Thursday, July 18, 2024

Who's Your Best? (Cont.)

At the request of the site’s benevolent curator, I pondered competitive connections with primo athletes and relationships with illustrious former peers, and found both lacking. Or more accurately, my recall and engagement are lacking. But in the interest of thematic continuity, here’s a meager addition to “Who’s Your Best?” 

The area south of Annapolis, Md., where I grew up in the 1960s and ‘70s was transitioning from rural to suburban and produced no athletes of note. Granted, plenty of professional athletes come from tiny, nondescript places – Jerry Rice is from a small town in eastern Mississippi with a population of fewer than 1,000, Bo Jackson is from Bessemer, Ala. (pop. 27,000) and Scottie Pippen came from Hamburg, Ark. (pop. 3,000) – just not my nondescript place. Closest I came was a high school buddy, a multi-sport athlete and all-around good goof in his younger days named Dale Castro, who went on to become an All-American punter and kicker at the University of Maryland. 

In my previous life as a newspaper sports guy in southeastern Virginia, I was fortunate to cover an inordinate number of exceptional athletes and events. I saw Allen Iverson and Michael Vick and Alonzo Mourning and Bryant Stith and Chris Slade and Ronald Curry and Percy Harvin and champion quarter-miler LaShawn Merritt and Ticha Penicheiro and Olympic gold medalist Francena McCorory. That list doesn’t even include those who competed in the area as youngsters – David Robinson at the Naval Academy, Elena Delle Donne at Delaware, Brian Westbrook at Villanova – and a metric f*ckton of future college and pro hoopsters at local AAU impresario Boo Williams’ tournaments such as Jason Kidd and Kenny Anderson and Kevin Durant and Breanna Stewart and Tyson Chandler and Maya Moore and Jayson Tatum and Trae Young. 

Given that my longtime home didn’t have major league sports, I saw many of those athletes in their formative years, before they became famous and wealthy. Though I did witness all-timer Annika Sorenstam win her 72nd and final LPGA Tour event in Williamsburg and saw then-local pro Curtis Strange at the height of his powers at the annual PGA Tour stop there. I spent time around future world champion boxer and Norfolk native Pernell Whitaker and his 1984 Olympic teammates Evander Holyfield, Mark Breland and Meldrick Taylor, who were managed and packaged together for several years and regularly stopped in Hampton Roads. 

Which gets to the “coverage” part. Much of my work put me around other Virginia and mid-Atlantic reporters, many of whom were aces if not well known outside their readership and writer circles. Occasional Washington NFL games and ACC coverage put me in rooms with a bunch of Washington Post staffers. Former columnists Dave Kindred and Ken Denlinger were gracious and amiable. John Feinstein was always friendly to me, but I get that he rubs some folks the wrong way. Before he became TV Personality Mike and Mouthpiece of the Stars, Michael Wilbon was approachable and receptive. Liz Clarke was a kind of jill-of-all-trades who wrote about everything from the NFL to tennis to NASCAR to the Olympics. She was a lovely and friendly and chatty presence and more than willing to quaff a couple beers after deadline in the press parking lot with the rest of us idiots following night races at Richmond International Raceway. 

I covered a Super Bowl, three NCAA Final Fours, a national championship football game and a slew of NCAA Tournament games, men and women. Which is to say that periodically I was around a lot of Bigfoot writers and journalists, most of whom I barely glanced at because I was either busy working or hanging with those I knew. A couple of them, however, left an impression: Before he moved to political writing and blogging, Charlie Pierce was a top-shelf sportswriter, mostly for Boston and New England outlets. He dips back into the genre now and then and remains a go-to when he does so. I shared a few press rooms with him at several NCAA Tournament sites in the ‘80s, ‘90s and early ‘00s. In the days before the internet and when everything was available, I managed to read his stuff on occasion and marveled at his style. In person, from a distance, he was smart, gregarious, and a wicked quick writer. He also often wore a baseball hat with patches of Historically Black Colleges and Universities logos sewn into the crown, a small yet visible statement of his support and solidarity with those under-funded and often underappreciated schools. 

Frank Deford was sports writing royalty. He was one of the preeminent writers and essayists for Sports Illustrated in its heyday, a man whose stuff I read religiously. I shared a few press rooms with him in the ‘80s and ‘90s and tried to keep my gawking to a minimum. Where Pierce often looked like an unmade bed, Deford cut, dare I say, a dashing figure. Tall (6-foot-4), lean, dark hair combed back, rakish mustache, dressed in a sportcoat, button-down collared shirt and slacks, handkerchiefs tucked into lapel pockets, he might have stepped out of a Raymond Chandler novel. As a writer, he was a brilliant stylist and someone who preached observation and detail and description and narrative. There’s a story that he once told a fellow staffer who he thought relied on too many quotes in a feature piece: “You’re a writer, not a stenographer.” 

Best I got. I’ll try to connect and engage better in my next life.

23 comments:

rob said...

deford was so good. loved reading him as a kid. lost a bit of shine for me when i learned he actively pushed back on grant wahl's advocacy for more soccer coverage at sports illustrated and some of his get off my lawn later stuff.

rob said...

biden seems to have lost obama. in which case the convention is gonna be wiiiiiild.

Professor G. Truck said...

wait-- no ween on that 1994 playlist? fuck the entire thing. also missing spoonman and fell on black days. the more I look at that playlist, the more I regret listening to it at all-- it's revising my notions of good music in 1994!

Whitney said...

Ween is on there.

Fell on black days is on there.

Maybe regret not being smarter.

Professor G. Truck said...

but not enough ween . . .

Professor G. Truck said...

but i apologize for my skimming, it's hard to read a playlist in that little window and I had it on shuffle

Whitney said...

I only did one song by each artist

Whitney said...

RIP Bob Newhart. Loved that guy.

OBX dave said...

To be funny the way Newhart was funny is a talent.

Marls said...

Prof Truck is a ween.

rob said...

bob newhart is pissed that he has to share space on the shuttle to st peter with lou dobbs.

rootsminer said...

¿ Think they’re on the same bus to godalajara?

OBX dave said...

New definition of Hulk-a-Mania, brother.

Danimal said...

Day 3 of our Northeastern family vacay. Heading to Bah Hahbuh today from Beantown. Walked a fuckton around the city doing and seeing most of the musts. Tried to eat lunch at Cheers but the kids weren’t having the 35-min wait to eat at some joint a tv show was based on 40 (40?!) years ago. Fine. I know we’ve got a few New England aficionados up in here, so have at it, with recs that is.

Watchin my favorite major for tv in hotel lobby. Still early but I do fear based on leaderboard this has makings of a snooze fest or a finish w entirely unappealing contenders beyond Lowry. Cantlay and Shauffele epitomize boredom and the former is a toolbox. Would love Horschel to remain up there as a local Jax and all around good dude but not likely imo. Spieth is too far back and with way too many awful swings in his bag. Perhaps we can count on Scotty who is 6 back…certainly doable.

Carry on and Happy Friday

rob said...

if you're anywhere near portland around the lunch hour, hit duckfat.

and i'm hoping adam scott makes a run.

rob said...

billy ho's gonna be really happy to be in the clubhouse and out of the wind at -2.

rob said...

impressive couple of days for the big irishman

Lumpy said...

Danimal- in bar harbor, check out the side street cafe and/or the tap and barrel tavern.

rob said...

rory and bob just having absolute howlers. not gonna be great for my fan duel account.

zman said...

No comments how this post is a badass (maybe even American badass?) mic drop by OBX Dave?

rob said...

that's obx dave's style. very self-aggrandizing, that fella.

Whitney said...

pretty boss, tho

OBX dave said...

Hey Drew, gracias, I think. If being fortunate enough to land in a spot and write about primo athletes (and reporters) and not actually attain such status yourself -- reflected glow territory -- qualifies as mic-drop worthy, I guess I'll take it.