Foreword
Where is sport without the words that surround it?
Every day a thousand games are played a million times and
pass by. Sweat is shed by the bucket as wins and losses peel off in
laughter and cheers. Tears fall every second and disappear.
Words preserve sport, the taste and smell of it. We remember
not the simple exercise, but the result and reason why it matters at
all, or why it doesn't. With the words as our guide, we follow and
learn.
As I read these stories each year, I find myself caring about
someone, something, or some sport I know little about and couldn't
have imagined ever wanting to know more about. A writer, by way of
words alone, has made this happen, something so surprising and
delightful that even the familiar sometimes becomes extraordinary,
and the exotic moves close at hand. And I read on.
My daughter has grown up with the detritus of this endless
project all around her. In our home, piles of newspapers, magazines,
and thick manila envelopes fill the places that in other houses are
occupied by -- oh, I don't know -- potted plants, knickknacks, and
knockoffs. Over the course of putting together The Best American
Sports Writing 2001, I've watched her grow from almost four to almost
five and begin to read. It has been astonishing to watch letters
become words and sentences become stories. And she gets lost in other
worlds.
So do I. Still. The experience of creating these books has
taken me from smoke-filled rooms in Las Vegas to hospital beds and
penitentiaries, from mountain peaks to swamps and ocean wrecks, to
locker rooms, playing fields, horse stalls, and a hundred other
places. The best part of creation, and, I suspect, reading, is the
pleasure that comes from being transported outside ourselves to
elsewhere. We become happily lost while finding something lasting in
what otherwise -- without the words -- would remain the unexplored.
Most games go unwatched, and athletes remain anonymous. Even the
fans' most rabid obsession disregards more than it includes.
Whether or not my team or my sport or your team or your sport
appears in this book is, thankfully, immaterial. Final scores do not
often matter here. This is not a book of results or an encyclopedia.
Neither is it an awards ceremony, a testimonial, or a competition.
The collective words of the writers in this book are an invitation, a
conversation with those we'll never meet about things we wouldn't
otherwise experience. Sports is the most subtle of hooks here, one
that by the first sentence begins to be unwrapped by language and
made into something we do care about. Here is a place where Parts
Otherwise Unknown are made familiar.
I suppose that is because the writers both care and use care
to let us know that. When they don't, I can tell and fill landfills
with their poor directions. But when they do and whisper in our ear
and let us in on the secret, this slim book swells and we find our
way. Without the words, I sometimes wonder whether there is such a
thing as sports at all.
So where is sport? A part of it is here, in the words that
follow.
Just listen.
Every season of this process, I read every issue of hundreds of
sports and general interest magazines in search of writing that might
merit inclusion in The Best American Sports Writing. I try not to
miss anything, so each year I also contact the sports editors of some
three hundred newspapers and request their submissions. Similarly, I
ask hundreds of magazine editors to provide complimentary
subscriptions and submissions of individual stories.
But none of us is perfect. That is why I encourage writers,
readers, and all other interested parties to send me stories they've
written or read in the past year that they would like to see
reprinted in this volume. No one should feel shy about submitting his
or her own material. A good description of the selection process can
be found in the December 2000 edition of the Associated Press Sports
Editors newsletter.
I forward the best seventy-five stories or so to the guest
editor, who makes the final selection. Bud Collins exceeded his
reputation as one of the most gracious, cooperative, and enthusiastic
people in this business. Even better, he made some great picks.
To be considered for inclusion in The Best American Sports
Writing 2002, each nonfiction story must have been published in 2001
in either the United States or Canada and must be column-length or
longer. Reprints are not eligible. All submissions must be received
by February 1, 2002.
All submissions must include the name of the author, the date
of publication, and the publication name and address. Photocopies,
tear sheets, or clean copies are fine. Reductions to 8-by-11 are
best. Submissions from online publications must be made in hard copy.
Owing to the volume of material I receive, no submission can be
returned or acknowledged. I also believe it is inappropriate for me
to comment on or critique any individual submission. Publications
that want to be absolutely certain their contributions are considered
are advised to provide a complimentary subscription to the address
listed below. Those that already do so should make sure to extend the
subscription.
Please send subscriptions or submissions to this exact
address:
Glenn Stout
Series Editor
The Best American Sports Writing
PO Box 381
Uxbridge, MA 01569
I may also be contacted by e-mail at [email protected]. No
submissions of material will be accepted electronically.
Copies of previous editions of this book can be ordered
through most bookstores or online book dealers. An index of stories
that have appeared in this series can be found at glennstout.net.
Thanks again go out to the Houghton Mifflin front office,
particularly to editors Eamon Dolan and Emily Little, both of whom
make this project as enjoyable as possible. I also thank Bud Collins
for his exemplary effort, and my wife, Siobhan, and daughter, Saorla,
for all the usual reasons and then some. And to all the writers who
have kept me company this year, I look forward to continuing our
acquaintance in the next edition.
glenn stout
Introduction
Who was Stroganov?
The question didn't flash through my head as it was being
dunked in a plate of the beef dish named for him. In my face
suddenly -- courtesy of a literary critic who doubled as general
manager of the Boston Red Sox -- and splattered all over it, was
enough beef Stroganov to feed a tag team of midget wrestlers.
Ah, the joys of sportswriting.
Still, on most days it beats working for a living. And on
many days it is done extremely well across the United States, as the
selections in this volume attest. I know some of the writers
included, not a majority. But I do believe that their stuff, on view
here, would make any writer proud.
Maybe even Stroganov? But who was he?
Only later did I wonder about the namesake of the entrée of
my sudden immersion. A nineteenth-century Russian nobleman, Sergei
Grigorievich Stroganov, is not to be confused with Nick Strincevich,
who pitched fairly nobly (a 48-49 record) for the Pirates during the
1940s. Stroganov's game was archaeological research, which some of us
sometimes dabble in. Perhaps to compare cavemen of the Dead Ball Age,
like Frank "Home Run" Baker and his American League-leading totals of
11, 10, 12, and 9 dingers between 1911 and 1914, with such
descendants as Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa.
Anyway, my immediate thought, as I wiped away moisturizing
embarrassment with a napkin, was astonishment. But not revenge. The
man who had just given me a facial in a New York hotel function room
was a lot bigger and stronger. He'd batted .292 during a long major-
league career -- and was drunk. Drink, however, had not dulled the
critical faculties welled up within Mike Higgins, overseer of the Red
Sox.
"Not Mike's favorite writer, are you?" observed another diner
at the large round table, Danny Murtaugh, the Pittsburgh manager.
Murtaugh, whom I'd met only minutes before, was kindly trying to take
the edge off within a group, as startled as I, partaking of a
postgame meal at the 1963 World Series.
Conversation centered on Johnny Podres -- until Higgins
lurched up to the table. Podres had shut down the Yankees, 4-1, that
afternoon, sending the Dodgers halfway through their sweep.
As the heavy-handed critic, satisfied with Stroganov-ing me,
staggered off into the maze of tables, Larry Claflin, on my left,
laughed, "Obviously Hig's got a beef with you." Larry, a pal and
colleague, the baseball writer of the Boston American, knew that
Higgins didn't care for my chiding him and the Red Sox on their
despicable failure to employ black players.
His and the team management's racism was evident as they
maintained a vanilla flavor until winning the major-league booby
prize: the last team to put a black on the field, Elijah "Pumpsie"
Green, in 1959. But "racism" and "despicable" were not words you used
in print in connection with my town's golden calves, the Red Sox, in
those days. Particularly in the bygone Boston Herald, my employer at
the time. The business arrangement of the Herald's TV and radio
stations carrying Sox games put the team pretty much above hard
knocks. Prodding and disapproval had to be fairly subtle, but Higgins
got the point -- and I got the Stroganov.
A small price to pay for the fun of being around games and
games-players, and writing about them. And, after all, sportswriters
do like to hear from their readers -- though not so vividly.
I suppose writers and players have ever conducted an
adversarial relationship of sorts: Us and Them. It softens and
hardens, waxes and wanes. Both sides have jobs to do, and sometimes
try to understand each other while getting the job done.
As you'll see, an athlete may let a writer into his life, as
Dale Earnhardt Jr. did Touré in "Kurt Is My Co-Pilot."
Another, Joe DiMaggio, never would, and the writer, Buzz
Bissinger, plumbed other sources in "For Love of DiMaggio."
Gene Collier is the star of his "Ex-Sportswriter," saying to
hell with the job altogether.
Whatever, we always have each other: Us -- as in Us versus
Them. Maybe we, the writers, are a duncely confederation of failed
jocks, wiseacres, pontificators, and believers in the axiom of a
picaresque old boxing impresario, Sam Silverman: "Never louse up a
good story with the facts." And maybe it's true, as expressed by
Richard Nixon's son-in-law, David Eisenhower, after a stint at the
Washington Post: "Newspaper reporters aren't as interesting as they
think they are."
Nevertheless, for me much of the fun, the part I would miss
most, is communing with the brothers and sisters of the scribbling
lodge. Are we still ink-stained wretches? Nobody has been armed with
a quill pen or even a typewriter for a long time.
The former was most likely used to record one of the earliest
quotes in print, dealing with prominent, combative opponents of about
three thousand years ago. In the Old Testament's First Book of Samuel
(previewing Muhammad Ali against Sonny Liston?), a brash young long-
shot called David trash-talked an ogre named Goliath: "I will strike
you down and cut off your head!" And, beating the odds, he did just
that.
Who among us wouldn't have loved to emulate the style of the
crusty English golf writer Leonard Crawley, the Daily Telegraph's
expert of not so long ago? Crawley, in tweed plus-fours and Norfolk
jacket, his stiff upper lip decorated by a curling, rust-toned
Edwardian moustache, showed up at tournaments with his secretary by
his side, a man ready to take dictation whenever. He dictated notes
as they strolled the course, looked them over, and composed and
dictated the story, which his man then phoned to London.
"Isn't that the way to go?" mused the wonderful Los Angeles
Times columnist Jim Murray, observing Crawley at a U.S. Open. "But I
don't quite see myself in the knickers."
But now, in this day of dolt.com and eek-mail, we are
software-warped warriors, lap-dancing with infernal machines that can
be both divine and diabolical (keep hitting SAVE, stupid!). These
indispensable tools of the trade malfunction and/or misplace stories
only on deadline. But that can't kill the tribal fun.
Numerous are the computers that have been slapped and kicked,
flung and cursed in the service of literature. In fact, I hereby
propose to the International Olympic Committee an additional event
for the 2004 Games: the computer throw for journalists. It would be
reality TV that Everyman could relate to, a crowd of out-of-shape but
highly motivated competitors giving their all to redress slights and
wounds in the line of duty.
A contender might be one David Israel, who as an operative of
the Chicago Tribune once pitched a recalcitrant PC an enormous
distance from the press box of Dodger Stadium. A tape-measure job,
according to witnesses.
If it had landed in a puddle of beef Stroganov, I would have
felt bonded to that typing machine. Should I have sent my assailant,
Higgins, a dry-cleaning bill, or applied for a restraining order? No.
I actually wished him well when he was fired three years later by
owner Tom Yawkey, though I hoped that move meant better days for the
team and Boston. It did. Yawkey had at last awakened from his own
alcoholic haze to see how his bigoted minions had been shortchanging
the franchise.
Mine was a drip-dry suit, by the way, which came out of the
hotel room sink looking just fine the following day. (Suit? Yes,
there was a time when sportswriters, historically as dapper as Ray
Bolger's Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz, did arrive at their alleged
labors in coats and ties. Tom Fitzgerald, a hockey writer for the
Boston Globe some time ago, was an exception. Normally a meticulous
dresser, he once appeared in the Montreal Forum press box in pajamas,
explaining that he'd overslept a nap and didn't wish to be late.
Today nobody would even notice him.)
Instead of the florists' familiar punch line "Say it with
flowers!" Mike Higgins's was "Say it with beef!" His had more punch.
It could have been worse. Genuine punches expressing reader
disapproval have been thrown by athletes at scribblers, normally
noncombatant types. Verbal assaults are more common.
Irrepressible John Feinstein of the Washington Post weathered
innumerable assaults from Bobby Knight and produced the best-seller
Season on the Brink, the first serious look -- a definitive one -- at
the tyrant of the basketball court. In a New York saloon, early one
morning, another coach, Pat Riley, was fairly patient as Feinstein
explained basketball to him. But Riley had the last word, mercifully
breaking up the gathering with "John, you're very young -- and very
loud."
The diminutive, dynamic New York Daily News columnist Mike
Lupica happened to be the public object of one of those serial
tirades of John McEnroe's. Sort of face-to-face in that Lupica was
seated four rows behind the court at Flushing Meadows while McEnroe
was at work, enmeshed with Mats Wilander in an arduous five-set
semifinal of the U.S. Open.
Despite phenomenal concentration on matters at hand, Mac
uncannily seemed to know where everybody he knew was seated in the
ballpark, and he picked out Lupica. (He didn't know Kay Graham,
publisher of the Washington Post, but that hardly stopped him from
suggesting, "Sit the f---- down, lady!" the afternoon she dared to
walk to her seat before he commenced serving.)
Abruptly pausing to fasten a drop-dead stare on Lupica, Mac
then castigated him for something he'd written. Far from being put
out, Mike was thrilled, uttering the wishful sentiment of all
writers: "Hah, he's reading me."
I suppose it's a badge of honor that the first of the not
many words Ted Williams ever spoke to me was the extended ten-letter
epithet.
Later, when he returned to Boston as manager of the
Washington Senators, Ted addressed me: "Are you still around writing
that shit?" -- although that time with a twinkle in his deep voice.
Lesley Visser is one of those who can tell you how tough it
was "to be out on the frontier," wading through insults and
indignities as one of the pioneering female reporters handling the
same assignments as men, locker rooms included, and eventually
winning acceptance.
"It was a class in humiliation," says she, a CBS-TV luminary
who got her baptism of male chauvinism as a reporter for the Boston
Globe. "Not just the athletes but the supposed grown-ups, the
coaches, gave us a rough time. At the 1980 Cotton Bowl game, Bill
Yeomans, the Houston coach, march-pushed me out of the locker room,
even though it was against the rules, and I was clearly accredited
and doing my job. He was yelling, 'I don't give a damn about the ERA -
- get outttt!'
"I cried, but I got over that."
So did Lisa Olson, scandalously treated by flashers among the
New England Patriots after a game in 1990. The publicity, and the
unbelievable public antagonism leveled at her for merely pursuing her
profession for the Boston Herald, drove Olson to flee to an
Australian newspaper. Recovering her equilibrium, she returned to do
fine work for her present employer, the New York Daily News.
Even in the genteel world of golf, at least in Britain,
female reporters are still mistreated. Liz Kahn, a distinguished
historian of the game who has written for several London dailies,
paid her way into tournaments for years. Although on assignment, she
was frequently unable to get accreditation, despite belonging to the
U.S. Golf Writers Association.
Finally she was granted membership in the British Golf
Writers Society, and life improved. Somewhat. "But I had to fight for
it" -- through dint of an intrepid, crusading personality. "You could
say mine was a life on the outside, continually discriminated
against. Evicted from clubs and dining rooms to which my male
colleagues had full access. It still hurts." Sometimes scribes strike
back with other than typing machine. None, however, as spectacularly
and literally as my Boston Globe compatriot Willie McDonough, never
one to pull his punches literarily or otherwise.
"Willie's in the sportswriting pantheon for what he did that
Sunday in Foxborough [Massachusetts]. He did what a lot of us would
like to do from time to time," grins the Globe's award-gathering
columnist Dan Shaughnessy.
Suddenly mad as hell and not going to take it anymore, Willie
gave. Big-time. It was 1979 in the dressing room of the New England
Patriots, victorious that afternoon. McDonough, interviewing
touchdown scorer Harold Jackson, felt a poke in his back. Turning, he
faced another literary critic, defensive back Raymond Clayborn.
Possibly to punctuate the poke, Clayborn then jabbed a finger
into McDonough's left eye. A mistake that couldn't be edited out.
Clayborn should have bumped-and-run. Feeling maligned and threatened,
Willie, who suffereth gladly no fingers in any context from anybody,
abruptly launched three swiftly brilliant right hands to Clayborn's
head. Flattened, on his face, hearing the derisive comments of his
teammates, Clayborn realized he'd misread a strong-right offense.
Few of us would endanger our typing fingers like that. But
McDonough, probably the best informed of all authorities on pro
football, shook out his knuckles and wrote a game story, leaving his
bombing of Clayborn -- the only cornerback ever beaten by a reporter -
- for others to chronicle.
Journalists fighting one another may be just as rare. That
happened in a Wimbledon interview room when a limey, Nigel Clarke of
the Daily Mail, and American Charlie Steiner of ESPN began scuffling,
rolling on the floor in a grapple, to the astonishment and delight of
assembled confreres.
Apparently Steiner objected to something Clarke had written
about John McEnroe and took it upon himself to defend his
countryman's questionable honor. Because most of our tribe are
essentially pacifists, it wasn't Bunker Hill revisited and ended
quickly, each combatant realizing his silliness. Fortunately for
both, neither possessed a McDonough-esque haymaker.
One of my heroes, Laurie Pignon, a jocular, charming
Englishman, also fought -- more seriously, against the Germans in
World War II. Taken prisoner for almost five years, he was used as a
slave laborer in a Polish coal mine. "I made up my mind," he
says, "that if I ever got out of there I would never let anything
bother me again -- the job, the boss, the players."
He returned to continue writing sports for London dailies,
and today, a very happy man in his eighties, he freelances. Pignon's
philosophy has held up well for him.
Still, this can be a hazardous trade. I was thinking that,
and thinking about Laurie, one impenetrable October night in 1982
when I was trying to put up a tent in a raging blizzard somewhere in
a Tibetan mountain range as the temperature plummeted below freezing.
The Chinese guides were lost. An unforeseen storm had pounced,
turning a pleasant trek into a wet, shiveringly bitter trial.
Exceptional sleeping bags and amiable, helpful yak herdsmen
pulled our group through. We never did find out where we'd been
because the guides, new to their business, had no maps. But it made a
pretty good story for Sports Illustrated. Anything for a story, of
course.
Weather wasn't the problem that balmy summer evening in 1960
when Floyd Patterson won back his heavyweight title from Ingemar
Johansson by knocking out the Swede at New York's Polo Grounds.
Instead, it was a hot-blooded segment of the crowd running amok.
Charging the ring to hail local guy Patterson, they stampeded through
the jerry-built press rows, smashing typewriters and any reporters in
the way. Al Abrams from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette was in tears,
bruised, his typewriter and notes gone. His buddies helped him to
piece together a story in longhand that he could dictate to his
office.
Luckily I was not in the mob's path. But another Bostonian,
Austen "Duke" Lake of the American, got trampled, suffering a couple
of broken ribs. An ex-college football player and World War I
battlefield survivor, Lake, then in his sixties, was a rugged,
straightforward character. He didn't own an overcoat and frequently
and gruffly shouted a favorite pejorative, "Bafflegab!" at anybody
trying to con him, whether a press agent, coach, or athlete.
To the Duke the deadline was sacred, and he had to make it.
When his typewriter was knocked off the planking, he hugged it on the
ground like a fumble while being stomped. As the crush subsided, he
rose, hurting, nevertheless composing his thoughts.
"If I had time I'd show those sons o'bitches a thing or two!"
he boiled. He would have, too. However, a slave to the deadline, he
found a place to sit and wrote his column in time for the edition.
You wouldn't think covering tennis could be risky, but maybe
you didn't know the ferocious champion Richard "Pancho" Gonzalez.
Reporters of the pre-computer days, clacking away at typewriters
while he played, enraged him, as did courtside photographers with
their flashbulbs. Those of that breed considered themselves lucky if
he refrained from throttling them. Pancho didn't always refrain.
Reporters were fortunately farther out of reach. But not out
of range when he began blasting balls at them with hefty swings to
silence those damned typists. Henry McKenna of the Herald recalled a
night at Boston Garden when he was among those "targeted." Even
though the balcony press box was far above the court, Pancho was
strafing it mercilessly.
"It was a war zone. Balls were coming at us like shrapnel,
and we were ducking as they slammed against the press box," McKenna
said. "It was late. The office expected something for the first
edition, but all of us said to hell with any deadlines until the
matches were finished and Pancho was gone."
A typewriter figured in the 1973 tennis ordeal of Mark Asher
of the Washington Post, covering the U.S. Indoor Championships at
Salisbury, Maryland. Attending to his story while Ilie Nastase and
Clark Graebner played Juan Gisbert and Jurgen Fassbender for the
doubles title, Mark found himself the uncomfortable center of
attention. As Graebner and Nastase forgot about their task, halting
play to focus glares on Asher in the building's uppermost tier,
customers seated in front of the press row began shushing and
screaming at him to be quiet.
Asher, on duty, persisted -- "I had a job to do." So thought
the patrons, feeling it their obligation to enforce silence. The most
adamant among them became a vigilante, determined to gag the
Washington Post. This enraged fellow confronted Asher and clawed the
newsman's offending hands, drawing blood, like an overzealous parent
chastising a naughty child. It would take more than that to deaden
those dutiful fingers.
More was soon in force. The guy grabbed the typewriter and
bolted down the grandstand steps as though sprinting for the end
zone -- with Asher in "Stop, thief!" pursuit. As the crowd gaped,
Asher chased the typewriter-napper the length of the hall and out the
door.
"I gave it my best . . . but I couldn't catch the jerk,"
Asher remembers. Reduced to pencil and longhand, he sighed, "I regret
that I had but one Olivetti to give for my paper."
Neither Asher nor anybody else had quite the style of the
thoughtful, gentlemanly Allison Danzig, who covered tennis, college
football, and Olympic sports peerlessly at the New York Times for
more than forty years. Seated in the press section of the open-air
marquee, a few feet from the Stadium court at Forest Hills, Danzig
never bothered players or spectators at the U.S. Championship with
his necessary typing.
So skilled and rapid was Al that he could condense his
writing into brief bursts within the few seconds between points,
maintaining a champion's concentration on the match before him, and
the story. He was a whirling dervish on a folding chair. Scrawling
his running account of the match with fountain pen, point by point,
he made the note, then attacked the typewriter keys fiercely,
stopping just before the next ball was served.
He probably could have written a novella during the twenty or
thirty seconds it took the players to change ends, in those days a
brief interval, not the sit-down stretch of a minute and a half now
in force in reverent respect for TV commercials. His copy that he
handed, a few graphs at a time, to a Western Union telegrapher for
transmission to the Times office was as neat and precise as Danzig
himself.
A soft-spoken Texan who cooked fiery chili, he had suffered a
stern penalty for his love of sports. As a ten-year-old in his
hometown, Waco, Al was apprehended sneaking into a minor-league
baseball game by the "inconsiderate sheriff. My father," he
recalled, "was even less considerate of that sheriff. He gave the man
holy hell when he came to get me out."
Though Al was one of the most considerate and generous guys
in the newspaper business, one of his Samaritan acts backfired. It
was 1935. He and two pals, syndicated columnists Grantland Rice and
Henry McLemore, were in Columbus covering the famous Notre Dame
football victory over Ohio State, won 18-13 in the last seconds, on a
pass from Bill Shakespeare to Wayne Millner.
After completing their stories, they dined together and had a
few drinks. A few more than needed by McLemore and the celebrated
Rice. They were wobbling as though trampled by Rice's immortal "Four
Horsemen."
But the younger Danzig kindly, ably shepherded them into a
cab to the railroad station, and then into their berths on the
sleeper to New York. Arriving the next day, they were profuse in
their thanks to the caretaker. Until . . . McLemore looked at Rice
and exploded, "Jee-zus, Granny! Now I remember . . . we drove your
car to Columbus."
How Peter Wilson of London's Daily Mirror managed to keep his
memory intact amazed his comrades of Fleet Street and anybody else
who knew him. His column always ran beneath a banner headline
identifying him unpretentiously: "World's Greatest Sportswriter." It
should have been accompanied by a subhead: "And World's Greatest
Scotch Drinker."
Burly, rumpled, and friendly, an unfailingly courteous fellow
with a walrus mustache and upper-class accent, Peter wandered the
planet, documenting every big sporting event of interest in Britain,
setting records for speedy writing and consumption of Scotch -- and
remaining journalistically sharp. He was partial to boxing and
Olympic track events, feeling, "They are the only pure sports. Man
either fights or runs away. The rest are contrived."
"He don't look or sound like a guy that can hold a lot of
booze, but look out," was the admiring appraisal of Wilson by boxing
promoter Sam Silverman, an impressive imbiber himself. "When it comes
to Scotch, Peter has flattened more contenders than Joe Louis."
Peter's running mate in touring and tippling was the dashing
Desmond Hackett of the Express, an obvious disciple of Beau Brummel,
favoring pink cardigans that accompanied well-tailored Saville Row
suits. But they parted company on Scotch.
"I savor champagne -- preferably sipped from the navel of a
beautiful woman," was Desmond's heartfelt cry.
That would not seem unseemly to the bon-vivanting notables of
Italian sportswriting and TV, Gianni Clerici of La Gazzetta della
Sport and Rino Tommasi of La Gazzetta della Sport and Il Tempo. As
amusing partners on tennis telecasts, they babble about all sorts of
topics that would never make air on U.S. networks: scandals, the sex
lives of the players (and themselves), the e-mail that they receive
during broadcasts.
How do they get away with it? Clerici, who covers similar
ground in his columns, replies, indignantly, "I live in a free
country. Don't you?"
For a time, before becoming very widely known nationally in
his added role as a TV commentator, Tommasi led a double life. He was
himself for Gazzetta, his principal paper. However, Il Tempo insisted
on having its own man at the events that Rino covered. This drove him
to adopt a separate identity, bylined as Tommy Salvatore, a
combination of his middle name and a twist of his last.
"Who's the better writer -- Tommasi or Salvatore?" I once
asked Clerici, since I'm unable to read Italian.
"Oh, the ghostly Salvatore. Easily," Gianni answered. "As
Tommasi, he takes himself too seriously and is careful and scrupulous
about being very boring. Too many statistics and pronouncements. When
he's done with Gazzetta, he looks at the clock and -- oh, Cristo,
disastro! -- his Il Tempo deadline is on top of him. Salvatore takes
over and has to get it done fast. He dashes it off, doesn't think
about it. He lets down and just has fun, and it comes out much more
readable.
"I tell Tommasi he should kill Tommasi and remain Salvatore
for the rest of his life. Be better off. Better for the readers. But
Rino is too proud of his own name."
It was Salvatore who perished instead. Il Tempo's editor
decided he wanted the renowned telecaster in his stable, and so the
Rino Tommasi byline appears in both papers.
When that happened, Clerici said, "I think Salvatore's
readers should picket Il Tempo, demanding his return."
The puckish Clerici remembers a demand for his own departure
at a tournament party on the Riviera. Because the invitation
prescribed "black tie," that is what he wore. Period. Thrown out
before he got in, he recalls, "They said, regretfully, that my
writing was more interesting than my body."
Though jovial, urbane Brian Dewhurst of the United Press in
Australia didn't go that far. He was known fondly and admiringly
across the continent as "Daks-dropping Dewhurst." His self-styled
performances most often occurred at cocktail parties or receptions
where he would be conversing with a prominent personage, preferably
female and prim. His mates stayed alert, wondering when "it" would
happen.
Brian refused to explain how "it" was done, but at the
appropriate moment his trousers began to descend, sliding slowly down
to crumple at his ankles. Taking no notice of the breeze at his
knees, he continued chatting engagingly while the startled lady
opposite him gaped, blushed, averted her widening eyes, and retreated
behind a hasty, "Excuse me, please."
Unfazed by the commotion, he rebelted himself without missing
a sip or syllable, explaining that his mother had insisted on his
always wearing clean, presentable undershorts.
Mine did the same, and was not timid in scolding me for
occasionally hanging out somebody else's dirty laundry in a story.
Nor did she approve of one of the best quotes an athlete ever dropped
on me, unprinted until now. It was a throwaway line from a good-
natured Baldwin-Wallace College halfback named George Morris who had
led U.S. small colleges in scoring the year I was only ten and
growing up in a house on the campus.
Peddling magazines in the neighborhood one day, I recognized
Morris, a hero to us kids, and shyly asked my first question to a
jock: "Mr. Morris, how did you score all those touchdowns?"
"Kid, it was easy. I just greased my ass and slid on through."
Good advice, wouldn't you say? That and maybe twenty bucks
would get you a helping of beef Stroganov.
Bud Collins
Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company
Introduction copyright © 2001 by Bud Collins