Whitson’s Victory Not So Unpopular
- Share via
In the wake of the brawl in Baltimore, in which Billy Martin suffered a broken arm and cracked ribs, a New York reporter was overheard saying, “Ed Whitson should be nominated as Most Valuable Yankee.”
Wrote Joe Gergen of Newsday: “Such a nomination would not be unprecedented. Casey Stengel, the manager whom Martin most admired, once suffered a broken leg when hit by a taxi in Boston during his tenure with the Braves 50 years ago. Since the club was enduring another dismal season, a Boston columnist proposed the cab driver be named Boston’s Man of the Year.”
Trivia Time: Michael Spinks, by beating Larry Holmes, won the International Boxing Federation heavyweight title. Name the World Boxing Assn. and World Boxing Council heavyweight champions. (Answer below.)
Add Spinks: He told the New York Times he never was in love with boxing, and after the 1976 Olympics, he took a job at a Monsanto plant in his hometown of St. Louis mopping floors and cleaning bathrooms.
Spinks: “It took me until I began having problems like falling asleep on the job before I decided to fight. Heck, breathing those chemicals at Monsanto, I could have died faster than in the ring.”
In his debut on Monday Night Football, Dieter Brock had his problems, prompting some second-guessing by Joe Namath, but at least the new Ram quarterback emerged a winner.
The first Monday Night Football game was played 15 years ago in Cleveland. It matched the Cleveland Browns and the New York Jets. The Browns won, 31-21, clinching the victory on a 25-yard return of an interception for a touchdown.
The pass was thrown by Joe Namath.
Said Pittsburgh Steelers Coach Chuck Noll when asked about the inconsistency of his team: “There are so many factors involved with your own team. Then you take the factors that involve the other team. What you get is a geometric explosion of the factors involved.”
Of course.
From the Christian Science Monitor: “Mike Scioscia of the Dodgers offers a pretty good argument as to why players get $44 a day in meal money when their teams are on the road: ‘The last time we were in New York and staying at the Grand Hyatt Hotel, I ordered a bagel, a croissant, a glass of orange juice and a cup of coffee for breakfast. The bill came to $18.’ ”
Take-your-choice dept.: Says University of Georgia football Coach Vince Dooley: “I’d say that 90% of the coaches in our profession abide by the rules.”
Says Fort Worth oilman Dick Lowe, a TCU booster: “I think there are 91 Division 1-A schools, and my assessment is that 80 of them are buying football players.”
G-r-r-r!: Bill Fralic Sr. of Pittsburgh, father of the Atlanta Falcons’ rookie tackle, has this sign in his yard: “Forget the dog. Beware of the owner.”
From Peter Gammons of the Boston Globe: “Ted Turner made an offer to Tom Lasorda that would have paid him in seven figures to take over the entire messed-up Atlanta Braves situation.”
Trivia Answer: Tony Tubbs (World Boxing Assn.) and Pinklon Thomas (World Boxing Council).
Quotebook
Times staffer Dave Scheiderer, a long-suffering Cleveland fan: “The Indians are so far behind they’re already mathematically eliminated for next season.”
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.