Scribe My Life In Sports
BOB RYAN
Copyright © 2014 by Bob Ryan All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information address Bloomsbury USA, 1385 Broadway, New York, NY 10018. Published by Bloomsbury USA, New York All papers used by Bloomsbury USA are natural, recyclable products made from wood grown in well-managed forests. The manufacturing processes conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin. library of congress cataloging-in-publication data has been applied for. ISBN: 978-1-62040-506-2 First U.S. Edition 2014 1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2 Typeset by Westchester Book Group Printed and bound in the U.S.A. by Thomson-Shore Inc., Dexter, Michigan Bloomsbury books may be purchased for business or promotional use. For information on bulk purchases please contact Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at specialmarkets@macmillan.com
Contents
1. Shootaround: “Do You Mind If I Call Red First?” 2. “The Sportster” 3. Trenton Born 4. Trenton Made 5. Boston College 6. Becoming a Reporter 7. Joining the Club 8. Take Me Out to the Ballgame 9. “You’d Eat That?” 10. It Was Still in My Blood 11. “Now that’s a Foul!” 12. Time to Powder Up 13. The Glorious NBA 14. “I’ll Decide” 15. ESPN 16. This Guy Ain’t No Hick 17. The Olympics 18. “Beat Me, Whip Me, Take My Picture” 19. The Sub Heard Round the World 20. Smitten by a Lady of Low Repute 21. Bob Knight 22. I Can Hardly Believe It’s Legal 23. Ending the Curse 24. Violence Mixed with Chivalry 25. Doc and the 2008 Champs
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
vi
Contents
26. The Prince of Pessimism 27. Michael v. LeBron 28. A Good Walk—Always 29. Can’t Live without Music 30. No Complaints 31. Short Takes Acknowledgements Index
00 00 00 00 00 00
CHAPTER 1
Shootaround: “Do You Mind If I Call Red First?”
The Boston Celtics’ morning shootaround was over on October 1, 1980, and I was back in my hotel room around noontime speaking on the phone to my old friend Paul Silas, who was starting his third season with the Seattle Supersonics and his fourth after leaving the Celtics for financial reasons in 1976. We were in Terre Haute, Indiana, a site carefully chosen for a good reason. For Terre Haute was the location of Indiana State University, alma mater of Larry Bird. The Celtics had booked an Indiana exhibition trip, scheduling games in Indianapolis, Terre Haute and, after this particular evening, Evansville. As coach Bill Fitch would say—and he was the first person I ever heard use the phrase—scheduling pre-season exhibition games in Indiana when you have Larry Bird on your team is a no-brainer. I heard a knock on the door. After asking Silas to wait a sec, I opened the door. There stood Dave Cowens, still in his green practice uniform with the number 18 jersey. He was holding a small sheaf of papers. Cowens had been a member of the Celtics since the 1970-71 season. He had been a co-Rookie of the Year, an MVP, the center on two championship teams and a player whose intense playing style had labeled him, for some, as a pejorative. To refer to any college player as “Cowens-like” was to identify the young man as a ferocious competitor. But more than that, he was the single most fascinating personality I had yet encountered during my then dozen years as a working sportswriter. He had an unrivaled dossier of 1
2
Scribe
iconoclastic, principle-based behavior, both on and off the court. There was a much better chance of finding a player who resembled Cowens than of finding a person like him. “Come in,” I said. “I’m talking to your old buddy Silas. Want to say hello?” The two chatted briefly. I wrapped up the call and said, “”OK, what’s up?” “Here,” he said, handing me the papers, “read this.” I began to read, but after several paragraphs I realized something. The pages were out of order. I wasn’t quite sure what the purpose of it was until I started at the top. It didn’t take long for it to hit me. “Oh my God,” I thought. This is a retirement statement. Retirement? Why? OK, he didn’t have a good game the night before in Indianapolis, but in an account of a pre-season game in Milwaukee played five days earlier I had noted that “Cowens” was again the best Boston player.” That’s right: “again.” But here it was. “...I used to treasure the individual confrontations with Kareem or Bob McAdoo, and relished the fact we were playing against teams like the Knicks of the early seventies and the old Chicago Sloan-Love-Walker quintets, who made you reach for everything you had in order to compete with their type of play. These challenges were exciting and real; they were invigorating and exhausting. “However, I can no longer play that caliber of basketball, and it is unbelievably frustrating to remain in an occupation which is wearing and in which one has seen better days.” Further on he wrote: “The primary reason I will not remain on the roster of the Celtics or any other professional basketball club is due to the fact that I have a highly-weakened and worn-out set of feet and ankles, and their respective anatomical members.” How many players would address their body parts as “anatomical members?” It was classic Cowens. He addressed the fact that he would be forfeiting his salary from the final year of a five-year contract, stressing that he didn’t think he could earn it. “Therefore,” he wrote, “”I don’t want preferential treatment from the coach due to my status as a seasoned veteran, because then I wouldn’t be able to expect maximum efforts from my teammates. Fairness goes hand in hand with dedication, especially when one is involved in a group participation effort.” So what do you want from me?” I said.
Shootaround
3
“Two things,” he said. “Help me put it in order. You know, give me some professional help. And tell me what you think.” Then came the punch line: “And I’d like to have this printed in the paper.” I told him I thought the Boston Globe could accommodate him. The truth is it was very nicely and powerfully-written, which did not surprise me because this was not the first time I had recognized his writing ability. I felt I could improve it without making it anything less than The World According To Dave Cowens. “I’ll need some time,” I told him. “Maybe an hour.” He was heading out the door when he turned around. “Do you mind if I call Red first?” he inquired. Excuse me? Do I, Bob Ryan, mind if he, Dave Cowens, calls the hallowed Red Auerbach, Mr. Celtics, on my phone to inform him he is retiring from active duty in the National Basketball Association, effective immediately? I gave him my blessing. The conversation was brief. It went through Mary Faherty, Red’s longtime secretary. “Hello, Mary. It’s Dave. Is Red in? Red, it’s Dave. Remember what we talked about the other night? Well, I’m doing it. OK, see you when I get back.” And he returned to his room. After phoning the Globe office to alert them to a pretty nice exclusive story, I began working on the statement. He had begun by writing it longhand on yellow legal pad paper, but had then decided to do it on a typewriter. The statement consisted of four and a half pages of copy, and the finished product was about 80-85 percent Cowens and 15-20 percent Ryan. I was able to edit it in an old- fashioned handwritten way, suitable for dictation. The story did not end there. Sometime around 3:30 or 4 o’clock, the team assembled on the bus for the trip to Evansville, where they would be playing the Chicago Bulls. Cowens boarded with his mates to break the news. He briefed them on the whys and wherefores of his decision, and he told center Robert Parish, acquired from Golden State in a draft day deal the spring before, but off to a very poor start with his new team, that he was sure Parish could do the job. According to multiple sources, resident team comedian M.L. Carr piped up. “”Are you done now?” he asked. “Is that it?” “Yes,” Cowens replied.
4
Scribe
“Then get the (naughty word) off our bus!” The bus pulled away, and there I was, standing with Dave Cowens. “What happens now?” I asked. He told me he’d be going back home to Newport, Kentucky for a few days. But there was a problem. He didn’t have his credit cards, and he was low on cash. This was 1980. There were no ATMs. So I went to the nearest Avis office, rented a car, and handed him the keys. Off he went. I then got into my car for the drive to Evansville and the game with the Bulls. I seem to recall coach Bill Fitch leaving Robert Parish in after he picked up four fouls in the first quarter, as if to say, “OK, pal, you’re on your own. You’d better figure it out.” Anyway, the Celtics won, and the postCowens era had begun. I never went to Journalism School, but I doubt there is a J- School anywhere that can prepare any sportswriter for a day like that.