Monday, April 21, 2014

Special

“Mr. K, you come to my house for dinner tonight?” asked an ever-cheerful fourth grader.
I don’t know where you live, I told him.
“Park Ridge. You come.”
O.K., I’ll see. What’s for dinner? I asked.
“Taco Bell. You like Taco Bell?”
No, I told him.
“You're funny, Mr. K.”

One of his classmates approached me somewhat guardedly, requesting privacy from the other children and their aides in the classroom. “Can we talk, Mr. K?” he asked, gently steering me away from his desk. He put his arm around me and had me bend low so he could whisper in my ear.
What’s wrong? I asked. How can I help?
“Can I have some chocolate milk?” 

Friday, March 28, 2014

Cliff Hagan and Kentucky’s Undefeated (But Not Championship) Team

Tonight’s Sweet 16 game in Indianapolis features a head-to-head match between the last two NCAA champions:  Louisville (31-5), which won last season, vs. in-state rival Kentucky (26-10), the 2012 title holder.

Louisville advanced last Saturday after defeating Saint Louis. A day later, Kentucky knocked off Wichita State, which had won all 35 of its games and had hoped to become the first undefeated college basketball champion since Indiana in 1976. In all, there have been just three other schools (San Francisco, 1956; North Carolina, 1957; and UCLA, 1964, ’67, ’72, and ’73) to go through the season and tournament without a single loss.

Kentucky’s total of seven national championships is second only to UCLA’s 11. (Louisville has two). Sixty years ago, Kentucky went 25-0 but did not win an NCAA title. Here is the backgroundand my story from Street & Smith’s 100 Greatest College Basketball Playerson that season for the Wildcats and their leader, Cliff Hagan.

High in the firmament of Kentucky basketball stars is Cliff Hagan, one of just three Wildcats in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. (The others are Frank Ramsey and Dan Issel.) Hagan was inducted in 1978 after a stellar amateur and professional career.

Born Dec. 9, 1931, in Owensboro, Ky., Hagan was a three-time all-state player at Owensboro Senior High, which he led to a state title in 1949 after scoring a then-record 41 points in the championship game.

“Cliff had probably the greatest hook shot that the good Lord ever saw,” said Ralph Beard, who preceded Hagan at the university. “He was only 6-4 ½ at most, but he’d take the big dudes in and his extension of his arms would prevent any of them from blocking his shots. He could lay it on the floor and he could score on anybody. Obviously he carried that into college.”

Happily for UK fans and coach Adolph Rupp, the college Hagan carried his game into was Kentucky. He led the Wildcats to 86 victories in 91 games, which included a 32-2 mark in his 1951 sophomore year, an eighth straight Southeastern Conference crown for UK, and the school’s third NCAA championship in four years (68-58 over Kansas State).

A year later, Hagan earned the first of his two consensus All-America honors. The Wildcats went 29-3 but were denied the opportunity to defend their title when they lost in the regional final.

In 1953 the NCAA imposed the death penalty on the school, banning it from competition for recruiting violations. Kentucky returned to the court the following season in a memorable game that saw Hagan score 51 points in a blowout win over Temple. He averaged 24 points and 13.5 rebounds, and again was named a consensus All-America, leading the Wildcats to a 25-0 record. Kentucky elected not to participate in the NCAA tournament after the NCAA ruled that Hagan and teammates Ramsey and Lou Tsioropoulos, as graduate students, were ineligible.

In 1974, Hagan was named to the Southeastern Conference all-time team and enshrined in the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame. In 2002, in recognition of 100 years of Kentucky basketball, the Lexington Herald-Journal polled a panel of writers, broadcasters, and former university coaches and personnel to determine the top players in school history. Only Issel and Beard received more votes than Hagan.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Jim Fregosi

Word came that former Major League Baseball player and manager Jim Fregosi, 71, suffered a series of strokes while on a cruise in the Caribbean with other MLB alumni. He passed away on Friday. Our thoughts and best wishes go out to his family.

A six-time All-Star, Fregosi was famously traded to the New York Mets in 1971 for Nolan Ryan. After his 18-year playing career came to an end in 1978, he managed Ryan for two years on the California Angels. Fregosi also managed the Philadelphia Phillies in the 1990s. It was during his tenure with the Phillies that Fregosi was reunited with New York Post sportswriter Maury Allen, who covered the Mets in the 1960s and 70s and wrote the National League East preview for Street & Smith's Baseball magazine for several years in the early 90s.

Prior to the start of an early-season game between the Phillies and the Mets in 1993, Allen was hanging around the batting cage at Shea Stadium when catcher Darren Daulton approached him. Fregosi wants to see you, Daulton told him.

Jim and I go way back, Allen thought. “Ive known him since he was a 19-year-old shortstop with the Angels. Probably just wants to say hello.

When Allen walked into the Phillies clubhouse, he was met by Fregosi and half a dozen of his players, including Curt Schilling and John Kruk. There he is, boys, Fregosi said. Theres the guy who picked us for last.

Friday, January 31, 2014

Tiger at the Super Bowl Gates

“The Trojan War will not take place.” The noble, sensible Trojan chieftain Hector says this repeatedly throughout Jean Giraudoux’s sublime play Tiger at the Gates. With his wife, Andromache, pregnant, Hector is determined to preserve the peace between his country and Greece after the willful Helen, wife of the Spartan king Menelaus, has taken up with the Trojan Paris. Ultimately, though, Hector’s insistent plea (wishful thinking, really), spoken inside the gates of Troy, goes unheeded in an inexorable and fateful rush to battle.

As the snow fell and the temperature in the New York metropolitan area remained below freezing in late January, the day for the National Football League’s final skirmish approached. As surely everyone from Pershing Square to Persia knows by now, this Sunday will be the first time that the Super Bowl will be stagedand no sporting event is more staged than this gameoutdoors (about 30 miles from New Jersey chieftain Chris Christie’s Sparta) in a cold-weather stadium.

And as I thought of the impending spectacle, and of all things bloated and self-important connected to the event, I was reminded of Hector’s futile words. Could they signify a contemporary football parallel? Where was the voice of reason during the original discussion over the site of this year’s Super Bowl? Was there no level-headed Hector in the NFL conference room when the debate took place? No one with the common sense to prevail over the lunatic consensus willing to risk leaving pro football’s championship to be determined by the vagaries of winter weather in the northeast?

Hector’s Greek counterpart Ulysses, dubious over the prospects of peaceful co-existence, is nevertheless persuaded by the steadfastness of Hector. Still, he offers a clear-eyed and damning conclusion about the inevitability of war. “One of the privileges of the great is to witness catastrophe from a terrace,” he tells Hector. For despite Hector’s brave insistence, because of a lie, the Greeks would eventually launch a thousand ships against Troy.

Could those words from Ulysses also help explain why and where the Super Bowl this weekend would take place? I picture NFL executives and their corporate business and media partners rolling in comfort and stylish charm in the sheltered, climate-controlled terrace of Met Life stadium’s luxury boxes, safely witnessing what could be a weather-affected catastrophe on the field.

And I wonder if the misguided decision to play the Super Bowl in a cold-weather stadium might have been different had the principals involved in the discussion been apprised that they would have to sit, Bowie Kuhn-style (sans overcoat and long underwear), among the non-privileged out in the uncomfortably bitter winter air. 

Sunday, January 26, 2014

The Grammys and Sports

In honor of, or perhaps in spite of, the Grammy awards tonight, we dug into our interview files to recall the favorite music or musicians of these sports and media personalities:

Ernie Accorsi: “The Great Pretender,” by the Platters
Marv Albert: James Blunt, Damian Rice, Sarah McLachlan. “I passed through the do-wop stage from my disk jockey days.”
Sandy Alderson: Robert Palmer’s “Addicted to Love”
Billy Beane: “I’m kind of a closet alternative music guy, going back to the New York City punk scene. I consider Johnny Ramone a friend.
Elton Brand: “I listen to hip-hop. Rock and roll songs—Prodigy—get me pumped up for the game.”
Jerry Colangelo: “I like anything that has sax, pianothat kind of jazz music, and I love anything Sinatra.”
Seth Davis: “Hard Rock Kid,” by the Radiators
Eddie DeBartolo: “Anything by Gary Puckett and the Union Gap.”
Frank Deford: “I’m thinking of all the country-and-western songs I like. [And] I love that Traviata (hums Libiamo).
Phil de Picciotto: Pachelbel’s Canon
Boomer Esiason: Led Zeppelin’s “Kashmir”
Ari Fleischer: Country music
Adonal Foyle: Reggae, soca, jazz and classical
Clyde Frazier: “I’m oldies but goodies. I Motown down: the Temptations, the Four Tops, the Isley Brothers. That’s what I listen to over and over.”
Peter Gammons: “Gimme Shelter,” by the Rolling Stones
Wyc Grousbeck: “I’m a Pearl Jam/Led Zeppelin/Aerosmith guy and I play drums in a rock band. We actually go play gigs, so I’m a rock drummer in my spare time.”
David Halberstam: “The Sinatra albums of the mid-to-late ’50s.”
Keith Hernandez: Rhythm & blues, rock, jazz
Peter Jacobsen: “Jethro Tull’s ‘Skating Away on the Thin Ice of a New Day.’ It’s got some great lyrics in there. It says, ‘Sometimes you feel like everybody else is on the stage and you’re the only one sitting in the audience.’”
Peter Kenyon: Handel’s Zadok the Priest
Armen Keteyian: “Sky Blue and Black,” by Jackson Browne; Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Goin’ On”
Len Komoroski: “Jungleland,” by Bruce Springsteen; “The Last Resort,” by the Eagles
Al Leiter: Bruce Springsteen’s music
Ronnie LottThe music of Prince.
Jeffrey Lurie: “For What It’s Worth,” by Buffalo Springfield. “My favorite group is The Doors.”
Rich McKay: “I’m a basic California kid, so I’m an Eagles guy.”
Sean McManus: “Maggie May,” by Rod Stewart, and “Johnny B. Goode,” by Chuck Berry. “My daughter’s name is Maggie, and those are my kids’ favorite two songs.”
Jim Nantz: “I’m pretty eclectic. I go from Bruce Springsteen to Yanni and everything in between.”
Rick Reilly: “Overall, I guess I’d say Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. 
Robert Sarver:Let’s Get It Started”
Larry Scott: “Desert Rose,” by Sting
Phil Simms: “I like everything from rock-and-roll to classical to country. I even listen to a little rap. I’ve got kids, and I hear it and I say, ‘Hey, that’s pretty good.’”
Emmitt Smith: Kirk Franklin and R&B
Gary SmithThunder Road, by Bruce Springsteen, is right up there.
Gene Smith: Stevie Wonder’s “That Girl”
Annika Sorenstam: “I like modern musicU2, Madonna.
Erik Spoelstra: “U2. Im not a groupie, but Ive seen them in concert six or seven times.
Roger Staubach: “I love country-and-western music. I work out every morning to CMT. I’m a Toby Keith fan, Martina McBride, Faith Hill, Gretchen Wilson. Mark Wills wrote a song, ‘19 Something,’ in which he remembered being Roger Staubach in the back yard running around. That became my favorite song.”
John Swofford: Good Morning, Starshine (from the musical Hair), by my brother, Oliver.
Randy VatahaJust about anything written by the Beatles."
Alan Webb: “Ants Marching,” by the Dave Matthews Band
Jerry West: “Growing up in West Virginia, everybody used to listen to country music. I like classical music. Now my tastes run to soft rock and some jazz. I like some of the old, traditional people. I like Elton John. I think he’s a tremendous entertainer. I listen to a lot of music from different areas.”
Pat Williams: “The William Tell overture. Never ceases to raise the hair on my head.”
Reggie Williams:  I love the Motown sound.
Mary Wittenberg: U2, Coldplay, The Jersey Boys
Alexander Wolff: “Maiden Voyage, by Herbie Hancock; Gustav Mahler’s Adagietto from his Fifth Symphony; and Domino,  by Van Morrison, never disappoint.
Kristi Yamaguchi: Daughtry, Janet Jackson, Rihanna, Nickelback, Ballas Hough Band