Posts Tagged ‘New York Times’

What Recession? We’re Ballplayers

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

I had my first piece in the New York Times Week in Review section today, about athlete salaries and the economy:

As long as sports have been played for money, someone has complained about how much of it the players receive. “Salaries must come down or the interest of the public must be increased in some way,” Albert Spalding, the owner of the Chicago White Stockings of baseball’s National League, said in 1881. “If one or the other does not happen, bankruptcy stares every team in the face.”

With the economy in free fall, warnings like Spalding’s should carry more weight than the usual grumbling about overpaid jocks. And yet, big numbers continue to dance across the sports pages. The Yankees offer $140 million to free-agent pitcher C.C. Sabathia. The Knicks pay disgruntled point guard Stephon Marbury $21 million to do nothing. Wide receiver Plaxico Burress of the Giants apparently cares so little about protecting his new $35 million contract that he lets a handgun go off in his sweat pants at a New York nightclub. Didn’t he know he was lucky to still have a job in these hard times?

The message for fans: recession or not, the gargantuan athlete’s salary isn’t going anywhere. As the outfielder and free agent Manny Ramirez put it after helping power the Los Angeles Dodgers to the playoffs: “Gas is up and so am I.”

Read more. . . 

Thursday Morning Kicker: The Revolving Door

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Here’s the latest installment of Thursday Morning Kicker on the New York Times’s NFL blog, The Fifth Down:

An enduring truism about the N.F.L. is that the guys who kick the ball are as disposable as a Pampers and as recyclable as today’s newspaper (the printed one). This season we have the perfect example. Just follow the bouncing punter:

Aug. 30: The Redskins cut veteran Derrick Frost and keep rookie draft pick Durant Brooks.

Sept. 1: The Packers sign Frost and cut Jon Ryan.

Sept. 9: The Seahawks sign Ryan and cut Ryan Plackemeier.

Oct. 14: The Redskins sign Plackemeier and (a few days later) cut Brooks.

And so the circle of the N.F.L. punting life is complete.

Read more. . .

I’m No Plimpton

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

The New York Times’s NFL blog, The Fifth Down, excerpts the first chapter of A Few Seconds of Panic, in which I compare myself to George Plimpton and find an NFL team willing to let me in:

Lord knows I’m no Plimpton. He was the tall, Mayflower-descended son of the founder of a white-shoe law firm. I’m the short, first-generation son of a Greek ship captain. By virtue certainly of the privileges he enjoyed but more of the personality that allowed him to capitalize on them, Plimpton was a presence. “He looked for ways in which he could make himself a ridiculous figure, and not only on the football field, but in all walks of life,” [the writer Peter] Matthiessen once said. “That made him a great storyteller.”

Still, I doubt that if Plimpton materialized as a young writer today he could pull off what he did in the late 1950s, ’60s and ’70s. Those were times when celebrity sportswriters like Plimpton and Dick Schaap could forge deep, personal bonds with a Muhammad Ali or a Joe Namath and enjoy unguarded conversation at the same gatherings. Athletes today are weary of the media invasion, schooled to handle it with bromides and banalities, and generally uncurious about its practices and provenances. Breaching the levee that separates Reporter and Jock is more difficult now.

Plimpton began Paper Lion with a declaration: “I decided finally to pack the football.” Those seven words quickly established the author’s Everymanhood. The message was that the workings of pro football are such a mystery that training camp very well might be BYOB, bring your own ball. “The Detroit Lions officials had not sent me the sort of list one remembered from boys’ camp—that one should bring a pillow case, a mattress cover, a flashlight, a laundry bag, etc.”

Forty-plus years later, such naïveté isn’t plausible. We are routinely escorted inside the locker stalls and medicine cabinets, the Armani-stuffed closets and Bose-loaded Hummers of today’s professional athletes. We are fed an endless cycle of sports news and blather, in print, on television, on talk radio, on the Internet. Every fan is a columnist, every columnist an expert, every expert a media star. In NFL equipment rooms, six-packs of official game balls are stacked from floor to ceiling like cordwood. I pay $74.99 for one at retail. I won’t pack it.

Read more. . .

Old Kickers Rule

Monday, November 10th, 2008

I had a piece in the sports section of Sunday’s New York Times about how older kickers are doing especially well this season:

NFL kickers are having their best season. And the oldest among them have been the best of all.

Defying time and logic, kickers 35 and older have converted 90 percent of their field-goal attempts — 6 percentage points better than their younger counterparts. That is a statistically significant margin, considering that in the N.F.L., every kick can be the difference between one more game and forced retirement.

Some of the aging kickers have been perfect or close to it. The Giants’ John Carney — the oldest player in the N.F.L. at 44 — has made 18 of 19 field-goal attempts, and his miss was a block. Carolina’s John Kasay, who has spent 18 of his 39 years in the league, is 16 for 16. Detroit’s Jason Hanson, 38 and in his 17th season, is 10 for 10, including a league-leading five field goals of 50 yards or longer.

Read more. . .

Sacked by the Market

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Art Rooney

My first piece for Play, the New York Times’s quarterly (or so) sports magazine, publishes this Sunday, Nov. 2 (but you can read it online now). It’s about the venerable Rooney family’s attempt to sell the Pittsburgh Steelers:

In 1933, a boxing promoter and horse-racing handicapper from the North Side of Pittsburgh named Art Rooney paid $2,500 for a franchise in the young National Football League. The team wouldn’t play for, let alone win, an N.F.L. championship in its first 40 years.

But then came Franco Harris and the “Immaculate Reception,” Terry Bradshaw and Lynn Swann and four Super Bowl titles in six seasons. The Pittsburgh Steelers earned a national following and a reputation as an elite organization. The year before his death in 1988, Rooney composed a letter on team stationery to his five sons. “Time is starting to run out on me,” he wrote. “I would like to reach some kind of an understanding so that there will be no questions or complications regarding my estate.” Rooney left each son $200,000 and an equal share of his 80 percent stake in the team.

Read more. . .

Thursday Morning Kicker

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Lou GrozaThat’s the incredibly clever name I’ve given to my new weekly post on The Fifth Down, the New York Times’s NFL blog. As you might have guess from the title, I’m writing about–what else?–kicking.

My introductory post assesses the incredible season  that kickers are having thus far.

Post No. 2 is about why icing the kicker is a waste  of time.

Today’s entry begins like this:

As I was scanning the N.F.L. field-goal stats the other day — yes, I do that — something popped out. Old guys are doing remarkably well this season.

John Carney, the 44-year-old Giants kicker who is in his 20th season, has made 18 of 19 attempts—the lone miss was a ridiculous block against San Francisco — and leads the league in scoring. Jason Elam, 38, in his first season in Atlanta after 15 in Denver, is 16-for-17 with a 50-yarder. Carolina’s John Kasay, who has spent 18 of his 39 years on Earth in the N.F.L.—is a perfect 16-for-16.

Read more. . .