This week, the Yankees are hosting the Seattle Mariners.
Seattle's 10 Greatest Teams
Honorable Mention to the University of Washington Huskies. Their football team were awarded shares of the National Championship in 1960 and 1991, and has won the league now known as the Pacific-12 16 times, most recently in 2016. They've won 7 Rose Bowls, most recently in 2000.
Their basketball team has won the league 15 times in the regular season, and 3 times in the postseason tournament, and reached the NCAA Final Four in 1953.
Washington State University is all the way across the State, in Pullman, just a 10-minute drive from the Idaho State Line, so I won't count them here.
Honorable Mention to the 1983-88 Seattle Seahawks. The 'Hawks began play in 1976, and first reached the Playoffs in 1983, stunning the Denver Broncos at the Kingdome and the Miami Dolphins at the Orange Bowl, before falling to the Los Angeles Raiders at the Coliseum in the AFC Championship Game.
They won another Wild Card berth in 1984, beating the Raiders at the Kingdome, before the Dolphins got revenge. After missing the Playoffs the next 2 seasons, despite a 10-6 record in 1986, they reached the Wild Card in 1987, losing a Playoff game in overtime to the Houston Oilers. In 1988, they won their 1st Division title, then in the AFC West, but lost to the Cincinnati Bengals in the Divisional Playoffs. They made the Playoffs only once in the next 14 years
Honorable Mention to the 1999 Seattle Seahawks. The last team to play a home game in the Kingdome, they were only 9-7, but, as in 1988, it was enough to win the AFC West. But they lost the Dome's last sporting event, a Divisional Playoff to the Dolphins.
10. 1976-82 Seattle Sounders. One of the leading teams of the old North American Soccer League, they reached the Western Division Final in 1976, then won it in 1977, to reach the Soccer Bowl. But their luck was bad: Not only did they have to face the mighty New York Cosmos, but they had to do so at a neutral site -- Civic Stadium (now Providence Park), home of their own arch-rivals, the Portland Timbers. They lost.
They won regular-season Division titles in 1980 and 1982, and reached the Soccer Bowl again in 1982, but, again, smacked into the Cosmos. They missed the Playoffs in 1983, and then folded, but the team's name would be revived in later leagues.
9. 1995-97 Seattle Mariners. The Mariners, founded in 1977, never had a winning record until 1991, and didn't reach their 1st Playoff berth until 1995. Famously, they came from well behind the California Angels in the American League Western Division, beat the Angels in a 1-game Playoff for the Division title, and then came from 2-0 down to beat the Yankees in a raucous 5-game AL Division Series that convinced fans to approve the bond issue that would build Safeco Field, and thus saved Major League Baseball in the Pacific Northwest.
But the M's were beaten in the AL Championship Series by the Cleveland Indians. After a close 2nd place in 1996, they won the West again in 1997, but were defeated in the ALDS by the Baltimore Orioles. By the time they got back to the Playoffs in 2000, it was a very different team: No more Ken Griffey Jr., no more Randy Johnson, no more Tino Martinez... but also no more Kingdome, into a real ballpark.
8. 2000-01 Seattle Mariners. After 2 years of mediocrity, the M's bounced back, winning 91 games and taking the AL Wild Card in 2000. They beat the Chicago White Sox in the ALDS, and then took the Yankees to 6 games in the ALCS.
In 2001, they dominated the AL, putting together a season that reminded many of the 1986 Mets. Even in June, people were signing on to Internet chat rooms with the screen name "Seattle Mariners 2001 World Champs." And they did tie the all-time single-season MLB record, set by the 1906 Chicago Cubs, of 116 wins in a season, breaking the AL record of 114 set by the Yankees 3 years before.
But the best-laid plans of mice and Mariners went astray. They nearly got torpedoed by the Indians in the ALDS. As with the Yankees 6 years earlier, the M's had to come from 2-0 back to win the series. But the Yankees humiliated them in 5 games in the ALCS. The most-hyped team in Seattle sports history was a spectacular failure.
Despite winning 93 games in each of the next 2 seasons, the Mariners haven't been back to the postseason since -- now the longest postseason drought of any team in the "Big Four" sports (MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL).
7. 2003-07 Seattle Seahawks. Mike Holmgren tried to replicate his success with the Green Bay Packers at the stadium now named CenturyLink Field. He got the 'Hawks to the Playoffs in 2003, but lost in the 1st round in overtime -- ironically, to the Packers.
He led the 'Hawks to the next 4 NFC Western Division titles. In the 2005 season, he got them all the way to their 1st Conference Championship, beating the Washington Redskins and the Carolina Panthers along the way. But they lost Super Bowl XL to the Pittsburgh Steelers. This was followed by Playoff losses to the Chicago Bears in overtime and again to the Packers, and then it was over.
6. 1992-98 Seattle SuperSonics. The last great Sonics team (really, only the 2nd) won 7 Playoff series in 8 seasons, and won the 1996 Western Conference Championship. Unfortunately, this team is best known for 2 series they lost: The 1994 1st Round series, in which the Denver Nuggets became the 1st 8th seed to beat a 1st seed; and the 1996 NBA Finals, in which the 72-10 Chicago Bulls completed their destiny.
After winning a series in each of the next 2 seasons, the team began to break up, as egos and salary demands got out of control, especially considering they hadn't won a title. After 1998, the Sonics won only 1 more Playoff series, in 2005, and were sold, and were moved out of town after the 2007-08 season.
Will they ever return? It's not impossible, but after teases the last few years with the Los Angeles Clippers and the Sacramento Kings, it might not be within the next 5 years.
5. 2004-10 Seattle Storm. One of the leading teams of the WNBA, they won the Championship in 2004, coached by Anne Donovan, who died last week. They beat the Connecticut Sun in the Finals. They then made the Western Conference Semifinals every year through 2009, but couldn't get over the hump until 2010, under coach Brian Agler, going 7-0 in the Playoffs against the Los Angeles Sparks, the Phoenix Mercury, and finally 3-0 against the Atlanta Dream to take the title.
They have usually been a Playoff team since, but have yet to return to the WNBA Finals.
4. 2014-17 Seattle Sounders. Reborn in Major League Soccer, the Sounders won the U.S. Open Cup, the American equivalent of England's FA Cup, in 2009, 2010 and 2011. But they came into their own in 2014, winning the Cup again, and also taking the Supporters' Shield, the regular-season MLS title. They reached the MLS Cup Final in 2016 and 2017, facing Toronto FC each time, winning the 1st and losing the 2nd.
3. 1915-24 Seattle Metropolitans. Seattle's 1st professional hockey team lasted 9 seasons, making the Pacific Coast Hockey Association playoffs 7 times. In 1917, they won the title, then beat the National Hockey Association Champions, the Montreal Canadiens, to become the 1st American-based team to win the Stanley Cup. And the 1st Seattle-based team that could legitimately be called "World Champions."
They lost the PCHA Final to the Vancouver Millionaires in 1918, then beat them in 1919, setting up a rematch with the Canadiens. But the Spanish Flu epidemic cut the series short, and the Cup was not awarded. They were PCHA Champions again in 1920, but lost the Stanley Cup Finals to the Ottawa Senators. They then lost the PCHA Final to Vancouver in 1921, 1922 and 1924, before folding.
2. 1974-84 Seattle SuperSonics. The 1st Seattle-based team in major league sports in the modern era, the Sonics were founded in 1967, and struggled for 4 seasons, before going 47-35 in their 5th season, 1971-72. But that wasn't enough to make the NBA Playoffs that season.
In 1975, they reached and won a Playoff series for the 1st time. In 1978, they got all the way to the NBA Finals, before losing Game 7 to the Washington Bullets. In 1978-79, they took no prisoners, and avenged their loss to the Bullets to take their 1st NBA Championship.
There would not be a 2nd. They made the Playoffs 3 of the next 4 years, but didn't make the NBA Finals, and tailed off.
1. 2010-17 Seattle Seahawks. Pete Carroll has a problem with the 'Hawks that he didn't have at USC: The NFL has a salary cap.
Okay, bad joke. But in 2010, his 1st season in charge, he made the 'Hawks the 1st team ever to make the NFL Playoffs with a losing record, as their 7-9, with a tiebreaker, made them NFC West Champions. And then they justified their place in the Playoffs by beating the New Orleans Saints.
They missed the Playoffs in 2011, but made it in 2012, beating the Redskins before losing to the Atlanta Falcons. In the 2013 season, the Seahawks finally fulfilled their destiny. They went 13-3, won the West, beat the Saints, won the NFC Championship by beating their alleged new arch-rivals, the San Francisco 49ers, and then came to the Meadowlands for Super Bowl XLVIII, and demolished the Denver Broncos.
They won the West again in 2014, beating the Panthers and the Packers to reach Super Bowl XLIX. But Carroll called a pass play on the 1-yard line, and you know the rest. The 'Hawks won Playoff games again in 2015 and 2016, but missed in 2017. They have since seen some of their best players leave, and it remains to be seen if Carroll can add to the legacy of Seattle's most successful sports run.
Showing posts with label seattle supersonics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seattle supersonics. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 20, 2018
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Faux Flashback: How to Be a New York Basketball Fan In Seattle
This Friday, the Brooklyn Nets will play away to the Oklahoma City Thunder.
It should be the New Jersey Nets playing away to the Seattle SuperSonics.
I began this blog just prior to the 2007-08 NBA season, which was the last one for the Sonics before they moved. I wasn't yet doing these travel guides. If I had been, with the Nets making their final visit on November 23, and the Nets their last on February 2, the one for the Sonics would have gone something like this (with updates in italics):
*
Yes, that really is Seattle. Yes, that really is a nice blue sky overhead. When the clouds part, and you can see Lake Washington and the Cascadia Mountains, including Mount Rainier, it's actually a beautiful city. It's just that it rains so much, such a sight isn't all that common.
Before You Go. Seattle is notorious for rain, and while this game will be indoors, you will have to spend quite a bit of time outdoors. Check the websites of the Seattle Times and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer for the weather forecast. Right now, they're predicting the high 50s for daylight on November 23, and the low 40s for the evening.
Seattle is in the Pacific Time Zone, 3 hours behind New York. Adjust your timepieces accordingly.
There is high-speed passenger ferry service from Seattle to the Canadian city of Victoria, the capital of the Province of British Columbia. But it takes 2 hours and 45 minutes, and costs a bundle: $187 round-trip. (The scenery in Washington State and British Columbia is spectacular, and this is clearly part of what you're paying for.) From there, you can easily get to Vancouver. (I don't know what it actually would have cost in 2007. That's what it costs in 2016.)
If you want to make this trip, you will have to give confirmation within 48 hours of booking. And it's a passenger-only ferry service: No cars allowed. If you'd like to make a side trip to Vancouver, you're better off driving or taking the train. But any way you go over the border, you should have your passport with you.
Tickets. The SuperSonics averaged 15,955 fans per home game in 2006-07, about 93 percent of capacity. And they're not very good at the moment, so tickets shouldn't be difficult to obtain.
(Unfortunately, I can find no reference to what Sonics ticket prices were in their final season, or in any other.)
Getting There. It's 2,854 miles from Times Square to Pioneer Square in Seattle. In other words, if you're going, you're going to want to fly.
After all, even if you get someone to go with you, and you take turns, one drives while the other one sleeps, and you pack 2 days' worth of food, and you use the side of the Interstate as a toilet, and you don’t get pulled over for speeding, you'll still need over 2 full days to get there. One way.
But, for future reference, if you really, really want to drive... Get onto Interstate 80 West in New Jersey, and stay on that until it merges with Interstate 90 west of Cleveland, then stay on 90 through Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, into Wisconsin, where it merges with Interstate 94. Although you could take I-90 almost all the way, I-94 is actually going to be faster. Stay on I-94 through Minnesota and North Dakota before re-merging with I-90 in Montana, taking it through Idaho and into Washington, getting off I-94 at Exit 2B.
Not counting rest stops, you should be in New Jersey for an hour and a half, Pennsylvania for 5:15, Ohio for 4 hours, Indiana for 2:30, Illinois for 2 hours, Wisconsin for 3:15, Minnesota for 4:30, North Dakota for 6 hours, Montana for a whopping 13 hours (or 3 times the time it takes to get from New York to Boston), Idaho for 1:15 and 6:45 in Washington. That’s 50 hours, and with rest stops, you're talking 3 full days.
That's still faster than Greyhound (70 hours, changing in Pittsburgh, Chicago, Minneapolis and Missoula, $362 round-trip) and Amtrak (67 hours, changing in Chicago, $746 before booking sleeping arrangements). (Note that these prices were in place for a Yankees-Mariners series in August 2016, but were probably close to what they were in November 2007 or February 2008.)
On Amtrak, you would leave Penn Station on the Lake Shore Limited at 3:40 PM Eastern Time on Tuesday, arrive at Union Station in Chicago at 9:45 AM Central Time on Wednesday, and board the Empire Builder at 2:15 PM, and would reach King Street Station at 10:25 AM Pacific Time on Friday. (Of course, for the Nets-Sonics game on November 23, this would have been complicated by the day before being Thanksgiving.)
King Street Station is just to the north of the stadium complex, at S. King St. & 3rd Ave. S., and horns from the trains can sometimes be heard as the trains go down the east stands of CenturyLink Field and the right-field stands of Safeco. The Greyhound station is at 811 Stewart St. at 8th Ave., in the Central Business District, about halfway between the stadiums and the Seattle Center complex.
A round-trip flight from Newark to Seattle, if ordered now, could be had, although not nonstop, on American Airlines for around $550. You can get a nonstop on United Airlines for around $850. Link Light Rail can get you out of Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (Sea-Tac), and the same system has Stadium Station to get to Safeco and CenturyLink Fields. The fare is $2.75.
Once In the City. Founded in 1853, and named for a Chief of the Duwamish Indians, Seattle is easily the biggest city in America's Northwest, with 635,000 people within the city limits and 3.6 million in its metropolitan area. Just as Charlotte is called the Queen City of the Southeast, and Cincinnati the Queen City of the Midwest, Seattle is known as the Queen City of the Northwest. All its greenery has also gotten it the tag the Emerald City. With Lake Washington, Puget Sound, and the Cascade mountain range nearby, including Mount Rainier, it may be, on those rare clear days, America's most beautiful metro area.
East-west street addresses increase from Puget Sound and the Alaskan Way on eastward. North-south addresses are separated by Yesler Way.
The Times is Seattle's only remaining daily print newspaper. The Post-Intelligencer is still in business, but in online form only. This is mainly due to the high cost of both paper and ink, and has doomed many newspapers completely, so Seattle is lucky to still, sort of, have 2 daily papers.
ZIP Codes in the State of Washington start with the digits 980 to 994. In Seattle proper, it's 980 and 981; and for the suburbs, 982, 983 and 984. The Area Code for Seattle is 206. Interstate 405 serves as Seattle's "beltway."
Sales tax in the State of Washington is 6.5 percent, but in the City of Seattle, it's 9.5 percent. Off-peak bus fare in Seattle is $2.25. In peak hours, a one-zone ride (either totally within the City of Seattle or in King County outside the city) is $2.50 and a two-zone ride (from the City to the County, or vice versa) is $3.00. The monorail is $2.25. The light rail fares, depending on distance, are between $2.00 and $2.75. Fares are paid with a farecard, or, as they call it, an ORCA card: One Regional Card for All.
Although Seattle is the largest city in the State of Washington, the State Capitol is Olympia, 60 miles to the southwest. It can be reached by public transportation, taking Bus 594 to Lakewood, and then transferring to Bus 620. The trip takes about 2 1/2 hours.
Going In. Erected for the 1962 World's Fair, Seattle Center is at 400 Broad Street at John Street, about a mile north of downtown. It can be reached from downtown by the Number 33 bus, although the nearest Link station is several blocks' walk away.
The complex includes the city's trademark, the Space Needle. Also there is Memorial Stadium, a high school football stadium built in 1946. It used to host the old North American Soccer League version of the Sounders, and now hosts the women's soccer team, the Seattle Reign. On June 24, 1975, it hosted a game between the national teams of the U.S. and Poland, ending in a draw.
For our purposes, the most important building in this complex is the KeyArena, home of the NBA's Seattle SuperSonics, the WNBA's Seattle Storm, and the basketball team at Seattle University. KeyBank owns the naming rights. The old Seattle Center Coliseum was built on the site in 1962, 3 blocks west and 2 blocks north of the Space Needle, and the expansion Sonics moved in for the 1967-68 season.
The Beatles performed at the old Coliseum on August 21, 1964, and did 2 shows there on their final tour on August 25, 1966. Elvis Presley, who filmed It Happened At the World's Fair at Seattle Center in 1962, sang at the Coliseum on November 12, 1970; April 29, 1973 (2 shows); and April 26, 1976.
It was demolished, and rebuilt while the Sonics played the 1994-95 season at the Tacoma Dome. The Arena's official address is 305 Harrison Street. Parking is $8.00.
Since the arena is north of downtown, most fans are likely to enter from the south. The court is laid out north-to-south.
On May 12, 2014, The New York Times printed a story that shows NBA fandom by ZIP Code, according to Facebook likes. With the loss of the Sonics, Seattle fans not only refused to accept their former heroes as Oklahoma City Thunder (Thunders? Thunderers? Thundermen?), but also refused to accept the next-closest team, their former arch-rivals, the Portland Trail Blazers, 171 miles away, as their new team. They seem to divide their fandom 4 ways, none of which should surprise you: The Chicago Bulls, the Los Angeles Lakers, the Boston Celtics and the Miami Heat. But if Seattle should ever get another team, these fans would certainly get behind the new Sonics.
Food. As a waterfront city, and as the Northwest's biggest transportation and freight hub, it is no surprise that Seattle is a good food city, with the legendary Pike Place Market serving as their "South Street Seaport." Fortunately, KeyArena lives up to this.
The northwest corner has Uptown Kitchen, which includes seafood like fish & chips and clam chowder; and La Choza, a Mexican food stand. The northeast corner has Grill 206, with burgers, hot dogs and fries; and Ceres, with roasted nuts. The southeast corner has Seven Hills Grill, named for the 7 hills of Rome, and featuring pizza and Italian sausages; and a gluten-free food stand. The southwest corner has World's Fare, featuring what it calls "global street food." In addition, there are what the arena calls "general concession stands" all over.
(All of these stands are still in place, 8 years after the Sonics left.)
Team History Displays. The Sonics began play in 1967, and have usually been at least good. They've made the Playoffs 22 times in their 1st 40 seasons; won 5 regular-season division titles, most recently in 2005; reached the Western Conference Finals 6 times; won the Western Conference in 1978, 1979 and 1996; and won the NBA Championship in 1979. That remains Seattle's only World Championship in any sport, except for the Seattle Metropolitans becoming the 1st team from outside Canada to win the Stanley Cup, in 1917.
In addition, the Seattle Storm won the WNBA Championship in 2004. The north end of the arena has the 1979 NBA title and the 2004 WNBA title at the center of a banner display, with the other banners arranged in chronological order -- oddly, with the Storm's other banner, for their 2004 Western Conference title, mixed in with the Sonics' banners.
(The Seahawks have since won Super Bowl XLVIII, and the Storm won another WNBA title in 2010.)
The Sonics have retired 6 numbers. The 1st was the 19 of Lenny Wilkens, a guard in their early days and the head coach of their 1979 title, retiring it just as their next season started. Later, from that title team, they retired the 1 of guard Gus Williams, the 32 of guard Fred "Downtown" Brown, and the 43 of center Jack Sikma.
They've also retired the 24 of forward Spencer Haywood, from their early days; and the 10 of guard Nate McMillan, from their 1996 Conference title. So far, they haven't retired the 20 of guard Gary Payton or the 40 of forward Shawn Kemp from the '96 Sonics. They have, however, retired a microphone for Bob Blackburn, who broadcast for them from their 1967 debut until 1992.
Wilkens, Haywood and Payton are in the Basketball Hall of Fame. Bill Russell was elected while he was Sonics coach, but was fired, and replaced by Wilkens. Russell was a great coach when he had Bill Russell to play for him; when he didn't, not so much.
Since the Sonics moved, Dennis Johnson, also a member of the 1979 title team, was elected. Like Haywood, he wore 24 with the Sonics. While some teams (including the Yankees and the Knicks) have retired a number for 2 players, the Sonics never so honored him, although the Boston Celtics retired the 3 he wore with them. Also since the Sonics moved, the Storm have retired a number, the 15 of Australian forward Lauren Jackson, 2001-12.
Wilkens was the only player with significant time with the Sonics to have been named to the NBA's 50th Anniversary 50 Greatest Players in 1996.
The Storm's Jackson and Sue Bird were named to the NBA's 15th Anniversary 15 Greatest Players in 2012. They, along with Swin Cash, Yolando Griffith, Katie Smith, Sheryl Swoopes and Tina Thompson, played for the Storm and were named to the NBA's 20th Anniversary 20 Greatest Players in 2016 -- in the 20th season, rather than at the 20th Anniversary.
Alas, the Sonics are gone now.
The rivalry between the NBA's 2 Pacific Northwest teams -- not counting the 1995-2001 experiment with the Vancouver Grizzlies -- ended 98-94 in favor of the Sonics.
Stuff. The Huddle, the main team store, is in the southwest corner of the arena, behind Section 118. Sonics and Storm items are available there.
There aren't many books about the team. Probably the best one is Nate Leboutillier's 2006 contribution to the NBA: A History of Hoops series, The Story of the Seattle SuperSonics. A DVD collection from their 1979 title team should be available.
In 2014, a video titled Sonicsgate: Requiem for a Team premiered.
During the Game. Wearing Knick or Net gear in Seattle, including inside KeyArena, will not endanger your safety. Sonics fans hate the Portland Trail Blazers, and they don't much like the Los Angeles Lakers. But they don't mind the New York-area teams.
The Sonics hold auditions for National Anthem singers, instead of having a regular. Their mascot is Squatch, short for "Sasquatch," or "Bigfoot," a creature that supposedly inhabits the Pacific Northwest. His "uniform number" is a footprint. Like Go the Gorilla in Phoenix, he does trick dunks -- indeed, he may have been inspired by Go, since he debuted for the 1993-94 season, the year after the Charles Barkley-led Suns won the NBA West.
After the 2008 season, Marc Taylor, who'd played Squatch since 1999, moved with the Sonics to become the Thunder's mascot, Rumble the Bison. The Squatch character remains a Sonics trademark, and, should the team ever return, would return with them, although Taylor remains a Thunder employee.
After the Game. Seattle Center is not an especially high-crime area, and Sonic do not tend to get violent. You might get a little bit of verbal if you're wearing Knick or Net gear, but it won't get any worse than that.
To the northwest of the Arena, on Republican Street, in the Queen Anne neighborhood, are a few bars known for serving Sonics fans after games. Taylor Oyster Bars at 124, Triumph Bar at 114, Agave Cocina at 100, and Dick's Drive-In at 500 Queen Anne Avenue North.
Two bars are usually identified with Mariners and Seahawks games, but they're 2 miles southeast of the Arena. Sluggers, formerly known as Sneakers (or "Sneaks" for short), is at 538 1st Avenue South, at the northwest corner of CenturyLink Field. A little further up, at 419 Occidental Avenue South, is F.X. McRory's. Pike Place Market is about halfway between, about a mile southeast, and may still be open after Sonics games.
As for New York-friendly bars, while there are Yankee Fans everywhere, I couldn't find anything specific on the Internet. I've been told that Buckley's in Queen Anne is good for football Giants fans. It is at 232 1st Avenue West, at Thomas Street, 3 blocks west and 1 block south from the Arena.
The Sonics' last season in Seattle, 2007-08, was the early days of mass satellite TV exposure of world soccer in America, making this next line viable.
If you visit during the European soccer season, which will soon be upon us, the leading "football pub" in the Pacific Northwest is The George and Dragon Pub, 206 N. 36th Street, 5 miles north of downtown. Bus 40.
Sidelights. Aside from the KeyArena and the Safeco/CenturyLink complex, Seattle doesn't have a lot of sports sites worth mentioning. But these should be mentioned:
* Safeco Field, CenturyLink Field and site of Kingdome. The Mariners new ballpark is at 1516 First Avenue South. It is in a neighborhood called SoDo, for "South of Downtown."
CenturyLink Field, formerly Seahawks Stadium and Qwest Field, home of the NFL's Seattle Seahawks and MLS' Seattle Sounders, is just to the north of Safeco, across Royal Brougham Way, on the site of the Kingdome. It is regarded as the loudest outdoor facility in the NFL, and it has one of the better soccer atmospheres in the U.S. as well. The U.S. soccer team has played at CenturyLink 4 times, and won them all. It also hosted the 2009 MLS Cup Final.
In case you're wondering, Safeco is an insurance company, and CenturyLink is a telecommunications outfit, which bought similar company Qwest.
CenturyLink was built on the site of the Kingdome, home to the Seahawks from 1976 to 1999, the Mariners from 1977 to 1999, the old Sounders from 1976 to 1984, and the Sonics for some home games from 1978 to 1984.
The Kingdome hosted the Final Four in 1984 (Georgetown over Houston), 1989 (Michigan over Seton Hall), and 1995 (UCLA over Arkansas). It also hosted 3 U.S. soccer team matches: A win, a loss, and a draw.
It was functional, and that's about it. It was demolished, and that was best for everyone from sports fans to architecture fans.
* Sick's Stadium. The Pacific Coast League team, known for most of its history as the Seattle Rainiers, played 2½ miles southeast of Safeco, first at Dugdale Field (1913-1932) and then at Sick’s Stadium (1938-68 and 1972-76, built by Rainiers' owner Emil Sick). The Seattle Pilots also played at Sick's, but lasted only one year, 1969, before being moved to Milwaukee to become the Brewers, and are now chiefly remembered for ex-Yankee pitcher Jim Bouton’s diary of that season, Ball Four.
The book gives awful details of the place's inadequacy: As an 11,000-seat ballpark, it was fine for Triple-A ball in the 1940s, '50s and '60s; expanded to 25,420 seats for the Pilots, it was a lousy place to watch, and a worse one to play, baseball in anything like the modern era.
Elvis Presley sang at Sick's on September 1, 1957 (since it had more seats than any indoor facility in town). Supposedly, Hendrix, then 15, was there. A few days prior, Floyd Patterson defended the heavyweight title there by knocking out fellow 1956 Olympic Gold Medalist Pete Rademacher.
Demolished in 1979 after the construction of the Kingdome (whose inadequacies were very different but no less glaring), the site of Sick's Stadium is now occupied by a Lowe's store. 2700 Rainier Avenue South, bounded also by McClellan & Bayview Sts. & Martin Luther King Jr. Way. Mount Baker station on the Link light rail system.
* Husky Stadium. The home of the University of Washington football, the largest stadium in the Pacific Northwest (including Canada) is right on Lake Washington, and is one of the nicest-looking stadiums in college football. A rare feature in major college football is that fans can dock right outside and tailgate by boat. (The only others at which this is possible: Neyland Stadium at the University of Tennessee, and Heinz Field for University of Pittsburgh games.)
It opened in 1920, making it the oldest stadium in the Pacific-12 Conference. The Seahawks played a few home games here in 1994, after some tiles fell from the Kingdome roof, and played their games here in 2000 and 2001 between the demolition of the Kingdome and the opening of what's now CenturyLink Field. In 1923, it was the site of the last public speech given by President Warren G. Harding before his death in a San Francisco hotel.
Sadly, The Wave was invented here in 1981, by university yell leader (think male cheerleader) Robb Weller, later one of Mary Hart's co-hosts on Entertainment Tonight.
A major renovation was recently completed, necessary due to age and the moisture from being on the water and in Seattle's rainy climate. Pretty much everything but the north stand of the east-pointing horseshoe was demolished and replaced. The Huskies played the 2012 season at CenturyLink, and moved into the revamped, 70,138-seat Husky Stadium for the 2013 season. Rutgers University will play its 1st game of the 2016 football game against Washington here, on Saturday, September 3.
3800 Montlake Blvd. NE, at Pacific St. Bus 545 to Montlake & Lake Washington Blvd., then walk half a mile across Montlake Cut, a canal that connects Lake Washington with Lake Union. Or, Bus 511 to 45th St. & 7th Ave., then Bus 44 to Pacific & Montlake, outside UW Medical Center, then walk a quarter of a mile.
* Edmundson Pavilion. Adjacent to Husky Stadium, at 3870 Montlake, is Alaska Airlines Arena at Clarence S. "Hec" Edmundson Pavilion, the home of "U-Dub" basketball since 1927. Hec was the school's longtime basketball and track coach, and "Hec Ed" hosted the NCAA Final Four in 1949 (Kentucky over Oklahoma A&M, the school now known as Oklahoma State) and 1952 (Kansas over St. John's). It has also hosted the State of Washington's high school basketball finals.
UW has been to the Final Four only once, in 1953, although they've won the regular-season title in the league now called the Pac-12 11 times, including 2012; and the Conference Tournament 3 times, most recently in 2011. Washington State, across the State in Pullman, reached the Championship Game in 1941, but hasn't been back to the Final Four since.
* Tacoma Dome. The Sonics used this building during the 1994-95 season, as the Seattle Center Coliseum was demolished and the KeyArena put up in its place. Opening in 1983, it seats 17,100, and its most common use has been for minor-league hockey and concerts. 2727 East D Street, about 32 miles south of downtown Seattle. It can be reached from downtown Seattle by Bus 590, 592, 594 or 595, and it would take about 45 minutes.
The night Elvis sang at Sick's Stadium, September 1, 1957, he gave an afternoon concert in Tacoma, at the Lincoln Bowl, the football stadium of Lincoln High School. 707 S. 37th Street. The day before, he sang across the State, at Memorial Stadium in Spokane. He returned to Spokane to sing at their Coliseum on April 28, 1973 and April 27, 1976.
The Spokane Coliseum, at Boone Street and Howard Avenue, seated 5,400, lasted from 1954 to 1995, and was replaced by the 12,200-seat Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena, across the street. It's home to minor-league hockey's Spokane Chiefs. 720 W. Mallon Avenue. Spokane is 280 miles east of Seattle.
* Seattle Ice Arena. The Seattle Metropolitans played in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association from 1915 to the league's folding in 1926, and won 5 league championships: 1917, 1919, 1920, 1922 and 1924. In 1917, they defeated the National Hockey Association champion Montreal Canadiens, and became the 1st American team to win the Stanley Cup. This would be Seattle's only world title in any sport for 62 years.
They played at the Seattle Ice Arena, which seated only 4,000 people, and was demolished in 1963. The IBM Building, a typically tacky piece of 1960s architecture, now stands on the site. 1200 Fifth Avenue at University Avenue, downtown.
If Seattle ever got a new NBA team, it would rank 17th among NBA metro areas in population. It would also rank 17th in the NHL. The closest NHL team is the Vancouver Canucks, 144 miles away. According to an article in the January 8, 2016 edition of Business Insider, the Canucks are the most popular NHL team in the State of Washington.
* Museums. In addition to the KeyArena, the Seattle Center Complex features the city's tradmark, the 605-foot Space Needle. Admission is $22, less than the cost of the Empire State Building, and it's open 'til 11:00 PM, with great views of the region's natural splendor.
Seattle Center also has the Pacific Science Center (think of it the Northwest's version of the American Museum of Natural History and its Hayden Planetarium), the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame (not sure why Seattle was chosen as the Hall's location, although the city is a major aerospace center).
Aside from the Pacific Science Center and the Science Fiction Museum, Seattle isn't a big museum city, although the Seattle Art Museum, at 1300 1st Avenue at University Street, might be worth a visit.
The State of Washington has never produced a President, so there's no Presidential Library. Senator Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson ran for the Democratic nomination in 1972 and 1976, but didn't get particularly close. The State's never produced a Vice President, either. Thomas S. Foley served a District centered on Spokane in Congress from 1965 to 1995, and was Speaker of the House of Representatives from 1989 to 1995.
At 967 feet high, Columbia Center, a.k.a. The Black Tower, is the tallest building in the Northwest, and, for the moment, the tallest building in North America west of the Rocky Mountains except for the U.S. Bank Tower in Los Angeles. (A building going up in San Francisco, and another in Los Angeles, are both expected to top the Black Tower in 2017.)
Aside from Seattle Center and its Space Needle, and the stadiums, Seattle's best-known structure is the Pike Place Market. Think of it as their version of the South Street Seaport and Fulton Fish Market. (Or Philadelphia's Reading Terminal Market, Baltimore's Harborplace, or Boston's Quincy Market/Faneuil Hall.) It includes the 1st-ever Starbucks store, which is still open. Downtown, 85 Pike Street at Western Avenue.
The TV show Northern Exposure was filmed in the State of Washington, and Twin Peaks was both filmed and set there: The former in Roslyn (hence, Roslyn's Cafe), about 85 miles southeast of downtown Seattle; the latter in North Bend, about 30 miles east. The science-fiction series Dark Angel, which vaulted Jessica Alba and NCIS' Michael Weatherly to stardom, was set in a dystopian future Seattle, but was filmed in Vancouver. So was The X-Files. So was Millennium. So is Kyle XY. So is Smallville, but that isn't meant to be Seattle.
While Frasier was set in Seattle, and Grey's Anatomy still is, there were hardly any location shots. The same is true for Here Come the Brides, The 4400 and iCarly.
The most obvious film made and set in Seattle is Sleepless in Seattle, and the city was home to Matthew Broderick's and Ally Sheedy's characters in WarGames (in which Broderick's computer hacking has much greater consequences than it would 3 years later in the Chicago-based Ferris Bueller's Day Off).
Singles came along in 1992, at the height of grunge and the rise of Starbucks, which helped make Seattle the hippest city in the country in the years of George Bush the father and Bill Clinton's 1st term -- or, as Jason Alexander put it shortly thereafter on Seinfeld, "It's the pesto of cities." It also reminded us of how good an actor Matt Dillon is, how gorgeous Kyra Sedgwick is, and that Bridget Fonda (daughter of Peter, niece of Jane and granddaughter of Henry) and Campbell Scott (son of George C. and Colleen Dewhurst) were worthy of their genes.
There's also been It Happened at the World's Fair (Elvis playing a visitor to the 1962 Fair), McQ
(John Wayne as a present-day cop in one of his last films, in 1974), The Parallax View, Stakeout, Black Widow, The Fabulous Baker Boys, My Own Private Idaho, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, The Crush, Harry and the Hendersons, 10 Things I Hate About You and Agent Cody Banks. An Officer and a Gentleman was filmed at the naval base in nearby Bremerton.
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So, if you could have afforded it, it would have been nice to go on out and join your fellow Knick and Net fans in watching your team play the SuperSonics in Seattle. Who knows, maybe, one day, it will be again.
It should be the New Jersey Nets playing away to the Seattle SuperSonics.
I began this blog just prior to the 2007-08 NBA season, which was the last one for the Sonics before they moved. I wasn't yet doing these travel guides. If I had been, with the Nets making their final visit on November 23, and the Nets their last on February 2, the one for the Sonics would have gone something like this (with updates in italics):
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Yes, that really is Seattle. Yes, that really is a nice blue sky overhead. When the clouds part, and you can see Lake Washington and the Cascadia Mountains, including Mount Rainier, it's actually a beautiful city. It's just that it rains so much, such a sight isn't all that common.
Before You Go. Seattle is notorious for rain, and while this game will be indoors, you will have to spend quite a bit of time outdoors. Check the websites of the Seattle Times and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer for the weather forecast. Right now, they're predicting the high 50s for daylight on November 23, and the low 40s for the evening.
Seattle is in the Pacific Time Zone, 3 hours behind New York. Adjust your timepieces accordingly.
There is high-speed passenger ferry service from Seattle to the Canadian city of Victoria, the capital of the Province of British Columbia. But it takes 2 hours and 45 minutes, and costs a bundle: $187 round-trip. (The scenery in Washington State and British Columbia is spectacular, and this is clearly part of what you're paying for.) From there, you can easily get to Vancouver. (I don't know what it actually would have cost in 2007. That's what it costs in 2016.)
If you want to make this trip, you will have to give confirmation within 48 hours of booking. And it's a passenger-only ferry service: No cars allowed. If you'd like to make a side trip to Vancouver, you're better off driving or taking the train. But any way you go over the border, you should have your passport with you.
Tickets. The SuperSonics averaged 15,955 fans per home game in 2006-07, about 93 percent of capacity. And they're not very good at the moment, so tickets shouldn't be difficult to obtain.
(Unfortunately, I can find no reference to what Sonics ticket prices were in their final season, or in any other.)
Getting There. It's 2,854 miles from Times Square to Pioneer Square in Seattle. In other words, if you're going, you're going to want to fly.
After all, even if you get someone to go with you, and you take turns, one drives while the other one sleeps, and you pack 2 days' worth of food, and you use the side of the Interstate as a toilet, and you don’t get pulled over for speeding, you'll still need over 2 full days to get there. One way.
But, for future reference, if you really, really want to drive... Get onto Interstate 80 West in New Jersey, and stay on that until it merges with Interstate 90 west of Cleveland, then stay on 90 through Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, into Wisconsin, where it merges with Interstate 94. Although you could take I-90 almost all the way, I-94 is actually going to be faster. Stay on I-94 through Minnesota and North Dakota before re-merging with I-90 in Montana, taking it through Idaho and into Washington, getting off I-94 at Exit 2B.
Not counting rest stops, you should be in New Jersey for an hour and a half, Pennsylvania for 5:15, Ohio for 4 hours, Indiana for 2:30, Illinois for 2 hours, Wisconsin for 3:15, Minnesota for 4:30, North Dakota for 6 hours, Montana for a whopping 13 hours (or 3 times the time it takes to get from New York to Boston), Idaho for 1:15 and 6:45 in Washington. That’s 50 hours, and with rest stops, you're talking 3 full days.
That's still faster than Greyhound (70 hours, changing in Pittsburgh, Chicago, Minneapolis and Missoula, $362 round-trip) and Amtrak (67 hours, changing in Chicago, $746 before booking sleeping arrangements). (Note that these prices were in place for a Yankees-Mariners series in August 2016, but were probably close to what they were in November 2007 or February 2008.)
On Amtrak, you would leave Penn Station on the Lake Shore Limited at 3:40 PM Eastern Time on Tuesday, arrive at Union Station in Chicago at 9:45 AM Central Time on Wednesday, and board the Empire Builder at 2:15 PM, and would reach King Street Station at 10:25 AM Pacific Time on Friday. (Of course, for the Nets-Sonics game on November 23, this would have been complicated by the day before being Thanksgiving.)
King Street Station is just to the north of the stadium complex, at S. King St. & 3rd Ave. S., and horns from the trains can sometimes be heard as the trains go down the east stands of CenturyLink Field and the right-field stands of Safeco. The Greyhound station is at 811 Stewart St. at 8th Ave., in the Central Business District, about halfway between the stadiums and the Seattle Center complex.
A round-trip flight from Newark to Seattle, if ordered now, could be had, although not nonstop, on American Airlines for around $550. You can get a nonstop on United Airlines for around $850. Link Light Rail can get you out of Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (Sea-Tac), and the same system has Stadium Station to get to Safeco and CenturyLink Fields. The fare is $2.75.
Once In the City. Founded in 1853, and named for a Chief of the Duwamish Indians, Seattle is easily the biggest city in America's Northwest, with 635,000 people within the city limits and 3.6 million in its metropolitan area. Just as Charlotte is called the Queen City of the Southeast, and Cincinnati the Queen City of the Midwest, Seattle is known as the Queen City of the Northwest. All its greenery has also gotten it the tag the Emerald City. With Lake Washington, Puget Sound, and the Cascade mountain range nearby, including Mount Rainier, it may be, on those rare clear days, America's most beautiful metro area.
East-west street addresses increase from Puget Sound and the Alaskan Way on eastward. North-south addresses are separated by Yesler Way.
The Times is Seattle's only remaining daily print newspaper. The Post-Intelligencer is still in business, but in online form only. This is mainly due to the high cost of both paper and ink, and has doomed many newspapers completely, so Seattle is lucky to still, sort of, have 2 daily papers.
ZIP Codes in the State of Washington start with the digits 980 to 994. In Seattle proper, it's 980 and 981; and for the suburbs, 982, 983 and 984. The Area Code for Seattle is 206. Interstate 405 serves as Seattle's "beltway."
Although Seattle is the largest city in the State of Washington, the State Capitol is Olympia, 60 miles to the southwest. It can be reached by public transportation, taking Bus 594 to Lakewood, and then transferring to Bus 620. The trip takes about 2 1/2 hours.
The Washington State House in Olympia
As a port city, Seattle has always been a home to job-seekers, both native-born and immigrant. As a result, there has frequently been trouble. There was a riot in 1886. In 1919, the leftist Industrial Workers of the World (a.k.a. the IWW or "Wobblies") led a 6-day general strike. There were anti-Filipino riots in Washington State in the Yakima Valley in 1927 and the Wenatchee Valley in 1928. In 1999, a meeting of the World Trade Organization was disrupted by leftist protestors.
(UPDATE: In 2020, despite restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Seattle was the site of a demonstration calling for the city to become a "Cop-Free Zone," following multiple accusation of police brutality, there and all over America.)
The complex includes the city's trademark, the Space Needle. Also there is Memorial Stadium, a high school football stadium built in 1946. It used to host the old North American Soccer League version of the Sounders, and now hosts the women's soccer team, the Seattle Reign. On June 24, 1975, it hosted a game between the national teams of the U.S. and Poland, ending in a draw.
The old Coliseum
For our purposes, the most important building in this complex is the KeyArena, home of the NBA's Seattle SuperSonics, the WNBA's Seattle Storm, and the basketball team at Seattle University. KeyBank owns the naming rights. The old Seattle Center Coliseum was built on the site in 1962, 3 blocks west and 2 blocks north of the Space Needle, and the expansion Sonics moved in for the 1967-68 season.
The Beatles performed at the old Coliseum on August 21, 1964, and did 2 shows there on their final tour on August 25, 1966. Elvis Presley, who filmed It Happened At the World's Fair at Seattle Center in 1962, sang at the Coliseum on November 12, 1970; April 29, 1973 (2 shows); and April 26, 1976.
It was demolished, and rebuilt while the Sonics played the 1994-95 season at the Tacoma Dome. The Arena's official address is 305 Harrison Street. Parking is $8.00.
The new Arena
Since the arena is north of downtown, most fans are likely to enter from the south. The court is laid out north-to-south.
On May 12, 2014, The New York Times printed a story that shows NBA fandom by ZIP Code, according to Facebook likes. With the loss of the Sonics, Seattle fans not only refused to accept their former heroes as Oklahoma City Thunder (Thunders? Thunderers? Thundermen?), but also refused to accept the next-closest team, their former arch-rivals, the Portland Trail Blazers, 171 miles away, as their new team. They seem to divide their fandom 4 ways, none of which should surprise you: The Chicago Bulls, the Los Angeles Lakers, the Boston Celtics and the Miami Heat. But if Seattle should ever get another team, these fans would certainly get behind the new Sonics.
Food. As a waterfront city, and as the Northwest's biggest transportation and freight hub, it is no surprise that Seattle is a good food city, with the legendary Pike Place Market serving as their "South Street Seaport." Fortunately, KeyArena lives up to this.
The northwest corner has Uptown Kitchen, which includes seafood like fish & chips and clam chowder; and La Choza, a Mexican food stand. The northeast corner has Grill 206, with burgers, hot dogs and fries; and Ceres, with roasted nuts. The southeast corner has Seven Hills Grill, named for the 7 hills of Rome, and featuring pizza and Italian sausages; and a gluten-free food stand. The southwest corner has World's Fare, featuring what it calls "global street food." In addition, there are what the arena calls "general concession stands" all over.
(All of these stands are still in place, 8 years after the Sonics left.)
Team History Displays. The Sonics began play in 1967, and have usually been at least good. They've made the Playoffs 22 times in their 1st 40 seasons; won 5 regular-season division titles, most recently in 2005; reached the Western Conference Finals 6 times; won the Western Conference in 1978, 1979 and 1996; and won the NBA Championship in 1979. That remains Seattle's only World Championship in any sport, except for the Seattle Metropolitans becoming the 1st team from outside Canada to win the Stanley Cup, in 1917.
In addition, the Seattle Storm won the WNBA Championship in 2004. The north end of the arena has the 1979 NBA title and the 2004 WNBA title at the center of a banner display, with the other banners arranged in chronological order -- oddly, with the Storm's other banner, for their 2004 Western Conference title, mixed in with the Sonics' banners.
(The Seahawks have since won Super Bowl XLVIII, and the Storm won another WNBA title in 2010.)
The Sonics have retired 6 numbers. The 1st was the 19 of Lenny Wilkens, a guard in their early days and the head coach of their 1979 title, retiring it just as their next season started. Later, from that title team, they retired the 1 of guard Gus Williams, the 32 of guard Fred "Downtown" Brown, and the 43 of center Jack Sikma.
They've also retired the 24 of forward Spencer Haywood, from their early days; and the 10 of guard Nate McMillan, from their 1996 Conference title. So far, they haven't retired the 20 of guard Gary Payton or the 40 of forward Shawn Kemp from the '96 Sonics. They have, however, retired a microphone for Bob Blackburn, who broadcast for them from their 1967 debut until 1992.
Haywood watches his Number 24 join the honorees
Wilkens, Haywood and Payton are in the Basketball Hall of Fame. Bill Russell was elected while he was Sonics coach, but was fired, and replaced by Wilkens. Russell was a great coach when he had Bill Russell to play for him; when he didn't, not so much.
Since the Sonics moved, Dennis Johnson, also a member of the 1979 title team, was elected. Like Haywood, he wore 24 with the Sonics. While some teams (including the Yankees and the Knicks) have retired a number for 2 players, the Sonics never so honored him, although the Boston Celtics retired the 3 he wore with them. Also since the Sonics moved, the Storm have retired a number, the 15 of Australian forward Lauren Jackson, 2001-12.
Wilkens was the only player with significant time with the Sonics to have been named to the NBA's 50th Anniversary 50 Greatest Players in 1996.
The Storm's Jackson and Sue Bird were named to the NBA's 15th Anniversary 15 Greatest Players in 2012. They, along with Swin Cash, Yolando Griffith, Katie Smith, Sheryl Swoopes and Tina Thompson, played for the Storm and were named to the NBA's 20th Anniversary 20 Greatest Players in 2016 -- in the 20th season, rather than at the 20th Anniversary.
Alas, the Sonics are gone now.
The rivalry between the NBA's 2 Pacific Northwest teams -- not counting the 1995-2001 experiment with the Vancouver Grizzlies -- ended 98-94 in favor of the Sonics.
Stuff. The Huddle, the main team store, is in the southwest corner of the arena, behind Section 118. Sonics and Storm items are available there.
There aren't many books about the team. Probably the best one is Nate Leboutillier's 2006 contribution to the NBA: A History of Hoops series, The Story of the Seattle SuperSonics. A DVD collection from their 1979 title team should be available.
In 2014, a video titled Sonicsgate: Requiem for a Team premiered.
During the Game. Wearing Knick or Net gear in Seattle, including inside KeyArena, will not endanger your safety. Sonics fans hate the Portland Trail Blazers, and they don't much like the Los Angeles Lakers. But they don't mind the New York-area teams.
The Sonics hold auditions for National Anthem singers, instead of having a regular. Their mascot is Squatch, short for "Sasquatch," or "Bigfoot," a creature that supposedly inhabits the Pacific Northwest. His "uniform number" is a footprint. Like Go the Gorilla in Phoenix, he does trick dunks -- indeed, he may have been inspired by Go, since he debuted for the 1993-94 season, the year after the Charles Barkley-led Suns won the NBA West.
After the 2008 season, Marc Taylor, who'd played Squatch since 1999, moved with the Sonics to become the Thunder's mascot, Rumble the Bison. The Squatch character remains a Sonics trademark, and, should the team ever return, would return with them, although Taylor remains a Thunder employee.
After the Game. Seattle Center is not an especially high-crime area, and Sonic do not tend to get violent. You might get a little bit of verbal if you're wearing Knick or Net gear, but it won't get any worse than that.
To the northwest of the Arena, on Republican Street, in the Queen Anne neighborhood, are a few bars known for serving Sonics fans after games. Taylor Oyster Bars at 124, Triumph Bar at 114, Agave Cocina at 100, and Dick's Drive-In at 500 Queen Anne Avenue North.
Two bars are usually identified with Mariners and Seahawks games, but they're 2 miles southeast of the Arena. Sluggers, formerly known as Sneakers (or "Sneaks" for short), is at 538 1st Avenue South, at the northwest corner of CenturyLink Field. A little further up, at 419 Occidental Avenue South, is F.X. McRory's. Pike Place Market is about halfway between, about a mile southeast, and may still be open after Sonics games.
As for New York-friendly bars, while there are Yankee Fans everywhere, I couldn't find anything specific on the Internet. I've been told that Buckley's in Queen Anne is good for football Giants fans. It is at 232 1st Avenue West, at Thomas Street, 3 blocks west and 1 block south from the Arena.
The Sonics' last season in Seattle, 2007-08, was the early days of mass satellite TV exposure of world soccer in America, making this next line viable.
If you visit during the European soccer season, which will soon be upon us, the leading "football pub" in the Pacific Northwest is The George and Dragon Pub, 206 N. 36th Street, 5 miles north of downtown. Bus 40.
Sidelights. Aside from the KeyArena and the Safeco/CenturyLink complex, Seattle doesn't have a lot of sports sites worth mentioning. But these should be mentioned:
* Safeco Field, CenturyLink Field and site of Kingdome. The Mariners new ballpark is at 1516 First Avenue South. It is in a neighborhood called SoDo, for "South of Downtown."
CenturyLink Field, formerly Seahawks Stadium and Qwest Field, home of the NFL's Seattle Seahawks and MLS' Seattle Sounders, is just to the north of Safeco, across Royal Brougham Way, on the site of the Kingdome. It is regarded as the loudest outdoor facility in the NFL, and it has one of the better soccer atmospheres in the U.S. as well. The U.S. soccer team has played at CenturyLink 4 times, and won them all. It also hosted the 2009 MLS Cup Final.
In case you're wondering, Safeco is an insurance company, and CenturyLink is a telecommunications outfit, which bought similar company Qwest.
CenturyLink was built on the site of the Kingdome, home to the Seahawks from 1976 to 1999, the Mariners from 1977 to 1999, the old Sounders from 1976 to 1984, and the Sonics for some home games from 1978 to 1984.
The Kingdome hosted the Final Four in 1984 (Georgetown over Houston), 1989 (Michigan over Seton Hall), and 1995 (UCLA over Arkansas). It also hosted 3 U.S. soccer team matches: A win, a loss, and a draw.
It was functional, and that's about it. It was demolished, and that was best for everyone from sports fans to architecture fans.
The Kingdome. It served its purpose, getting Seattle
into MLB and the NFL, and was thankfully replaced.
UPDATES: In 2020, CenturyLink was rebranded as Lumen Technologies, and the stadium as Lumen Field. It was approved by FIFA to be one of the host venues for the 2026 World Cup. And the naming rights to Safeco Field ran out in 2018, and it was renamed T-Mobile Park.
The book gives awful details of the place's inadequacy: As an 11,000-seat ballpark, it was fine for Triple-A ball in the 1940s, '50s and '60s; expanded to 25,420 seats for the Pilots, it was a lousy place to watch, and a worse one to play, baseball in anything like the modern era.
Elvis Presley sang at Sick's on September 1, 1957 (since it had more seats than any indoor facility in town). Supposedly, Hendrix, then 15, was there. A few days prior, Floyd Patterson defended the heavyweight title there by knocking out fellow 1956 Olympic Gold Medalist Pete Rademacher.
Demolished in 1979 after the construction of the Kingdome (whose inadequacies were very different but no less glaring), the site of Sick's Stadium is now occupied by a Lowe's store. 2700 Rainier Avenue South, bounded also by McClellan & Bayview Sts. & Martin Luther King Jr. Way. Mount Baker station on the Link light rail system.
* Husky Stadium. The home of the University of Washington football, the largest stadium in the Pacific Northwest (including Canada) is right on Lake Washington, and is one of the nicest-looking stadiums in college football. A rare feature in major college football is that fans can dock right outside and tailgate by boat. (The only others at which this is possible: Neyland Stadium at the University of Tennessee, and Heinz Field for University of Pittsburgh games.)
It opened in 1920, making it the oldest stadium in the Pacific-12 Conference. The Seahawks played a few home games here in 1994, after some tiles fell from the Kingdome roof, and played their games here in 2000 and 2001 between the demolition of the Kingdome and the opening of what's now CenturyLink Field. In 1923, it was the site of the last public speech given by President Warren G. Harding before his death in a San Francisco hotel.
Sadly, The Wave was invented here in 1981, by university yell leader (think male cheerleader) Robb Weller, later one of Mary Hart's co-hosts on Entertainment Tonight.
A major renovation was recently completed, necessary due to age and the moisture from being on the water and in Seattle's rainy climate. Pretty much everything but the north stand of the east-pointing horseshoe was demolished and replaced. The Huskies played the 2012 season at CenturyLink, and moved into the revamped, 70,138-seat Husky Stadium for the 2013 season. Rutgers University will play its 1st game of the 2016 football game against Washington here, on Saturday, September 3.
3800 Montlake Blvd. NE, at Pacific St. Bus 545 to Montlake & Lake Washington Blvd., then walk half a mile across Montlake Cut, a canal that connects Lake Washington with Lake Union. Or, Bus 511 to 45th St. & 7th Ave., then Bus 44 to Pacific & Montlake, outside UW Medical Center, then walk a quarter of a mile.
* Edmundson Pavilion. Adjacent to Husky Stadium, at 3870 Montlake, is Alaska Airlines Arena at Clarence S. "Hec" Edmundson Pavilion, the home of "U-Dub" basketball since 1927. Hec was the school's longtime basketball and track coach, and "Hec Ed" hosted the NCAA Final Four in 1949 (Kentucky over Oklahoma A&M, the school now known as Oklahoma State) and 1952 (Kansas over St. John's). It has also hosted the State of Washington's high school basketball finals.
UW has been to the Final Four only once, in 1953, although they've won the regular-season title in the league now called the Pac-12 11 times, including 2012; and the Conference Tournament 3 times, most recently in 2011. Washington State, across the State in Pullman, reached the Championship Game in 1941, but hasn't been back to the Final Four since.
* Tacoma Dome. The Sonics used this building during the 1994-95 season, as the Seattle Center Coliseum was demolished and the KeyArena put up in its place. Opening in 1983, it seats 17,100, and its most common use has been for minor-league hockey and concerts. 2727 East D Street, about 32 miles south of downtown Seattle. It can be reached from downtown Seattle by Bus 590, 592, 594 or 595, and it would take about 45 minutes.
Tacoma is also the home of Cheney Stadium, home of the Tacoma Rainiers of the Pacific Coast League, named for the former PCL team, the Seattle Rainiers. (UPDATE: It later became the home of OL Reign of the National Women's Soccer League. Formerly known as the Seattle Reign, they are now owned by Olympique Lyonnaise of French soccer.) 2502 S. Tyler Street.
The Spokane Coliseum, at Boone Street and Howard Avenue, seated 5,400, lasted from 1954 to 1995, and was replaced by the 12,200-seat Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena, across the street. It's home to minor-league hockey's Spokane Chiefs. 720 W. Mallon Avenue. Spokane is 280 miles east of Seattle.
* Seattle Ice Arena. The Seattle Metropolitans played in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association from 1915 to the league's folding in 1926, and won 5 league championships: 1917, 1919, 1920, 1922 and 1924. In 1917, they defeated the National Hockey Association champion Montreal Canadiens, and became the 1st American team to win the Stanley Cup. This would be Seattle's only world title in any sport for 62 years.
They played at the Seattle Ice Arena, which seated only 4,000 people, and was demolished in 1963. The IBM Building, a typically tacky piece of 1960s architecture, now stands on the site. 1200 Fifth Avenue at University Avenue, downtown.
There was also a hockey team named the Seattle Seahawks, competing in the North West Hockey League from 1933 to 1936, winning its championship in 1936; and then in the Pacific Coast Hockey League until 1941. Frank Foyston, who starred for the Metropolitans, was their 1st coach and their 1st general manager.
* Museums. In addition to the KeyArena, the Seattle Center Complex features the city's tradmark, the 605-foot Space Needle. Admission is $22, less than the cost of the Empire State Building, and it's open 'til 11:00 PM, with great views of the region's natural splendor.
Seattle Center also has the Pacific Science Center (think of it the Northwest's version of the American Museum of Natural History and its Hayden Planetarium), the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame (not sure why Seattle was chosen as the Hall's location, although the city is a major aerospace center).
Aside from the Pacific Science Center and the Science Fiction Museum, Seattle isn't a big museum city, although the Seattle Art Museum, at 1300 1st Avenue at University Street, might be worth a visit.
The State of Washington has never produced a President, so there's no Presidential Library. Senator Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson ran for the Democratic nomination in 1972 and 1976, but didn't get particularly close. The State's never produced a Vice President, either. Thomas S. Foley served a District centered on Spokane in Congress from 1965 to 1995, and was Speaker of the House of Representatives from 1989 to 1995.
At 967 feet high, Columbia Center, a.k.a. The Black Tower, is the tallest building in the Northwest, and, for the moment, the tallest building in North America west of the Rocky Mountains except for the U.S. Bank Tower in Los Angeles. (A building going up in San Francisco, and another in Los Angeles, are both expected to top the Black Tower in 2017.)
Aside from Seattle Center and its Space Needle, and the stadiums, Seattle's best-known structure is the Pike Place Market. Think of it as their version of the South Street Seaport and Fulton Fish Market. (Or Philadelphia's Reading Terminal Market, Baltimore's Harborplace, or Boston's Quincy Market/Faneuil Hall.) It includes the 1st-ever Starbucks store, which is still open. Downtown, 85 Pike Street at Western Avenue.
The TV show Northern Exposure was filmed in the State of Washington, and Twin Peaks was both filmed and set there: The former in Roslyn (hence, Roslyn's Cafe), about 85 miles southeast of downtown Seattle; the latter in North Bend, about 30 miles east. The science-fiction series Dark Angel, which vaulted Jessica Alba and NCIS' Michael Weatherly to stardom, was set in a dystopian future Seattle, but was filmed in Vancouver. So was The X-Files. So was Millennium. So is Kyle XY. So is Smallville, but that isn't meant to be Seattle.
While Frasier was set in Seattle, and Grey's Anatomy still is, there were hardly any location shots. The same is true for Here Come the Brides, The 4400 and iCarly.
The most obvious film made and set in Seattle is Sleepless in Seattle, and the city was home to Matthew Broderick's and Ally Sheedy's characters in WarGames (in which Broderick's computer hacking has much greater consequences than it would 3 years later in the Chicago-based Ferris Bueller's Day Off).
Singles came along in 1992, at the height of grunge and the rise of Starbucks, which helped make Seattle the hippest city in the country in the years of George Bush the father and Bill Clinton's 1st term -- or, as Jason Alexander put it shortly thereafter on Seinfeld, "It's the pesto of cities." It also reminded us of how good an actor Matt Dillon is, how gorgeous Kyra Sedgwick is, and that Bridget Fonda (daughter of Peter, niece of Jane and granddaughter of Henry) and Campbell Scott (son of George C. and Colleen Dewhurst) were worthy of their genes.
There's also been It Happened at the World's Fair (Elvis playing a visitor to the 1962 Fair), McQ
(John Wayne as a present-day cop in one of his last films, in 1974), The Parallax View, Stakeout, Black Widow, The Fabulous Baker Boys, My Own Private Idaho, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, The Crush, Harry and the Hendersons, 10 Things I Hate About You and Agent Cody Banks. An Officer and a Gentleman was filmed at the naval base in nearby Bremerton.
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So, if you could have afforded it, it would have been nice to go on out and join your fellow Knick and Net fans in watching your team play the SuperSonics in Seattle. Who knows, maybe, one day, it will be again.
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Saturday, October 29, 2016
Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame Clay Bennett for Moving the Seattle SuperSonics to Oklahoma City
July 2, 2008: With the last legal hurdle out of the way, Clay Bennett, owner of the NBA's Seattle SuperSonics, makes the official announcement that he's moving the team. It will be known as the Oklahoma City Thunder.
October 29, 2008: The Oklahoma City Thunder play their 1st regular-season game, at the Ford Center -- the arena now known as the Chesapeake Energy Arena -- and lose to the Milwaukee Bucks, 98-87.
Many NBA teams have moved, including some after being successful. Smaller cities just couldn't keep teams. Other teams moved because of bad arena leases.
* The Tri-Cities Blackhawks, based in Moline, Illinois, moved to become the Milwaukee Hawks in 1951, then the St. Louis Hawks in 1955, then, despite 4 trips to the Finals including the 1958 title, and a Division title in their last season, moved to Atlanta in 1968.
* The Rochester Royals, 1951 NBA Champions, moved to Cincinnati in 1957, then to Kansas City in 1972, then to Sacramento in 1985. They almost to Anaheim in 2011, and to Seattle to become the new Sonics in 2013.
* The Fort Wayne Pistons, 1944 and 1945 National Basketball League Champions, and NBA Finalists in 1955 and 1956, moved to Detroit in 1957. Since Fort Wayne was a big automotive parts center, the name "Pistons" made sense even before the move.
* The Minneapolis Lakers, NBA Champions in 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953 and 1954, and Finalists as late as 1959, moved to Los Angeles in 1960.
* The Philadelphia Warriors, NBA Champions in 1947 and 1956, moved to the Bay Area, becoming the San Francisco Warriors in 1962, and then to Oakland to become the Golden State Warriors in 1971.
* The Syracuse Nationals, NBA Champions in 1955, moved to fill the Warriors' void, becoming the Philadelphia 76ers in 1963.
* The Chicago Zephyrs became the Baltimore Bullets in 1963. Despite being Finalists in 1971 and Division Champions even in their last season, they moved to Washington in 1973, changing their name to the Washington Wizards in 1997.
* The San Diego Rockets became the Houston Rockets in 1971.
* The Buffalo Braves, despite 3 straight Playoff berths ending in 1977, became the San Diego Clippers in 1978 and the Los Angeles Clippers in 1984.
* The New Orleans Jazz became the Utah Jazz in 1979.
* The Vancouver Grizzlies became the Memphis Grizzlies in 2001.
* The original Charlotte Hornets became the New Orleans Hornets in 2002, and the New Orleans Pelicans in 2013. The Charlotte Bobcats were established in 2004, and became the new Charlotte Hornets in 2014.
Some of those moves can be justified. But even the Lakers' move from Minneapolis to Los Angeles -- by Bob Short, who would later move the Washington Senators to become the Texas Rangers in 1972 -- wasn't as bemoaned as the Sonics to Oklahoma.
The SuperSonics were Seattle's 1st true major league sports team. Before that, the city had the University of Washington, Seattle University, and the Seattle Metropolitans of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association, 1917 Stanley Cup winners, but they folded in 1926. The Seattle Rainiers had won 7 Pennants, but they were all in the Pacific Coast League.
Losing the Sonics, a team that existed for 41 years, made the Playoffs 22 times, reaching 6 Conference Finals, winning 3 Conference Championships and the 1979 NBA title was a blow to the Queen City of the Northwest.
And, the thing is, it didn't seem to make any sense. Seattle's a big city: 650,000 people in the city, 4.4 million people in the metropolitan area. The arena was relatively new: It opened in 1994. Attendance wasn't an issue: Although their last 3 seasons in Seattle were competitively terrible, the attendance was good (15,955 in the next-to-last season, before they officially became a lame duck and dropped to 13,355).
Surely, there must have been a reason why moving the team at that time made sense.
Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame Clay Bennett for Moving the Seattle SuperSonics to Oklahoma City
5. The KeyArena. After the original Seattle Center Coliseum, built in 1962, was demolished and rebuilt during the 1994-95 season (which the Sonics played at the nearby Tacoma Dome), it seemed to be fully modernized, with the Camden Yards model and skyboxes in mind.
But, eventually, as other new arenas were built, the arena's capacity of 17,072 became the smallest in the NBA. And the amount of skyboxes they had simply didn't generate sufficient revenue. Aside from vastly increasing ticket prices, there was nothing the Sonics could do to keep up -- in that arena's seating plan at the time.
In 2006, after failing to get funding for another renovation that would have expanded the arena, Howard Schultz sold the Sonics to Clay Bennett, who made no secret of his plans to move the team. And the arena was the reason why.
4. The Government. Or, should I say, "The Governments." King County built Safeco Field for the Mariners, opening in 1999. The State of Washington built what's now named CenturyLink Field for the Seahawks in 2002, which also made possible the re-establishment of the Sounders.
So that was new, state-of-the-art buildings for the local MLB team, the local NFL team, and, as it turned out, the local MLS team, built by the State and the County. Why didn't the State, or the County, or the City of Seattle, do it for Seattle's 1st major league sports team?
Schultz negotiated with the City over a publicly funded arena expansion worth $220 million. He couldn't get a deal. When Schultz sold the Sonics to Bennett on October 24, 2006, the terms of the sale required that the new ownership group "use good faith best efforts" to rework the lease, or get a new venue, for 12 months -- in other words, until October 24, 2007.
Bennett did try. Despite what Schultz would later say, Bennett was completely honest about his intention to move, yet he did follow the letter of his contract, and he did work to cut a deal to stay.
On February 12, 2007, he presented a plan for a new arena in suburban Renton, Washington. Neither King County (which includes Renton as well as Seattle) nor the State was willing to pick up any part of the $500 million tab. The State legislative session ended on April 30, 2007, and Bennett gave up on that idea. Still, he continued to try to get a deal, until the October 24 deadline passed.
On November 2, 2007, 9 days after the deadline, Bennett told NBA Commissioner David Stern that he would move the team to Oklahoma City as soon as he legally could. The team's KeyArena lease would expire at the end of the 2009-10 season. After informing the Commissioner, Bennett informed the public. He did not keep it secret. There was no shock.
Only then did Mayor Greg Nickels of Seattle try to fight. He tried to put together a group of local business owners to buy the team from Bennett. Bennett wouldn't sell -- nor was he legally or morally obligated to do so. He had fulfilled his legal obligation to Seattle. The only thing he was still obligated to do was honor his lease -- or buy his way out of it.
On March 6, 2008, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said that his investor group would pay half of the $300 million needed for the arena's renovations -- if the City and the County would pay the rest. But the City and the County wouldn't do it unless they got the money from the State. When the April 10 deadline to do so passed, without the State having done so, Mayor Nickels said the only hope left to keep the Sonics in Seattle was winning a lawsuit.
The City was represented by former U.S. Senator Slade Gorton. He said the City would drop the suit if the NBA promised a replacement team. Memories were triggered of the city's original MLB team, the Seattle Pilots, leaving after the financially disastrous 1969 season and the promise of a replacement team, dependent on a domed stadium, so the American League didn't give Seattle an expansion team or approve a move there until the Kingdome was ready in 1976, with the Mariners beginning play in 1977.
The Sonics played their last home game on April 13, 2008, beating the Dallas Mavericks, 99-95; and their last game under the Seattle name on April 16, 2008, beating the Golden State Warriors, 126-121 in Oakland. (It was only their 4th 2-game winning streak all season.)
On July 2, 2008, mere hours before Judge Marsha J. Pechman's announced ruling (we may never know what it would have been), a settlement was reached: Professional Basketball Club LLC (Bennett's company for running the team) would pay the City of Seattle $45 million to break the lease, plus another $30 million if no replacement team was granted in 5 years (it wasn't), and the Oklahoma City team could not use the SuperSonics' name or colors, or claim the team's history (including the 1979 NBA title), which would be given to any replacement team. In return, Bennett could now legally move the team, to any place that would take it. He did.
He did try to get a deal to keep the team in Seattle. He tried harder than Walter O'Malley did to keep the Dodgers in Brooklyn; harder than Bob Short did to keep the Lakers in Minneapolis or the Senators in Washington; harder than Al Davis did to keep the Raiders in Oakland, then in Los Angeles; harder than the owners of the Rams did to keep them first in Los Angeles, then in St. Louis.
The problem was, Seattle didn't even try as hard as Baltimore did to keep the Colts, or as hard as Cleveland did to keep the Browns. They didn't react until the horse had already kicked open the barn door.
3. Hurricane Katrina. The worst natural disaster in American history struck New Orleans on August 29, 2005. Among the buildings it damaged were the Louisiana Superdome, home of the NFL's New Orleans Saints; and the next-door New Orleans Arena (now known as the Smoothie King Center), home of the NBA team then known as the New Orleans Hornets.
The NFL season was about to begin, so the NFL scrambled to compensate: The Saints played 1 "home" game at the Meadowlands (since the Giants were their 1st home opponent, simply switching venues for this game bought them some time), then 3 at the Alamodome in San Antonio and 4 at Tiger Stadium on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge.
The Hornets had more time, with their 1st home game set for November 1. Since Oklahoma City had a new 18,000-seat arena, without a major league tenant, that's where they played 27 "home" games as "the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets" until March 8, when the New Orleans Arena was ready to reopen. But they only played 3 games in New Orleans, playing the rest of their 41-game home schedule in Oklahoma City.
If the hurricane had missed New Orleans, or the levees had held and the flood not happened, the Hornets (now the New Orleans Pelicans) would never have had to set up shop in another city while their arena was restored, thus making that city a viable one to which an NBA team could move. The city they chose was...
2. Oklahoma City. Despite being a small market -- about 580,000 people in the city (not a whole lot less than Seattle) but less than 1.4 million people in the metropolitan area (about 1/3rd the size of Seattle, and ranking it ahead of only Memphis among NBA cities since 2008) -- it's proven to be a great home for an NBA team. The Hornets sold out every game they played at the Ford Center. This showed Bennett that an NBA team could thrive there.
The Thunder have played to 18,203 fans at every single game at the Ford Center/Chesapeake Energy Arena, all 378 of them. (That's 328 in the regular season, 50 in the Playoffs. It remains to be seen how well they'll draw now that Kevin Durant is gone.)
The biggest reason is that, as far as the major leagues go, the Thunder are the only game in town. Seattle still has MLB's Mariners, the NFL's Seahawks, MLS' Sounders, the WNBA's Storm (who never moved, because Bennett did sell them to a local buyer in 2008), and the NWSL's Reign.
But Oklahoma City has a Triple-A team in baseball, and is too small a metro area to support an MLB team 81 times a year. The closest they've ever come to a major league pro football team is in 1984, when the United States Football League's Oklahoma Outlaws played in Tulsa.
It's had minor-league teams in hockey, but there's no way they would support an NHL team, even in Commissioner Gary Bettman's wildest drug-induced fantasies. (I'm not saying Bettman uses drugs. Though I don't have a better explanation for why he's such an asshole.) They've got teams in American soccer's 2nd and 3rd divisions, but MLS won't be expanding to them anytime soon.
There are 3 major colleges playing sports in Oklahoma, but the University of Oklahoma is 23 miles away (at least a half-hour drive from downtown), Oklahoma State University 67 (at least an hour and 15 minutes), and the University of Tulsa 106 (close to 2 hours). Oklahoma City University is in town, and was in NCAA Division I until 1985, but then they became an NAIA school -- think "NCAA Division IV."
And so, like Sacramento with the Kings, San Antonio with the Spurs, Portland with the Trail Blazers and Utah with the Jazz (though the last 3 also have the WNBA, and the last 2 have MLS), Oklahoma City has taken its one and only major league team to heart. In other words, if an NBA team (and only an NBA team) was going to move, Oklahoma City was a great choice for a destination.
And, on top of everything else, Oklahoma City is Clay Bennett's hometown. He wanted to do something for his hometown. So he moved an NBA team there. An NBA team that its then-hometown didn't do much to save until it was too late.
Once you accept that the Sonics were doomed, which they were, before Bennett ever got involved, you have to conclude that Bennett not only didn't do anything wrong, but he did something really good for his hometown.
By now, if Bennett actually were on trial for moving the Seattle SuperSonics, a judge would have dismissed the case. The team was almost certainly doomed anyway. It's not like he moved for the money. He did it out of love for his hometown, which he owed much. Once he fulfilled his contract with Schultz, he owed Seattle nothing.
Verdict: NOT GUILTY.
And we haven't even seen Reason Number 1 yet. If you want to blame anyone other than the City, County or State governments for losing the Sonics, here's the guy who's GUILTY:
1. Howard Schultz. The irony is that Schultz should have known better about costing a city a team. He's from Brooklyn. He's not really old enough to remember the Dodgers being there (he was born in 1953), but, surely, he heard from older people about how awful it was that the Dodgers left.
In 1981, already an executive at a coffee company, he met with executives from Seattle-based Starbucks. Hardly anybody outside the State of Washington had yet heard of the company, but he was impressed with them. A year later, he became their director of marketing.
A trip to Milan, Italy showed him that cafes serving espresso could be gathering places. In 1987, he bought Starbucks, and put his plan into action. By 1992, it had proven so successful that he was able to take them national. The rest is history.
In 2000, he resigned as Starbucks CEO. In 2001, he bought the Seattle SuperSonics. But he didn't run the team like a sports team, he ran it like a business, and, in so doing, alienated a lot of people, including their best player, Gary Payton, driving him away.
Whatever persuasive techniques he used to build Starbucks were ineffective in convincing the local governments to help him build a new arena or expand the old one. Since he was worth about $3 billion, and a new arena would have cost about $500 million, he could have afforded to build 6 new arenas for the team. But ask a billionaire to pay out of his own pocket for something that would help the community? "That's socialism!"
Nor was he able to find someone local to whom he could sell the team. Nor could he convince groups looking to bring teams to Kansas City, St. Louis, Las Vegas, San Jose (where they would have competed with the Oakland-based Warriors) or Anaheim (where they would have competed with the Los Angeles-based Lakers and Clippers).
He sold the Sonics to Bennett in 2006, taking Bennett at his word (Schultz said) that he wouldn't move the team, when everybody in Washington State and his dog knew that the team would be moved to Oklahoma City. He returned as Starbucks CEO in 2008.
Schultz might be a genius when it comes to running and marketing Starbucks, but all his business sense seemed to desert him when it came to running a major league sports team. He, not Clay Bennett, is the reason the Seattle SuperSonics are, officially, in limbo.
And if there is ever a new Sonics -- an expansion team or a moved team -- Schultz won't be asked to be a part of the ownership group. I doubt they'll even negotiate to put a Starbucks stand in KeyArena or its replacement.
October 29, 2008: The Oklahoma City Thunder play their 1st regular-season game, at the Ford Center -- the arena now known as the Chesapeake Energy Arena -- and lose to the Milwaukee Bucks, 98-87.
Many NBA teams have moved, including some after being successful. Smaller cities just couldn't keep teams. Other teams moved because of bad arena leases.
* The Tri-Cities Blackhawks, based in Moline, Illinois, moved to become the Milwaukee Hawks in 1951, then the St. Louis Hawks in 1955, then, despite 4 trips to the Finals including the 1958 title, and a Division title in their last season, moved to Atlanta in 1968.
* The Rochester Royals, 1951 NBA Champions, moved to Cincinnati in 1957, then to Kansas City in 1972, then to Sacramento in 1985. They almost to Anaheim in 2011, and to Seattle to become the new Sonics in 2013.
* The Fort Wayne Pistons, 1944 and 1945 National Basketball League Champions, and NBA Finalists in 1955 and 1956, moved to Detroit in 1957. Since Fort Wayne was a big automotive parts center, the name "Pistons" made sense even before the move.
* The Minneapolis Lakers, NBA Champions in 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953 and 1954, and Finalists as late as 1959, moved to Los Angeles in 1960.
* The Philadelphia Warriors, NBA Champions in 1947 and 1956, moved to the Bay Area, becoming the San Francisco Warriors in 1962, and then to Oakland to become the Golden State Warriors in 1971.
* The Syracuse Nationals, NBA Champions in 1955, moved to fill the Warriors' void, becoming the Philadelphia 76ers in 1963.
* The Chicago Zephyrs became the Baltimore Bullets in 1963. Despite being Finalists in 1971 and Division Champions even in their last season, they moved to Washington in 1973, changing their name to the Washington Wizards in 1997.
* The San Diego Rockets became the Houston Rockets in 1971.
* The Buffalo Braves, despite 3 straight Playoff berths ending in 1977, became the San Diego Clippers in 1978 and the Los Angeles Clippers in 1984.
* The New Orleans Jazz became the Utah Jazz in 1979.
* The Vancouver Grizzlies became the Memphis Grizzlies in 2001.
* The original Charlotte Hornets became the New Orleans Hornets in 2002, and the New Orleans Pelicans in 2013. The Charlotte Bobcats were established in 2004, and became the new Charlotte Hornets in 2014.
Some of those moves can be justified. But even the Lakers' move from Minneapolis to Los Angeles -- by Bob Short, who would later move the Washington Senators to become the Texas Rangers in 1972 -- wasn't as bemoaned as the Sonics to Oklahoma.
The SuperSonics were Seattle's 1st true major league sports team. Before that, the city had the University of Washington, Seattle University, and the Seattle Metropolitans of the Pacific Coast Hockey Association, 1917 Stanley Cup winners, but they folded in 1926. The Seattle Rainiers had won 7 Pennants, but they were all in the Pacific Coast League.
Losing the Sonics, a team that existed for 41 years, made the Playoffs 22 times, reaching 6 Conference Finals, winning 3 Conference Championships and the 1979 NBA title was a blow to the Queen City of the Northwest.
And, the thing is, it didn't seem to make any sense. Seattle's a big city: 650,000 people in the city, 4.4 million people in the metropolitan area. The arena was relatively new: It opened in 1994. Attendance wasn't an issue: Although their last 3 seasons in Seattle were competitively terrible, the attendance was good (15,955 in the next-to-last season, before they officially became a lame duck and dropped to 13,355).
Top 5 Reasons You Can't Blame Clay Bennett for Moving the Seattle SuperSonics to Oklahoma City
5. The KeyArena. After the original Seattle Center Coliseum, built in 1962, was demolished and rebuilt during the 1994-95 season (which the Sonics played at the nearby Tacoma Dome), it seemed to be fully modernized, with the Camden Yards model and skyboxes in mind.
But, eventually, as other new arenas were built, the arena's capacity of 17,072 became the smallest in the NBA. And the amount of skyboxes they had simply didn't generate sufficient revenue. Aside from vastly increasing ticket prices, there was nothing the Sonics could do to keep up -- in that arena's seating plan at the time.
In 2006, after failing to get funding for another renovation that would have expanded the arena, Howard Schultz sold the Sonics to Clay Bennett, who made no secret of his plans to move the team. And the arena was the reason why.
4. The Government. Or, should I say, "The Governments." King County built Safeco Field for the Mariners, opening in 1999. The State of Washington built what's now named CenturyLink Field for the Seahawks in 2002, which also made possible the re-establishment of the Sounders.
So that was new, state-of-the-art buildings for the local MLB team, the local NFL team, and, as it turned out, the local MLS team, built by the State and the County. Why didn't the State, or the County, or the City of Seattle, do it for Seattle's 1st major league sports team?
Schultz negotiated with the City over a publicly funded arena expansion worth $220 million. He couldn't get a deal. When Schultz sold the Sonics to Bennett on October 24, 2006, the terms of the sale required that the new ownership group "use good faith best efforts" to rework the lease, or get a new venue, for 12 months -- in other words, until October 24, 2007.
Bennett did try. Despite what Schultz would later say, Bennett was completely honest about his intention to move, yet he did follow the letter of his contract, and he did work to cut a deal to stay.
On February 12, 2007, he presented a plan for a new arena in suburban Renton, Washington. Neither King County (which includes Renton as well as Seattle) nor the State was willing to pick up any part of the $500 million tab. The State legislative session ended on April 30, 2007, and Bennett gave up on that idea. Still, he continued to try to get a deal, until the October 24 deadline passed.
On November 2, 2007, 9 days after the deadline, Bennett told NBA Commissioner David Stern that he would move the team to Oklahoma City as soon as he legally could. The team's KeyArena lease would expire at the end of the 2009-10 season. After informing the Commissioner, Bennett informed the public. He did not keep it secret. There was no shock.
Only then did Mayor Greg Nickels of Seattle try to fight. He tried to put together a group of local business owners to buy the team from Bennett. Bennett wouldn't sell -- nor was he legally or morally obligated to do so. He had fulfilled his legal obligation to Seattle. The only thing he was still obligated to do was honor his lease -- or buy his way out of it.
On March 6, 2008, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said that his investor group would pay half of the $300 million needed for the arena's renovations -- if the City and the County would pay the rest. But the City and the County wouldn't do it unless they got the money from the State. When the April 10 deadline to do so passed, without the State having done so, Mayor Nickels said the only hope left to keep the Sonics in Seattle was winning a lawsuit.
The City was represented by former U.S. Senator Slade Gorton. He said the City would drop the suit if the NBA promised a replacement team. Memories were triggered of the city's original MLB team, the Seattle Pilots, leaving after the financially disastrous 1969 season and the promise of a replacement team, dependent on a domed stadium, so the American League didn't give Seattle an expansion team or approve a move there until the Kingdome was ready in 1976, with the Mariners beginning play in 1977.
The Sonics played their last home game on April 13, 2008, beating the Dallas Mavericks, 99-95; and their last game under the Seattle name on April 16, 2008, beating the Golden State Warriors, 126-121 in Oakland. (It was only their 4th 2-game winning streak all season.)
On July 2, 2008, mere hours before Judge Marsha J. Pechman's announced ruling (we may never know what it would have been), a settlement was reached: Professional Basketball Club LLC (Bennett's company for running the team) would pay the City of Seattle $45 million to break the lease, plus another $30 million if no replacement team was granted in 5 years (it wasn't), and the Oklahoma City team could not use the SuperSonics' name or colors, or claim the team's history (including the 1979 NBA title), which would be given to any replacement team. In return, Bennett could now legally move the team, to any place that would take it. He did.
He did try to get a deal to keep the team in Seattle. He tried harder than Walter O'Malley did to keep the Dodgers in Brooklyn; harder than Bob Short did to keep the Lakers in Minneapolis or the Senators in Washington; harder than Al Davis did to keep the Raiders in Oakland, then in Los Angeles; harder than the owners of the Rams did to keep them first in Los Angeles, then in St. Louis.
The problem was, Seattle didn't even try as hard as Baltimore did to keep the Colts, or as hard as Cleveland did to keep the Browns. They didn't react until the horse had already kicked open the barn door.
3. Hurricane Katrina. The worst natural disaster in American history struck New Orleans on August 29, 2005. Among the buildings it damaged were the Louisiana Superdome, home of the NFL's New Orleans Saints; and the next-door New Orleans Arena (now known as the Smoothie King Center), home of the NBA team then known as the New Orleans Hornets.
The NFL season was about to begin, so the NFL scrambled to compensate: The Saints played 1 "home" game at the Meadowlands (since the Giants were their 1st home opponent, simply switching venues for this game bought them some time), then 3 at the Alamodome in San Antonio and 4 at Tiger Stadium on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge.
The Hornets had more time, with their 1st home game set for November 1. Since Oklahoma City had a new 18,000-seat arena, without a major league tenant, that's where they played 27 "home" games as "the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets" until March 8, when the New Orleans Arena was ready to reopen. But they only played 3 games in New Orleans, playing the rest of their 41-game home schedule in Oklahoma City.
If the hurricane had missed New Orleans, or the levees had held and the flood not happened, the Hornets (now the New Orleans Pelicans) would never have had to set up shop in another city while their arena was restored, thus making that city a viable one to which an NBA team could move. The city they chose was...
2. Oklahoma City. Despite being a small market -- about 580,000 people in the city (not a whole lot less than Seattle) but less than 1.4 million people in the metropolitan area (about 1/3rd the size of Seattle, and ranking it ahead of only Memphis among NBA cities since 2008) -- it's proven to be a great home for an NBA team. The Hornets sold out every game they played at the Ford Center. This showed Bennett that an NBA team could thrive there.
The Thunder have played to 18,203 fans at every single game at the Ford Center/Chesapeake Energy Arena, all 378 of them. (That's 328 in the regular season, 50 in the Playoffs. It remains to be seen how well they'll draw now that Kevin Durant is gone.)
The biggest reason is that, as far as the major leagues go, the Thunder are the only game in town. Seattle still has MLB's Mariners, the NFL's Seahawks, MLS' Sounders, the WNBA's Storm (who never moved, because Bennett did sell them to a local buyer in 2008), and the NWSL's Reign.
But Oklahoma City has a Triple-A team in baseball, and is too small a metro area to support an MLB team 81 times a year. The closest they've ever come to a major league pro football team is in 1984, when the United States Football League's Oklahoma Outlaws played in Tulsa.
It's had minor-league teams in hockey, but there's no way they would support an NHL team, even in Commissioner Gary Bettman's wildest drug-induced fantasies. (I'm not saying Bettman uses drugs. Though I don't have a better explanation for why he's such an asshole.) They've got teams in American soccer's 2nd and 3rd divisions, but MLS won't be expanding to them anytime soon.
There are 3 major colleges playing sports in Oklahoma, but the University of Oklahoma is 23 miles away (at least a half-hour drive from downtown), Oklahoma State University 67 (at least an hour and 15 minutes), and the University of Tulsa 106 (close to 2 hours). Oklahoma City University is in town, and was in NCAA Division I until 1985, but then they became an NAIA school -- think "NCAA Division IV."
And so, like Sacramento with the Kings, San Antonio with the Spurs, Portland with the Trail Blazers and Utah with the Jazz (though the last 3 also have the WNBA, and the last 2 have MLS), Oklahoma City has taken its one and only major league team to heart. In other words, if an NBA team (and only an NBA team) was going to move, Oklahoma City was a great choice for a destination.
And, on top of everything else, Oklahoma City is Clay Bennett's hometown. He wanted to do something for his hometown. So he moved an NBA team there. An NBA team that its then-hometown didn't do much to save until it was too late.
Once you accept that the Sonics were doomed, which they were, before Bennett ever got involved, you have to conclude that Bennett not only didn't do anything wrong, but he did something really good for his hometown.
By now, if Bennett actually were on trial for moving the Seattle SuperSonics, a judge would have dismissed the case. The team was almost certainly doomed anyway. It's not like he moved for the money. He did it out of love for his hometown, which he owed much. Once he fulfilled his contract with Schultz, he owed Seattle nothing.
Verdict: NOT GUILTY.
And we haven't even seen Reason Number 1 yet. If you want to blame anyone other than the City, County or State governments for losing the Sonics, here's the guy who's GUILTY:
1. Howard Schultz. The irony is that Schultz should have known better about costing a city a team. He's from Brooklyn. He's not really old enough to remember the Dodgers being there (he was born in 1953), but, surely, he heard from older people about how awful it was that the Dodgers left.
In 1981, already an executive at a coffee company, he met with executives from Seattle-based Starbucks. Hardly anybody outside the State of Washington had yet heard of the company, but he was impressed with them. A year later, he became their director of marketing.
A trip to Milan, Italy showed him that cafes serving espresso could be gathering places. In 1987, he bought Starbucks, and put his plan into action. By 1992, it had proven so successful that he was able to take them national. The rest is history.
In 2000, he resigned as Starbucks CEO. In 2001, he bought the Seattle SuperSonics. But he didn't run the team like a sports team, he ran it like a business, and, in so doing, alienated a lot of people, including their best player, Gary Payton, driving him away.
Whatever persuasive techniques he used to build Starbucks were ineffective in convincing the local governments to help him build a new arena or expand the old one. Since he was worth about $3 billion, and a new arena would have cost about $500 million, he could have afforded to build 6 new arenas for the team. But ask a billionaire to pay out of his own pocket for something that would help the community? "That's socialism!"
Nor was he able to find someone local to whom he could sell the team. Nor could he convince groups looking to bring teams to Kansas City, St. Louis, Las Vegas, San Jose (where they would have competed with the Oakland-based Warriors) or Anaheim (where they would have competed with the Los Angeles-based Lakers and Clippers).
He sold the Sonics to Bennett in 2006, taking Bennett at his word (Schultz said) that he wouldn't move the team, when everybody in Washington State and his dog knew that the team would be moved to Oklahoma City. He returned as Starbucks CEO in 2008.
Schultz might be a genius when it comes to running and marketing Starbucks, but all his business sense seemed to desert him when it came to running a major league sports team. He, not Clay Bennett, is the reason the Seattle SuperSonics are, officially, in limbo.
"I'm the guy who's really to blame for you
losing the first basketball team you ever loved.
But that's none of your business."
And if there is ever a new Sonics -- an expansion team or a moved team -- Schultz won't be asked to be a part of the ownership group. I doubt they'll even negotiate to put a Starbucks stand in KeyArena or its replacement.
Friday, January 31, 2014
How Long It's Been: Seattle Won a World Championship
The Seattle Seahawks will be playing the Denver Broncos on Sunday, at MetLife Stadium in the New Jersey -- not New York -- Meadowlands, in Super Bowl XLVIII (48).
The Seahawks have played since 1976, but have never won a title.
In fact, Seattle's record as a sports city is pretty pathetic. To wit:
* In 38 seasons of play, this is only the 2nd time the Seahawks have won a Conference Championship, only the 3rd time they've reached a Conference Championship Game (1983-84 in the AFC, 2005-06 and 2013-14 in the NFC), and until 2003 they'd made the Playoffs only 5 times. Even with those 2 trips to the Super Bowl, in those 38 seasons they've won a grand total of 11 Playoff games -- a little better than 1 every 4 years.
* The Seattle Mariners have played 37 seasons, and have reached 4 postseasons, winning 3 American League Western Division titles, and reaching 3 AL Championship Series. But they've never won a Pennant. Only 3 teams have ever had longer Pennant droughts: The 1901-44 St. Louis Browns, the 1919-1959 and 1959-2005 Chicago White Sox, and the 1945-present Chicago Cubs -- meaning that, if the M's conclude the 2022 season without winning the Pennant, they will have the longest drought in AL history.
* The Seattle SuperSonics played their last 29 seasons without winning an NBA Championship, a period in which they only won 1 Western Conference title and only made the Conference Finals 3 times. Then, in 2008, they were moved, to become the Oklahoma City Thunder.
* Seattle has never had a team in the National Hockey League. Nor did they have one in the World Hockey Association -- surprising, considering the WHA was looking for untapped NHL markets and Seattle was very much one, is very much a Northern city, and had a hockey history, long in the minors if distant in the majors. The Seattle Metropolitans played in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association from 1915 to 1924, winning that league 5 times, and in 1917 beating the Montreal Canadiens to become the first American-based team to win the Stanley Cup. The team folded with its league, and for 90 years Seattle hasn't had anything that could be called a "major league" hockey team. Since 1977, the Seattle Breakers began play in the Western Hockey League; in 1985, they became the Seattle Thunderbirds. But only once, in 1997, did they reach the WHL Finals, and they got swept.
* If you count soccer in North America as a "major league sport," the 1st version of the Seattle Sounders drew big crowds to the Kingdome (in fact, they opened it), but only once did they reach the North American Soccer League's title game, losing Soccer Bowl '77 to the New York Cosmos. They had 2 legitimate excuses, though: The game was played at Civic Stadium (now Jeld-Wen Field), home of their arch-rivals, the Portland Timbers; and the Cosmos were loaded, with legends like Pele, Carlos Alberto, Franz Beckenbauer, Johan Neeskens and Giorgio Chinaglia.
* The new version of the Sounders won the Supporters' Shield, Major League Soccer's regular-season title, in 2011, and in 2009-11 won 3 straight U.S. Open Cups (the American equivalent of the FA Cup) and nearly made it 4. But they've never won the MLS Cup; as New York Red Bulls fans found out in 2013, MLS is the one league on the planet where finishing the season in first place overall doesn't make you "League Champions." So, in spite of their superb pre-Playoff play and having the best attendance in MLS, the Sounders haven't brought much glory to Washington State, either.
Indeed, in the entire history of major league sports in Seattle, they've won only 2 World Championships: The 1917 Stanley Cup, by the Metros; and the 1979 NBA Championship. In 1978 and '79, both seasons, the NBA Finals featured the Sonics against the Washington Bullets (now the Washington Wizards); the Bullets won in '78, the Sonics in '79.
That title happened on June 1, 1979, a 97-93 win for the Sonics over the Bullets at the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland.
That's 34 years and 4 months. How long has that been?
*
The Sonics were coached by Lenny Wilkens. The leading athletes in Seattle were Sonics stars Dennis Johnson, Gus Williams and Fred "Downtown" Brown; Hawks players Jim Zorn, Steve Largent, and, for that one season, former Minnesota Vikings legend Carl Eller; and Mariners players Ruppert Jones, Danny Meyer and Bruce Bochte.
At that point, the Houston Rockets, the Detroit Pistons, the Chicago Bulls, the San Antonio Spurs, the Miami Heat, the Dallas Mavericks, the San Francisco 49ers, the Denver Broncos, the New England Patriots, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the New Orleans Saints, the Philadelphia Phillies, the Kansas City Royals, the Minnesota Twins, the Toronto Blue Jays, the Braves since they moved to Atlanta, the Florida/Miami Marlins, the Arizona Diamondbacks, the team now known as the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, the Giants since they moved to San Francisco, the New York Islanders, the Edmonton Oilers, the Calgary Flames, the Pittsburgh Penguins, the New Jersey Devils, the Quebec Nordiques/Colorado Avalanche franchise (unless you count the 1977 WHA title), the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Hartford Whalers/Carolina Hurricanes franchise (unless you count the 1973 WHA title), the Anaheim Ducks and the Los Angeles Kings had never won a World Championship.
The Rockets, the Pistons, the Bulls, the Spurs, the Heat, the Mavs, the Seahawks, the Niners, the Pats, the Bucs, the Saints, the Isles, the Oilers, the Flames, the Pens, the Devils, the Lightning, the Canes, the Ducks, the Kings, the Orlando Magic, the Utah Jazz, the Indiana Pacers (unless you count their 3 ABA titles), the New Jersey (now Brooklyn) Nets (unless you count the 1974 and '76 ABA titles), the Buffalo Bills (unless you count the 1964 and '65 AFL titles), the San Diego Chargers (unless you count the 1963 AFL title), the Atlanta Falcons, the Houston Oilers/Tennessee Titans franchise (unless you count the 1960 and '61 AFL titles), the Carolina Panthers, the Royals, the Braves since they moved to Atlanta, the Jays, the Marlins, the D-backs, the Angels, the Milwaukee Brewers, the San Diego Padres, the Houston Astros, the Colorado Rockies, the Tampa Bay Rays, the Texas Rangers, the Minnesota North Stars/Dallas Stars franchise, the Vancouver Canucks, the Florida Panthers, the Washington Capitals and the new Ottawa Senators had never reached their sports' finals.
And the Magic, the Mavs, the Heat, both sets of Panthers, the Marlins, the Rockies, the D-backs, the Rays, the Lightning, the old Charlotte Hornets (now the New Orleans Pelicans), the new Charlotte Hornets (formerly the Bobcats), the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Memphis Grizzlies, the Toronto Raptors, the Jacksonville Jaguars, the Baltimore Ravens, the Houston Texans, the San Jose Sharks, the Nashville Predators, the new Winnipeg Jets (formerly the Atlanta Thrashers), the Columbus Blue Jackets and the Minnesota Wild didn't even exist yet.
As of Super Bowl XLVIII, those facts are no longer true.
The NBA of 1979 has often been retroactively described as being "in trouble." And then, the next season, came Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. This is nonsense, as the league already had Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Julius "Dr. J" Erving.
The Los Angeles Clippers were still playing down the coast in San Diego, the Kings in Kansas City, and the Jazz were about to move from New Orleans (where their team name made sense) to Utah (where it doesn't). The New Jersey Nets were playing on the Rutgers campus, as the Meadowlands arena was just beginning construction. And while the Portland Trail Blazers and Milwaukee Bucks had both won NBA titles within the last 8 years, neither saw any problem playing in an arena with no more than 12,880 seats -- in the Bucks' case, only 10,938.
In the NFL, the Colts were still in Baltimore, the Cardinals were still in St. Louis, the Rams were still in Los Angeles, the Titans were still the Houston Oilers. In MLB, the Brewers were still in the AL, the Astros still in the National League, and the Washington Nationals were still the Montreal Expos.
The ideas of the NBA using international players, MLB using Asian natives, and the best players from Eastern Europe being allowed to leave for the NHL (unless they successfully defected, like the Stastny brothers) were far-fetched.
Not one player on the Seahawks' Super Bowl roster had yet been born; for the Broncos, only Peyton Manning, Champ Bailey and Paris Lenon had, and Quentin Jammer was about to be born. Current Seahawks coach Pete Carroll was the secondary coach at Ohio State University, while Broncos coach John Fox was a graduate assistant at San Diego State. Tom Brady was about to turn 2 years old. Eli Manning, Ben Roethlisberger and Aaron Rodgers hadn't been born yet.
Only the Green Bay Packers, Oakland Raiders, San Diego Chargers, Kansas City Chiefs, Buffalo Bills, New Orleans Saints and San Francisco 49ers played the 2013 NFL season in the same stadium in which they played in 1979; starting next season, you can drop the Niners from that list.
The only NBA teams playing in the same arena in which they played the 1978-79 season are the Knicks at Madison Square Garden, and the Golden State Warriors at the Oakland Coliseum Arena. The only NHL teams doing so are the Rangers at The Garden, the Islanders at the Nassau Coliseum, and the Edmonton Oilers at the Northlands Coliseum. The only MLB teams doing so are the Boston Red Sox, the Chicago Cubs, the Oakland Athletics, the Kansas City Royals, and both Los Angeles-area teams.
In addition to the Sonics, the defending World Champions were the Yankees, the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Montreal Canadiens. Muhammad Ali had retired as Heavyweight Champion of the World, the WBC was recognizing Larry Holmes as Champion, while the WBA hadn't yet made up its mind, and the IBF didn't exist yet.
Since that last Seattle title, the Olympic Games have been held in America 3 times, Canada twice, and once each in Russia (and are about to be again), Yugoslavia (post-breakup, Sarajevo is in Bosnia), Korea, France, Spain, Norway, Japan, Australia, Greece, Italy, China and Britain.
In June 1979, the current head coach of the Seattle Seahawks, was defensive backs coach at Ohio State; and the current head coach of the team that had been the Seattle SuperSonics, now the Oklahoma City Thunder, Scott Brooks, was 14 years old.
Tom Coughlin of the Giants was Syracuse University's offensive coordinator, Terry Collins of the Mets was playing in the Pittsburgh Pirates' minor-league system, Mike Woodson of the Knicks was at Indiana University; Joe Girardi of the Yankees, Rex Ryan of the Jets and Alain Vigneault of the Rangers were in high school; Jack Capuano of the Islanders was in junior high school, Peter DeBoer of the Devils was 9, and Jason Kidd of the Nets was 6.
There were 26 Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The last Justice then on the Supreme Court who was still on it was John Paul Stevens, who served from 1975 to 2010.
The President of the United States was Jimmy Carter. Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, their wives, and the widows of Harry Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson were still alive.
Ronald Reagan was beginning his 3rd run for President, George H.W. Bush his 1st. Bill Clinton was in his 1st year as Governor of Arkansas. George W. Bush had recently lost his 1st run for public office, for Congressman from Texas. Barack Obama had just graduated high school, and Michelle Robinson was still in it. Joe Biden had just been elected to a 2nd term in the U.S. Senate from Delaware, and John Boehner was working for Nucite Sales, apparently believing the line in the movie The Graduate about the future being "plastics."
The Governor of New York was Hugh Carey, of New Jersey Brendan Byrne, and the State of Washington had one of the earliest women to be elected Governor without her husband having previously held the job, Dixy Lee Ray. The Mayor of New York City was Ed Koch, and of Seattle Charles Royer. He was in the 2nd of 12 years on the job, and is still alive.
There were still living veterans of the Spanish-American War, the Boer War, the Philippine Campaign and the Boxer Rebellion. Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin were the holders of the Nobel Peace Prize. The Pope was John Paul II. The current Pope, Francis, was then Father Jorge Mario Bergoglio, and was Provincial Superior of the Socity of Jesus (the Jesuits) in Argentina.
The Prime Minister of Canada was Pierre Trudeau, but had just led his Liberal Party to an election defeat, after winning 3 times. Just 3 days after the Sonics' title, Progressive Conservative Party Leader Joe Clark would be sworn in as Prime Minister. The next day would be his 40th birthday, making him the youngest person ever to be head of government in either Canada or America. But his government would quickly fall apart over a budget impasse, and early the next year, Trudeau would lead the Liberals back to victory, and serve another 4 years as Prime Minister, for a total of 15.
The monarch of Great Britain was Queen Elizabeth II -- that hasn't changed -- but Margaret Thatcher had just been elected Prime Minister. (Thatcher in Britain in May 1979, Clark in Canada the same month, Reagan in America in November 1980 -- a pattern, the difference being that Canada wised up a lot faster to the fact that conservatism doesn't work.)
England's FA Cup was won, 3 weeks earlier, by Arsenal, after blowing a 2-0 lead in the last 5 minutes against Manchester United, but Alan Sunderland's last-gap goal won the Cup for the North London club. The Football League had just been won by Liverpool, dethroning Nottingham Forest, which won the European Cup (now the UEFA Champions League) by beating Swedish club Malmo in the Final. They would win it again the next year, too, beating Hamburg in the Final, making them, to this day, the only team in all of Europe to win the European Cup more than it's won its domestic league.
Forest manager Brian Clough, after winning the League with Derby County in 1972 and failing spectacularly with Leeds United in 1974 before moving on to Forest (ironically, Derby's arch-rivals), had proved the point he made after that '72 title: "I wouldn't say I'm the best manager in the country, but I'm in the top one."
Among Clough's acquisitions that 1978-79 season was Birmingham City player Trevor Francis, the 1st player in the English league to be purchased for at least one million pounds. My, how times have changed.
Major books of 1979 included Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Jeffrey Archer's Kane and Abel, Barbara Taylor Bradford's A Woman of Substance, Stephen King's The Dead Zone, Norman Mailer's The Executioner's Song, William Styron's Sophie's Choice, and Tom Wolfe's The Right Stuff. All were made into major motion pictures or TV-movies. So was Peter Shaffer's play about Mozart, Amadeus, which debuted in 1979.
George R.R. Martin got divorced from his 1st wife, and left his job as writer in residence at Clarke University and moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, because he was tired of hard winters in Dubuque, Iowa -- perhaps inspiring some of his later books. J.K. Rowling was 14.
No one had yet heard of Hannibal Lecter, Celie Harris, Forrest Gump, Alex Cross, Harry Potter, Robert Langdon, Lisbeth Salander, Bella Swan or Katniss Everdeen.
New in theaters when the Sonics' won what remains, for the moment, Seattle's last title were Alien
and The Muppet Movie. One featured weird creatures. The other had Sigourney Weaver kicking ass, with her own barely covered. Francis Ford Coppola was about to premiere Apocalypse Now, his moving of Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness to the Vietnam War, and filming it nearly killed him and his star Martin Sheen, and made the jokes about Marlon Brando get worse.
Christopher Reeve had just begun playing Superman, Lynda Carter was about to wrap up playing Wonder Woman, and Lou Ferrigno was smashing as the Hulk, but the last live-action Batman was still Adam West, and Nicholas Hammond's recent Spider-Man and Reb Brown's Captain America were absolute bombs. Tom Baker was playing The Doctor. Mad Max had just premiered.
Moonraker was about to premiere. Despite all the jokes about it, it actually holds up better than most classic James Bond films. Roger Moore was 51, but still believable as an action hero. Making his 2nd appearance as Jaws, Richard Kiel made a fantastic villain's henchman-turned-hero. But that 2-minute laser battle in space toward the end will forever overshadow the rest of it.
In contrast, Gene Roddenberry was putting the finishing touches on Star Trek: The Motion Picture. People would say, "We waited 10 years for this?" Just as 2001: A Space Odyssey had helped kill the original series by showing just what special effects could do for a space film, Roddenberry learned the wrong lessons from it, doing long scenes with beautiful shots but no dialogue or plot. Also, Gene ripped himself off, redoing the episode "The Changeling." As a result of these things, it became known as Star Trek: The Motionless Picture, A Spock-alypse Now, and Where Nomad Has Gone Before.
No one had yet heard of Ash Williams, John Rambo, the Terminator, the Ghostbusters, Marty McFly, Robocop, John McClane, Jay & Silent Bob, or Austin Powers.
Just wrapping up their 1st seasons were the TV shows WKRP in Cincinnati, The White Shadow, The Dukes of Hazzard, Diff'rent Strokes, Taxi, Mork & Mindy, and the original version of Battlestar Galactica. Preparing for a fall debut were Hart to Hart, Benson, Trapper John, M.D., Knots Landing and The Facts of Life.
CBS' Match Game was on hiatus from May until September, so, no Brett Somers, no Charles Nelson Reilly, no Fannie Flagg, no Dumb Donald, no Old Man Periwinkle, and no horrible accents from host Gene Rayburn. (Richard Dawson had already quit to focus on hosting Family Feud.)
And 1979 was a disaster for NBC. They launched the super-campy, body-suited version of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, a lame attempt to capitalize on Star Wars and Star Trek that did no one, least of all the original character, any good, that show was still a gem compared to their disastrous Hello Larry, Brothers and Sisters, Turnabout, and, yes, Supertrain.
NBC was desperate enough to advertise these shows on what were then "independent stations": In New York, you could turn from WNBC-Channel 4 to WNEW-Channel 5 (now WNYW, Fox 5), and see a promo for Supertrain, an obvious Love Boat ripoff. Or Brothers and Sisters, not to be confused with the later ABC drama of the same title: This was a ripoff of Animal House, which ABC had tried to officially do, taking some of the actual actors from that film and making the ill-fated Delta House.
In 1979, NBC was so bad! (How bad was it?) It was so bad that, on one of the few NBC shows that was still successful, The Tonight Show, Johnny Carson suggested that the network should use the same method that the floundering Chrysler Corporation was using, with NBC sportscaster Joe Garagiola faking a smile throughout the commercials: Pay off viewers to accept a lousy product: "Watch Hello, Larry, get a check!" It would have been no use: Hello, Larry ran 38 episodes in 2 seasons; between them, Brothers and Sisters, Turnabout and Supertrain aired 28 episodes.
No one had yet heard of Sam Malone, He-Man, Goku, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, the Thundercats, Bart Simpson, Fox Mulder, Xena, Ash Ketchum, Jed Bartlet, Tony Soprano, Master Chief, Leroy Jethro Gibbs, Rick Grimes, Don Draper, Walter White or Richard Castle.
The day of the Sonics' title, Joy Division released their album Unknown Pleasures. The Number 1 song in America was "Hot Stuff" by Donna Summer. In the days before, The Who played their first concerts since the death of Keith Moon, with former Faces drummer Kenney Jones in his place, and Elton John played 8 concerts in the Soviet Union. In the days after, rock and roll pioneer Bill Haley made his last recordings, fellow rock pioneer Chuck Berry was sentenced to 4 months in prison on tax evasion charges, the first Sony Walkman went on sale in Japan, to be released in the U.S. a year later, the Bee Gees sold out Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, and, in an officially unrelated event but a totally welcome counterpoint, Disco Demolition Night (a.k.a. Disco Sucks Night) was held at Comiskey Park in Chicago.
"The World Series of Rock" was held at Cleveland Municipal Stadium (as opposed to the World Series of baseball, which was only held there once, in 1948), and Ted Nugent was one of the headliners. That's how long it's been since Nugent was relevant in music, unlike in politics, where he has never been relevant. Also on the bill were AC/DC, Thin Lizzy, rising bands Journey and the Scorpions. The headliner was Aerosmith, but after the concert, an argument developed among the soused, coked-out members, and lead guitarist Joe Perry quit. It would take 5 years and a lot of rehab for the original lineup to reunite.
Bob Dylan was about to release his 1st Christian album, Slow Train Coming. Michael Jackson was about to release Off the Wall, which would have insured that his solo career was a legend even if Thriller had never been recorded. None of the Beatles was doing much: 1979 was a quiet year for them. 1980 would not be.
Van Halen, Miami Sound Machine and Prince had released their earliest recordings. George Michael and Whitney Houston were 15 years old. Jennifer Lopez and Gwen Stefani were 9. Selena was 8. (Quintanilla, not Gomez: She wasn't born until 1992.) Shakira was 2. Pink, Christina Aguilera, Alicia Keys, Britney Spears, Katy Perry, and all the members of Desinty's Child had yet to be born.
In the late Spring and early Summer of 1979, a civil war began in El Salvador, and power was democratically transferred to the first government made up of Rhodesia's black majority, which would later rename the country Zimbabwe and make democracy there a cruel joke, Robert Mugabe being no less brutal a dictator than his white predecessor Ian Smith. John Paul II visited his native Poland, becoming the 1st sitting Pope to visit a Communist country.
President Carter and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the SALT II treaty. A DC-10 crashed at O'Hare Airport in Chicago, killing 273 people, still the deadliest air disaster in American history. Former San Francisco Supervisor (what most cities call a Councilman) Dan White got a light sentence for killing fellow Board member Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone the preceding November, and the gay community rioted. McDonald's introduced the Happy Meal.
A. Philip Randolph, and Mary Pickford, and John Wayne died. So did baseball legend Duffy Lewis, and hockey legend Fred "Cyclone" Taylor. Rosario Dawson, and Andrea Pirlo, and LaDainian Tomlinson were born.
June 1, 1979. The Seattle SuperSonics won the NBA Championship, for the only time in their history. It remains the last World Championship won by any Seattle-based team.
Now, the Seattle Seahawks are 2 days away from playing in the Super Bowl. The Denver Broncos are currently favored by 2 1/2 points, in spite of the Hawks' vaunted defense. Can they win their city's 1st World Championship in nearly 35 years? Stay tuned.
The Seahawks have played since 1976, but have never won a title.
In fact, Seattle's record as a sports city is pretty pathetic. To wit:
* In 38 seasons of play, this is only the 2nd time the Seahawks have won a Conference Championship, only the 3rd time they've reached a Conference Championship Game (1983-84 in the AFC, 2005-06 and 2013-14 in the NFC), and until 2003 they'd made the Playoffs only 5 times. Even with those 2 trips to the Super Bowl, in those 38 seasons they've won a grand total of 11 Playoff games -- a little better than 1 every 4 years.
* The Seattle Mariners have played 37 seasons, and have reached 4 postseasons, winning 3 American League Western Division titles, and reaching 3 AL Championship Series. But they've never won a Pennant. Only 3 teams have ever had longer Pennant droughts: The 1901-44 St. Louis Browns, the 1919-1959 and 1959-2005 Chicago White Sox, and the 1945-present Chicago Cubs -- meaning that, if the M's conclude the 2022 season without winning the Pennant, they will have the longest drought in AL history.
* The Seattle SuperSonics played their last 29 seasons without winning an NBA Championship, a period in which they only won 1 Western Conference title and only made the Conference Finals 3 times. Then, in 2008, they were moved, to become the Oklahoma City Thunder.
* Seattle has never had a team in the National Hockey League. Nor did they have one in the World Hockey Association -- surprising, considering the WHA was looking for untapped NHL markets and Seattle was very much one, is very much a Northern city, and had a hockey history, long in the minors if distant in the majors. The Seattle Metropolitans played in the Pacific Coast Hockey Association from 1915 to 1924, winning that league 5 times, and in 1917 beating the Montreal Canadiens to become the first American-based team to win the Stanley Cup. The team folded with its league, and for 90 years Seattle hasn't had anything that could be called a "major league" hockey team. Since 1977, the Seattle Breakers began play in the Western Hockey League; in 1985, they became the Seattle Thunderbirds. But only once, in 1997, did they reach the WHL Finals, and they got swept.
* If you count soccer in North America as a "major league sport," the 1st version of the Seattle Sounders drew big crowds to the Kingdome (in fact, they opened it), but only once did they reach the North American Soccer League's title game, losing Soccer Bowl '77 to the New York Cosmos. They had 2 legitimate excuses, though: The game was played at Civic Stadium (now Jeld-Wen Field), home of their arch-rivals, the Portland Timbers; and the Cosmos were loaded, with legends like Pele, Carlos Alberto, Franz Beckenbauer, Johan Neeskens and Giorgio Chinaglia.
* The new version of the Sounders won the Supporters' Shield, Major League Soccer's regular-season title, in 2011, and in 2009-11 won 3 straight U.S. Open Cups (the American equivalent of the FA Cup) and nearly made it 4. But they've never won the MLS Cup; as New York Red Bulls fans found out in 2013, MLS is the one league on the planet where finishing the season in first place overall doesn't make you "League Champions." So, in spite of their superb pre-Playoff play and having the best attendance in MLS, the Sounders haven't brought much glory to Washington State, either.
Indeed, in the entire history of major league sports in Seattle, they've won only 2 World Championships: The 1917 Stanley Cup, by the Metros; and the 1979 NBA Championship. In 1978 and '79, both seasons, the NBA Finals featured the Sonics against the Washington Bullets (now the Washington Wizards); the Bullets won in '78, the Sonics in '79.
That title happened on June 1, 1979, a 97-93 win for the Sonics over the Bullets at the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland.
That's 34 years and 4 months. How long has that been?
*
The Sonics were coached by Lenny Wilkens. The leading athletes in Seattle were Sonics stars Dennis Johnson, Gus Williams and Fred "Downtown" Brown; Hawks players Jim Zorn, Steve Largent, and, for that one season, former Minnesota Vikings legend Carl Eller; and Mariners players Ruppert Jones, Danny Meyer and Bruce Bochte.
At that point, the Houston Rockets, the Detroit Pistons, the Chicago Bulls, the San Antonio Spurs, the Miami Heat, the Dallas Mavericks, the San Francisco 49ers, the Denver Broncos, the New England Patriots, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the New Orleans Saints, the Philadelphia Phillies, the Kansas City Royals, the Minnesota Twins, the Toronto Blue Jays, the Braves since they moved to Atlanta, the Florida/Miami Marlins, the Arizona Diamondbacks, the team now known as the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, the Giants since they moved to San Francisco, the New York Islanders, the Edmonton Oilers, the Calgary Flames, the Pittsburgh Penguins, the New Jersey Devils, the Quebec Nordiques/Colorado Avalanche franchise (unless you count the 1977 WHA title), the Tampa Bay Lightning, the Hartford Whalers/Carolina Hurricanes franchise (unless you count the 1973 WHA title), the Anaheim Ducks and the Los Angeles Kings had never won a World Championship.
The Rockets, the Pistons, the Bulls, the Spurs, the Heat, the Mavs, the Seahawks, the Niners, the Pats, the Bucs, the Saints, the Isles, the Oilers, the Flames, the Pens, the Devils, the Lightning, the Canes, the Ducks, the Kings, the Orlando Magic, the Utah Jazz, the Indiana Pacers (unless you count their 3 ABA titles), the New Jersey (now Brooklyn) Nets (unless you count the 1974 and '76 ABA titles), the Buffalo Bills (unless you count the 1964 and '65 AFL titles), the San Diego Chargers (unless you count the 1963 AFL title), the Atlanta Falcons, the Houston Oilers/Tennessee Titans franchise (unless you count the 1960 and '61 AFL titles), the Carolina Panthers, the Royals, the Braves since they moved to Atlanta, the Jays, the Marlins, the D-backs, the Angels, the Milwaukee Brewers, the San Diego Padres, the Houston Astros, the Colorado Rockies, the Tampa Bay Rays, the Texas Rangers, the Minnesota North Stars/Dallas Stars franchise, the Vancouver Canucks, the Florida Panthers, the Washington Capitals and the new Ottawa Senators had never reached their sports' finals.
And the Magic, the Mavs, the Heat, both sets of Panthers, the Marlins, the Rockies, the D-backs, the Rays, the Lightning, the old Charlotte Hornets (now the New Orleans Pelicans), the new Charlotte Hornets (formerly the Bobcats), the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Memphis Grizzlies, the Toronto Raptors, the Jacksonville Jaguars, the Baltimore Ravens, the Houston Texans, the San Jose Sharks, the Nashville Predators, the new Winnipeg Jets (formerly the Atlanta Thrashers), the Columbus Blue Jackets and the Minnesota Wild didn't even exist yet.
As of Super Bowl XLVIII, those facts are no longer true.
The NBA of 1979 has often been retroactively described as being "in trouble." And then, the next season, came Magic Johnson and Larry Bird. This is nonsense, as the league already had Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Julius "Dr. J" Erving.
The Los Angeles Clippers were still playing down the coast in San Diego, the Kings in Kansas City, and the Jazz were about to move from New Orleans (where their team name made sense) to Utah (where it doesn't). The New Jersey Nets were playing on the Rutgers campus, as the Meadowlands arena was just beginning construction. And while the Portland Trail Blazers and Milwaukee Bucks had both won NBA titles within the last 8 years, neither saw any problem playing in an arena with no more than 12,880 seats -- in the Bucks' case, only 10,938.
In the NFL, the Colts were still in Baltimore, the Cardinals were still in St. Louis, the Rams were still in Los Angeles, the Titans were still the Houston Oilers. In MLB, the Brewers were still in the AL, the Astros still in the National League, and the Washington Nationals were still the Montreal Expos.
The ideas of the NBA using international players, MLB using Asian natives, and the best players from Eastern Europe being allowed to leave for the NHL (unless they successfully defected, like the Stastny brothers) were far-fetched.
Not one player on the Seahawks' Super Bowl roster had yet been born; for the Broncos, only Peyton Manning, Champ Bailey and Paris Lenon had, and Quentin Jammer was about to be born. Current Seahawks coach Pete Carroll was the secondary coach at Ohio State University, while Broncos coach John Fox was a graduate assistant at San Diego State. Tom Brady was about to turn 2 years old. Eli Manning, Ben Roethlisberger and Aaron Rodgers hadn't been born yet.
Only the Green Bay Packers, Oakland Raiders, San Diego Chargers, Kansas City Chiefs, Buffalo Bills, New Orleans Saints and San Francisco 49ers played the 2013 NFL season in the same stadium in which they played in 1979; starting next season, you can drop the Niners from that list.
The only NBA teams playing in the same arena in which they played the 1978-79 season are the Knicks at Madison Square Garden, and the Golden State Warriors at the Oakland Coliseum Arena. The only NHL teams doing so are the Rangers at The Garden, the Islanders at the Nassau Coliseum, and the Edmonton Oilers at the Northlands Coliseum. The only MLB teams doing so are the Boston Red Sox, the Chicago Cubs, the Oakland Athletics, the Kansas City Royals, and both Los Angeles-area teams.
In addition to the Sonics, the defending World Champions were the Yankees, the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Montreal Canadiens. Muhammad Ali had retired as Heavyweight Champion of the World, the WBC was recognizing Larry Holmes as Champion, while the WBA hadn't yet made up its mind, and the IBF didn't exist yet.
Since that last Seattle title, the Olympic Games have been held in America 3 times, Canada twice, and once each in Russia (and are about to be again), Yugoslavia (post-breakup, Sarajevo is in Bosnia), Korea, France, Spain, Norway, Japan, Australia, Greece, Italy, China and Britain.
In June 1979, the current head coach of the Seattle Seahawks, was defensive backs coach at Ohio State; and the current head coach of the team that had been the Seattle SuperSonics, now the Oklahoma City Thunder, Scott Brooks, was 14 years old.
Tom Coughlin of the Giants was Syracuse University's offensive coordinator, Terry Collins of the Mets was playing in the Pittsburgh Pirates' minor-league system, Mike Woodson of the Knicks was at Indiana University; Joe Girardi of the Yankees, Rex Ryan of the Jets and Alain Vigneault of the Rangers were in high school; Jack Capuano of the Islanders was in junior high school, Peter DeBoer of the Devils was 9, and Jason Kidd of the Nets was 6.
There were 26 Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The last Justice then on the Supreme Court who was still on it was John Paul Stevens, who served from 1975 to 2010.
The President of the United States was Jimmy Carter. Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, their wives, and the widows of Harry Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson were still alive.
Ronald Reagan was beginning his 3rd run for President, George H.W. Bush his 1st. Bill Clinton was in his 1st year as Governor of Arkansas. George W. Bush had recently lost his 1st run for public office, for Congressman from Texas. Barack Obama had just graduated high school, and Michelle Robinson was still in it. Joe Biden had just been elected to a 2nd term in the U.S. Senate from Delaware, and John Boehner was working for Nucite Sales, apparently believing the line in the movie The Graduate about the future being "plastics."
The Governor of New York was Hugh Carey, of New Jersey Brendan Byrne, and the State of Washington had one of the earliest women to be elected Governor without her husband having previously held the job, Dixy Lee Ray. The Mayor of New York City was Ed Koch, and of Seattle Charles Royer. He was in the 2nd of 12 years on the job, and is still alive.
There were still living veterans of the Spanish-American War, the Boer War, the Philippine Campaign and the Boxer Rebellion. Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin were the holders of the Nobel Peace Prize. The Pope was John Paul II. The current Pope, Francis, was then Father Jorge Mario Bergoglio, and was Provincial Superior of the Socity of Jesus (the Jesuits) in Argentina.
The Prime Minister of Canada was Pierre Trudeau, but had just led his Liberal Party to an election defeat, after winning 3 times. Just 3 days after the Sonics' title, Progressive Conservative Party Leader Joe Clark would be sworn in as Prime Minister. The next day would be his 40th birthday, making him the youngest person ever to be head of government in either Canada or America. But his government would quickly fall apart over a budget impasse, and early the next year, Trudeau would lead the Liberals back to victory, and serve another 4 years as Prime Minister, for a total of 15.
The monarch of Great Britain was Queen Elizabeth II -- that hasn't changed -- but Margaret Thatcher had just been elected Prime Minister. (Thatcher in Britain in May 1979, Clark in Canada the same month, Reagan in America in November 1980 -- a pattern, the difference being that Canada wised up a lot faster to the fact that conservatism doesn't work.)
There
have since been 6 Presidents of the United States, 5 Prime Ministers of
Britain and 3 Popes.
England's FA Cup was won, 3 weeks earlier, by Arsenal, after blowing a 2-0 lead in the last 5 minutes against Manchester United, but Alan Sunderland's last-gap goal won the Cup for the North London club. The Football League had just been won by Liverpool, dethroning Nottingham Forest, which won the European Cup (now the UEFA Champions League) by beating Swedish club Malmo in the Final. They would win it again the next year, too, beating Hamburg in the Final, making them, to this day, the only team in all of Europe to win the European Cup more than it's won its domestic league.
Forest manager Brian Clough, after winning the League with Derby County in 1972 and failing spectacularly with Leeds United in 1974 before moving on to Forest (ironically, Derby's arch-rivals), had proved the point he made after that '72 title: "I wouldn't say I'm the best manager in the country, but I'm in the top one."
Among Clough's acquisitions that 1978-79 season was Birmingham City player Trevor Francis, the 1st player in the English league to be purchased for at least one million pounds. My, how times have changed.
Major books of 1979 included Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Jeffrey Archer's Kane and Abel, Barbara Taylor Bradford's A Woman of Substance, Stephen King's The Dead Zone, Norman Mailer's The Executioner's Song, William Styron's Sophie's Choice, and Tom Wolfe's The Right Stuff. All were made into major motion pictures or TV-movies. So was Peter Shaffer's play about Mozart, Amadeus, which debuted in 1979.
George R.R. Martin got divorced from his 1st wife, and left his job as writer in residence at Clarke University and moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, because he was tired of hard winters in Dubuque, Iowa -- perhaps inspiring some of his later books. J.K. Rowling was 14.
No one had yet heard of Hannibal Lecter, Celie Harris, Forrest Gump, Alex Cross, Harry Potter, Robert Langdon, Lisbeth Salander, Bella Swan or Katniss Everdeen.
New in theaters when the Sonics' won what remains, for the moment, Seattle's last title were Alien
and The Muppet Movie. One featured weird creatures. The other had Sigourney Weaver kicking ass, with her own barely covered. Francis Ford Coppola was about to premiere Apocalypse Now, his moving of Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness to the Vietnam War, and filming it nearly killed him and his star Martin Sheen, and made the jokes about Marlon Brando get worse.
Christopher Reeve had just begun playing Superman, Lynda Carter was about to wrap up playing Wonder Woman, and Lou Ferrigno was smashing as the Hulk, but the last live-action Batman was still Adam West, and Nicholas Hammond's recent Spider-Man and Reb Brown's Captain America were absolute bombs. Tom Baker was playing The Doctor. Mad Max had just premiered.
Moonraker was about to premiere. Despite all the jokes about it, it actually holds up better than most classic James Bond films. Roger Moore was 51, but still believable as an action hero. Making his 2nd appearance as Jaws, Richard Kiel made a fantastic villain's henchman-turned-hero. But that 2-minute laser battle in space toward the end will forever overshadow the rest of it.
In contrast, Gene Roddenberry was putting the finishing touches on Star Trek: The Motion Picture. People would say, "We waited 10 years for this?" Just as 2001: A Space Odyssey had helped kill the original series by showing just what special effects could do for a space film, Roddenberry learned the wrong lessons from it, doing long scenes with beautiful shots but no dialogue or plot. Also, Gene ripped himself off, redoing the episode "The Changeling." As a result of these things, it became known as Star Trek: The Motionless Picture, A Spock-alypse Now, and Where Nomad Has Gone Before.
No one had yet heard of Ash Williams, John Rambo, the Terminator, the Ghostbusters, Marty McFly, Robocop, John McClane, Jay & Silent Bob, or Austin Powers.
Just wrapping up their 1st seasons were the TV shows WKRP in Cincinnati, The White Shadow, The Dukes of Hazzard, Diff'rent Strokes, Taxi, Mork & Mindy, and the original version of Battlestar Galactica. Preparing for a fall debut were Hart to Hart, Benson, Trapper John, M.D., Knots Landing and The Facts of Life.
CBS' Match Game was on hiatus from May until September, so, no Brett Somers, no Charles Nelson Reilly, no Fannie Flagg, no Dumb Donald, no Old Man Periwinkle, and no horrible accents from host Gene Rayburn. (Richard Dawson had already quit to focus on hosting Family Feud.)
And 1979 was a disaster for NBC. They launched the super-campy, body-suited version of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, a lame attempt to capitalize on Star Wars and Star Trek that did no one, least of all the original character, any good, that show was still a gem compared to their disastrous Hello Larry, Brothers and Sisters, Turnabout, and, yes, Supertrain.
NBC was desperate enough to advertise these shows on what were then "independent stations": In New York, you could turn from WNBC-Channel 4 to WNEW-Channel 5 (now WNYW, Fox 5), and see a promo for Supertrain, an obvious Love Boat ripoff. Or Brothers and Sisters, not to be confused with the later ABC drama of the same title: This was a ripoff of Animal House, which ABC had tried to officially do, taking some of the actual actors from that film and making the ill-fated Delta House.
In 1979, NBC was so bad! (How bad was it?) It was so bad that, on one of the few NBC shows that was still successful, The Tonight Show, Johnny Carson suggested that the network should use the same method that the floundering Chrysler Corporation was using, with NBC sportscaster Joe Garagiola faking a smile throughout the commercials: Pay off viewers to accept a lousy product: "Watch Hello, Larry, get a check!" It would have been no use: Hello, Larry ran 38 episodes in 2 seasons; between them, Brothers and Sisters, Turnabout and Supertrain aired 28 episodes.
No one had yet heard of Sam Malone, He-Man, Goku, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, the Thundercats, Bart Simpson, Fox Mulder, Xena, Ash Ketchum, Jed Bartlet, Tony Soprano, Master Chief, Leroy Jethro Gibbs, Rick Grimes, Don Draper, Walter White or Richard Castle.
The day of the Sonics' title, Joy Division released their album Unknown Pleasures. The Number 1 song in America was "Hot Stuff" by Donna Summer. In the days before, The Who played their first concerts since the death of Keith Moon, with former Faces drummer Kenney Jones in his place, and Elton John played 8 concerts in the Soviet Union. In the days after, rock and roll pioneer Bill Haley made his last recordings, fellow rock pioneer Chuck Berry was sentenced to 4 months in prison on tax evasion charges, the first Sony Walkman went on sale in Japan, to be released in the U.S. a year later, the Bee Gees sold out Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, and, in an officially unrelated event but a totally welcome counterpoint, Disco Demolition Night (a.k.a. Disco Sucks Night) was held at Comiskey Park in Chicago.
"The World Series of Rock" was held at Cleveland Municipal Stadium (as opposed to the World Series of baseball, which was only held there once, in 1948), and Ted Nugent was one of the headliners. That's how long it's been since Nugent was relevant in music, unlike in politics, where he has never been relevant. Also on the bill were AC/DC, Thin Lizzy, rising bands Journey and the Scorpions. The headliner was Aerosmith, but after the concert, an argument developed among the soused, coked-out members, and lead guitarist Joe Perry quit. It would take 5 years and a lot of rehab for the original lineup to reunite.
Bob Dylan was about to release his 1st Christian album, Slow Train Coming. Michael Jackson was about to release Off the Wall, which would have insured that his solo career was a legend even if Thriller had never been recorded. None of the Beatles was doing much: 1979 was a quiet year for them. 1980 would not be.
Van Halen, Miami Sound Machine and Prince had released their earliest recordings. George Michael and Whitney Houston were 15 years old. Jennifer Lopez and Gwen Stefani were 9. Selena was 8. (Quintanilla, not Gomez: She wasn't born until 1992.) Shakira was 2. Pink, Christina Aguilera, Alicia Keys, Britney Spears, Katy Perry, and all the members of Desinty's Child had yet to be born.
Inflation was such that what $1.00 bought then, $3.39 would
buy now. A U.S. postage stamp cost 15 cents, and a New York Subway ride 50 cents.
The average price of a gallon of gas was 88 cents, a cup of coffee 83 cents, a McDonald's meal (Big
Mac, fries, shake) $2.00, a movie ticket $2.42, a new car $6,848, and a
new house $72,400. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed that day at 821.21.
The tallest building in the world was the Sears Tower in Chicago. There were desktop computers, but, as yet, no laptops. Mobile telephones existed, but they were as big as Army walkie-talkies. Automatic teller
machines were still a relatively new thing, and many people had never seen one. The leading home video game system was the Atari VCS (later renamed the Atari 2600). There were heart transplants, liver transplants and
lung transplants, and artificial kidneys, but no artificial hearts.
AIDS was around, but not yet discovered. "Chronic fatigue syndrome" was hardly known, and even more rarely were doctors, who hate to admit that they don't know something or can't cure something, willing to diagnose it. The birth control pill was long-established, but there was, as yet, no Viagra. NASA was still trying and failing to get the first space shuttle off the ground. A few weeks after the Sonics' title, Skylab fell out of orbit, broke up, and crashed into the ocean.
AIDS was around, but not yet discovered. "Chronic fatigue syndrome" was hardly known, and even more rarely were doctors, who hate to admit that they don't know something or can't cure something, willing to diagnose it. The birth control pill was long-established, but there was, as yet, no Viagra. NASA was still trying and failing to get the first space shuttle off the ground. A few weeks after the Sonics' title, Skylab fell out of orbit, broke up, and crashed into the ocean.
In the late Spring and early Summer of 1979, a civil war began in El Salvador, and power was democratically transferred to the first government made up of Rhodesia's black majority, which would later rename the country Zimbabwe and make democracy there a cruel joke, Robert Mugabe being no less brutal a dictator than his white predecessor Ian Smith. John Paul II visited his native Poland, becoming the 1st sitting Pope to visit a Communist country.
President Carter and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the SALT II treaty. A DC-10 crashed at O'Hare Airport in Chicago, killing 273 people, still the deadliest air disaster in American history. Former San Francisco Supervisor (what most cities call a Councilman) Dan White got a light sentence for killing fellow Board member Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone the preceding November, and the gay community rioted. McDonald's introduced the Happy Meal.
A. Philip Randolph, and Mary Pickford, and John Wayne died. So did baseball legend Duffy Lewis, and hockey legend Fred "Cyclone" Taylor. Rosario Dawson, and Andrea Pirlo, and LaDainian Tomlinson were born.
June 1, 1979. The Seattle SuperSonics won the NBA Championship, for the only time in their history. It remains the last World Championship won by any Seattle-based team.
Now, the Seattle Seahawks are 2 days away from playing in the Super Bowl. The Denver Broncos are currently favored by 2 1/2 points, in spite of the Hawks' vaunted defense. Can they win their city's 1st World Championship in nearly 35 years? Stay tuned.
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