No, that's not Jack Klugman wearing a white wig.
That's a real-life sportswriter, and, in his own way,
a far messier one than Oscar Madison.
October 17, 1917, 100 years ago: Richard Young (as far as I know, he had no middle name) is born in The Bronx, and grows up in the Washington Heights section of Manhattan. From 1937 until 1982, Dick Young wrote sports for the New York Daily News, mostly covering baseball. In 1982, during a dispute with management, he switched to the arch-rival New York Post -- indicative of his own changing attitudes, left to right.
Young saw himself as a fan who wrote. He enjoyed that he got to travel with the players on the trains and later the planes, and stay in the same hotels, and eat at the same restaurants. He said, "I don't want to be a millionaire, I just want to live like one. Millionaires would pay to have my job."
Frank Deford of Sports Illustrated, as he so often did, had the right words: "Dick Young was exactly what a tabloid sportswriter was supposed to be like." Bob Rosen of the Elias Sports Bureau went deeper: "What set Dick Young apart from the other baseball writers was the way he wrote. He wrote what I saw. He didn't use a lot of fancy words. He wrote to us. Like he was a common fan, just like us. He was anti-owner." (Those italics are mine, not Rosen's.)
He was anti-owner. That changed. It's not clear when. As to why, I can only make a slightly educated guess: He began to get (at least, in his mind) better information from ownership than from players.
In 1947, when Jackie Robinson reached the Brooklyn Dodgers, Young championed the cause of racial integration in print. By 1954, when Jackie and the other black players on the Dodgers were demanding to be housed in the same hotel as their white teammates in then-segregated St. Louis, Young thought they were going too far.
Within a few years, he wasn't even trying to hide the fact that he was on the side of the establishment, slamming the many black activists at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. It didn't mesh with what he termed "My America."
Citing the hapless successor to Weeb Ewbank as Jets head coach, Ross Wetzsteon of The Village Voice wrote, "Young Ideas, the title of his column, is the greatest misnomer since Charley Winner... He used to hang out with the players, but now all he does is suck up to the millionaire owners."
In 1975, as the fight against baseball's reserve clause case was nearing its resolution, he took the side of Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, and the owners overall, including Kuhn's puppetmaster Walter O'Malley of the now-Los Angeles Dodgers, against the players and their representative, Marvin Miller -- or the "ingrates" and "this man Miller," as Young put it.
It got worse: In June 1977, as Tom Seaver was feuding with Mets team president M. Donald Grant, Grant asked Young to write a column slamming Seaver. Grant was cheap, and wouldn't have paid Young for it. Clearly, Young didn't have to take money for it: He was happy to do it for free, and cited not just Seaver's jealousy over how well his friend and ex-teammate Nolan Ryan was being paid, but Mrs. Seaver's jealousy of Mrs. Ryan. That was the last straw: Seaver was furious that his wife (and Ryan's) were brought into it, and blamed Grant for Young's writing, and demanded to be traded.
Dick Young died on August 30, 1987, shortly before what would have been his 70th birthday. One of his last columns ripped Dwight Gooden after his return to the Mets from drug rehab. It was titled "Stand Up and Boo." I guess it never occurred to Young that his own alcohol intake, while legal, was also an unhealthy form of substance abuse.
What would Young say about sports today? He'd probably be on the side of the owners, unless they conflicted with Donald Trump, in which case he'd cave in on the side of superficial patriotism, and say that the owners better make their players stand for the National Anthem.
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October 17, 1752: Jacob Broom is born. A signer of the Constitution of the United States in 1787, he lived until 1810.
October 17, 1814: The London Beer Flood occurs. No, I’m not making that up. If Boston could have a molasses flood in 1918, why couldn't London have a beer flood?
It happened in the London parish of St. Giles. At the Meux and Company Brewery on Tottenham Court Road, a huge vat containing over 135,000 "imperial gallons" of beer ruptured, causing other vats in the same building to succumb in a domino effect. As a result, more than 323,000 imperial gallons of beer burst out and gushed into the streets.
The wave of beer destroyed 2 homes and crumbled the wall of the Tavistock Arms Pub, trapping the Eleanor Cooper, a barmaid whose age has been variously given as 14, 15 and 16 years old, under the rubble. The brewery was located among the poor houses and tenements of the St Giles Rookery, where whole families lived in basement rooms that quickly filled with beer. The wave left 9 people dead: 8 due to drowning (including the barmaid) and 1 from alcohol poisoning.
October 17, 1859: William Ewing (no middle name) is born outside Cincinnati in Hoagland, Ohio. "Buck" Ewing played pretty much any position, but was best known as a catcher. He was an original New York Giant in 1883, and helped them win National League Pennants in 1888 and 1889.
He was considered, along with Cap Anson and King Kellly, the best player of his era, and was one of the earliest inductees into the Baseball Hall of Fame, in 1939. He did not live to see this, as he died in 1906, from diabetes, at age 47.
October 17, 1860: For the 1st time, The Open Championship (referred to in North America as the British Open) is held, at Prestwick Golf Club, in Ayrshire, Scotland. The winner is Scotsman Willie Park.
Wait, why am I mentioning this? Golf is not a sport!
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October 17, 1879: Sunderland and District Teachers Association Football Club is founded in Sunderland, in the North-East of England, by James Allan, a Scottish schoolmaster who played soccer as a forward. They joined the Football League in 1890, eventually becoming simply "Sunderland A.F.C."
Like the people of their hometown, they are known as "The Mackems" The name comes from the city's past as a shipbuilding center: In what became known as "the Mackem dialect," they would say of the ships, to everyone else in Britain, "We make them, and you take them." This became "We mack 'em and you tack 'em." Stereotypically, the people there pronounce "Whose keys are these?" as "Wheeze keys are these?"
Sunderland A.F.C. are also known as the Black Cats, for the black lions on their club badge. They won the League in 1892, 1893 and 1895, and became known as known as "The Team of All Talents." They won it again in 1902, 1913 and 1936. They haven't won it since, but that's still 4 more titles than have been won by Tottenham Hotspur, 2 more than by Manchester City, and it was only this year that Chelsea matched their total.
They won the FA Cup in 1937 and 1973, the latter as a Division Two team that upset North London's Arsenal in the Semifinal and Yorkshire's Leeds United in the Final. It remains their last major trophy, and they've struggled since. From 1958-59 to the 2017-18 season just begun, they've played 60 seasons, and only 29 of those, less than half, have been in the 1st division; 1, 1987-88, was in the 3rd.
In 2003, they were relegated from the Premier League, having gained just 19 points all season long (4 wins for 3 points each, and 7 draws for 1 point each), a new record low for the English 1st division. They got promoted back up in 2005, but in 2006, they broke their own record with just 15 points (3 wins and 6 draws, a record broken in 2007-08 by East Midlands side Derby County with 11). But they won the 2nd division in 2007, and remained in the Premier League until finishing dead last this past season, with 24 points -- a pathetic total, but genius compared to '03 and '06.
They are known for their red and white striped shirts, their rivalry with nearby Newcastle United (known as the Tyne-Wear Derby), and the noise made by their fans, known as the Roker Roar, from their home field from 1898 to 1997, Roker Park. They now play at the 49,000-seat Stadium of Light.
October 17, 1883: With professional boxing still illegal in most parts of America, fights are technically held underground, and not in major cities. Therefore, today's fight, for the unofficial Heavyweight Championship of the World, is held not in Pittsburgh, but in nearby McKeesport, Pennsylvania.
It is no contest: The Champion, John L. Sullivan, knocks challenger James McCoy out in the 1st round. "The Boston Strong Boy" won the title by knocking out Paddy Ryan a year earlier, and would hold the title for 10 years.
October 17, 1889: John F. Hartranft dies in Norristown, Pennsylvania, outside Philadelphia, at age 58. A General of the Union Army in the American Civil War, he fought at the Battles of Bull Run (both of them), Antietam, Fredericksburg, Vicksburg, Knoxville, Spotsylvania, Petersburg and Fort Stedman. He was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.
He served as Governor of Pennsylvania from 1873 to 1879, and an equestrian statue of him stands on the grounds of the State House in Harrisburg.
October 17, 1892, 125 years ago: The Universities of Michigan and Minnesota play each other in football for the 1st time. Minnesota wins 14-6 in Minneapolis. In 1903, the rivalry began to be played for a trophy known as the Little Brown Jug. Michigan leads the series 74-25-3. (UPDATE: The 2017 game made it 75-25-3 in Michigan's favor.)
October 17, 1896: Florence Dent Archibald McSkimming is born in St. Louis. He -- yes, he -- was the son of George Francis McSkimming, who worked at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and George named his son after 2 male colleagues, Florence D. White and Dent H. Robert.
He went by the name Dent McSkimming, and would also write for the Post-Dispatch. Since several members of the U.S. team at the 1950 World Cup were from St. Louis, he went to Brazil to cover it, paying his own way because the Post-Dispatch wouldn't. he saw the U.S. team beat England 1-0, and wrote, "It was as if Oxford University sent a baseball team over here and it beat the Yankees."
He died in 1976, and, because of his journalistic connection to the sport, was elected to the National Soccer Hall of Fame. In the 2005 film The Game of Their Lives, he was played in 1950 by Terry Kinney, and as an older man by, ironically, an Englishman, Patrick Stewart, in real life a big fan of Yorkshire club Huddersfield Town. Since he only lived for 26 years after the game in question, the age difference shouldn't have been necessary to have an older actor, no matter how good.
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October 17, 1906: Samuel Paul Derringer is born in Springfield, Kentucky. Paul Derringer was a rookie pitcher with the 1931 World Champion St. Louis Cardinals, and won the 1939 National League Pennant and the 1940 World Series with the Cincinnati Reds. He started the 1st major league night game, at Cincinnati's Crosley Field in 1935, and won 223 games in his career. Of those, 161 came in a Reds uniform, 2nd in club history only to Eppa Rixey's 179. He lived until 1987.
Also on this day, Joseph Albert Albertson is born in Yukon, Oklahoma, and grows up in Caldwell, Idaho. Founder of the Albertsons grocery store chain, he was a major donor to Boise State University, whose stadium is named for him. He died in 1993.
October 17, 1908: Robert Abial Rolfe is born in Penacook, New Hampshire. The starting 3rd baseman in 4 All-Star Games, Red Rolfe helped the Yankees win the 1932, '36, '37, '38, '39 and '41 World Series. He is the greatest player ever born in New Hampshire, although Bellows Falls, Vermont-born Carlton Fisk grew up in Charlestown.
Retiring as a player at only 34, he was immediately hired, due to the wartime manpower shortage, as both baseball and basketball coach at Yale University. He later served as athletic director at his alma mater, Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire.
Until Graig Nettles, and later Alex Rodriguez, he was probably the best all-around player ever to play 3rd base for the Yankees. Yankee broadcaster Mel Allen selected him as the 3rd baseman on his all-time team, although Mel did also see plenty of Eddie Mathews and Brooks Robinson, and wasn't that far past the era of Pie Traynor.
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October 17, 1910: Julia Ward Howe dies in Portsmouth, Rhode Island at age 91. In 1861, already an established writer and abolitionist, and sister of the esteemed abolitionist minister Henry Ward Beecher, she met with Abraham Lincoln at the White House. Hearing him speak of the Civil War crusade to save the Union, she rewrote the song "John Brown's Body" and made it "The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
This great sacred song has been twisted into a soccer chant, often profanely telling of what happened when a representative of a team the singer doesn't like "went to Rome to see the Pope."
October 17, 1911: After criticizing his teammate Rube Marquard's pitching to Philadelphia Athletics 3rd baseman Frank Baker in his newspaper column‚ Christy Mathewson takes the mound for the New York Giants in Game 3 against 29-game winner Jack Coombs. Matty takes a 1-0 lead into the 9th. With 1 out‚ Baker lines another drive over the right field fence to tie it.
With that blow‚ he receives the nickname "Home Run" Baker. Based on 2 home runs? Well, it was
1911, the Dead Ball Era: He only hit 96 home runs in his entire 13-season career, although he did have a .307 lifetime batting average and a very strong 135 OPS+, is regarded as one of the best 3rd basemen of the 1st half of the 20th Century, and is in the Hall of Fame.
However, Baker's homer only ties the game, and it goes to extra innings. Errors by Giant 3rd baseman Buck Herzog and shortstop Art Fletcher give the A's 2 unearned runs in the top of the 11th. New York scores once‚ but the A's win 3-2 behind Jack Coombs's 3-hitter.
October 17, 1912: Albino Luciani (no middle name, very odd for an Italian) is born in Canale d'Agordo, Veneto, Italy. He was Patriarch of Venice when, on August 26, 1978, he was named Pope, to succeed the late Paul VI. When Paul VI died, it was mentioned on a Yankee broadcast, and the very Italian, very Catholic Phil Rizzuto said, "Well, that puts a damper on even a Yankee win."
Cardinal Luciani took the name John Paul I, combining the names of the last 2 Popes, both of them truly beloved around the world: John XXIII and Paul VI. But just 33 days later, on September 28, 1978, he also died, apparently of a heart attack. The shortest-reigning Pope of the modern era, he was only 65. With a Yanks-Sox Pennant race coming down to the wire, Charles Laquidara of Boston radio station WBCN began his broadcast, "Pope dies, Sox still alive."
The late Pope's successor, Karol Wojtyla, Archbishop of Krakow in Poland, took the name John Paul II, and said of his predecessor, "What warmth of charity, nay, what an abundant outpouring of love, which came forth from him in the few days of his ministry."
October 17, 1913: Robert Lowery Hanks is born in Kansas City, Missouri. Dropping his last name, Robert Lowery played Batman in the 1949 serial Batman and Robin. In 1956, he appeared on an episode of The Adventures of Superman, having previously appeared with series star George Reeves in... a World War II propaganda film designed to teach soldiers and sailors of the dangers of venereal disease. He died of a heart attack in 1971, only 58.
October 17, 1914: Jerome Siegel (no middle name) is born in Cleveland. His father was killed when his store was robbed. Sounds like a superhero's origin story, doesn't it?
It was. With Joe Shuster, a friend who came to Cleveland from Toronto, doing the illustrations, Jerry Siegel created Superman. Siegel died in 1996. Shuster, also born in 1914, died in 1992.
What does Superman have to do with sports? Occasionally, he was drawn playing baseball. One time, in 1976, there was a superheroes vs. supervillains baseball game. The villains' team captain and pitcher, Sportsmaster, insisted that the heroes not use their powers (but cheated anyway). This almost worked, except for when Sportsmaster beaned Superman. Since Superman can't turn his invulnerability off, the ball hit him and rebounded right back, leading Sportsmaster to say, "Almost got beaned by my own pitch!" The heroes won the game, of course, but it was close: 11-10.
Then there was this cover, from 1970, drawn by the other man best known for drawing Superman, Curt Swan. On other occasions, he's been in races with the Flash.
October 17, 1915: Michael Joseph Sandlock is born in Sound Beach (now named Old Greenwich), Connecticut, making him a "New Yorker by extension." A catcher, he played for the Boston Braves in 1942 and 1944, and for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1945 and 1946. Then he got sent back to the minors, and got stuck behind Roy Campanella.
Sandlock didn't play a single game with the 1947 Dodgers, but was with them for spring training in Cuba, and was one of the players who was handed the petition to keep Jackie Robinson off the big club. He refused to sign the damned thing.
Former Dodger president Branch Rickey, by 1951 running the Pittsburgh Pirates, must have seen something he liked, because he bought Sandlock from the Stars after that season, and brought him back up for one more run in the majors, for 64 games in 1953. After playing 1954 with the Pacific Coast League version of the San Diego Padres, he retired at age 39.
With his mechanical skills, he continued working as a freelance electrician, plumber and all-around handyman, living in Cos Cob, Connecticut, just 3 miles from his childhood home. He played golf at a Connecticut club until advancing age put him in a wheelchair. He was active with the Baseball Assistance Team (BAT), providing aid to indigent retired ballplayers.
At age 97, still able to get around with a cane, he was honored at Citi Field before a Met game as the oldest living Brooklyn Dodger. With the death of Connie Marrero on April 23, 2014, he became the oldest living former MLB player. He is believed to be the 17th major leaguer to reach a 100th birthday. He died on April 4, 2016.
Also on this day, Arthur Asher Miller is born in Harlem -- at the time, becoming the nation's foremost black neighborhood, but still retaining much of its former German and Jewish character. (Lou Gehrig was born there in 1903, the son of Protestant German immigrants.)
In Miller's play Death of a Salesman, he quoted his lead character, Willy Loman, as exulting in the fact that, "We're playing football at Ebbets Field!" Football? At Ebbets Field? Yes, it happened in real life, as the NFL had a Brooklyn Dodgers from 1930 to 1944, although the play refers to high school football.
October 17, 1917, 100 years ago: Martin Paterson Donnelly is born in Ngāruawāhia, New Zealand. He became a cricket and rugby star in high school, and, still a teenager, was selected for the New Zealand national cricket team on their 1937 tour of England. He would star in both sports, mostly in England, until 1949, and lived until 1999, age 82.
October 17, 1918: Margarita Carmen Cansino is born in Brooklyn. Better known as Rita Hayworth. Although she was a huge star, for a lot more than 2 reasons, her personal life was a mess, including stormy marriages to Orson Welles and the manipulative, skirt-chasing Muslim prince Aly Khan. She said, "Basically, I am a good, gentle person, but I am attracted to mean personalities." She also said, citing her best-known film role, “Men fall in love with Gilda, but they wake up with me.”
What does she have to do with sports? Nothing, as far as I know, although Aly Khan was a noted breeder of racehorses. She’s just one of the most magnificent women who ever lived. After so many years of martial abuse, alcoholism and Alzheimer’s disease, she finally found peace in 1987. Her daughter, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, is a major fundraiser for Alzheimer’s research.
Also on this day, Ralph Cookerly Wilson Jr. is born in Columbus, Ohio. Growing up in Detroit, he ran an industrial firm, and was a minority owner of the NFL's Detroit Lions during their glory years in the 1950s, when he had the chance buy a franchise in the fledgling American Football League. His first choice for a city in which to play was Miami, but he was turned down. He got his 2nd choice, and the Buffalo Bills were born. (Clearly, he didn't make Buffalo his 2nd choice after Miami due to the weather!)
Of the original 8 AFL owners, a.k.a. "The Foolish Club," he was the last survivor, dying in 2014. At 54 years, he was the 2nd-longest-lasting owner in NFL history, trailing only league and Chicago Bears founder George Halas at 63 years. He was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2009.
When the naming rights to the Bills' Rich Stadium ran out, the board of directors renamed it Ralph Wilson Stadium. They have since run out again, and it has been renamed New Era Field. Under Ralph, the Bills won 2 AFL Championships, 1964 and '65, and 4 AFC Championships, 1990, '91, '92 and '93. But not a Super Bowl.
Natural gas tycoon Terry Pegula, already the owner of the Buffalo Sabres, the lacrosse team the Buffalo Bandits, and minor-league hockey's Rochester Americans, bought the Bills from the Wilson family (splitting ownership between himself and his wife Kim, to get around the NFL's rule against majority ownership of a team in another sport), and is keeping the team in Buffalo, even ending the team's commitment to play a "home game" in Toronto every season. Ralph Wilson began the Bills in Buffalo, kept them there in life, and, in death, his family ensured they will stay.
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October 17, 1920: The Chicago Cardinals, who'd been playing football since 1898 (when it was still mostly amateur), play their 1st home game in what was then named the American Professional Football Association. It would become the National Football League in 1922.
They play it at St. Rita's Field, behind a church in Chicago, against a team from the Illinois/Iowa "Quad Cities," the Moline Universal Tractors, a "company team." The Cardinals win, 33-0.
They would play the rest of their home games at Cubs Park (renamed Wrigley Field in 1926) on the North Side and Normal Field on the South Side, before switching to Comiskey Park on the South Side for all home games in 1922, to St. Louis in 1960, and to Arizona in 1988.
October 17, 1923: Charles Yeomans McClendon is born in Lewisville, Arkansas. He played football for fellow Arkansas native Bear Bryant at the University of Kentucky, and coached at Louisiana State University, starting in 1953 as an assistant, then in 1962 as head coach.
He got the LSU Fighting Tigers to the 1963 and 1966 Cotton Bowls, the 1965 and 1968 Sugar Bowls, and the 1971 and 1974 Orange Bowls. In 1970, he guided them to the Southeastern Conference Championship, and was named national Coach of the Year. This was his only SEC title, mainly because it was the only time he beat Mississippi and Bryant's Alabama in the same season.
He was fired after the 1979 season, and never coached again, completing his record at 137-59-7. He died in 2001.
October 17, 1924: Donald David Coryell is born in Seattle. A paratrooper in World War II, he played football and earned a bachelor's and master's degree at his hometown school, the University of Washington. He won small-college titles coaching at Whittier College, spent a season as an assistant to John McKay at the University of Southern California, and in 1961 was named head coach at San Diego State.
He went 104-19-2 at SDSU, including 3 undefeated seasons, bringing them from Division II to Division I-A. Since USC and UCLA seemed to be recruiting all the good running backs in Southern California, he went to a pass-happy offense. He coached All-Pro quarterback Brian Sipe, and All-Pro receivers Isaac Curtis, Gary Garrison and Haven Moses. He also coached football players turned actors Fred Dryer (Hunter) and Carl Weathers (Apollo Creed in the Rocky films).
The NFL's St. Louis Cardinals noticed him, and hired him as head coach, He brought his passing ideas to Busch Memorial Stadium, and in 1974 and 1975, he led the "Cardiac Cardinals" to NFC East titles, the only 1st-place finishes the former Chicago and future Arizona franchise would have between 1948 and 2008.
In 1978, he returned to San Diego, taking the head job with the Chargers, and guided them to their 1st winning season in 9 years. His "Air Coryell" offense led the NFL in passing yards in 7 of the next 8 seasons, with quarterback Dan Fouts, tight end Kellen Winslow, receivers Charlie Joiner and John Jefferson, and pass-catching running backs James Brooks and Lionel James. The Chargers had a good defense, too, known as the Bruise Brothers: Mean Fred Dean, Gary "Big Hands" Johnson and Louie Kelcher.
In 1979, Fouts passed for an NFL record 4,082 yards, the 1st NFL passer to reach the 4,000 mark (Joe Namath had done it in the AFL in 1967), and convinced the great Johnny Unitas to say, in an interview for CBS' The NFL Today, to say Fouts was the current NFL quarterback he liked the best.
That 1979 season was the Chargers' 1st trip to the Playoffs in 14 years. They won 3 straight AFC Western Division titles. But they couldn't get over the hump. In back-to-back weeks in January 1982, they played perhaps the hottest game in NFL history, beating the Miami Dolphins in an overtime thriller at the Orange Bowl, remembered as the Kellen Winslow Game; and then faced the Cincinnati Bengals at Riverfront Stadium in perhaps the coldest game in NFL history, getting completely shut down in what became known as the Freezer Game. (San Diego playing well in Miami heat was understandable, but in Ohio cold was not. Actually, Cincinnati is not generally known for cold weather, but it sure was cold that day.)
Coryell left the Chargers after the 1986 seasons, and never coached again. His regular season records were superb: 127-24-3 in college, 114-89-1 in the NFL. But his Playoff record was a mere 3-6, and only once did he get to the AFC Championship Game. So while he is in the College Football Hall of Fame, that is probably why he's not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and, having died in 2010, he won't live to see it happen.
But Fouts, Winslow, Joiner, Dean, and 2 of his assistant coaches, John Madden and Joe Gibbs, are in the Hall of Fame. When Madden was elected, he mentioned that he, Gibbs and Fouts were taught by Coryell, and said, "Something's missing." John Madden may know more about football than any man alive, so he knows what he's talking about. Many observers consider the "West Coast offense" employed by the 5-time Super Bowl-winning San Francisco 49ers and the Super Bowl XXXIV-winning St. Louis Rams to be a progression from Air Coryell. If innovation is a qualification for the Hall, then Don Coryell should be in.
October 17 and 18, 1925: Believe it or not, the expansion New York Giants football team plays on back-to-back days. A lot of teams did that in the 1920s, and it will end up becoming an issue that clouds the awarding of this season's title. Neither the Giants nor the Frankford Yellow Jackets have to worry about that, as neither is a contender this season.
On Saturday the 17th, since Pennsylvania law then prohibited playing sporting events on Sundays, they played at Frankford Stadium in Northeast Philadelphia, and the Jackets won 5-3. (There must have been a safety.) On Sunday the 18th, since New York State law did allow Sunday sports, they played at the Polo Grounds, officially the 1st home game in franchise history, despite their 1st actual game having been played in Newark. But the home field advantage didn't help the Giants, as Frankford completed the sweep, 14-0.
The Jackets won the NFL Championship in 1926, but went out of business in 1931, due to the Great Depression. The NFL sold the rights to the Philadelphia territory to Bert Bell and Lud Wray, who founded the Philadelphia Eagles in 1933, but the Eagles signed no Yellow Jackets players, and do not count the Yellow Jackets' records, including their 1926 title, as their own.
Nevertheless, the weekend of October 17-18, 1925, is the beginning of the pro football rivalry between New York and Philadelphia, which remains tense and strange to this day, with all kinds of weird things having happened.
October 17, 1927, 90 years ago: Ban Johnson‚ in failing health‚ retires as President of the American League, after heading the League he started for its 1st 28 years. His endless battles with Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis and the team owners had eroded his power. Detroit Tigers president Frank Navin, is named acting AL President, until Ernest Barnard, longtime general manager of the Cleveland Indians, is named President. Johnson dies in 1931.The Jackets won the NFL Championship in 1926, but went out of business in 1931, due to the Great Depression. The NFL sold the rights to the Philadelphia territory to Bert Bell and Lud Wray, who founded the Philadelphia Eagles in 1933, but the Eagles signed no Yellow Jackets players, and do not count the Yellow Jackets' records, including their 1926 title, as their own.
Nevertheless, the weekend of October 17-18, 1925, is the beginning of the pro football rivalry between New York and Philadelphia, which remains tense and strange to this day, with all kinds of weird things having happened.
Also on this day, John Calvin Klippstein is born in Washington, D.C. A pitcher, and the son-in-law of former big league pitcher Dutch Leonard, Johnny Klippstein had a 101-118 record, mostly for the Chicago Cubs and the Cincinnati Reds. He quickly went from the penthouse, a member of the 1959 World Champion Los Angeles Dodgers, to the basement, a member of the expansion 1961 Washington Senators, the team that would become the Texas Rangers. In between, with the 1960 Cleveland Indians, he shared the American League lead in saves.
He later went in the other direction: The Philadelphia Phillies traded him before he could be a part of, and possibly help prevent, their 1964 collapse, to the Minnesota Twins, whom he helped win the 1965 Pennant. He died in 2003, listening on the radio to Game 3 of the National League Championship Series between the Cubs and the Florida Marlins.
October 17, 1928: James Earle Breslin is born in Jamaica, Queens. As much as anyone – not a word, fans of the late Ed Koch; shut up, Rudy Giuliani; put a sock in it, Donald Trump; sorry, Regis Philbin – Jimmy Breslin was the voice of New York City.
He wrote for the New York Journal-American in the Fifties, and moved on to the New York Herald-Tribune in 1962, writing a book about the horrendous 1st year of the Mets, borrowing for his title a line from manager Casey Stengel: Can't Anybody Here Play This Game?
When the Trib folded in 1966, he became one of the cornerstones of "New York's Hometown Paper," the Daily News. He remains best known for receiving letters from David Berkowitz, the serial killer known as the Son of Sam, after the 6th of the 8 shootings in 1977, publishing them, and writing an editorial whose title was blasted on the front page: "Breslin to .44-Caliber Killer: GIVE UP! IT’S THE ONLY WAY OUT." After Berkowitz was caught, Breslin and his former Trib teammate Dick Schaap collaborated on a novel based on the case, titled .44.
Unfortunately, like his Daily News stablemate Dick Young, and his Chicago counterpart Mike Royko, he got crochety and conservative in his later years, taking his image as the voice of his city's common man too seriously. He moved on to the Long Island paper Newsday, and received a Polk Award and the last of his 4 Pulitzer Prizes. He has since returned to the Daily News, and his recent columns suggest that he has remembered that it's liberals, not conservatives, that are for the little guy.
Through all the drinking, smoking, inhalation of New York smog, rides in cabs with crazy drivers, health problems, and a particularly nasty beating from the Mob in 1970, he still lives. In addition to the preceding, his books include the Mob novel The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight, the Watergate-themed book How the Good Guys Finally Won, an expose of the priestly-abuse scandal titled The Church That Forgot Christ, and biographies of racehorse trainer Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons, sportswriter Damon Runyon, and, most recently, baseball executive Branch Rickey.
He introduced and closed Spike Lee's film Summer of Sam. In another film based on life in New York in 1977, The Bronx Is Burning, he was very convincingly played by Michael Rispoli.
Also on this day, Bob Schnelker is born in Galion, Ohio. A 2-time Pro Bowler, the tight end is 1 of 7 surviving members of the 1956 NFL Champion New York Giants, along with Sam Huff, Rosey Grier, Harland Svare, Dick Modzelewski, Henry Moore and Ben Agajanian.
Vince Lombardi was the offensive coordinator on those Giants, and he later hired Schnelker as an assistant coach on the Green Bay Packers, giving him rings from the 1st 2 Super Bowls. He coached in the NFL from 1963 to 1989, but was never a head coach.
October 17, 1929: In the wake of the death of manager Miller Huggins, and interim manager Art Fletcher's desire to remain as 3rd base coach (a post he held from Huggins' arrival in 1918 until Joe McCarthy's resignation in 1946), Yankee owner Jacob Ruppert hires former pitcher Bob Shawkey as manager.
In 1917, Ruppert had made Shawkey his 1st big acquisition. This would be paralleled 67 years later as George Steinbrenner made another A's pitcher, Catfish Hunter, his first big free-agent signing. But Shawkey will only manage the 1930 season, and with the Cubs having fired McCarthy, Ruppert snaps him up, and the Yanks get back on track.
Also on this day, Harding William Peterson is born in Perth Amboy, Middlesex County, New Jersey. Known as Hardy or Pete for short, the catcher helped Rutgers reach the 1950 College World Series, and then played for the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1955 to 1959, not quite making it to their 1960 World Champions.
He did get 2 rings with the Pirates, though, as he became their farm system director, helping to build their 1971 World Champions, and then their general manager, building their 1979 World Champions. He later became the Yankees' GM, but George Steinbrenner fired him in 1990, his last act before being suspended.
Pete Peterson later scouted for the San Diego Padres and the Toronto Blue Jays, and has been retired from active baseball service since 1995.
Also on this day, Mário Wilson is born in Lourenço Marques (now Maputo), Mozambique, then a colony of Portugal. He is one of the few men to be admired by both Lisbon soccer giants. For Sporting Clube de Portugal (Sportinguistas don't like it when you call them "Sporting Lisbon"), he was a centreback on their team that won the Primeira Liga title in 1951. For Benfica, he managed them to the Liga title in 1976, and the Taça de Portugal (Portuguese Cup) in 1980 and 1996. He died this past October 3, just short of his 87th birthday.
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October 17, 1930: Robert Coleman Atkins is born -- like Ralph Wilson, in Columbus, Ohio. The nutritionist was the creator of the Atkins Diet, which emphasized lowering your carbohydrates and eating more protein, especially in vegetables.
Contrary to urban legend, he did not die an ironic (or hypocritical) death, from a heart attack from being too fat. On April 8, 2003, following a rare April snowstorm in New York, he slipped on some ice, fell, and hit his head. He was on his way to work, at age 72, so that's to be admired. But I like my carbs. Pasta! Mangia!
October 17, 1934: John Norman Haynes is born in Kentish Town, North London. A forward, he starred for West London soccer team Fulham in the 1950s and 1960s. He was one of the 1st mass-media footballers, starring in television and magazine ads, and captained the England national team 22 times. In 1958, he scored 3 goals against the Soviet Union at Wembley Stadium, in a 5-0 England win.
A 1962 car crash limited his ability, but he still managed to play for England in his 3rd straight World Cup that summer. But, despite being only 33 years old, age and injury had left him declining by the time of the 1966 World Cup, on home soil, and he was not selected.
In 1971, he moved to South Africa, and helped Durban City win the national league title, and this turned out to be his only trophy. He later managed Fulham, and moved to Edinburgh, Scotland. On October 17, 2005, his 71st birthday -- 11 years ago today -- he suffered a brain hemorrhage while driving, and crashed. There was no recovering from this crash, as he died the next day.
Today, the old Stevenage Road Stand at Fulham's ancient stadium, Craven Cottage, is named for him, and a statue of him stands outside.
Also on this day, Frank Blunstone (no middle name) is born in Crewe, Cheshire, in the North-West of England. After playing for his hometown club Crewe Alexandra, he played 11 seasons for West London club Chelsea. He, Derek Saunders and Roy Bentley are the last 3 surviving members of Chelsea's 1955 League Champions.
October 17, 1937, 80 years ago: Gilbert Francis Lani Damian Kauhi is born in Hilo, on the "Big Island" of Hawaii. He became a singer and comedian, calling himself Giblert Francis Kauhi. He was also an accomplished surfer, nicknamed the Waikiki Beach Boy.
But he is best known by his stage name, the mononym Zulu, playing Detective Kono Kalakaua, on the original version of Hawaii Five-O. The opening sequence showed him charging a man while holding a rifle, freezes him, and identifies him as "Zulu as Kono."
Like his successor on the new version, Grace Park -- as with Starbuck on the reboot of Battlestar Galactica, on the new H50, Kono is a woman -- he left the show while it was still running, but not for money like she did. He was frustrated over his character having a "big dumb native" image, and returned to singing and comedy. He died of diabetes in 2004, only 66.
October 17, 1938: Harry Mackey dies in a car crash in Philadelphia at age 69. He was Captain of both the baseball and the football teams at Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania in the 1889-90 schoolyear. He attended Law School at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, and, under the rules of the time, was allowed to play for them as well, serving as Captain in 1893.
He served as head coach of what's now Widener University outside Philadelphia in 1894, and the University of Virginia in 1895. From 1928 to 1931, he was Mayor of Philadelphia, including the Athletics' 1929 and 1930 World Series wins, and the 1931 opening of the Philadelphia Civic Center, but also including the worst single season any NHL team has ever had, the Quakers going 4-40-4 in 1930-31, and then going out of business.
Also on this day, Robert Craig Knievel is born in Butte, Montana. Like Elvis Presley, Evel Knievel was a Seventies spectacle who wore white jumpsuits, big collars, big belts with big buckles, and made a fool of himself in Las Vegas. Unlike Evel, however, Elvis also had some great shows in Vegas.
Evel Knievel may have been on ABC Wide World of Sports many times, but what he did was not a sport. He died in 2007 -- not due to the effects of any or all of his crashes, but due to lung disease.
October 17, 1939: The film Mr. Smith Goes to Washington premieres, directed by Frank Capra, and starring James Stewart as a young man appointed to a vacancy in the U.S. Senate by a Governor who thinks he can control him, and finding out otherwise. The phrase "Mr. Smith goes to Washington" is still used as a metaphor for a "citizen legislator" fighting corruption in the nation's capital, but most politicians who are described that way turn out to be more like the Governor and his string-pulling "political boss."
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October 17, 1940: George Davis dies of tertiary syphilis in Philadelphia, at age 70. It was a grim end to the life of one of baseball's finest shortstops, who starred for the New York Giants in the 1890s and the Chicago White Sox in the 1900s. A member of the 1906 White Sox team that won the World Series, he was posthumously elected to the Hall of Fame in 1998.
October 17, 1942, 75 years ago: Steven Howard Jones is born in Alexandria, Louisiana, and grows up in Portland, Oregon, playing his college basketball for that city's Portland State University. Steve Jones was very nearly a unique player, playing in all 9 seasons of the ABA, but never in the NBA. He ruined this distinction, or perhaps achieved his dream, by playing the ABA's last season, 1975-76, with the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers, his hometown team (although they weren't there while he grew up).
He actually had rotten luck: The New Orleans Buccaneers reached the ABA Finals in 1968, but he didn't get there until the next season, 1969. The Oakland Oaks won the ABA title that season, but he was with them the year before. And his season with the Blazers, after which he was let go, was the season before they won the NBA title.
But "Snapper" did broadcast for the Blazers, and called their 1977 Game 6 clincher over the Philadelphia 76ers for CBS. In his long broadcasting career, he was often paired up with his Blazers teammate Bill Walton. Well before tennis star John McEnroe made the phrase famous, Snapper would frequently say, "Bill, you can't be serious." They are now on separate networks: Walton on ESPN, and Jones on NBA TV.
October 17, 1943: The Liga Mayor (Major League) is founded, beginning the modern era of Mexican soccer. It is now known as Liga MX.
Also on this day, Sandra Mae Trentman is born in Delphos, Ohio, outside Toledo. We know her as Sabrina Scharf. A former Playboy Bunny, she became one of those "actors who's on every show" in the 1960s and '70s, appearing on Gidget, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The Wild Wild West, Gunsmoke, Mannix, Hogan's Heroes, Hawaii Five-O and The Streets of San Francisco. She was also in the film Easy Rider.
But she is best known for playing Miramanee, the native princess who marries an amnesiac Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner) on the Star Trek episode "The Paradise Syndrome." In the entire Trek canon, she is the only woman ever shown marrying Kirk.
She quit acting in 1975, and became a lawyer and an environmental activist. She is still alive, but lost her husband, TV writer Bob Schiller, earlier this year.
October 17, 1946: Bob Seagren is born in Pomona, California, outside Los Angeles. He won the pole vault at the 1968 Olympics, and the 1st ABC Superstars competition in 1973.
October 17, 1948: Margaret Ruth Kidder is born in Yellowknife, the capital of Canada's Northwest Territories. Better known as Margot Kidder, she is almost certainly the most famous person ever to come from the NWT -- though huge in area, it has just 441,000 people.
She played Lois Lane in Christopher Reeve's Superman movies. "Don't worry, Miss," Superman says when meeting Lois in-costume for the first time. "I've got you." Her classic response: "You've got me? Who's got you?" A street in Yellowknife has been named Lois Lane in her honor.
Also on this day, George Robert Wendt III is born in Chicago. Who? "Good afternoon, everybody." NORM! What’s goin' on, Norm? "My birthday, Sammy. Gimme a beer, put a candle in it, and I'll blow out my liver." That's an actual exchange from a 1991 episode of Cheers, in which Wendt played beerhound and occasionally-employed accountant Norm Peterson.
"Bars can be sad places," he once said. "Some people spend their whole lives in a bar. Yesterday, some guy came in, and sat down next to me for 11 hours."
Wendt got his big break on a 1982 episode of M*A*S*H, playing a Marine (a guy that out of shape, playing an active-duty Marine, especially during wartime? No way) who tried to stick an entire pool ball in his mouth, and, unfortunately for him, he succeeded. Having to treat him, Major Charles Emerson Winchester III, played by David Ogden Stiers, got to do something he rarely did: Have some fun.
That episode was written by Ken Levine and David Isaacs, who would go on to co-create and write for Cheers, and remembered Wendt. They also remembered Shelley Long from a M*A*S*H episode they'd written. Come to think of it, there are some similarities between Winchester and Dr. Frasier Crane, although we later found out that, unlike Charles, Frasier was not actually from Boston.
Norm is a Red Sox, Patriots, Celtics and Bruins fan. In real life, though, Wendt is Chicago through and through, and roots for the Cubs, the Blackhawks, and, as reflected in his character Bob Swerski on the Saturday Night Live sketch "The Super Fans," he also loves "a certain team which is known as... Da Bears!" And another "certain team which is known as... Da Bulls!"
October 17, 1954: Adrian Burk of the Philadelphia Eagles throws a record-tying 7 touchdown passes against the Washington Redskins, and the Eagles beat the Redskins, 49-21 at Griffith Stadium in Washington.
October 17, 1956: Kenneth Arlington Morrow is born in Flint, Michigan. When the U.S. hockey team won the Gold Medal at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York, Sports Illustrated named the entire team "Sportsmen of the Year," calling them "Nineteen fuzzy-cheeked college kids and a tall guy with a beard." Ken Morrow, a 6-foot-4 defenseman from Bowling Green State University in northwestern Ohio, was the tall guy with the beard.
He was drafted by the New York Islanders, and in just 3 months went from an Olympic Gold Medal to the Stanley Cup, helping them win their 4 straight Cups. Knee trouble ended his career in 1989, and in 1993 he became the Isles' director of pro scouting, a job he still holds. He is a member of their team Hall of Fame, and the United States Hockey Hall of Fame.
October 17, 1957, 60 years ago: Stephen Douglas McMichael is born in Houston. Speaking of Da Bears, Steve McMichael was a defensive tackle on their 1985-86 Super Bowl Shuffle team, and made 2 Pro Bowls.
Nicknamed "Mongo" after the Blazing Saddles character played by another legendary DT, Alex Karras, he later became a pro wrestler, and has twice been married to WWE "Divas." He hosts a talk show on Chicago radio station ESPN 1000 (the former WLUP and WMVP), and coaches an indoor football team, the Chicago Slaughter.
October 17, 1959: Kevin Bruce Blackistone is born in Washington, D.C., and grows up in the nearby suburb of Hyattsville, Maryland. One of several sportscasters to come out of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, he wrote for The Boston Clobe and The Dallas Morning News.
He is a frequent commentator on ESPN, including its "game show" Around the Horn, which he has won 278 times, 5th among active panelists. On the show, his nickname is "The Professor," reflecting his current job, teaching sports journalism at the University of Maryland.
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October 17, 1960: The National League grants franchises to New York and Houston. So, in a way, this is the Mets' birthday. And the Astros'.
The team that will become known as the Mets is awarded to a group led by Joan Whitney Payson, a former member of the New York Giants board of directors, the only member to vote against moving to San Francisco (through her proxy, M. Donald Grant -- probably the last time Grant tried to do something good for baseball in New York). The Colt .45's, who become the Astros in 1965, are awarded to a group led by Roy Hofheinz, a federal judge and a former Mayor of Houston.
Also on this day, Cobo Hall opens in downtown Detroit. Now named the Cobo Center, it was built on the site where Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac set foot on the land in 1701 and claimed the area for France. The 1st event is the Auto Industry Dinner, and President Dwight D. Eisenhower gives a speech. Every President since has attended some kind of event there.
The centerpiece is a 12,000-seat arena that was home to the Detroit Pistons from 1961 to 1978, but they never got close to an NBA title there. In 1979, the Joe Louis Arena was built next-door. In 1994, the Joe Louis Arena was the site of the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, and Cobo Hall was used as a practice facility. It was there that Nancy Kerrigan was attacked.
With the Reds Wings and the Pistons moving to the Little Caesars Arena for the 2017-18 season, Joe Louis Arena will be demolished. The City of Detroit is considering renaming the Cobo complex for Louis, as Albert Cobo, the Mayor who got it built, is pretty much forgotten today, despite the Wings winning 4 Stanley Cups and the Lions 2 NFL Championships during his tenure.
October 17, 1963: Sergio Javier Goycochea is born in Zárate, Buenos Aires province, Argentina. A goalkeeper, he backstopped Buenos Aires club River Plate to league titles in 1986 and 1993, and the Copa Libertadores (South America's version of the Champions League) in 1986. He led Bogotá club Millonarios to Colombia's league title in 1988.
He wasn't on the Argentina team that won the 1986 World Cup, but he helped them get to the 1990 World Cup Final, and win the Copa América in 1991 and 1993 and the Confederations Cup in 1992. He is now a pundit on an Argentine network.
October 17, 1964: The Yankees fire manager Yogi Berra, even though he got an aging and flawed Yankee team to Game 7 of the World Series. Meanwhile, Johnny Keane, the manager of the team that beat the Yankees, the St. Louis Cardinals, having had enough of their management, resigns. Within days, Keane will be given the Yankee manager's job.
It's hard to say that all 3 moves were mistakes. After all, the Cardinals promoted coach and former star 2nd baseman Red Schoendienst to the manager's job, and he won 2 Pennant. And, let's face it, with what happened to the Yankees, Yogi wouldn't have managed much beyond 1965 even if they'd kept him. But Keane turns out to be a total mismatch for the Yankees, his health falls apart, he's fired early in the 1966 season, and he dies in 1967.
October 17, 1965: Pinnaduwage Aravinda de Silva is born in Colombo, Sri Lanka. He is the only player to make a hundred and take 3 or more wickets in a Cricket World Cup Final, doing so in 1996. Aravinda (he drops his first name professionally) played from 1984 to 2003, and is credited with bringing Sri Lanka up to the level of neighbors India and Pakistan in cricket. He is now the head of the selection committee for the national team.
October 17, 1966: Bob Swift, manager of the Detroit Tigers, dies in office of lung cancer. He was 51. He had replaced Charlie Dressen earlier the year, after Dressen had died in office. As far as I know, no other MLB team has ever had 2 managers die on them in a single year.
Also on this day, Daniel John Willard Ferry is born in the Washington suburb of Hyattsville, Maryland. The son of former NBA star and executive Bob Ferry, Danny Ferry went to the famed DeMatha Catholic High School in Hyattsville, and helped Mike Krzyzewski reach his 1st 3 Finals Fours at Duke University. He was a 2-time Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year.
The forward played 10 season for the Cleveland Cavaliers, and closed his career by winning the 2003 NBA title with the San Antonio Spurs. Like his father, he moved into management, first with the Spurs, then with the Cavs, helping them reach the NBA Finals for the 1st time in 2007. In 2012, he was named general manager of the Atlanta Hawks, but was fired earlier this year. It may not have had anything to do with a racist remark he was accused of making, since an investigation cleared him of wrongdoing.
October 17, 1967, 50 years ago: Major Don Holleder, U.S. Army, is shot and killed by a Viet Cong sniper while attempting to rescue a wounded soldier and bring him aboard a helicopter, in the Battle of Ong Thanh. He was 33.
The Buffalo native was a star athlete at Aquinas Institute in Rochester, and was recruited to the football team at the U.S. Military Academy by Vince Lombardi, then an assistant to their head coach, Colonel Earl "Red" Blaik. He was an All-American end in 1954, but was moved to quarterback in 1955, and led the team to a 6-3 record, including an upset of Navy that made him the 1st athlete from any of the service academies to be shown on the cover of Sports Illustrated. He graduated the following Spring, and one of his classmates was Norman Schwarzkopf, later field commander of all allied troops in the Persian Gulf War.
Although drafted by the New York Giants, he would have had to sit out his military commitment. (Which might have worked out, because Charlie Conerly would have retired as quarterback by then, but the Giants got Y.A. Tittle instead.) He stayed in the Army until his death, including a tenure as an assistant coach at West Point, and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
In 1974, his high school's football stadium, Aquinas Memorial Stadium, was renamed Holleder Memorial Stadium. Professional soccer's Rochester Lancers, 1970 NASL Champions, played there. It was torn down in 1985, and Holleder Technology Park is now on the site, on Holleder Parkway. That same year, he was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame, and West Point's arena was named the Donald W. Holleder Center.
October 17, 1968: David Robertson (no middle name) is born in Aberdeen, Scotland. No, not the relief pitcher who, for 1 year, succeeded Mariano Rivera as the Yankees' closer, and is back in the Yankee bullpen.. This one is a soccer player, a left back who starred for hometown club Aberdeen, winning the Scottish League Cup in 1989 and the Scottish Cup in 1990.
He moved on to Glasgow giants Rangers, winning 6 straight League titles fro 1992 to 1997. He also won the Scottish Cup in 1992, 1993 and 1996, for "The Double." He also won the Scottish League Cup in 1992 and 1993, for "The Treble." He has now gone into management, and now manages Indian club Real Kashmir.
Although also Scottish, he is not related to Jimmy Robertson, the winger who was the 1st player to pull off the double feat of scoring for Tottenham against their North London arch-rivals Arsenal and scoring for Arsenal against Tottenham (in 1967 and 1970, respectively).
He's not the only British soccer star born on this day, or even the only big-name British left back: Graeme Pierre Le Saux is born in St. Helier, Jersey, Channel Islands. Despite their proximity to France and his being ethnically French, he is a British citizen, and played 36 times for England, including at the 1998 World Cup.
Club-wise, he played for West London club Chelsea, when they were a small club, easily laughed-about -- and it wasn't all that long ago. He helped them get promoted back to the English top flight in 1989. He was sold to Blackburn Rovers, and helped them win the League in 1995. Chelsea bought him back, and he won the League Cup and the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1998, and the FA Cup in 2000.
He went into announcing, mainly for the BBC, and can be heard on NBC's U.S. broadcasts of Premier League games. Usually, however, his commentary is dire, and he clearly does not like Arsenal.
October 17, 1969: Theodore Ernest Els is born in Johannesburg, South Africa. Ernie Els won golf's U.S. Open in 1994 and 1997, and the British Open in 2002 and 2012. Winning 4 majors is good, but not especially noteworthy. What is noteworthy, although not unheard-of, is the 18-year span between his 1st and his last (so far).
Also on this day, Lloyd Eaton, head football coach at the University of Wyoming, kicks 14 black players off the team, for their plan to wear black armbands during tomorrow's game against Brigham Young University at War Memorial Stadium in Laramie, Wyoming.
The players, who became known as The Black 14, were Co-Captain Joe Williams, Earl Lee, John Griffin, Willie Hysaw, Don Meadows, Ivie Moore, Tony Gibson, Jerry Berry, Mel Hamilton, Jim Isaac, Tony Magee, Lionel Grimes, Ron Hill, and a man with a name that was already legend in sports, if not through his own efforts: Ted Williams. (No relation to the aforementioned Joe.)
The year before, during the Cowboys' win over the BYU Cougars in Provo, Utah, the BYU players had used racial epithets. It got worse when the Black 14 were told by the head of UW's black student advocacy group that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, usually known as the Mormons and the operator of BYU, excluded black men from priesthood. Like Epicsopalians but unlike Roman Catholics, they allow married men. But, at the time, they did not allow black men.
This was the end of the 1960s, and men in positions of power were tired of being told that they had to loosen their standards. It's not clear that Eaton acted out of racial prejudice. But there can be no question that he did not like having his authority challenged, and he took it personally. He later testified under oath that he had listened to them for 10 minutes.
All 14 players testified that he was lying: According to Joe Williams, "He came in, sneered at us and yelled that we were off the squad. He said our very presence defied him. He said he has had some good Neeegro boys. Just like that." Tony McGee said that Eaton "said we could go to Grambling State or Morgan State ... We could go back to 'colored relief'. If anyone said anything, he told us to shut up. We were really protesting policies we thought were racist. Maybe we should've been protesting there."
At San Jose State University, whose alumni Tommie Smith and John Carlos had performed what became known as the Black Power Protest at the previous year's Olympics, the team voted to wear multicolored armbands against Wyoming in support of the 14, and groups at other Western Athletic Conference schools demanded that Wyoming be dropped from their schedules. But the University, and the white establishment at the State, stood by Eaton -- for now.
At the time of the incident, Wyoming was undefeated 4-0, ranked 12th in the nation, and 3-time defending WAC Champions. Even though the Cowboys beat BYU 40-7 and San Jose State (the next game) without the Black 14, it lost its last 4 games of 1969, and went 1-9 the next year. Apparently, being definitely authoritarian, and possibly racist, was okay for white Wyomingans, but losing wasn't. Eaton was fired after the 1970 season.
Black players began to stay away from Wyoming, and following the San Jose State win, the Cowboys lost 26 of their next 38 games. Fred Akers came in and rebuilt the program, getting them to the WAC title in 1976, leading to his being hired by one of the great college football programs, the University of Texas. The team has usually been respectable since, and has had no further racial incidents.
Eaton died in 2007, and in the last 37 years of his life, he never got another coaching job, and gave only 1 interview -- and was unrepentant. Of the Black 14, 11 are still alive, 48 years later: James Isaac died in 1976, Don Meadows in 2009, and Earl Lee in 2013. Joe Williams won Super Bowl VI with the Dallas Cowboys, Tony McGee played for the Washington Redskins in Super Bowl VII, and Jerry Berry, using the name Jay Berry, became an award-winning sportscaster in the 1970s, at a time when black sportscasters were few and far between.
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October 17, 1970: John Steven Mabry is born in Wilmington, Delaware. He played 1st base, 3rd base, left field and right field, and even pitched twice in the major leagues. His 96 home runs ties him with Randy Bush and Dave May as the all-time leader... for players born in the State of Delaware, although he grew up 25 miles away in Chesapeake City, Maryland. (Bush was born in Dover but grew up in New Orleans. May was born and raised in New Castle.)
Mabry reached the postseason with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1998, the Oakland Athletics in 2002, and the Cardinals again in 2004, this time reaching the World Series. He last played with the Colorado Rockies in 2007, although he was released before they won the Pennant that year.
Also on this day, Anil Radhakrishna Kumble is born in Bengaluri, India. He played for India in the Cricket World Cups of 1996, 1999, 2003 and 2007, and was twice named his country's cricketer of the year. He later served as the national team's head coach.
October 17, 1971: Steve Blass hurls a 4-hitter and Roberto Clemente homers, as the Pittsburgh Pirates win Game 7 of the World Series, 2-1 over the Baltimore Orioles at Memorial Stadium‚ becoming World Champions for the 4th time, the 1st time since 1960.
Clemente played in all 7 games in '60 and in all 7 games in '71, and got hits in all 14 World Series games in which he played. In fact, all 5 of the Pirates' World Series wins -- 1909, '25, '60, '71 and '79 -- have been in 7 games.
Clemente and Bill Mazeroski are the only men to have played for the Pirates in both the 1960 and the 1971 World Series, although Danny Murtaugh managed them in both, and 1960 player Bill Virdon was one of Murtaugh’s 1971 coaches.
After the game‚ 40‚000 people riot in downtown Pittsburgh. At least 100 are injured‚ some seriously, although no deaths are reported.
Immediately after the Game 7 victory, rookie hurler Bruce Kison and his champagne-soaked best man Bob Moose are whisked away from Memorial Stadium by helicopter to a waiting Lear Jet to attend the 21 year-old Kison's 6:30 PM wedding in Pittsburgh, in which the groom will arrive 33 minutes late.
Earlier in the season, the Pirates had become the 1st team ever to field an all-black-and/or-Hispanic starting lineup, leading author Bruce Markusen to title his book about the '71 Bucs The Team That Changed Baseball. He's also written biographies of Clemente, Ted Williams, Orlando Cepeda, and a book about the 1970s Oakland A's team, published in 1998, just before the Yankees began a streak of 3 straight World Series, thus making a retroactive error out of the title of Markusen's book: Baseball's Last Dynasty: Charlie Finley's Oakland A's.
There are 17 players from the '71 Pirates still alive: Blass, Mazeroski, Kison, Al Oliver, Manny Sanguillen, Bob Veale, Jackie Hernandez, Bob Robertson, Gene Clines, Gene Alley, Vic Davalillo, Richie Hebner, Luke Walker, Bob Johnson, Milt May, Dave Cash and Dave Giusti.
October 17, 1972: Quite a day to be born. Marshall Bruce Mathers III is born in St. Joseph, Missouri, although the man better known as Eminem and Slim Shady has spent most of his life in the Detroit area.
As far as I know, he has nothing to do with sports, but he does often wear a cap of his hometown Detroit Tigers, and he did just rip Donald Trump a new one over his obsession with NFL players' protesting during the National Anthem.
Say what you want about Em, and I don't like him much, but at least he's funny every once in a while, and he's still got more class than those other white Detroiters who want us to think they've got street cred, Rob "Kid Rock" Ritchie and Ted "Motor City Madman" Nugent.
Wyclef Jean, lead singer of the Fugees, is born in Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti. I don’' think he has anything to do with sports, either, but he was in Shakira's "Hips Don’t Lie" video, which certainly required some athleticism.
Sharon Ann Leal is born in Tucson, Arizona. She's best known for playing a teacher on on the Fox TV drama Boston Public. She's also been in the film version of Dreamgirls and 2 Tyler Perry films. I don't think she's involved with sports either, but she's so beautiful that I don't care. She now appears on the CW series Supergirl as superheroine Miss Martian.
And Joseph Earl McEwing is born in Bristol, Pennsylvania, about halfway between Philadelphia and Trenton. He played for the Mets, so he doesn't have anything to do with sports, either. (Ba-dump-bump-tshhhh!) He did help the Mets win the 2000 National League Pennant, though, and is now the 3rd base coach for the Chicago White Sox.
Also on this day, Walter "Turk" Broda dies of a heart attack in Toronto. He was 58, and was well overweight, even in his playing days. Idiot Ranger fans who called the Devils' Martin Brodeur "Fatty" never saw Broda (or their own 1950s star Lorne "Gump" Worsley).
But, as the martial artist and actor Sammo Hung would say, Broda wasn't out of shape, he was just fat. He won the Vezina Trophy as the NHL's top goaltender in 1941 and 1948, and was the goalie on 5 Stanley Cup winners for the Toronto Maple Leafs: 1942, 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1951. (The Leafs won the Cup in 1945 as well, but he was serving in World War II.)
In 1955 and 1956, he coached the Toronto Marlboros, a team owned by the Maple Leafs, to back-to-back wins in the Memorial Cup, the championship of Canadian junior hockey. He had previously won it as a player with the 1933 Toronto St. Michael's Majors.
He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame and the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame. The Leafs retired Number 1 for him and Johnny Bower in 2016, after previously having it for them as an "Honoured Number." In 1998, The Hockey News listed him at Number 60 on their list of the 100 Greatest Hockey Players. In 2017, he was honored as one of the NHL's 100th Anniversary 100 Greatest Players.
October 17, 1973: On the day the Arab oil embargo is announced, driving gas prices way up (and they had already gone up a lot this year, as a general inflation jacked up the prices of everyting), and Motorola engineer Marty Cooper is granted the patent for the handheld mobile telephone, the Mets even the World Series at 2 games apiece with a 6-1 win over the Oakland A's at Shea Stadium.
Rusty Staub goes 4-for-4 with a homer and 5 RBI. The New Orleans chef was really cooking that night.
Also on this day, England can only manage a 1-1 draw against Poland in a qualifying match for the 1974 World Cup. It means that England won't even qualify, and manager Sir Alf Ramsey, who guided them to the 1966 World Cup, is fired. Poland will go on to reach the Semifinals, their best performance ever.
October 17, 1974: At the Oakland Coliseum, Oakland's Vida Blue and Los Angeles' Don Sutton are tied 2-2 going into the bottom of the 6th, when Mike Marshall relieves Sutton and retires the side. In the 7th‚ a shower of debris from the fans halts the game for 15 minutes. When play is resumed‚ Joe Rudi hits Marshall's first pitch for a homer to give the A's a 3rd 3-2 win‚ clinching a 3rd straight World Championship for the team.
The A's thus become only the 2nd major league franchise to win 3 straight World Series, and remain the only one other than the Yankees to have done it. This was also the 1st all-California World Series, or even the 1st with both teams playing more than a few blocks west of the Mississippi River (take note, fans of St. Louis and Minnesota).
Jim "Catfish" Hunter died in 1999. The other 24 men on the 1974 A's World Series roster are still alive: Blue, Rudi, Reggie Jackson, Rollie Fingers, Sal Bando, Bert Campaneris, Gene Tenace, Dick Green, John "Blue Moon" Odom, Darold Knowles, Angel Mangual, Ted Kubiak, Dave Hamilton, Jesus Alou, Ray Fosse, Dal Maxvill, Herb Washington, Claudell Washington (no relation), Billy North, Ken Holtzman, Manny Trillo, Larry Haney, John Donaldson and Jim Holt.
Also on this day, the expansion New Orleans Jazz make their NBA debut, at Madison Square Garden. It doesn't go so well: Despite 15 points from Louisiana's own Pistol Pete Maravich, the Knicks get 20 points from Earl "The Pearl" Monroe, and beat the Jazz, 89-74.
The Jazz will go on to lose their 1st 11 games, playing home games at the New Orleans Municipal Auditorium, before the Superdome opens the next year. They will play 5 seasons in the Crescent City, never making the Playoffs, before moving to Salt Lake City and becoming the Utah Jazz, whiere they will be considerably more successful.
This was actually a watershed day in NBA history. Over the off-season, several titans of the game announced their retirements: Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West, Oscar Robertson, and, from the Knicks alone, Willis Reed, Dave DeBusschere and Jerry Lucas. The era of those guys, and of the Celtic team that dominated with Bill Russell, is over.
The rest of the Seventies would see the assertion of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bill Walton, Elvin Hayes, and, after the semi-merger with the ABA in 1976, Julius "Dr. J" Erving and Moses Malone. Anyone who tells you that the NBA was "saved" by the 1979 arrival of Earvin "Magic" Johnson and Larry Bird simply doesn't know his history -- or is lying.
It was, however, with the arrival of Magic and Larry that the NBA management figured out that they'd better market what was already a great game much better. Airing Game 6 of the 1980 NBA Finals, in which Magic, subbing at center for Kareem, led the Lakers to defeat Dr. J's 76ers on tape delay at 11:30 PM was inexcusable.
Also on this day, John Loy Rocker is hatched from his pod in Macon, Georgia. He rose quickly to become a power pitcher, then fell apart, both competitively and physically. At first, we thought it was because, following all his insulting, ignorant, bigoted comments about the Mets and Met fans, that the furious reaction from the Flushing Faithful had gotten into his head. Certainly, there was room in there. (Not entirely a joke: The dope's head is huge.) But, eventually, it was revealed that he was a steroid user. Which explains a lot of things.
He did pitch for the Atlanta Braves in the 1999 World Series, after pitching against the Mets in the NLCS. But here's the difference: The Mets and their fans talked about how they wanted to beat him (justifiably so), while the Yankees actually did it.
He last pitched in the majors for the 2003 Tampa Bay Devil Rays, and recently published -- I won't say "wrote" -- a memoir, Scars and Strikes. He also produces (again, I won't say "writes") a column for WorldNetDaily, the right-wing loon website also known as World Nut Daily. He has publicly supported Donald Trump. On the plus side, he does work as director of public affairs for an organization called Save Homeless Veterans.
October 17, 1976: Game 2 of the World Series. The Cincinnati Reds score 3 runs off Catfish Hunter in the 2nd inning, and that decides it. Jack Billingham pitches well, and the Reds beat the Yankees 4-3.
This was the 1st Series game to start at night on a weekend. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn did it so the game would have better ratings on NBC. It was cold, and he decided to prove to people that cold Cincinnati weather in mid-October didn't bother him by not wearing an overcoat. I hope the bastard froze his ass off.
Also on this day, the NFL's 2 expansion teams play each other at Tampa Stadium. Both teams are 0-5, so everybody is praying that the game ends in anything but a tie. The Seattle Seahawks get the 1st win in franchise history, beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 13-10.
The 'Hawks will also beat the Atlanta Falcons on November 7, but that's it: They finish 2-12. The Bucs should have been so lucky. Just 1 week later, they will again come within 3 points of their 1st win, this time against the powerful Miami Dolphins, but will lose 23-20. That will be the closest they come to a win until December 11, 1977.
Also on this day, Washington Sebastián Abreu Gallo is born in Minas, Uruguay. Known professionally as Sebastián Abreu, the striker won Argentina's League with San Loreno in 2001 and with River Plate in 2008. He won Uruguay's league with Nacional in 2003, 2004 and 2005. He won the Copa América with Argentina in 2011. He is still playing, with Santa Tecla in El Salvador.
October 17, 1977, 40 years ago: Luís André de Pina Cabral e Villas-Boas is born in Porto, Portugal. Known professionally as André Villas-Boas, and nicknamed AVB, he is, in a manner of speaking, a Portuguese nobleman, the great-grandson of the 1st Viscount of Guilhomil. But he also has English ancestry, as a grandmother came from Stockport, outside Manchester, and he has always spoken fluent English.
October 17, 1977, 40 years ago: Luís André de Pina Cabral e Villas-Boas is born in Porto, Portugal. Known professionally as André Villas-Boas, and nicknamed AVB, he is, in a manner of speaking, a Portuguese nobleman, the great-grandson of the 1st Viscount of Guilhomil. But he also has English ancestry, as a grandmother came from Stockport, outside Manchester, and he has always spoken fluent English.
Unlike most managers of soccer teams, he never played the game professionally. But in 1994, he discovered that Bobby Robson, the legendary English manager then running FC Porto, was living in the same apartment complex. They became friends, and Robson helped him get into position to earn his coaching license. When AVB was ready, he was hired as an assistant at Porto by one of Robson's former assistants, Jose Mourinho. AVB followed Jose to Chelsea in London and Internazionale in Milan.
In 2009, AVB was hired for his 1st managerial job, at Portuguese club Académica de Coimbra. He was then hired at Porto, and won the League and Cup Double, and the Europa League, in 2011. He was hired to manage Chelsea, but flopped. He was hired to manage Tottenham, but flopped. It is now generally believed that he can't handle the English game. He managed Zenit St. Petersburg to the Russian Premier League title in 2015 and the Russian Cup in 2016. He now manages Chinese slub Shanghai SIPG.
October 17, 1978: The Yankees complete their last of many comebacks in this amazing season, taking Game 6, 7-2 at Dodger Stadium, and winning their 22nd World Championship, their 2nd in a row, having taken the last 4 games after dropping the first 2.
Reggie Jackson has his chance for revenge over Dodger rookie Bob Welch for striking him out with the bases loaded to end Game 2, and his revenge goes to right field, halfway to the San Gabriel Mountains.
Both halves of the Yankee double-play combination, Bucky Dent and Brian Doyle (subbing for the injured Willie Randolph) collect 3 hits. Dent batted .417 for the Series and is named MVP, capping a month that began with his Playoff homer over Boston. Doyle bats .438, and, along with 3rd base wizard Graig Nettles and reliever Goose Gossage, also makes a pretty good case for Series MVP.
Jim "Catfish" Hunter, hurting and apparently finished earlier in the season, completes his late-season renaissance, starting and winning. The final out is Gossage popping up Ron Cey behind home plate, where Thurman Munson catches it. The Goose thus becomes the 1st pitcher to nail down the final out of a Division clincher, a Pennant clincher, and a World Series clincher in the same season.
This remains my favorite single-season sports team of all time, as it was the first baseball season I was really old enough to "get" what was happening. I was aware of the 1977 title, but I didn't really comprehend what the Yankees had to overcome to win it.
Unfortunately, as with the year before, my parents waited until the Yankees were winning, and then sent me to bed, so I didn't see it. Despite being a fan of the greatest franchise in the history of sports, I was almost 27 years old before I saw my favorite team win a World Series while it was actually happening. And I don't think it was until that 1996 Series that I got over that fact.
The next season, 1979, Munson was killed in a plane crash. As stated with the 1974 entry, Catfish died of Lou Gehrig's Disease in 1999. Jim Spencer died of a heart attack in 2002. Paul Lindblad died of early-onset Alzhheimer's disease in 2006. And Paul Blair died of a heart attack in 2013.
The other 20 players on the '78 Yanks' World Series roster are still alive: Reggie Jackson, Goose Gossage, Ron Guidry, Willie Randolph, Roy White, Graig Nettles, Chris Chambliss, Lou Piniella, Mickey Rivers, Bucky Dent, Ed Figueroa, Sparky Lyle, Dick Tidrow, Cliff Johnson, Fred Stanley, Ken Clay, Brian Doyle, Jim Beattie, Gary Thomasson, Jay Johnstone and Mike Heath.
October 17, 1979: As in 1971, the Pittsburgh Pirates win the World Series by beating the Baltimore Orioles in Game 7 at Memorial Stadium, winning 4-1 to complete a comeback from 3 games to 1 down.
Willie Stargell, the 1st baseman known as "Pops" not just for his age (39) but because of his playing of Sister Sledge's hit disco song "We Are Family," hits his 3rd homer of the Series, and is named Series MVP, after having also been named MVP of the NLCS. After the season, it will be announced that there is a tie vote for the regular-season MVP, between Stargell and the NL's batting champion, St. Louis Cardinal 1st baseman Keith Hernandez. Stargell becomes the 1st man, and remains the only one, ever to sweep the regular season, LCS and World Series MVPs in a single season.
Stargell, pitcher Bruce Kison and catcher Manny Sanguillen are the only players to have played for the Pirates in both the '71 and the '79 Series, although Sanguillen had left and since returned.
For the only time in his Presidency, Jimmy Carter attends a Major League Baseball game, and he picks a good one. He throws out the ceremonial first ball, and is among those congratulating the Pirates in the locker room afterward.
But in the 38 years since -- nearly 2 full generations -- the Pirates have never won another Pennant, though they reached Game 7 of the NLCS in 1991 and ’92, losing to the Atlanta Braves both times. The Steelers have since won 3 Super Bowls and appeared in 2 others; the Penguins have reached the Stanley Cup Finals 5 times, winning 4; and the University of Pittsburgh football team has won some bowl games and has usually a contender for their conference title (formerly the Big East, now the Atlantic Coast Conference).
The Pirates? After 21 years out of the postseason, they made it for 3 straight seasons, 2011 to '13, but, so far, they can't get beyond the NLDS. So they're still waiting for the next generation of the Family to make good.
There are 20 players from the '79 Pirates still alive: Sanguillen, Kison, Bert Blyleven, Dave Parker, John Candelaria, Bill Madlock, Rennie Stennett, Kent Tekulve, Mike Easler, Phil Garner, Tim Foli, Ed Ott, Enrique Romo, Steve Nicosia, Lee Lacy, Omar Moreno, Jim Rooker, Grant Jackson, Matt Alexander and Don Robinson.
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October 17, 1980: Mohammad Hafeez is born in Sargodha, Pakistan. "The Professor" is a former captain of his country's national cricket team.
October 17, 1981: Eddie Murphy first plays the character of Velvet Jones on Saturday Night Live. Jones is a pimp... and a romance novelist.
October 17, 1982: Robin Yount records his 2nd 4-hit game of the World Series to lead the Brewers to a 6-4 win in Game 5 at County Stadium, and give Milwaukee a 3-2 lead overall. Yount is the first player ever to have two 4-hit games in one World Series.
This night is the high-water mark of the Brewers franchise: Not only is this the closest they have ever gotten to winning a World Series, but they have never won a World Series game since.
October 17, 1983: The Green Bay Packers beat the Washington 48-47 at Lambeau Field. It remains the highest-scoring game in Monday Night Football history.
Also on this day, Mitchell Russell Talbot is born in Cedar City, Utah. Mitch Talbot pitched for the Tampa Bay Rays in 2008, but was called up too late to be included on their postseason roster. He appeared for the Cleveland Indians in 2010 and '11, and has since played in the leagues of Mexico, Japan and, currently, China.
October 17, 1985: George Steinbrenner fires Billy Martin as Yankee manager for the 4th time. He replaces him with Lou Piniella. He'll fire Lou after the 1987 season, and replace him with Billy Martin. He'll fire Billy for a 5th time in the middle of the next season, and replace him with Lou. Feel free to do a facepalm, or even a headdesk.
Also on this day, Carlos Eduardo González is born in Maracaibo, Venezeula. "CarGo" is the right fielder for the Colorado Rockies, a 3-time All-Star, a 3-time Gold Glove winner, and the 2010 National League batting champion.
October 17, 1986: It is Homecoming at East Brunswick High School, in my senior year. The E.B. Bears beat Woodbridge 16-0.
It looks like the Big Green will continue their challenge for the 1st-ever Greater Middlesex Conference Red Division title, and for a berth in the Central Jersey Group IV Playoffs. But those dreams will take a big hit the following weekend.
October 17, 1987, 30 years ago: In the 1st indoor World Series game ever, at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis‚ Dan Gladden's grand slam caps a 7-run 4th inning and leads the Twins to a 10-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1. It is the 1st World Series grand slam since 1970.
Also on this day, Saturday Night Live introduces the sketch "Pumping Up With Hans and Franz."
It looks like the Big Green will continue their challenge for the 1st-ever Greater Middlesex Conference Red Division title, and for a berth in the Central Jersey Group IV Playoffs. But those dreams will take a big hit the following weekend.
October 17, 1987, 30 years ago: In the 1st indoor World Series game ever, at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis‚ Dan Gladden's grand slam caps a 7-run 4th inning and leads the Twins to a 10-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1. It is the 1st World Series grand slam since 1970.
Also on this day, Saturday Night Live introduces the sketch "Pumping Up With Hans and Franz."
October 17, 1989: Billy Joel releases his album Storm Front. It includes his Number 1 hit, the history lesson "We Didn't Start the Fire." It mentions baseball figures Joe DiMaggio, Roy Campanella, the 1955 Dodgers, Mickey Mantle, and the Dodgers' and Giants' 1957 move to California. But it mentions no other sports, and no later sports moments, not even the Mets' 1969 "Miracle" or Joe Namath' Super Bowl guarantee the next year.
In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine a few weeks later, after the Berlin Wall fell and Nicolae Ceausescu had been overthrown and executed in Romania, he said he had the song all ready to be recorded in June, and he had to change it at the last minute: "That whole Alar thing was happening, so I had 'Poison apples in the store.' Then the whole Tienanmen Square thing happened, and it became 'China's under martial law.' Think of everything I'd have to write about Eastern Europe now."
One thing he couldn't have foreseen was an earthquake at the World Series, which also happened on this day. It was the pregame ceremonies of Game 3 of the World Series, the 1st ever between the 2 teams of the San Francisco Bay Area, the San Francisco Giants and the Oakland Athletics. The A's have a 2 games to none lead.
At 5:04 PM Pacific Time -- 8:04 Eastern Time -- ABC is showing highlights of Game 2 when the screen flickers. The ground starts shaking. In ABC's broadcast booth at Candlestick Park are Al Michaels, Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver. Michaels, who had lived in California, figured out what was happening, and said, "I'll tell you what, we're having an earth-- "
And the screen goes black. ABC puts a "Please Stand By" card up. A few minutes later, audio is restored, although video takes a little longer, and Michaels explains that there was, indeed, an earthquake.
The official World Series highlight film shows fans at Candlestick reacting with a sense of fun, since nobody inside the ballpark got hurt. One fan, who'd brought white cardboard panels and magic markers to make up signs on the spot, had on one side, "That was nothing, wait till the Giants bat," and on the other, a jagged line, supposed to be a quake-caused crack, and, "Welcome to Candlestick."
Back in the Giants clubhouse, Giant legend Willie Mays, who had been introduced as part of the pregame ceremony, said, "That's the first time I've ever been scared in Candlestick. I've been knocked down a lot, but that's the first time I was scared." Asked why, he said, "The ground was shaking, man!"
But, on the highlight film, the camera then shifts to a man in a Giants cap with headphones on, and he develops a look that shows he's just found out how serious the situation really is. There are fires all over the city. Many houses in the Marina District are burning. A section of the upper level of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge has collapsed onto the lower level, killing 3 people. Worst of all, a section of the double-decked Nimitz Freeway, Interstate 880, has collapsed in Oakland, killing several.
The quake registers a magnitude of 7.1 on the Richter scale. At first‚ it's believed that over 200 people were killed. When everyone is accounted for, it is determined that the quake killed 67 people, and did $7 billion in damage -- about $13.7 billion in today's money.
Commissioner Fay Vincent has Candlestick evacuated, and the remainder of the Series postponed. Everyone was lucky: The stadium then had a baseball seating capacity of 62,000, and if it had collapsed, or even if a part of the stadium had collapsed, the death toll almost certainly would have exceeded the nearly 3,000 in the World Trade Center attacks of 12 years later.
But Candlestick Park, the most maligned venue in the history of North American sports, held firm, with only a few small concrete chunks dislodged. In the San Francisco Bay Area's darkest hour since the 1906 earthquake and fire, The 'Stick did its duty, and saved lives.
It would be 10 days before the Series was resumed, and 12 rescue workers -- 6 from San Francisco, 6 from Oakland -- were chosen to throw out ceremonial first pitches.
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October 17, 1990: Saki Kumagai is born in Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan. A centreback, she plays for the women's team at French soccer club Olympique Lyonnais. She was a member of the Japan team that won the Women's World Cup in 2011, and lost the Final to the U.S. in 2015.
The Pirates fail to score in the last 22 innings of the series. Steve Avery is named the MVP of the NLCS. Worst of all, for this Pennant-deciding game, only 46,932 fans come out to the 58,729-seat Three Rivers Stadium. That's a disgrace for such a good sports city as Pittsburgh.
Also on this day, the Buffalo Sabres retire the Number 11 of Gilbert Perreault, their 1st-ever signing in 1970, and, even now, their greatest player ever and their all-time leading scorer. But they lose 4-3 to the Montreal Canadiens.
October 17, 1992, 25 years ago: In the 1st-ever World Series game involving a team from outside the U.S., the Atlanta Braves defeat the Toronto Blue Jays, 3-1. Catcher Damon Berryhill hits a 3-run homer in the 6th inning.
The pitching matchup of Tom Glavine and Jack Morris is the 1st time that a pair of 20-game winners starts the opening game of a World Series since 1969. Glavine goes all the way for the win‚ while Joe Carter homers for the only Toronto run.
This is a big moment in Toronto sports for another reason. It took 41 years after the plane crash that killed him, following his goal that won them the 1951 Stanley Cup, but the Toronto Maple Leafs finally retire the Number 5 of Bill Barilko. They beat the Chicago Blackhawks 4-3.
October 17, 1993: Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, having debuted on September 12, airs the episode "Requiem for a Superhero." Metropolis Daily Planet reporters Lois Lane (Teri Hatcher) and Clark Kent (Dean Cain) investigate corruption in boxing.
The episode is a dual tribute to Rod Serling: The title is a takeoff on his 1955 TV play Requiem for a Heavyweight (filmed in 1962), and the story of cyborg boxers is a tip of the hat to his 1963 Twilight Zone episode "Steel" -- tying in with one of Superman's nicknames, "The Man of Steel."
October 17, 1994: The Gund Arena opens in downtown Cleveland, adjacent to the new Jacobs Field. The 1st event is a concert by Billy Joel. The NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers move in a few days later. In 2005, the arena was renamed the Quicken Loans Arena, or "The Q," and the ballpark was renamed Progressive Field in 2008. In 2016, the Cavs won the NBA title, and The Q thus became the home of Cleveland's 1st World Championship since the 1964 Browns.
October 17, 1995: The Cleveland Indians shut out the Seattle Mariners‚ 4-0‚ behind the pitching of Dennis Martinez‚ Julian Tavarez‚ and Jose Mesa‚ to clinch their 1st Pennant in 41 years.
October 17, 1996: The Yankees finally find out who they’ll be playing in their 1st World Series in 15 years. The Braves complete their comeback from being 3 games to 1 down in the NLCS‚ winning their 3rd in a row‚ 15-0‚ to defeat the Cardinals and win the NL Pennant. Homers by Fred McGriff‚ Javy Lopez‚ and Andruw Jones support the shutout pitching of Tom Glavine.
October 17, 1998: Game 1 of the World Series at Yankee Stadium, the way God intended it. Down 5-2 in the bottom of the 7th, the Yankees explode for 7 runs to blow away the Padres‚ 9-6.
Chuck Knoblauch completes his redemption from his ALCS Game 2 "brainlauch" with a 3-run homer in the inning to tie it‚ off Padre starter Kevin Brown, who had a reputation as a "Yankee Killer" while pitching for the Texas Rangers. (Yankee Killer? Kevin Brown? We hadn't seen nothin' yet.)
Then, after reliever Mark Langston (himself rather successful against the Yankees while pitching for the Mariners and Angels) loads the bases, Tino Martinez, who's also been struggling lately, comes up. With a 2-2 count, Langston throws a pitch that’s juuuust low. To this day, Padre fans will say that it was strike 3, and Tino should have been called out, and that this "fixed" the Series for the Yankees.
Now, we Yankee Fans don't have much reason to get upset with Padres fans, but if you blow a 3-run lead in the 7th inning of a World Series game, you don't deserve to win the Series. Tino takes the full-count pitch, and cranks it into the upper deck in right field for a grand slam. San Diego native David Wells notches the win against his hometown team.
Also on this day, Judge Judy Scheindlin interrupts a Saturday Night Live sketch in which Cheri Oteri is playing her. It's usually a good thing when an SNL actor is faced with the real version of the character that he or she is playing, and this time is no exception.
October 17, 1999: The Mets edge the Braves in a 15-inning thriller at Shea‚ 4-3‚ to move within 1 game of Atlanta in their NLCS. Robin Ventura's grand slam in the bottom half of the 15th wins it‚ but his Met teammates mob him before he can reach 2nd base. He never completes his round of the bases, and so he gets credit for a single instead of a home run.
The Braves leave a postseason-record 19 players on base in the contest. The Mets use 9 pitchers in the game‚ with rookie Octavio Dotel getting the win. No "Heartbreak Dotel" in this game.
No, if it's heartbreak you're looking for, head up to Fenway Park. The Yankees defeat the Red Sox‚ 9-2‚ to take a 3-games-to-1 lead in the ALCS. Andy Pettitte gets the victory for New York‚ with home run support from Darryl Strawberry and Ricky Ledee.
It was only 3-2 Yankees going into the top of the 8th, but the Boston bullpen (Ledee hits a grand slam off Rod Beck) and defense collapse – some would say aided by some poor umpiring. The Sox fans, angry about the calls, throw garbage onto the field in the 9th, for about five minutes until the umpires get the public-address announcer to ask the fans to stop or else the game will be forfeited.
But with all the errors the Sox have been making, and with all the bullpen failure, Sox fans have no one to blame but their own players. For years, I’d heard Boston described as "the Athens of America," and Red Sox fans described as the most knowledgable in baseball. This proved both a lie. Even Tony Massarotti, then writing for the Boston Herald, ripped the Fenway faithful, saying that this was not the Curse of the Bambino, but "the Torment of the Drunks."
Also on this day, the Staples Center opens in Los Angeles. The home ever since of the Los Angeles Lakers, Clippers and Kings, the 1st event is a concert by Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band.
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October 17, 2000: The Yankees defeat the Mariners‚ 9-7 at Yankee Stadium‚ to win the ALCS and their 37th AL Pennant. David Justice's 3-run homer in the 7th inning gives New York a lead it never relinquishes. Justice wins the ALCS MVP award. Seattle catcher Dan Wilson's single breaks his 0-for-42 hitless streak‚ the longest ever in postseason history.
Since the Mets have already wrapped up the NL Pennant, New York will have its 1st Subway Series in 44 years.
One positive note for the Mariners: With an opposite-field single, catcher Dan Wilson snaps his 0-for-42 skid, the longest hitless streak in postseason history. Marv Owen had gone 0-for-31 in the 1934 and 1935 World Series playing for the Tigers.
Also on this day, Leo Nomellini dies at the age of 76. A Hall of Fame defensive end, the San Francisco 49ers had retired his Number 73, He was named to the NFL's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team and its All-Decade Team for the 1950s. He had also been a champion professional wrestler.
October 17, 2003: It was 12:16 AM when Aaron Boone became the newest in a long list of unlikely postseason heroes for the Yankees. But aside from another homer that turned out to be meaningless, he barely hit in the World Series against the Florida Marlins, and in the offseason he injured his knee so badly he'd be out for the 2004 season. So the Yankees got Alex Rodriguez. How did that turn out? One title.
Early editions of the October 17 New York Post include an editorial claiming the Yankees lost to Boston and couldn't get the job done in Game 7 of the ALCS. Way to go, Murdoch Post, showing your usual quality control and/or honesty.
Also on this day, Charlie "Choo-Choo" Justice dies in Cherryville, North Carolina at age 79. The North Carolina running back twice finished 2nd in the Heisman Trophy voting, and played for the Washington Redskins. He was named to the College Football Hall of Fame and the Redskins Ring of Honor.
In 1981, sportswriter Frank Deford published the novel Everybody's All-American, about a college football star at North Carolina in the 1950s, who falls from grace. People thought it was based on Justice. When it was made into a movie in 1988, it was filmed at Louisiana State, and Dennis Quaid's Gavin Grey sure looked like a stand-in for LSU star Billy Cannon.
Deford denied that Grey had been based on either one, saying he'd never met them and didn't know much about them. While Cannon served time for counterfeiting before restoring his reputation (after the film came out), Justice never had anything as bad as what happened to Grey happen to him.
October 17, 2004: The Red Sox stay alive in the ALCS with a 6-4‚ 12-inning win over the Yankees. David Ortiz's 2-run walkoff homer wins it in the 12th after the Sox tied the score off Mariano Rivera in the 9th, with a walk by Kevin Millar, pinch-runner Dave Roberts' steal of 2nd, and Bill Mueller singling him home with the tying run.
Ortiz drives home 4 runs for Boston‚ while Alex Rodriguez homers for New York – his last positive contribution to a Yankee postseason effort for 5 years. (Millahhhh? Mueller? Ortiz? Cough-steroids-cough.)
The Sox jumped on Ortiz as if they'd just won not just 1 ALCS game, but the World Series. They had good reason to call themselves "Idiots." Aw, what the heck, it's only 1 game, right? The Yankees will wrap up the Pennant tomorrow, right?
It took the Yankees 5 more years to wrap up their next Pennant.
On this same day, in Game 4 of the NLCS at Minute Maid Park, Carlos Beltran goes deep in the 7th inning, giving the Astros an eventual 6-5 victory over the Cardinals. With the round-tripper, the Houston center fielder sets a new postseason record, hitting a homer in 5 consecutive postseason games, and ties Barry Bonds' 2002 mark with a total of 8 postseason homers.
This gives Beltran a reputation as a postseason star. That reputation will be shattered in 2006. It's now 2017, and that reputation hasn't gotten any better. (UPDATE: It has now.)
Also on this day, Ray Boone dies at age 81 in his hometown of San Diego. A descendant of American pioneer Daniel Boone, the infielder was a rookie on the Cleveland Indians when he won the 1948 World Series, but was not on the Series roster. He was a 2-time All-Star for the Detroit Tigers, and led the American League in RBIs in 1955.
But he had bad luck: The Chicago White Sox traded him a few weeks before winning the 1959 American League Pennant, and he ended up on the Milwaukee Braves right after they stopped winning Pennants.
He became the patriarch of Major League Baseball's 1st 3-generation family. His son Bob Boone was the catcher for the 1980 World Champion Philadelphia Phillies. His son Bret Boone was a 3-time All-Star won won the 1999 National League Pennant with the Atlanta Braves, and his son Aaron Boone... well, I just told you what he did. Ray lived 1 year after Aaron became a legend. This year, Bret's son Jake was drafted by the Washington Nationals, putting the Boones in position to become the 1st 4-generation MLB family.
October 17, 2005: Albert Pujols' 3-run homer off Brad Lidge, practically smashing through the outer wall beyond left field at Minute Maid Park, with 2 outs in the 9th inning gives the Cardinals a 5-4 comeback win over the Astros and keeps their Pennant hopes alive. Lance Berkman's 3-run homer in the 7th had given Houston a 4-2 lead. The Astros still lead the Series‚ 3 games to 2. Jason Isringhausen gets the win in relief for St. Louis.
Legend has it that Lidge was never the same after giving up this mammoth home run, but his performance for the Phillies since 2008 proved that not to be true.
October 17, 2009: Game 2 of the ALCS at the new Yankee Stadium. The Yankees fall behind the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in the top of the 11th inning. But, through raindrops, Alex Rodriguez continues the one postseason hot streak of his career, hitting a home run and extending the game.
In the bottom of the 13th, Cesar Izturis commits an error that allows Melky Cabrera to reach base and Jerry Hairston Jr. to score, and the Yankees win 4-3, and take a 2 games to none lead in the series.
Also on this day, actor, pro wrestler, and former college football player Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson makes his 2nd appearance as "The Rock Obama," President Barack Obama's Hulk-like "You wouldn't like me when I'm angry" personality.
October 17, 2011: Carl Lindner dies at age 92. He turned his family's dairy farm into the United Dairy Farms convenience store chain, and later bought the American Financial Group. From 1999 to 2006, he was the owner of the Cincinnati Reds, saving them from the stigma of Marge Schott, and overseeing the building of their new stadium, Great American Ball Park.
October 17, 2012: Milija Aleksic dies in Johannesburg, South Africa, where he was working for a country club. He was 61. An Englishman of Serbian descent, He was the starting goalkeeper for North London's other club, Tottenham Hotspur, in the 1981 FA Cup Final, which they won. However, he was replaced by former Liverpool goalie Ray Clemence, and was only the backup for their successful defense of the Cup in 1982.
October 17, 2015: Howard Kendall dies in Southport, Merseyside, England at the age of 69. He was the greatest figure in the history of Liverpool, Merseyside-based Everton Football Club.
A midfielder from County Durham (so he was a "Geordie"), he played for Lancashire club Preston North End in their most recent FA Cup Final, which they lost to East London's West Ham United in 1964. He was sold to Everton, and played in the Toffees' 1968 FA Cup Final defeat to Birmingham-area club West Bromwich Albion. But he helped them win the Football League title in 1970.
After managing Lancashire's Blackburn Rovers to promotion from the 3rd to the 2nd division in 1980, Everton hired him, and he finally won the FA Cup as a manager in 1984, beating Hertfordshire club Watford. In 1985 and 1987, he led Everton to the League title, their most recent titles. In other words, the Blues haven't won the League without him being involved since 1963. He was named England's Manager of the Year both times.
He also managed them to the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1985, but the Heysel ban on English clubs playing in Europe, following Liverpool fans' role in the stadium disaster at that season's European Cup Final, kicked in, and Everton were not able to play in Europe for 5 years, including in the 1985-86 and 1987-88 European Cups (the tournament now known as the UEFA Champions League). Because of this, what had been a comparatively friendly rivalry between the Merseyside clubs degraded into a nasty one, with Everton fans coming to despise Liverpool, for more than just their usual success.
Frustrated, and ambitious to win in Europe, he left Everton for Spanish club Athletic Bilbao in 1987, but the closest he would come to European success was the 1995 Anglo-Italian Cup, won with Nottingham club Notts County. He would manage Everton twice more, without success, and in 1997 got Yorkshire club Sheffield United promoted to the Premier League.
He remains the last English-born manager to lead an English club to a European trophy. And the only English-born manager since Kendall to lead an English team to a League title is Howard Wilkinson of Leeds United in 1992.
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