by
Gus Moorhead
By
the Ol' Coach
with the help of his wife SPORTS TRIVIA: Which of
the following pitchers has had the most 20-win
seasons (with eight) since 1960:
Tom Seaver, Ferguson Jenkins, Jim Palmer, or Roger
Clemens?
WABASH STUDENT HAS INTERESTING PROJECT:
The Ol' Coach had a visit a couple of weeks ago
from a
nice-looking,
well-mannered young man, who is pursuing a degree
from Wabash College. Colin Lanam is working on
a video project as part of a $1 million grant from
Lilly Endowment that allows Lanam and 10 other
Wabash
students to study culture and quality of life around
the Hoosier state.
Lanam's project has
to do with research on how the Milan and Crispus
Attucks state
basketball
championships
influenced their communities. "I want to try
to show how this was important to these two teams.
These two teams proved there was so much more to
the story than basketball," Lanam said.
We
became involved in Lanam's project because of our
friend and former student Howard Hewitt. Howard
works for Wabash College as part of their public
relations/communications program. He had suggested
the Ol' Coach as a good candidate for an interview
because of his coaching at Versailles during the
Milan glory days.
In addition to the Ol' Coach,
Lanam has interviewed several Milan players, including
Bobby Plump and
Ray Craft. He has also talked with Roselyn McKittrick
and visited the Milan '54 Museum.
The front page
of the June 28 issue of The Paper (Montgomery County)
contained a story and photo
of the Ol' Coach being videotaped by Lanam. The
story
described Lanam's project: "Milan won the
state championship and there were only 100 kids
in the
entire school. Crispus Attucks had to overcome
the racism problem. It's amazing to me where using
basketball
is the common trait between the two schools."
Lanam's
20-minute video will show the culture of the two
schools, emphasizing the way they dealt
with adversity, but were able to accomplish their
goals
through winning the state basketball championship.
HOME RUN DERBY IS AWESOME DISPLAY:
Monday
night's Home Run Derby in Detroit was quite a show
as Bobby Abreu hit an astounding 24 homers in his
first turn at bat. He set a record that will be
hard to beat.
Abreu, who is from Venezuela, plays right field for the Philadelphia Phillies.
Batting left-handed, Abreu homered
on his first swing and continued until he had erased
the record
Miguel Tehada set last year when he hit 15 homers
in
a round. Abreu's 517-foot shot above the back row of right-field bleachers
was
the third-longest drive in the 20 times this event has been held. Sammy Sosa
is first with a 524-foot homer in 2002, and Frank Thomas is second with a 519-footer
in 1994.
To help celebrate their countryman's
home run record, Johan Santana and Miguel Cabrera
ran to the plate to drape Abreu
in a large Venezuelan flag. It was
quite a sight.
BRET BOONE JOINS THE MINNESOTA TWINS:
Former Reds' player Bret Boone, who was recently
dumped by the Seattle Mariners,
has joined the Minnesota Twins. Although
the Mariners' decision to get rid of Boone really hurt him when he was informed
July 3, he will see significant playing time with the Twins and get to be part
of a pennant race again.
Boone had his best season with the
Mariners in 2001, when he finished third in the
American League's
MVP vote and batted .331 with 118 runs, 37 homers
and 141
RBIs. Though he won his fourth Gold Glove last season, Bret Boone began to
slump about the same time the Mariners did. They went 63-99, their worst record
since
1983.
We always liked Bret
Boone when he played for the Reds just
as we did his younger brother Aaron, now with
Cleveland, and his father Bob
Boone, who is a
part of the Washington Nationals' organization.
GROUP MAKES BID TO BUY THE
REDS: Sunday's Cincinnati Enquirer had a lead story
on the sports page about a group of friends in
Cincinnati who are making
a
bid to buy the Cincinnati Reds. According to John Fay, an Enquirer staff
writer, Rick Steiner, who is a Broadway producer who grew up and still lives
in North
Avondale, said that he is part of a group that has been approved by Major
League Baseball to make a bid for the majority stake in the club.
Other members
of the group are Rocco Landesman, president of
Jujamcyn Theaters; Dan Staton, a venture capitalist
investor and former
head of Duke Realty; and entrepreneur John Osher.
Three of the Reds' limited partners put 51.5 percent
of the club up for sale in March, and those are
the shares that Steiner's group would like to have plus
more, if that is possible.
Carl Lindner, the Reds' chief executive
officer, controls about 37 percent of the club,
along with his family and Great American
Insurance Company.
The limited
partnership agreement allows the 85-year-old Lindner to control the club
for life.
Explaining that his
group has great respect for Lindner, Steiner
told the reporter
that they would not purchase
the stock without Lindner's blessing.
When he
was asked why he and his friends would want to buy a baseball team, Steiner
said, "We're
huge fans. It's every boy's dream when he stops playing to own a team."
Of
course, anyone wanting to buy a team must also be able to put up the
necessary cash. It is estimated that the 51.5 percent
stake in the Reds
is worth around
$100 million. The Milwaukee Brewers sold in January for $223 million.
All four members of
the group are apparently multi-millionaires so
what do you do when you have more money than you
know what to do with? You buy a baseball
team.
AMERICAN LEAGUE WINS ALL-STAR GAME:
Mid-July brings a break in the major league baseball
season as outstanding
players from both leagues join
forces for the
annual All-Star game. This year's game on Tuesday night was played in
Detroit with intermittent rain causing some problems for fans.
The Reds
only representative Felipe Lopez played
third base for a couple of innings late in the
game and got a hit a single. This didn't
help the National League's cause very much, however. They lost to the
AL 7-5. MVP was the Orioles' Miguel Tejada, who
got a home run his first time at bat.
ANSWER TO
SPORTS TRIVIA: The pitcher to post the most 20-victory
seasons since 1960 with eight is
Jim Palmer, who won 20 or more games from 1970-73
and 1975-1978.
Ferguson Jenkins won 20 games seven times since 1960; Tom Seaver and
Roger Clemens did it five times during that span. |