Read Everything They Had Online
Authors: David Halberstam
By the third day we can joke about our nervousness. The rain has no effect on me; I am finally rowing well. The last two days have served as a crash course of good, simplified instruction; the videotape, a marvelous coaching instrument showing us how we row, not how we think we row. On what is, for me, surprisingly flat water, I am now doing twelve miles a day rowing a Schoenbrod, a sleek boat, virtually a racing shell; and I love it. I take twelve quick strokes, and it is like going back thirty-two years in time; I am rowing as I had thought I might, and I am thrilled by the speed of the boat. I have pledged to myself that I will not be competitive, but I am rowing so well that I soon find my eyeânot me, but my eyeâmeasuring the distance between myself and some of the other equally experienced scullers, trying to see if I have opened any water on them. Shameful stuff. I also wonder privately whether it will be hard to go back to the slower Alden once I get back to Nantucket.
Captivated by the pleasure of my own rowing, I have paid no attention to Jean. As I row back to the dock, I spot another boat. A Vancouver, moving quite nicely. It is my wife, and she is putting her body into it. As she comes up to the dock, her pleasure is self-evident. These are real strokes, and this is real rowing.
Technically, the school has three- or five-day classes; but Fraiman and Sparhawk are nothing if not flexible, and Jean and I decide to stay for a fourth day. The wind is up, and it is a very hard day to row. I stay somewhat closer to Jean, and I am pleased; she is frustrated by the coming of the wind, a new adversary. On this hard day, I see a young woman who has gone from absolute beginner to novice; her strokes are not just good, they are strong and she drives her entire body into them.
When we reach the dock, there is a new confidence to her voice. “In three days,” she says, “you can feel that you're doing it right and take real pleasure from it. That doesn't mean you're a great sculler yetâonly that you are doing it correctly enough to take pleasure. If I were starting out in tennis at my age, it might take six months or more of very hard work before I felt good about a serve.” When she gets back to New York, Jean says she intends to take swimming lessons for people who have serious fear of the water. (She does.)
Everyone seems pleased as they leave, but I think I am most pleased of all. There may be few things as sweet in this world as watching the person you love come to appreciate and like the sport you love.
The editor would like to thank the following institutions and individuals who were of assistance in tracking down material and putting together this volume: John Dorsey, the Boston Public Library, Joe Farara, the Johnson State College Library, Meg Downey, Christine Irizarry, the Nashville
Tennessean
, John Seigenthaler, Rob Fleder, Richard Johnson, Howard Bryant, Leanne Garland, Deborah May, the Nashville Public Library, Amanda Hicks, Alex Belth and Nate Rau. Special thanks to editors Will Schwalbe and Brendan Duffy at Hyperion Books, John Taylor “Ike” Williams of Kneerim & Williams at Fish & Richardson, and Jean Halberstam for the opportunity to work on this book.
“Death of a Sculler, in Three Acts” reprinted from the
Harvard Alumni Bulletin
, 57:13 (April 23, 1955)
“Introduction” by David Halberstam from
The Best American Sports Writing 1991
. Introduction copyright © 1991 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
“Sports Can Distract, but They Don't Heal” © ESPN.com 2002
“The Education of Reggie Smith” originally appeared in
Playboy
magazine
“Why Men Love Baseball” © 1989 David Halberstam.
Initially published in
Parade Magazine
, May 14, 1989. All rights reserved.
“The Ultimate Gamer” © ESPN.com 2001
“Torre Makes a Good Boss” © ESPN.com 2001
“If They Strike, I'm Going Fishin'” © ESPN.com 2002
“Say It Ain't So, Mike” © ESPN.com 2001
“In Admiration of Iverson” © ESPN.com 2001
“The Games Harvard Plays” reprinted from
Inc
., October 1990
“How I Fell in Love with the NFL” © ESPN.com 2001
“Homage to Patagonia” © ESPN.com 2001
“Ali Wins Another Fight © ESPN.com 2001
“Thanks, Soccer, See You in Four Years” © ESPN.com 2002
“Schaap Was a Pioneer ⦠and a Good Guy” © ESPN.com 2004
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific entry, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
Aaron, Hank, 50, 125, 196
Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem, 184, 186, 188, 191, 202
AFL, 228, 240, 249
African Americans,
see
black athletes; race and racism
Ainge, Danny, 217
Aka, Gary, 355, 359
Ali, Muhammad, 32, 44, 47â50, 195, 215, 253, 333, 364
“Ali Wins Another Fight,” 317â22
Allen, Mel, 98, 113, 114
Altman, Roger, 24
Amateurs, The
(Halberstam), xxi, 330
Amaya, Naohiro, 34
America, 29â39, 41, 44, 49, 51
“Baseball and the National Mythology,” 61â69
as fair and just society, 123â24
American League, 75â76, 86, 96, 157
Anderson, Dave, 18
Andrews, Harley and Arley, 178â79
Andrews, Harold, 178
Angell, Roger, 218â19
Aretsky, Ken, 349â50, 352, 354â55, 360
Arlen, Michael, 244
Arroyo, Bronson, 157
automobiles, 35
Babbitt, Bruce, 22
Bach, Johnny, 211
Ball Four: My Life and Hard Times Throwing the Knuckleball in the Big Leagues
(Bouton), 66â68, 69
Baltimore Colts, 44, 45â46, 223, 224, 225, 244â47, 286
Baltimore Orioles, 76
Baltimore Ravens, 281, 284, 285â86
Banks, Ernie, 28
Barber, Red, 37
Barkley, Charles, 207, 210, 211, 217
Barnes, Jimmy, 172
Barney, Rex, 133
Bartha, Miklos, 296
Baryshnikov, Mikhail, 195
baseball, 13, 56, 59â157, 196, 248
“And So It Happened,” 153â57
“Baseball and the National Mythology,” 61â69
black players in, 28, 40â41, 65, 67, 80â81, 86â87, 122â25, 126â27, 144, 196
“The Education of Reggie Smith,” 70â95
“The Fan Divided,” 96â105
“The Good Old Daysâfor Baseball Owners,” 115â18
“History's Man,” 122â25
“If They Strike, I'm Going Fishin',” 146â52
Jordan and, 200
“Maybe I Remember DiMaggio's Kick,” 126â28
“My Dinner with Theodore,” 119â21
“The Perfectionist at the Plate,” 142â45
radio and, 43, 250
“Renewed Spirits at Fenway Opener,” 106â10
television and, 225â26
“Torre Makes a Good Boss,” 137â41
“The Ultimate Gamer,” 129â36
“Why Men Love Baseball,” 111â14
Baseball: The Perfect Game
, 59
basketball, 13, 56, 65, 159â219, 248
“The Basket-Case State,” 161â82
black players in, 65, 174â77, 186â87, 188â89, 190, 342
“Character Study: Pat Riley,” 201â5
“He Got a Shot in the NBA, and It Went In,” 337â43
“A Hero for the Wired World,” 193â200
“In Admiration of Iverson,” 212â20
“Say It Ain't So, Mike,” 159, 206â11
statistics in, 66
“The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of,” 183â92
women's, 304
Batts, Matt, 22â23
Bayer, Cliff, 290, 291, 296â99
Bayer, Greg, 296, 297â98
Bayer, Michael, 296
Baylor, Don, 104â5
Baylor, Elgin, 196, 342
Belichick, Bill, 366â67, 369, 373
Belichick, Jeannette, 370â71, 372
Belichick, Steve, 366â73
Berkow, Ira, 18
Berlin, Richard, 146, 147, 152, 282â83, 344, 347â48, 350â56
Berman, Chris, 245
Berra, Yogi, 19, 28, 68â69, 90
Berry, Charley, 109
Berry, Raymond, 46
Best American Sports Writing, The
(Halberstam and Stout, eds.), xxiâxxii
introduction to, 13â21
Best and the Brightest, The
(Halberstam), xviii, 26
Best Sports Writing of the Century, The
(Halberstam and Stout, eds.), xxiiâxxiii, 364
Bianchi, Al, 342
Bias, Len, 185
Biasone, Danny, 342
Bigart, Homer, 18
Bilicic, Mary, 368
Bird, Larry, 183â84, 185, 186, 187, 189, 190â92
black athletes, xiv, 39, 191, 215
African, 325â26
in baseball, 28, 40â41, 65, 67, 80â81, 86â87, 122â25, 126â27, 144, 196
in basketball, 65, 174â77, 186â87, 188â89, 190, 342
in football, xvâxvi, 65, 190, 232, 240
media and, 191
as natural athletes, 188â89
sportswriters and, 319â20, 362â64
Williams and, 144
see also
race and racism
Blackmon, Mars, 197
Boggs, Wade, 108
Bonds, Bobby, 122
Bonham, Tiny, 99, 142
Borack, Carl, 289â90
Boston Celtics, 183â92, 205
Boston Globe
, 26, 135, 147, 186, 192