in observing this drama,
including that you can't let teams use wild off-campus partying as a
bonding mechanism. In Duke's case, the situation was made all the more
volatile by a racial dimension - the hiring of two black exotic dancers to
entertain players on a mostly white team. A recent NCAA student-athlete
ethnicity report found a higher percentage of white athletes (91.9
percent) in men's college lacrosse than any other sport, a racial
imbalance that universities, and the sport generally, should begin to
address.
• During this week's rebuttal press conference at Rutgers
University, in which members of the women's basketball team countered
the degrading stereotype presented of them by talk show host Don Imus,
Coach C. Vivian Stringer made an interesting comment. "These young
ladies are valedictorians of their class, future doctors, musical
prodigies, and, yes, even Girl Scouts." Exactly, they are students, and
sometimes accomplished ones. With this in mind, I suggest that the team
start a new tradition at their games, namely, having the pregame player
introductions include each player's academic major, even if
"undecided." It would be a small reminder that these young women are
far from one dimensional.
• The NHL's Anaheim Mighty Ducks,
a team that owes its name to a Disney family movie and once was owned
by the Walt Disney Company, now is the most fight-prone team in the
league. The team racked up 1,457 penalty minutes this season, and
logged 71 fights. If this keeps up, parents with tickets may have to
leave the kids at home. Maybe the Mighty Ducks are just trying to do
their part to keep up the image of the league, whose commissioner, Gary Bettman, who recently told the Canadian Press, "We've never taken active steps or considered eliminating
fighting from the game. I've always taken the view that it's a part of
the game and it rises and lowers based on what the game dictates."
• After 14 years, Drew Bledsoe has
called it quits as an NFL quarterback. He may have fallen short in his
quest to win a Super Bowl ring during stops with New England, Buffalo,
and Dallas, but he always stood tall in the heat of battle and in the
face of criticism, whether from the media, fans, or a demanding coach
like Bill Parcells. As well as I remember, Bledsoe was the first player
with a Boston or New England team to take out a full-page ad to express
his appreciation to the community and fans after his departure. Having
once met his parents in their modest Yakima, Wash., home, I can't say I
was ever surprised at how well Bledsoe carried himself throughout his
playing career. As he walked away, he characteristically took the high
road, telling the Associated Press, "I feel so fortunate, so honored,
to have played this game that I love for so long, with so many great
players, and in front of so many wonderful fans."
• For the first time in the modern era, neither Stanley Cup finalist
from last season – the champion Carolina Hurricanes or the Edmonton
Oilers - even made it into the NHL playoffs this year. That's pretty
amazing when you consider how many teams do make the postseason: 16. My
sentimental favorite is the Buffalo Sabres.
I guess I still feel for Buffalo, which has tried vainly to win a major
pro championship, once losing four straight Super Bowls. The Sabres, in
case you're wondering, have lost twice in the Stanley Cup finals, in
1975 and 1999.
• Pop quiz: You may have heard about the Logan, Ohio, couple who
decided to name their newborn son Tressel Hayes Huffines in honor of
two of Ohio State University's most successful football coaches, Woody
Hayes and Jim Tressel. But can you name the two men who guided the
Buckeyes between the Hayes and Tressel eras? The answer appears at the
bottom of this blog.
• Sports Illustrated has called a triple in baseball the most exciting
12 seconds in sports. The problem, the magazine points out, is that
there's often not a lot of incentive to try for third since stopping at
second puts you in position to score on most singles.
• Bobblehead figurine
mania is everywhere these days in sports. It makes me wish I had held
onto my Green Bay Packers bobblehead in the 1960s, which surely would
be a first-generation collector's item today. I wasn't a Packers fan
and the toy-like figure didn't resemble a particular player, so it
didn't hold much interest for me. Oh well, at least I kept my baseball
cards.
• On the surface, moving baseball games from a snow-piled Cleveland
to Milwaukee wouldn't seem to make a lot of sense. Major League
Baseball took that route, however, after a foot of snow in Cleveland
wreaked havoc with early-season games scheduled there, wiping out the Indians' entire series with Seattle and threatening another with the Los Angeles
Angels.
Officials decided the best solution would be to find a nearby
neutral site with a dome to play the games, thus the choice of Milwaukee's Miller Park,
which has a retractable roof. To help lure fans, good seats were sold
for $10, which was enough of a bargain to attract 19,000 fans
to to Tueday night's series opener. "I know a lot of people from Cleveland [who] live in Chicago came racing up after work," said superfan John Adams. The move was the first made for weather reasons since
2004, when hurricane Ivan forced the Florida Marlins to play the
Montreal Expos in Chicago.
• As mentioned in this space recently, the 60th anniversary of
Jackie Robinson's integration of baseball will be celebrated Sunday,
with every Dodger wearing Jackie's old number, 42. Players on other
teams have since announced their plans to follow suit. The one player
who can salute Robinson without even trying is relief ace Mariano
Rivera of the Yankees. He normally wears 42 even though Major League
Baseball retired the number on every club on the 50th anniversary.
That's because MLB grandfathered its continued use to anybody already
wearing it. Rivera is the sole player still active who reserves that
right. Because the number has been retired, though, the Yankees won't
have to do it again when Rivera calls it quits. That's a good thing,
since the Yankees have already retired more numbers (15) than any other
team and face the prospect of having to take more numbers out of
circulation in the future. Current stars who would seem to eventually
merit consideration for the honor are Derek Jeter (#2), Jorge Posada
(#20), Manager Joe Torre (#6), and possibly ex-Yankee Bernie Williams
(#51). See if you can name the Yankee greats who wore these retired
numbers (the answers are at the end of the blog): 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 (two
players), 9, 10, 15, 16, 23, 32, 37, 44, 49.
• Although I'm not a big fan of oversize logos and overwrought
designs sometimes used to decorate basketball courts these days, I did
admire the tasteful electric-guitar motif used in Cleveland for this
year's NCAA women's basketball Final Four. The art, which tied in with
the city's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, ran basically the length of the
court at Quicken Loans Arena, but because the overlaid design was done
discreetly, with a color that blended well with the wood planking, it
worked.
• Two-time Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip was charged with
reckless driving near his North Carolina home, it was reported this week. The news made
me realize that it's surprising that you hardly ever read about race-car drivers getting pulled over for lead-footed or reckless maneuvers.
• Maybe her golfing buddies should start calling Elsie McLean
"Tiger." She's obviously "got game" and isn't resting on her laurels.
Last weekend, playing at Bidwell Park in Chico, Calif., McLean, at age
102, scored her first-ever hole-in-one. She did so using a driver on
the par-3, 100-yard fourth hole. On April 24 she's scheduled to appear
on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" to explain how she broke the hole-in-one age
record of 101, which was set when Harold Stilson aced a hole in 2001.
• The NCAA has compiled an interesting probability table
showing what percentage of high school athletes go on to compete in college and professionally. The data
shows that ice hockey (among five men's sports and one women's) enjoys
the highest continuation rate, with 11 percent of boys who played in
high school going on to play in college. Baseball was next with 6.1
percent, followed by football (5.7 percent), soccer (5.5 percent),
women's basketball (3.3 percent), and men's basketball (3 percent).
Professionally, women's pro basketball was the hardest of all to break
in to, with only .02 percent who played basketball in high school
landing pro careers.
• Here's guessing that the Detroit Tigers are the only pro sports
team ever to be owned consecutively by two pizza tycoons. Tom Monaghan, the owner of the Domino's franchise, sold the club to Mike Ilitch of Little Caesar's fame.
• To throw a baseball from Point A to Point B might seem a simple
matter, but in the hands of a rusty-armed politician, it is anything
but. Cincinnati Mayor Mark Mallory proved this point at the Reds' home
opener, when his ceremonial first pitch was so wide of the plate that
comedians and Internet users tapped its laugh value. Rather than
ridicule the errant throw, however, John Geisen, the president of
Izzy's deli, decided to capitalize on it, naming a sandwich the Mark
Mallory Screwball. It's "any two meats tossed in the general direction
of a bun or two pieces of bread." The price: $7.75, when served with
pickles and a potato pancake.
• If you think Major League Baseball led the far-westward migration
of pro sports by relocating the Dodgers and Giants to California, think
again. The National Football League actually beat baseball to the punch
by 12 years. What many forget is that the league moved the Cleveland
Rams to Los Angeles in 1946.
• Have you ever wondered why a baseball field is called a diamond,
when it's clearly not, geometrically speaking. A true diamond
incorporates two obtuse angles. More accurately, it should be called a
square, but as baseball historian Peter Morris explains in his
fascinating book, "A Game of Inches: The Stories Behind the Innovations
That Shaped Baseball," the early fields were too irregular to call the
resulting shape a square. Back in the sports pre-Civil War era,
"convenient trees, posts, and pumps" defined the flexible layout, as
surely such objects still do for sandlot games. Morris's book, by the
way, can bog down in arcane, historical detail, but on the whole, I'd
recommend it to anyone interested in tracing the origins and evolution
of baseball. If nothing else, the depth of research is impressive.
• When the Rutgers women's basketball team sits down with apologetic
talk-show host Don Imus to air out their feelings about his insensitive
description of them, let's hope they seize the moment. Not by blasting
him, which they've already done to some degree in a press conference,
but by inviting him to their games next season. Imus, I'd think, would
feel compelled to attend at least some games to show not only
genuine repentance, but newfound appreciation of a team that made it to
the NCAA Finals this year, and is good enough to return next year.
• On Sunday's Masters golf tournament telecast, CBS didn't seem to have a
wealth of information about the surprise winner, Zach
Johnson, but I'm guessing he's the first Iowan to ever win a coveted
green jacket. His name sounds as middle American as it looks next to
those of the three guys who finished two strokes behind him - Retief
Goosen, Rory Sabbatini, and Tiger Woods. Johnson played his
collegiate golf at non-national power Drake University (that's in Des
Moines).
Fittingly, he began his professional career modestly, playing
on something called the Prairie Golf Tour and eventually becoming the
top player on the minor-league Nationwide Tour. Since moving up to the
PGA Tour in 2004, he's blended in with the crowd, but hasn't really
disappeared into it. While winning just one other tournament, the 2004
BellSouth Classic, he's been among the top 40 players each year and was a
Ryder Cup team member last year.
The thing that stood out to me about
Johnson on Sunday was that he didn't get rattled – not after Woods scored
what might have seemed an ominous eagle at 13th, nor when he reached the
16th green, where he had three-putted from three feet away on Friday.
Needing a confidence-building putt, he drained an eight-footer for a
birdie. Later, when interviewed on national television in the famous
Butler Cabin by CBS anchor Jim Nantz, Johnson acknowledged that the win
would change his life as a golfer, but he vowed that he would remain
the same person as before. In other words, a good ol' Iowa boy.
• True-blue tennis aficionados won't like the idea, but I think it's
time that the sport do something radical with its major team
competitions, namely incorporate them into the Olympics
to give them much greater prominence and sharper focus. As it is, I'm
guessing that many average sports fans don't have a clue about how or when
these events are conducted. There is nothing wrong with awarding both
individual medals and team cups at the Olympics, which truly would
become a can't-miss event for the top players if all the tennis world
stopped every four years to concentrate on this ultracompetition. In
case you missed it, by the way, which seems altogether possible, the
United States and Sweden advanced last weekend into one Davis Cup semifinal, with Germany facing Russia in the other, to be held Sept. 21-23.
• Millions of baseball fans know Peter Gammons
as an ESPN baseball analyst whose broadcasting and writing on the sport
have earned him recognition by the Baseball Hall of Fame. What many
outside Boston may not know is that he is also an avid rock guitarist
who occasionally jams with Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein, who shares the
same musical passion. Earlier this week, Gammons played in a concert to
benefit Epstein's foundation, amusingly named the Foundation to Be
Named Later, and also rolled out a CD, "Never Slow Down, Never Grow Old."
• I'll go out on a limb, though admittedly probably not a very long one, and predict that Gail Goestenkors
will do at the University of Texas what she never was quite able to do
at Duke, which is coach a women's NCAA championship basketball
team. She took two different Duke teams to the brink, in 1999 and 2006, only to see
them lose in the finals, and this year saw her top-ranked team upset in the regional semifinals by Rutgers. With the talent pool in the state of Texas
and the institutional and fan support at UT, I see a national
championship within four years, tops. The Longhorns won their lone
women's basketball title in 1986 with a perfect 34-0 record under Jody Conradt, who has retired after becoming only the second women's coach ever to reach 900 victories.
• Billy Donovan's decision
to stay at the University of Florida despite losing all five starters
from the two-time man's NCAA basketball champions, raises an interesting
question: Can a football-oriented school build and maintain a
tradition of basketball excellence? Donovan clearly thinks so,
otherwise he might have left for Kentucky, where he once was an
assistant coach. To a lesser degree, the University of Wisconsin is
working on a similar double track, but as fans of the University of
Michigan well know, it can be hard to keep both football and basketball
programs hitting on all cylinders simultaneously, and football tends to
rule the roost.
• I'm beginning to think that Kevin Garnett of the Minnesota
Timberwolves may join Charles Barkley, Patrick Ewing, Karl Malone, and John
Stockton among the greatest NBA players to never win a championship. Garnett is completing his 12th season and it appears Minnesota will miss the playoffs for a third straight year.
• A growing trend in pro sports is to provide a mixed set of two
attractions for the price of one. Mostly these doubleheaders involve a
rock concert right after the game, as was the case recently when the
Wreckers, a female country-pop duo, performed after the Boston Bruins
hosted the Montreal Canadiens. Bonus concerts are nice, but I'm
partial to some of the dual events the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers have
put on, including their annual career fair, in which customers who
purchase a $35 game ticket are encouraged to bring multiple copies of
their resumes to share at an afternoon fair with representatives of
numerous local businesses.
• As Major League Soccer fans await this season's ballyhooed import, British star David Beckham, they may not have noticed an interesting outmigration across "the pond." Three teams in the English Premier League are now owned by American businessmen with stateside teams in other sports. Malcom Glazer
simultaneously owns Manchester United and the NFL's Tampa Bay
Buccaneers; Tom Hicks (MLB's Texas Rangers and the NHL's Dallas Stars) and George
Gilllett (the NHL's Montreal Canadiens) jointly own Liverpool; and Randy Lerner
of the NFL's Cleveland Browns owns Aston Villa.
• Ironically, Tiger Woods may not be available to play in this year's AT&T National Tournament, which the PGA Tour has turned into Tiger's own event by making him the host and his philanthropy, the Tiger Woods Foundation,
the primary beneficiary. His wife, Elin, is expecting the couple's
first child right about that time, and Woods says that may prevent him
from playing in the event, which will mark the tour's return to
Washington, D.C. Part of the proceeds will be used to build a new Tiger Woods Learning Center, similar to the youth education complex that he opened in Anaheim, Calif., last year.
• Roger Clemens has four sons - Koby, Kody, Kory, and Kacy - whose
names were inspired by the "K" baseball uses to score strikeouts. A
backwards "K" indicates the batter was caught looking, but why this
rather odd choice of letters, anyway? The usual explanation is that "S"
was already assigned to sacrifices, so the ruleskeepers resourcefully
turned to "K" because it was the last letter of "struck."
Today, of
course, it seems odd that a sacrifice should take precedence over a
strikeout in scorekeeping parlance, but it's important to remember that
pitchers originally weren't supposed to try to get batters out. Their
job, in the early days, was to make slow, underhanded tosses - to
"serve the ball over the plate," Alan Schwarz says in his book "The
Numbers Game: Baseball's Lifelong Fascination with Statistics." That
all changed, Schwarz explains, in 1860, when 18-year-old Jim Creighton
of the Brooklyn Excelsiors began using an imperceptible wrist flick to
make the ball harder to hit. This evolved into the batter-pitcher duels
that have long been the essence of baseball.
Clemens, clearly, has held
the upper hand in many of these mano-a-mano battles. He has the
second-most strikeouts in major-league history with 4,604, trailing only fellow
Texan Nolan Ryan, who fanned 5,714 batters during his career. For
Clemens to hold his No. 2 position, though, he may need to keep playing,
since Randy Johnson is only 98 strikeouts behind the Rocket.
• It was nice to see my good buddy Arnold Palmer handling the
ceremonial first shot honors at the Masters this year. I jest, of
course, about our close friendship, but seeing Arnie again reminds me
of the time I was promised a private audience with the golfing great by a public relations rep.
Although the details are fuzzy now, I believe it was 1995 when Palmer,
a founder of The Golf Channel, was involved in the cable enterprise's launch, and some of his minions may have been pushing too hard to get him in the media spotlight. One member of the PR machinery contacted me and asked if I'd like to visit with Palmer and even better yet, to have dinner with him at his house during a
trip I had planned to Florida as a sportswriter for the Monitor. This sounded too good be be true, but I went along
with the come-on anyhow.
The dinner never came to pass, and the
publicist didn't deliver on the promise of a sit-down interview,
either. Ultimately, I had to settle for a stand-up, mini interview at
the Arnold Palmer Invitational. Not only that, I had to wait out Arnie's
annual mass interview at the Bay Hill Club in Orlando before a hurried
introduction and a few questions. I never held getting such a short shrift against Palmer, who seemed unaware of any promises
made to me, but I sometimes wonder what happened to that tricky
publicist.
• Kudos to the Atlanta Braves for choosing an exterminator to serve
as the team's new public address announcer. Casey Motter's only
previous experience was announcing youth baseball and football games in
Peachtree City, an Atlanta suburb, where a Braves executive discovered
him. Motter, who has four sons, ages 5 to 14, was invited to join about
a dozen candidates, with radio and professional voice backgrounds of
various kinds, in auditioning for the vacancy. He got the nod with one
condition: He couldn't flounder under pressure during a couple of
preseason games, which he didn't.
• Three-point shots are the daggers of college basketball. Make them
with any regularity and your team's chances of winning are much
improved, as they should be. But there are enough long-distance
marksmen these days that it's probably time to adopt the NBA
three-point line, which is 23 ft. 9 in. straight out from the basket
rather than 19 ft. 9 in., which is the college distance. Moving the
line out might encourage more mid-range shots, which, in my mind, would
be a good thing.
• There's probably no player in the WNBA happier that the league
plays in the summer than Lindsey Harding, the Duke All-America guard.
Fifteen minutes after the Phoenix Mercury made her the No. 1 overall pick in
this week's WNBA draft, Phoenix traded her to the Minnesota Lynx. A
Houston native, Harding says she doesn't "do well with the cold at
all." Minnesota summers, however, are something she can get used to.
• Boston Globe sports columnist Bob Ryan went on a rant this week
after the newest members of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame were
announced and there were no players named. I would agree that it seems
odd to name several coaches, a referee, and one whole team (the 1966
Texas Western squad that made civil rights as well as basketball
history), but not designate a single individual player for
enshrinement. I'd go a step further, though, and say the Hall of Fame
missed the boat by filling its new class of inductees with all men.
Surely, there's a woman in some category - player, coach, contributor -
that deserves to be admitted in any given year.
• When it comes to group precision, the Navy's Blue Angels have nothing
on the grounds crew at Augusta National Golf Club. A Masters tournament
picture in The New York Times this week shows 14 riding lawnmowers
rolling down a fairway together, side by side, seemingly just inches
apart.
• Have you noticed how Buckeye athletes identify their school as
"The Ohio State University," not just as Ohio State? I'm sure there's a
tradition here that people at the school want to drive home to the
public. I can relate to their efforts, having seen my alma mater
frequently called the University of Indiana, which it's not. The proper
name is always Indiana University.
• Hats off to the Los Angeles Dodgers for an inspired idea. Every
Dodger player will wear Jackie Robinson's old jersey number, 42, on
April 15, the 60th anniversary of his historic entry into major-league
baseball. On the 50th anniversary, every team retired the
number.
• And speaking of retired numbers, you qualify as a trivia
overachiever if you know the name of the only Tampa Bay player whose
number has been retired by the Devil Rays. See the bottom of this blog
for the answer.
• University of Tennessee basketball Coach Pat Summitt strikes me as
fiery, tough, and intensely competitive, but fair and a first-class
human being. I can see why young athletes would want to play for her,
and why she has been able to produce seven NCAA championship teams.
• Long before I knew anything about any of the other historically
black colleges, I knew about Grambling, or Grambling State University,
to be more formal. That's because NFL fans, even young ones like
myself, were aware that Grambling was like a small-college Notre Dame,
turning out pro-caliber players during the 1960s, even stars such as
Hall of Famers Buck Buchanan and Willie Davis. The man at the helm was
estimable coach Eddie Robinson, whose passing this week prompted many
lengthy written tributes. I once had the pleasure of sitting around a
table with Robinson along with a small group of other college football
writers. I'm sorry I didn't keep my notes, but one overarching quality
that I will forever associate with Robinson from that opportunity is
humility. He was a real, down-home, no-frills guy without an ego to
match his 408 career victories, the most ever in the game's upper
echelons. Not surprising, when it came time to reflect on what he had
achieved, he said, "The real record I set for over 50 years is the
fact that I have had one job and one wife."
• Triva answer: Wade Boggs. Although Boggs played most of his Hall
of Fame career with the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees, it was his
last team, the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, that decided to honor the five-time
American League batting champion by retiring his number. Boggs
collected his 3,000th hit
in 1999 – a home run with the Devil Rays. That made him the only member
of the 3,000-hit fraternity to belt a round-tripper to achieve the
milestone. Ironically, he was always known as a singles hitter.
• Now that the University of Florida has strung together an unprecedented triple – national championships in men's basketball sandwiched around one in football – the logical question is: What next? Will the school become an even greater athletic power and possibly make off with the Director's Cup, presented annually to the university with the most successful all-around athletic program by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics?
Stanford, which does well in tennis, golf, volleyball, and other less-covered college sports, has absolutely dominated this award, having won it the last 12 years. Florida finished fifth last year, and has been third three other times.
Even though the Gators are sixth in the current standings (Wisconsin barely leads Stanford at the top), they might move into contention with a strong showing in spring sports. And clearly, Florida, with an annual athletic budget of $70 million, is looking to add more depth to its portfolio and has placed an ad in the NCAA News for a coach for its new women's lacrosse program, which will be launched in the spring of 2010.
In the short term, Gator backers worry about a wholesale exodus of its men's basketball team, with its key players likely to move on to the NBA and Coach Billy Donovan rumored to be the front-runner for the vacancy at Kentucky. If he stays in Gainesville, he'd probably face a major rebuilding year or two, whereas at Kentucky he might be able to catch a perennial power in an off-peak period but ready for a resurgence.
But who knows, if everybody stays put, a three-peat basketball championship would be a strong possibility at Florida. And wouldn't that be an interesting counterpoint to baseball's Florida Marlins, the kings of one-and-done, having gutted two World Series winners before the paint was dry.
• March Madness wasn't as much fun in the men's bracket this year without an underdog like George Mason advancing to the Final Four. Those who prefer seeing nontraditional powers excel, however, should have tuned in to the women's National Invitation Tournament, won by Wyoming. The team was pretty much an afterthought for many years. When Joe Legarski arrived to coach the Cowgirls four years ago, they had only 16 season-ticket holders. Now there are about 1,000, and that number could grow significantly in the least populous US state after Wyoming's NIT championship before 14,000 home fans. A team featuring three Aussies and a Pole knocked off defending champion Kansas State in triple overtime in the semis before toppling Wisconsin, 72-56, in the final.
• There's no doubt in my mind that being a sports fan is one way to
increase a person's geographic literacy. Take, for example, the recent
announcement that the 2011 World Track and Field Championships will be
held in Daegu, South Korea. I'd never heard of the city before, even
though it's the country's fourth-largest. I can thank the Olympics for
many of my other geographic discoveries, such as Sarajevo, Albertville,
Sapporo, and Nagano.
• For all the talk about the Cubs not winning the World Series since
1908, let's not forget that neither Texas team has even made it to the
World Series, much less won it. The Astros date to 1962 and the
Rangers, if you include their years as an expansion franchise in
Washington, D.C., to 1960. The other major-league clubs never to have
played in the Series, with their first year of existence in parantheses, are the Seattle Mariners (1977); Colorado Rockies (1993);
the Washington Nationals, the ex-Montreal Expos (1969); and Tampa Bay Devil Rays (1998).
• My wife is pretty amused by how basketball players chew on their mouthpieces. My pet peeve is how some players colorize these teeth protectors, leaving the appearance that there are teeth missing.
• Lindsey Harding, the Duke senior who captured most of the national player of the year awards this season, looks to have star potential off the basketball court as well as on it. About a week after she missed two last-second free throws in a heartbreaking regional loss to Rutgers, ESPN brought her onto its set at the women's Final Four. Host Trey Wingo grilled her about the missed foul shots and Harding handled the questions with dignity and poise. She didn't shy away from offering thoughtful answers about what had to be the low-point of her college career. I expect to see her back, working as an analyst someday.
• It's understandable that President Bush would want to present the Commander-in-Chief's trophy, awarded to the military academy football team that wins the annual three-team rivalry. But is it really that important that Navy, last season's trophy winner, be invited back for a Rose Garden salute for a fourth straight year? Bush did the honors Monday, but missed the Washington Nationals home opener because of scheduling difficulties. It was his second straight year he didn't make it to RFK Stadium to throw out the ceremonial first pitch. President Howard Taft started the tradition when he did the honors in 1910. According to the Baseball Almanac, one newspaper account of the toss described it this way: Taft threw the ball "with his good, trusty right arm, and the virgin sphere scudded across the diamond, true as a die to the pitcher's box, where Walter Johnson gathered it in."
• The San Francisco Giants say they hope to send a message to their fans by installing 590 solar panels at AT&T Park. Actually, the team's role is to provide a high-visibility location for utility PG&E's installation above the port walk that rings the outfield. Utility customers, in fact, will foot the bill, paying between $1 million and $1.5 million for the installation of equipment that will collect as much solar energy as 40 home roof systems and connect it to the San Francisco power grid. The Giants figure the project casts their energy-conserving park in a favorable light. The stadium uses fluorescent lighting, motion-sensor lights, and has a new high-definition scoreboard that uses 78 percent less energy than the old board.
• In a wonderful tribute to Hank Aaron, the Georgia State University baseball team is wearing specially designed uniforms this season made to resemble the one Aaron and his Atlanta Braves teammates wore in 1974. That's the year he broke Babe Ruth's career home run record with No. 715. Credit Georgia State coach Greg Frady with coming up with the inspired idea, just as Barry Bonds begins a countdown to surpass Hammerin' Hank's career-ending total of 755. Frady grew up as a huge fan of Aaron's and figured this would be the ideal time to honor the slugger who played just blocks from the Georgia State campus, and has continued to represent his city and sport well. As a gesture of appreciation, Aaron met with the team and agreed to be photographed with them for the school's baseball media guide.
• High-scoring Gilbert Arenas of the Washington Wizards got called on the carpet recently by the NBA for making $10 challenge-type bets with Trailblazer fans during a road game in Portland. In one case, Arenas bet he'd hit the winning basket, and when he lost that wager he said he'd use the fan's e-mail address to pay up. The league spoke to Arenas and got him to cease and desist such misconduct. The NBA, however, has to be careful in handling such infractions, since it doesn't seem totally averse to pushing back from modern gambling culture. The league held this year's All-Star Game in Las Vegas, the Boston Celtics have a tie-in with the Massachusetts Lottery with a $5 instant-ticket promotion, and the Connecticut Sun team of the WNBA, an NBA subsidiary, plays its home games at Mohegan Sun Arena, which is part of a casino complex.
• Although baseball's Giants and A's share the Bay Area, they can seem poles apart. Certainly that's how actor Tom Hanks
felt as a teenage soft drink vendor at A's games. "They might as well
have been the Peking Giants. They were in a different world," Hanks
told Dan Rosen for an article in last fall's World Series program. "I
didn't pay much attention to them." One of the occupational hazards of
hawking sodas, he remembered, was going home with sticky pants from all
the soda that sloshed onto them. Hanks remains such a big fan of the
game that he and fellow celebrities Ron Howard and Dennis Miller went
on a seven-ballpark tour last summer.
• After 10 years spent in the University of Kentucky's basketball
pressure cooker as coach of the school's men's basketball team, Tubby Smith probably is going to enjoy getting out
from under it in his new job as coach of the University of Minnesota's
Golden Gophers. Smith had the misfortune, if you want to call it that,
of taking Kentucky to a national championship in his very first season
in Lexington. That set up unrealistically high expectations in a state
where many people don't suffer even just good teams lightly. In
Minneapolis, though, fans should be happy with any incremental
improvement after Minnesota won just three of 16 Big Ten Conference
games this season and was 9-22 overall.
• By writing blogs, athletes can exercise their own power of the
press and go right to the people, essentially bypassing reporters, who
may misquote them or take their comments out of context. In Boston,
some sportswriters are wary that Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling may be
using his "38 Pitches" blog to
circumvent the local beat writers and columnists and better control his
image and relationship with the fans. Be that as it may, Schilling
claims he's not trying to sanitize what people say about him on "38
Pitches," and professes to let people even rip him on the site, so long
as they don't use foul language.
• In a revealing story about college basketball team managers, Pete
Thamel of The New York Times notes that the three managers at the
University of Memphis make themselves available to the coaches 24/7 by
living in the team's practice facility. Sleeping on couches in the
players' lounge might not be ideal, but there's no rent and ready access to a big-screen TV and pool table.
• The women's basketball Final Four doesn't start until Sunday in
Cleveland, but I think we can already pick the player with a name that
most belongs in the city's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: Epiphanny Prince
of Rutgers. If the name sounds familiar it may be because the talented
freshman scored a national high school record 113 points in a single
game last year while playing for Murry Bergtraun High School in
Brooklyn.
• Harvard University couldn't have been too pleased with the Boston
Globe article that pointed out that the school doesn't have a single
black coach in charge of any of the school's 41 varsity teams. That
could change any day now, since Harvard has reportedly interviewed two
African-American candidates for its men's basketball head coaching
vacancy: Tommy Amaker and Mike Jarvis. Amaker's previous stops have
been at Seton Hall and Michigan, which just fired him. Jarvis's head
coaching jobs have been at Boston University, George Washington, and
St. John's. He's the local guy made good, having started out just blocks from
Harvard at Cambridge Rindge and Latin High School, where he coached
future Georgetown and New York Knicks star Patrick Ewing.
• Any hopes for an orderly succession in the New York Yankees' hierarchy have
hit a major bump in the road. The guy whom owner George Steinbrenner had
previously mentioned as his likely successor is Steve Swindal,
Steinbrenner's son-in-law. But Swindal's wife has just filed for
divorce. Steinbrenner's two sons reportedly haven't been interested in
assuming the reins, but one or both of them may be forced
into taking a more active role soon.
• I think it's safe to say that if freshmen had been eligible to play when
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (then Lew Alcindor) entered college, UCLA's
monopoly of the NCAA men's basketball championship wouldn't have been
interrupted. UCLA won back-to-back titles before he arrived, and began
a streak of seven straight in his sophomore year. In 1965-66, however,
Texas Western (Texas-El Paso today) came out of nowhere to beat
Kentucky for all the marbles while Alcindor bided his time on the
Bruins' freshman team. When he became eligible the following season, he
launched his varsity career by scoring 56 points against crosstown
rival Southern Cal. UCLA went on to a perfect 30-0 season and another
NCAA championship. Abdul-Jabbar, who is now a special assistant with
the Los Angeles Lakers, is the co-author of a new book, "On the
Shoulders of Giants: My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissance."
• If North Carolina and Kansas had reached the Final Four, instead
of losing in the regional finals, there was the possibility for a 50th
anniversary rematch of their famous 1957 showdown, in which the Tar
Heels outlasted Kansas and super soph Wilt Chamberlain in triple
overtime.
• Even if swimmer Michael Phelps comes up short in his quest to win
eight gold medals at the current world championships in Australia,
you've got to give the guy a lot of credit for sticking around after a
spectacular effort at the 2004 Athens Olympics, where he won eight
medals, including six gold. After that, you might have thought he'd
lose his hunger to compete.
• According to Wikipedia, and I have no reason to doubt it, the term
March Madness far predated its current association with the NCAA men's
basketball tournament. An Illinois high school sports official is
credited with coining the term in 1939 and, years later, a book about
the state's basketball tournament took "March Madness" as its title.
Broadcaster Brent Musburger, who spent his early years in the business
in Chicago, is credited with helping to identify the college tournament
season as "March Madness" in the early 1980s.
• Correction: A few blogs ago, I said that CBS college basketball
commentator Billy Packer would be working his 25th Final Four. While
he's been the lead analyst for the network that long, this actually
will be his 33rd consecutive year dissecting Final Four action, having done his first star turn for NBC in 1975 alongside Curt
Gowdy. That was a historic occasion to be breaking in, since it was the
last season for UCLA coach John Wooden. Packer was at the mike for the
final, in which the Bruins beat Kentucky for their 10th title under the
Wizard of Westwood. Packer has been a broadcast voice for so long that
many viewers probably know nothing of his credentials. The son of a
college coach in Pennsylvania, Packer was an all-Atlantic Coast
Conference guard at Wake Forest, where he helped lead the Demon Deacons
to the Final Four in 1962. Besides his on-air work during the
basketball season, he spends most of his time as a real estate
developer in North Carolina, although at various times he has organized
bicycle races, including the Tour DuPont on the Atlantic seaboard and
the Tour of China.
• You've got to love the ingenuity of zealous sports fans like Aaron
Goldsmith, who rushed into new Busch Stadium last year in search of
several "firsts," including first hot dog sold at the park. He had a
friend videotape him running up to an outfield concession stand as soon
as the gates opened, then managed to sell the hot dog for $270
to a Tampa, Fla., radio talk show. It cost $77 to express-mail it in
dry ice, but regardless of the profit, it makes for great
storytelling. Goldsmith, a huge Cardinals fan, also claims to have been
the first to sit in many of the bleacher seats, zig-zagging his
posterior over rows at a time. Maybe best of all, he left a record of
his historic visit, using duct tape to adhere a custom-designed logo to
commemorate the occasion on a hidden part of a steel support beam.
• If anyone knows of a more sensational effort in a basketball
championship game than Anthony Atkinson's, please speak up. Atkinson
scored 10 points in the last 39 seconds to lead North Carolina's Barton
College past Winona State of Minnesota in the Division II men's title game.
These points were critical in Barton's 77-75 win, since Atkinson's
next-to-last basket, on a driving reverse layup, tied the game with 11
seconds remaining, and his final basket came on a layup after a steal and pass
from teammate Bobby Buffaloe as time expired. The stunning loss snapped
the two-year, 57-game winning streak of the defending-champion Winona State team.
• Imagine getting fined $30,000 for carrying on a conversation with the spectator sitting next to you. That's what happened to Danny Ainge,
the executive director of basketball operations for the Boston Celtics,
when the NBA disapproved of his chatting with the mother of University
of Texas freshman phenom Kevin Durant
during this month's Big 12 Conference tournament. The NBA deemed this
excessive contact with a player who hasn't yet declared himself
eligible for the NBA draft. So the Celtics are out 30 grand, but what
gets overlooked here is how an NBA executive winds up in the middle of
the Longhorn rooting section. It's
possible somebody with the university may be partly responsible for this costly outcome.
• Greg Oden,
Ohio State's All-American freshman center, is almost certain to head for
the NBA next season, but until then he's a student, right? Well, up to
a point. Sports Illustrated says he's only taking two courses this
quarter, sociology and the history of rock and roll.
• The last time Ohio State won
the men's Final Four, in 1960, the star of the team was Jerry Lucas.
But while Lucas led the Buckeyes over the University of California in
the championship game, with 16 points, Ohio State got 15, 13, 12, and
10 points from its remaining starters, who included John Havlicek and
Larry Siegfried, who both went on to play for the Boston Celtics. Bob
Knight was an Ohio State reserve who took one shot, but didn't score.
• A "We're Just Fans" reader wrote in to question my opinion that
women's basketball doesn't have enough depth to put on a competitive 64-team NCAA
tournament, and that this leads to more lopsided games than in the
men's bracket. She cites this statistic from the current
tournaments: First-round blowouts, decided by 20+ points: men (11),
women (13). "Maybe neither tournament should be at 64," the fan concludes.
• New York Giants All-Pro defensive lineman Michael Strahan
needed an appellate court ruling to put a hold on his $6.5 million in
divorce payments to his ex-wife, all of which makes me wonder how many
athletes get their future spouses to sign prenuptial agreements.
• During March Madness, the ball can't be brought across midcourt
without millions of eyes noticing the blue center-jump circle
emblazoned with the letters "NCAA." Increasingly, courts are treated as
huge billboards, causing some to
wonder about visual clutter, says the in-house NCAA News. Rules prevent
commercial logos from being any larger than 8 ft. x 10 ft., but there's
a trend to supersize school names and icons. At the University of Kansas, for example, the Jayhawk mascot that's painted at center court measures 28 ft. x 31 ft.
• Subscribing to the theory that it's always better to play before a
packed smaller house than a half-full larger one, I'd urge organizers
of the women's NCAA basketball tournament to rethink where they hold
games before the Final Four. During game telecasts over the weekend,
there definitely were way too many empty seats visible in the
background, even in a basketball hotbed like Greensboro, N.C. I'd
suggest seeking out mid-size cities willing to virtually guarantee
sellouts in mid-size arenas.
• In the National Football League, where spectating opportunities
are limited to once a week, ticket demand is high for most games.
Surely, this has been the case of late. The league just announced that
it set a paid attendance record for
all games for a fifth straight year in 2006. Average regular-season
attendance was 67,738, with the Washington Redskins topping the chart
with 87,631 per game. That's nearly capacity at 91,704-seat FedEx
Field, the league's largest by far.
• Even if you're not a college hockey fan, you've got to love a
sport that provides a showcase for the Universities of North Dakota and
Maine, which join Michigan State and Boston College in this season's Frozen Four.
If you name where the former two schools are located, go the to top of
the class. The answer: Grand Forks, N.D., and Orono, Maine.
• For Duke's top-ranked women's team, losing to Rutgers 53-52 in a
NCAA regional final was especially heartbreaking for two reasons: 1)
Duke had beaten Rutgers in New Jersey by 40 points in December, and 2)
the captain of the Blue Devils, senior Lindsey Harding, missed two free throws
with one-tenth of a second left. Both clanged off the back of the rim
as she made sure not to come up short. Ironically, she wouldn't have
been on the line at all if she hadn't made a sensational steal at
midcourt with five seconds left and been fouled after a heroic drive to
the basket.
• Little-known Marist College
is out of the NCAA women's basketball tournament now, but, hey, it's
not too late to place an online order for Marist "Sweet 16" T-shirts
and other apparel. The Red Foxes had their Cinderella run in the
postseason ended by Tennessee.
• Tiger Woods said he expects the PGA Tour will fine him for letting
tennis player Roger Federer, his new friend, follow him from inside the gallery ropes
during a practice round in Miami for the CA Championship. Clearly, this
sort of thing could quickly get out of hand if you let it, with all
sorts of tag-along cronies and VIPs, including sponsors, garnering
fairway-access privileges. Federer's case does raise some interesting
questions, however, among which is how does a celebrity golf fan avoid
being hassled by the crowds? Maybe every player should be allowed one
premium pass for a walk-behind fan who must abide by certain rules.
• In all my years watching college basketball, I never saw two teams play with more defensive zeal and ball-hawking skill than UCLA
and Kansas did last Saturday. There were an amazing 32 steals, with
Kansas enjoying a slight 17-to-15 edge, even though UCLA won to advance
to the Final Four.
• Do you think more college basketball recruiters may start booking
flights to Cameroon, given the presence of two key players from the
African republic on UCLA's current roster – sophomores Luc Richard Mbah a Moute and Alfred Aboya?
• Correction: A few blogs ago, I said that CBS college basketball analyst Billy Packer would be working his 25th straight Final Four. He's been the leading analyst for the network's college basketball coverage that long, but his work at the Final Four dates back even further, to 1975, when he joined with Curt Gowdy on NBC to call John Wooden's swan song game at UCLA, the Bruins' victory over Kentucky. That means Packer will be working his 33rd straight NCAA championship game next Monday night (April 2), which must be some sort of record.
• That team that you hear screaming "Argh!" must be the University of Massachusetts
men's hockey squad. It beat the University of Maine four times this
month (twice in back-to-back games that closed out the regular season
and twice in Hockey East tournament action) only to lose their fifth
meeting Saturday, 3-1, in NCAA tournament play.