Sunday, December 12, 2021

2021 University of Hawaii football

12/12/21 - Chevan Cordeiro headed for San Jose State
12/3/21 - Hawaii surprised to be invited to play in bowl game
12/2/21 - Chevan Cordeiro enters transfer portal

5/16/21 - Tru Edwards (son of Troy) accepts scholarship from Hawaii
4/23/21 - Landon Sims (son of Travis) commits to Hawaii
3/7/21 - Bo Graham promoted to offensive coordinator
3/5/21 - Hawaii will open season in Rose Bowl against UCLA
2/25/21 - Jalen Walthall, WR, Manvel High (TX) signs with Hawaii
2/22/21 - G.J. Kinne leaving Hawaii to join Central Florida staff
2/3/21 - The Warriors signing class
2/3/21 - Caleb Phillips, TE, will join Hawaii as a graduate transfer from Stanford
1/31/21 - Matagi Thompson to continue family legacy at UH
1/28/21 - Hawaii gets commitments from Hugh Nelson II (slot cover/outside linebacker from Georgia), Arnold Azunna (safety from Iowa State), Ty Marsh (safety from Ryan High in Texas)
1/14/21 - Pita Tonga Jr., DL, to join Hawaii as graduate transfer from Utah, O'Tay Baker, edge, will come from Tyler (TX) JC
1/13/21 - Zacchaeus McKinley, DT, to transfer to Hawaii from Oklahoma
1/11/21 - Hawaii preparing to play home games on campus
1/3/21 - Calvin Turner will return

Saturday, December 11, 2021

2021 NCAA Football

12/11/21 - Bryce Young wins Heisman Trophy
11/30/21 - Brian Kelly leaving Notre Dame to become new LSU head coach
11/28/21 - Lincoln Riley leaving Oklahoma to become USC head coach

1/27/21 - Josh Heupel leaves UCF to take Tennessee head coaching job

Friday, November 19, 2021

Shohei Ohtani MVP

Shohei Ohtani, coming off a largely unprecedented 2021 season, was crowned the American League's Most Valuable Player unanimously on Thursday night, cementing the two-way superstar as a global sensation.

Later in Japan, the Tokyo Tower was scheduled to be lit up in Los Angeles Angels colors to celebrate Ohtani becoming the 19th unanimous MVP in major league history. Earlier, Major League Baseball ran a global spot centered on Ohtani in four languages, representing the latest in a string of efforts to market him all over the world.

How did Ohtani plan to celebrate?

"I don't have any special plans, actually," Ohtani, speaking through his interpreter, said a little after 10 a.m. local time from his home in Japan. "I'm probably gonna spend a lonely night by myself at home."

Ohtani, charmingly ordinary amid extraordinary accomplishment, claimed all 30 first-place votes from the Baseball Writers' Association of America and became the fifth unanimous MVP since 2000, joining Mike Trout (2014), Albert Pujols (2009), Barry Bonds (2002) and Bryce Harper, who won unanimously in 2015 and was named the National League MVP on Thursday.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr., the young star for the Toronto Blue Jays, captured 29 of the 30 second-place votes by the BBWAA, with the remaining vote going to Salvador Perez of the Kansas City Royals. Guerrero's teammate Marcus Semien received 24 third-place votes.

The 2021 season saw Ohtani fulfill his promise as a two-way star and somehow exceed the outsized expectations he carried with him from Japan four years earlier.

The MVP was his crowning achievement.

"I've always dealt with a lot of doubters, especially from my days in Japan," Ohtani said. "But I try not to let that get to me. I just wanted to have fun and see what kind of numbers I could put up."

Ohtani became the first player in baseball history to hit at least 30 home runs in a year when he also made at least 10 pitching appearances -- and that doesn't come close to capturing his wide-ranging excellence.

Ohtani, 27, amassed 46 home runs and made 23 starts for an otherwise lowly Angels team. Offensively, he posted a .965 OPS (second highest in the AL), added eight triples (tied for the major league lead) and stole 26 bases (a mark topped by only seven players). He became the sixth player in history with at least 45 homers and at least 25 stolen bases in the same season, joining a decorated list of names that includes Alfonso Soriano, Chipper Jones, Jose Canseco, Larry Walker and Bonds.

None of the others, of course, actually pitched.

Ohtani also compiled 130 1/3 innings on the mound, and boasted a 3.18 ERA with 156 strikeouts and 44 walks. Among those with at least 120 innings in 2021, Ohtani ranked within the top 14% in strikeout percentage, the top 19% in opponents' slugging percentage and the top 16% in expected fielding independent pitching. All told, Ohtani was worth 9.1 Baseball-Reference wins above replacement, far more than anybody else in the sport.

"Shohei's season was nothing short of electric," Trout wrote in a statement. "At times, I felt like I was back in Little League. To watch a player throw eight innings, hit a home run, steal a base and then go play right field was incredible. What impresses me the most about him, though, is the way he carries himself both on and off the field. With so much on his plate daily, he still manages to do it with a smile."

Ohtani, who gave up a promising career in Japan early to become a two-way player at his sport's highest level, showed glimpses of his potential early in his first season in the United States. Through his first two months of 2018, he posted a 3.18 ERA on the mound and a .929 OPS in the batter's box. But he suffered a sprain of his ulnar collateral ligament in his first June start and made only one more pitching appearance the rest of the year.

Tommy John surgery was recommended in late September, prompting Ohtani to spend most of the next 15 months rehabbing his right elbow. Ohtani proved to be a formidable offensive weapon in the meantime -- batting .286/.351/.532 with 40 home runs in a combined 210 games from 2018 to 2019 -- but shouldered widespread doubt over whether he could become baseball's first two-way star since a young Babe Ruth briefly juggled hitting and pitching in the early 1900s.

The COVID-19-shortened 2020 season only exacerbated concerns. Ohtani posted a .190 batting average and made only two pitching starts -- allowing seven runs and recording only five outs -- before being shut down from throwing once again with a flexor strain.

An aggressive offseason followed. Ohtani altered his diet, sought counsel from third-party facilities, got into more game-like situations as both a pitcher and a hitter and showed up to spring training in 2021 looking like a completely different player. His fastballs breezed into the upper 90s, his batted balls frequently cleared the center-field batter's eye, and in the midst of that, Angels manager Joe Maddon decided to let Ohtani dictate the terms of his season. He lifted prior restrictions, allowing Ohtani to hit the day before, the day after and, most notably, the day of his starts. On some nights, he even moved Ohtani from the mound and into the outfield in order to keep his bat in the lineup.

In July, Ohtani competed in the Home Run Derby, then led off the All-Star Game as both a pitcher and a hitter. In October, Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred gifted him with the Commissioner's Historic Achievement Award meant to "recognize accomplishments and contributions of historical significance to the game," according to an MLB release. Throughout, Ohtani captivated audiences with his unprecedented combination of power, speed and pitching prowess. His fastball was electric, but his splitter was devastating. He hit 500-foot moon shots, but he also legged out routine grounders.

Fans lined up outside the Angel Stadium gates for his giveaways, people all over the world tuned in on his start days and the most respected members of his sport -- players, coaches, executives -- were left stunned by his overwhelming talent.

Now, rightfully, he is the MVP.

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Cleveland Indians will become the Guardians

The conflict over the Guardians name in Cleveland has come to an end.

The Cleveland Guardians baseball team and the Cleveland Guardians roller derby team released a joint statement on Tuesday morning, announcing they will share the same name going forward. 

“The Cleveland Guardians Baseball Company, LLC and Guardians Roller Derby are pleased to announce an amicable resolution of the lawsuit filed by Guardians Roller Derby, whereby both organizations will continue to use the Guardians name."

The Guardians — previously known as the Indians — announced the name change in July, which would go into effect for the 2022 baseball season.

Friday, October 22, 2021

75 Greatest NBA Players

The NBA is celebrating its 75th anniversary throughout the 2021-22 season, and part of that celebration includes the unveiling of the list of the greatest players in NBA history. It has been 25 years since the league unveiled its list of the 50 greatest players in NBA history, which tipped off a season-long celebration of the NBA's 50th anniversary in 1996.

The NBA's 75th anniversary team was selected by a blue-ribbon panel of media, current and former players, coaches, general managers and team executives. As a result of a tie in the voting, the 75th anniversary team includes 76 players.

***

Thursday, September 02, 2021

Colt Brennan, Robert Kekaula, Edwin Wong, Amber Kauffman inducted into Circle of Honor

In more than a century of University of Hawaii football, no player had reached the popular heights — “Colt hero,” it has been said — than quarterback Colt Brennan.

During a three-season career, Brennan broke or tied 31 NCAA records, as well as established top QB and Q ratings. His announcement that he would return to UH for his senior season in 2007 broke UH’s internet transmission. Brennan then led the Warriors to a 12-0 regular season, the Western Athletic Conference’s outright title, and a berth in the 2008 Sugar Bowl.

Brennan died in May, but his legacy continued with Wednesday’s announced induction into UH’s Circle of Honor.

Sportscaster Robert Kekaula and Edwin Wong, founding member of Na Koa Football Club, were posthumously inducted into the Circle. Amber Kaufman, a national champion high jumper, also was welcomed into UH athletics’ most prestigious fellowship.

The four inductees will be enshrined during UH’s homecoming weekend on Oct. 1 and 2. A 30-minute show honoring the class will be shown Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. on KHON and Oct. 17 at 6:30 p.m. on KHII.

Brennan, who was a Heisman Trophy finalist in 2007, brought national attention to the Warriors. He was featured in several publications, including the cover story of ESPN the Magazine. Two couples named their sons Brennan. A line for his autograph snaked more than 300 yards. His UH graduation was a front-page story. Natural Vibrations played at his graduation party.

“I don’t think there will be another Colt Brennan in Hawaii sports history,” former UH head coach June Jones said. “He captivated the state, not just the university. It’s well deserving.”

Kekaula, who died in June, was an original. Kekaula was a talented musician who recorded three albums, songwriter and music producer. He also starred in “Byrds of Paradise,” a television series whose cast included Timothy Busfield, Seth Green and Jennifer Love-Hewett, as well as several independent projects. His career as a sportscaster — twice with KITV, as well as a color analyst and then play-by-play announcer for UH football games — spanned more than three decades.

But Kekaula, a Kamehameha Schools graduate, was best known for his association with UH. Nicknamed the “general manager,” Kekaula’s connections and generosity were useful in helping to coordinate and produce projects for the school. He also served as a mentor, helping develop the sportscasting careers of Rob Fukuzaki, Jahmai Webster, Kanoa Leahey, Rob DeMello, Brandi Higa, Russell Yamanoha, Dan Meisenzahl and Neil Everett.

Wong was Na Koa’s president for several years, and also served on the boards of various UH-related organizations.

Kaufman was an All-America player for the Rainbow Wahine volleyball team for four years and member of the track-and-field program for three years. She was the 2010 NCAA outdoor champion in the high jump. That year, she was named the recipient of the Joe Kearney Award as the Western Athletic Conference’s top athlete.

“She was an underrated volleyball player and also under-sized,” former UH coach Dave Shoji said of Kaufman, who played middle blocker at 5 feet 11. “She was really, really valuable to the team during her years. She was an offensive threat, and very dynamic. I think she still holds a couple records for serving. Coupled with the high-jump championship, that puts her in the (Circle). That’ll be on the record books for all time. We probably will never have another champion like that.”

***

Stephen Tsai's candidates

Hawaii paid tribute to Colt Brennan

Sunday, July 25, 2021

2021 U.S. Olympic basketball team

7/25/21 - USA opens Olympics with loss to France

7/16/21 - USA-Australia exhibition game cancelled
7/16/21 - Kevin Love withdrawsJaVale McGee and Keldon Johnson added.
7/15/21 - Beal out of Olympics

7/10/21 - Team USA loses to Nigeria in debut

6/23/21 - 12-man roster finalized: Adebayo, Love, Green, Durant, Tatum, Grant, Middleton, LaVine, Booker, Beal, Holiday, Lillard / declined: Butler, Curry, Davis, Harden, Irving, James, Lowry, Paul / other: Aldridge, Allen, Barnes, Brogdon, Brown, Conley, DeRozan, Drummond, George, Gordon, Griffin, Harrell, Harris, Harris, Hayward, Howard, Kuzma, Leonard, Lopez, McGee, Mitchell, Oladipo, Plumlee, Randle, Robinson, Turner, VanVleet, Walker, Wall, White, Williamson, Wood, Young

Thursday, June 17, 2021

NBA 2020-2021

6/17/21 - Rick Carlisle resigns as Dallas head coach after 13 seasons
6/16/21 - New Orleans fires Stan Van Gundy after one season
6/9/21 - Rudy Gobert named defensive player of the year
6/9/21 - Pacers fire Nate Bjorkgren after one season
6/8/21 - Nikola Jokic wins MVP
6/5/21 - Steve Clifford and Orlando Magic part ways after three seasons
6/4/21 - Terry Stotts out as head coach of Trail Blazers after nine seasons
6/2/21 - Danny Ainge steps down as Celtics president, Brad Stevens to move from head coach to front office
5/17/21 - Marv Albert retiring
5/16/21 - Kobe, Duncan, Garnett inducted into the NBA Hall of Fame
4/15/21 - LaMarcus Aldridge retiring due to irregular heartbeat
3/27/21 - LaMarcus Aldridge to sign with Brooklyn after buyout from Spurs
3/25/21 - trade deadline buzz
3/25/21 - Aaron Gordon and Gary Clark traded from Orlando to Denver for Gary Harris, R.J. Hampton, and first round pick
3/25/21  - Victor Oladipo traded from Houston to Miami for Avery Bradley, Kelly Olynyk, and 2022 pick swap 
3/25/21 - Nikola Vucevic and Al-Farouq Aminu traded from Orlando to Chicago for Wendell Carter, Otto Porter Jr, and two first round picks (2021 and 2023)
3/25/21 - Lou Williams (with two second picks and cash) traded from Clippers to Hawks for Rajon Rondo
3/25/21 - George Hill traded to Philadelphia from Oklahoma City, Tony Bradley goes from Philadelphia to Oklahoma City, Austin Rivers goes from New York to Oklahoma City, Terrance Ferguson and Vincent Poirier go from Philadelphia to New York
3/25/21 - Chicago acquires Troy Brown Jr. from the Wizards and Daniel Theis from the Celtics.  Daniel Gafford and Chandler Hutchison are headed from Chicago to Washington.  Mo Wagner goes from Washington to Boston.  Luke Kornet headed to Boston from Chicago.
3/25/21 - Norman Powell traded from Toronto to Portland for Gary Trent Jr., and Rodney Hood
3/25/21 - Evan Fournier traded to Boston from Orlando for two second round picks
3/25/21 - JaVale McGee traded from Cleveland for Denver for Isaiah Hartenstein and two future protected second round picks
3/17/21 - Rockets trade P.J. Tucker and Radions Kurocs and 2022 first round pick to Milwaukee for DJ Augustin, DJ Wilson, and 2023 first round pick
3/8/21 - Blake Griffin signs with Nets after buyout
3/1/21 - Atlanta fires Lloyd Pierce as head coach, Nate McMillan named interim coach
2/26/21 - NBA releases second half of schedule
2/23/21 - NBA All Star reserves chosen
2/22/21 - Minnesota fires Ryan Saunders as head coach, hires Chris Finch from Toronto
2/7/21 - Derrick Rose headed from Detroit to New York for Dennis Smith Jr. and draft compensation
1/13/21 - James Harden traded from Houston to Brooklyn; Oladipo (from Indiana), Exum (from Cleveland), Kurocs (from Brooklyn), four first-round picks (22, 22-Mil, 24, 26), four first-round swaps (21,23,25,27) go to Houston; Jarrett Allen and Taurean Prince sent from Brooklyn to Cleveland; Indiana receives Caris LeVert and a second round pick. 
12/20/20 - Kuzma agrees to $40 million, 3 year extension.
12/20/20 - Gobert signs $205 million, 5 year extension
12/19/20 - Jrue Holiday pledges remainder of his 2020 salary
12/15/20 - Giannis signs supermax, $228 million, 5 year extension to remain with Bucks 
12/11/20 - Paul George signs $190 million, 4 year extension
12/2/20 - Rockets to trade Russell Westbrook to Wizards for John Wall and lottery-protected 2023 first-round pick
11/29/20 - Batum to sign with Clippers
11/27/20 - Rockets trade Austin Rivers to Knicks
11/25/20 - Hassan Whiteside agrees to sign with Sacramento for 1 year
11/24/20 - Bodanovic joins Hawks after Sacramento declines to match offer sheet 
11/24/20 - Brandon Ingram agrees to 5-year, $158 million max extension with New Orleans
11/23/20 - The official Jrue Holiday, Steven Adams, Eric Bledsoe, George Hill trade
11/23/20 - Cousins to sign with Rockets
11/22/20 4:18 PM - Jerami Grant signs with Detroit for 3 years, $60 million, Denver gets cash considerations
11/22/20 4:15 PM - Lakers trade JaVale McGee to Cleveland, so they can sign Marc Gasol 
11/22/20 12:00 PM - Jayson Tatum agrees to 5 year, $195 million max extension with Celtics
11/22/20 8:16 AM - Bogdan Bogdanovic signs 4 year, $72 million offer sheet with Atlanta
11/22/20 7:28 AM - Donovan Mitchell signs signs extension with Utah for 5 years, $195 million

11/21/20 6:57 PM - Clippers to sign Serge Ibaka for 2 years, $19 million
11/21/20 4:52 PM - Lakers re-sign Caldwell-Pope for 3 years, $40 million
11/21/20 4:43 PM - Tristan Thompson headed to Boston for 2 years, $19 million
11/21/20 12:33 PM - Carmelo finalizing deal to remain with Portland
11/21/20 12:25 PM - Paul Millsap to stay with Nuggets for $10 million
11/21/20 11:58 AM - Rajon Rondo to sign with Hawks
11/21/20 9:45 AM - Jae Crowder leaves Miami to join Suns for 3 years, $30 million
11/21/20 9:23 AM - Avery Bradley signs with Miami for 2 years, $11.6 million
11/21/20 7:42 AM - Bobby Portis leaves Knicks for Milwaukee for 2 years, D.J. Augustin signs with Milwaukee for 3 years, $21 million
11/21/20 7:42 AM - VanVleet to re-sign with Toronto for 4 years, $85 million
11/21/20 6:31 AM - Kris Dunn joining Hawks for 2 years $10 million
11/21/20 8:51 AM - Gordon Hayward headed to Hornets for 4 years, $120 million, to waive Batum

11/20/20 8:46 PM - Trevor Ariza now headed to Oklahoma City, after Houston finishes trading him and and Justin Jackson 
11/20/20 8:16 PM - Steven Adams headed from Oklahoma City to New Orleans as part of the Jrue Holiday deal.  Thunder to receive George Hill, Darius Miller, 2023 first round pick (Denver), 2023 second round pick (Charlotte)), 2024 second round pick (Milwaukee). 
11/20/20 6:49 PM - Marcus Morris to stay with Clippers for 4 years $64 million
11/20/20 6:23 PM - Christian Wood headed from Detroit to Houston for 3 years, $41 million
11/20/20 5:57 PM - Joe Harris to re-sign with Brooklyn for 4 years, $75 million
11/20/20 5:41 PM - Davis Bertans stays with Wizards for 5 years, $80 million
11/20/20 5:37 PM - Jerami Grant leaves Denver for Detroit for 3 years, $60 million
11/20/20 5:01 PM - Montrezl Harrell to sign with Lakers
11/20/20 4:05 PM - Dwight Howard headed to Philadelphia right after saying he's staying with the Lakers
11/20/20 3:55 PM - Danilo Gallinari to sign with Hawks for 3 years $61.5 million
11/20/20 3:17 PM - Jazz to sign Derrick Favors and re-sign Jordan Clarkson
11/20/20 2:35 PM - De'Aaron Fox signs maximum extension with Sacramento for five years, $163 million
11/20/20 2:08 PM - Free agent first night roundup 
11/20/20 1:41 PM - Wesley Matthews to sign with Lakers
11/20/20 1:25 PM - Goran Dragic and Meyers Leonard to re-sign with Miami

11/20/20 12:16 PM - Every official trade from the 2020 Draft
11/20/20 11:40 AM - Ricky Rubio headed back to Minnesota with Jaden McDaniels (no. 28 pick) from Oklahoma City.  Leandro Bolmaro (no. 23 from Knicks) also headed to Minnesota.  Timberwolves send James Johnson, Aleksej Pokusevski, 2020 second round pick to Oklahoma City and send Mathias Lessort and Detroit's second pick to Knicks.  Thunder sends Immanuel Quickly (no. 25 pick) to New York.
11/20/20 11:07 AM - Enes Kanter sent from Boston back to Portland.  Memphis gets Mario Hezonja and Desmond Baine (30th pick).  Celtics gets future Memphis draft consideration.
11/20/20 10:36 AM - Hawks trade Dewayne Dedmon to Pistons for Tony Snell and Khyri Thomas

11/19/20 3:58 PM - Brooklyn acquires Landry Shamet and Reggie Perry from Clippers and Bruce Brown from Detroit.  Saddiq Bey (Nets 19th pick), Dzanan Musa, Jaylen Hands, Toronto's 2021 second round pick.  Jay Scrubb (Net's second round pick) goes to Clippers.  Pistons send Luke Kennard, Justin Patton, Portland's 2023 second round pick, Detroit's second round pick in 2024, 2025, 2026 to Clippers.  Clippers send Rodney McGruder and cash considerations to Pistions.  
11/19/20 12:09 PM - Warriors to acquire Kelly Oubre from Oklahoma City (who came from Phoenix in the Chris Paul trade)
11/19/20 - Klay Thompson out for season with torn Achilles
11/19/20 - Bucks trade for Bogdan Bogdanovic in flux
11/18/20 - Lakers acquire Dennis Schroder from Oklahoma City for Danny Green and Jaden McDaniels 

11/18/20 - The rest of the lottery picks: Vassell at no. 11 to the Spurs, Haliburton at no. 12 to the Kings, Pelicans takes Kira Lewis at no. 13, Celtics take Aaron Nesmith at no. 14
11/18/20 - Here's the updated mock draft.  Edwards, Ball, Wiseman, Williams (correct), Toppin, Haliburton, Avdija, Okoro, Okongwu, Vassell.  So where did Halibuton and Vassell end up?
11/18/20 - Looking at the consensus mock draft, Tyrese Haliburton was no. 6.  They got the first three correct.  No. 4 was Avdija followed by Toppin and Haliburton.  Rounding out the top 10 were Patrick Williams, Killian Hayes, Okongwu with Okoro and Devin Vassell tied at 10.  Jalen Smith was not in the top 14.
11/18/20 - At no. 10, Suns take Jalen Smith from Maryland
11/18/20 - Wizards take Deni Avdija at no. 9 (who could be the steal of the draft says Jay Williams or somebody -- actually it was Mike Schmitz, the other analyst is Jay Bilas with Reece Davis as the ESPN announcer)
11/18/20 - Knicks take Obi Toppin.  Maybe a steal at no. 8
11/18/20 - Where is Obi Toppin?  Not yet.  Detroit takes Killian Hayes at no. 7
11/18/20 - Atlanta takes Onyeka Okongwu from USC at no. 6
11/18/20 - Cleveland takes Isaac Okoro at no. 5
11/18/20 - Now it gets interesting.  Who do the Bulls take at no. 4?  Patrick Williams.  What?
11/18/20 - So does that mean LaMelo Ball goes third to Charlotte?    Yep.
11/18/20 - With the second pick, Golden State takes ... James Wiseman
11/18/20 - With the first pick, Minnesota takes ... Anthony Edwards

11/18/20 - Philadelphia trades Al Horford, 34th pick, 2025 first round pick, Vasilije Micic to Oklahoma City for Danny Green and Terrance Ferguson

11/17/20 - Bucks acquire Bogdan Bogdanovic from Sacramento for Donte Divencenzo, D.J. Wilson, and Ersan Ilyasova
11/17/20 - Bucks acquire Jrue Holiday from New Orleans for Eric Bledsoe, George Hill, and three first-round picks
11/17/20 - Harden turns down $103 million, reportedly wants to be traded to Brooklyn
11/16/20 - Robert Covington traded from Houston to Portland for Trevor Ariza, 2020 first round pick, 2021 first round pick
11/16/20 - Phoenix reportedly acquires Chris Paul and Adbel Nader from Oklahoma City for Ricky Rubio, Kelly Oubre, Ty Jerome, Jalen Lecque, and 2022 first-round pick
11/15/20 - Lakers to acquire Dennis Schroeder from Oklahoma City for Danny Green and first round pick
11/11/20 - Hawks name Nate McMillan assistant coach
11/11/20 - Oklahoma City promotes Mark Daigneault to head coach
11/9/20 - Dave Joeger, Sam Cassell, Dan Burke joins Doc Rivers' coaching staff at Philadelphia
11/8/20 - Chauncey Billups and Larry Drew to become assistant coaches for the Clippers
11/6/20 - Players approve start date of December 22
10/30/20 - Mike D'Antoni joins Steve Nash's coaching staff in Brooklyn
10/28/20 - Houston hiring Stephen Silas as head coach
10/21/20 - New Orleans names Stan Van Gundy as new head coach
10/15/20 - Clippers sign Ty Lue to five-year deal as head coach
10/15/20 - Daryl Morey steps down as Houston GM
10/7/20 - Alvin Gentry joining Sacramento as associate head coach
10/1/20 - 76ers hire Doc Rivers as head coach
9/23/20 - Bulls hire Billy Donovan as head coach
9/13/20 - Mike D'Antoni won't return as Houston head coach
9/8/20 - Billy Donovan leaving as head coach of Oklahoma City
9/3/20 - Nets hire Steve Nash as head coach, Jacque Vaughn becomes lead assistant

Thursday, May 20, 2021

2021 NFL

5/20/21 - Tebow signs with Jacksonville as a tight end
3/30/21 - NFL expanding regular season to 17 games
3/14/21 - Drew Brees retires after 20 seasons
3/8/21 - Dak Prescott signs $160 million, 4 year extension
3/1/21 - J.J. Watt to sign with Arizona
2/18/21 - Colts acquire Carson Wentz from Philadelphia for third round pick and conditional 2022 second round pick (that could turn into a first round pick)
2/12/21 - J.J. Watt released by Houston
1/30/21 - Matthew Stafford traded from Lions to Rams for Jared Goff, 2021 third round, 2022 first round, 2023 first round
1/28/21 - Eric Bieniemy shut out again
1/28/21 - Houston hires David Culley as head coach
1/21/21 - Eagles hire Nick Sirianni as head coach
1/20/21 - Detroit hires Dan Campbell as head coach
1/17/21 - Chargers hire Brandon Staley as head coach
1/15/21 - Falcons hire Arthur Smith as head coach
1/14/21 - Jets hire Robert Saleh as head coach
1/14/21 - Urban Meyer agrees to coach Jacksonville

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Elgin Baylor

LOS ANGELES >> Elgin Baylor, the Lakers’ 11-time NBA All-Star who soared through the 1960s with a high-scoring style of basketball that became the model for the modern player, died today. He was 86.

The Lakers announced that Baylor died of natural causes in Los Angeles with his wife, Elaine, and daughter Krystal by his side.

With a silky-smooth jumper and fluid athleticism, Baylor played a major role in revolutionizing basketball from a ground-bound sport into an aerial show. He spent parts of 14 seasons with the Lakers in Minneapolis and Los Angeles during his Hall of Fame career, teaming with Jerry West throughout the ’60s in one of the most potent tandems in basketball history.

“Elgin was THE superstar of his era — his many accolades speak to that,” Lakers Governor Jeanie Buss said in a statement announcing Baylor’s death.

Baylor’s second career as a personnel executive with the woebegone Los Angeles Clippers was much less successful. He worked for the Clippers from 1986 until 2008, when he left the team with acrimony and an unsuccessful lawsuit against owner Donald Sterling and the NBA, alleging age and race discrimination.

The 6-foot-5 Baylor played in an era before significant television coverage of basketball, and little of his play was ever captured on film. His spectacular style is best remembered by those who saw it in person — including West, who once called him “one of the most spectacular shooters the world has ever seen.”

Baylor had an uncanny ability to hang in mid-air indefinitely, inventing shots along the way with his head bobbing. Years before Julius Erving and Michael Jordan became international superstars with their similarly acrobatic games, Baylor created the blueprint for the modern superstar.

Baylor soared above most of his contemporaries, but never won a championship or led the NBA in scoring largely because he played at the same time as centers Bill Russell, who won all the rings, and Wilt Chamberlain, who claimed all the scoring titles. Knee injuries hampered much of the second half of Baylor’s career, although he remained a regular All-Star.

West and Baylor were the first pair in the long tradition of dynamic duos with the Lakers, followed by Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in the 1980s before Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal won three more titles in the 2000s.

But Baylor’s Lakers lost six times in the NBA Finals to the Boston Celtics and another time to the New York Knicks. Los Angeles won the 1971-72 title, but only after Baylor retired nine games into the season.

Baylor arrived in the NBA in 1958 as the No. 1 draft pick out of Seattle University. He immediately set new superlatives for individual scoring, with a 55-point game in his Rookie-of-the-Year season before scoring 64 on Nov. 8, 1959 — then the NBA single-game record, and the Lakers record for 45 years until Bryant broke it.

Baylor became the first NBA player to surpass 70 points with a 71-point game Dec. 11, 1960, against New York. Chamberlain set the record of 100 points in 1962.

Baylor averaged 38 points in the 1961-62 season despite doing active duty as an Army reservist. He scored 61 points in a playoff game against Boston in 1962, a record that would stand for 24 years until Jordan broke it.

Baylor averaged 27.4 points and 13.5 rebounds during his 14-year career. He scored a total of 23,149 points in 846 games, and was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in May 1977.

Elgin Gay Baylor was born in Washington, D.C. on Sept. 16, 1934. He was named after his father’s favorite watch, an “Elgin” timepiece. Although he starred at two high schools, Baylor struggled academically and briefly dropped out, working in a furniture store and playing in local recreational leagues.

Baylor went to the College of Idaho because he was given a scholarship to play both basketball and football, but the school fired its basketball coach and cut several scholarships a year later. Baylor transferred to Seattle and played from 1956-58, averaging 31.3 points per game and leading the team to the 1958 NCAA championship game, where it lost to coach Adolph Rupp’s Kentucky Wildcats.

The year before the Lakers persuaded Baylor to leave college a year early, the club was near bankruptcy after finishing 19-53, falling far since their glory years in the late ’40s and early ‘50s in Minneapolis with center George Mikan.

Baylor transformed the franchise with his scoring and style. Minneapolis beat the Detroit Pistons and the defending champion St. Louis Hawks in the 1959 playoffs to make it to the NBA Finals, losing to the fledgling Celtics dynasty.

Baylor averaged 24.9 points, fourth in the league, and was third in rebounding with 15 a game. He was easily voted Rookie of the Year.

The Lakers moved west to Los Angeles in 1960, and Baylor became the centerpiece of their Hollywood revival. He averaged 34.8 points in the Lakers’ first season in Los Angeles, second in the league to Chamberlain.

Jerry West arrived from West Virginia in 1960, and they immediately clicked, averaging 69.1 combined points per game. Baylor played in only 48 games on weekend passes because his military service, but the Lakers still won the Western Conference by 11 games.

Baylor’s 61-point performance against the Celtics in Game 5 of the finals put the Lakers ahead 3-2 in the series, but they lost to the Celtics in overtime in Game 7 — the pinnacle of the Lakers’ suffering at Boston’s hands.

Frank Selvy missed a 10-foot jumper that would have won the game in regulation. In film of that moment, Baylor appears poised to get Selvy’s rebound, then disappears from the screen. Baylor contended he was pushed out of bounds by Boston’s Sam Jones.

“I’ve always felt that was our championship,” Baylor told the Riverside Press-Enterprise in 2000.

He never got closer to a ring.

The following season Baylor became the first to finish in the NBA’s top five in four different statistical categories: scoring, rebounding, assists and free-throw percentage. The Lakers reached the finals again — and lost to the Celtics again.

Knee problems that began in the 1963-64 season started a slow decline for Baylor. He never averaged more than 30 points a season again, though he remained a competent scorer.

Baylor played his last full season in 1968-69, and suited up only sporadically until retiring at 37 in the fall of 1971.

Baylor’s post-playing career never lived up to the magic of his on-court skills.

The expansion New Orleans Jazz hired him as an assistant coach for their debut season in 1974, and he eventually replaced Butch van Breda Kolff as coach during the 1976-77 season, going 86-135 in parts of three seasons. Pete Maravich’s Jazz never made the playoffs, and Baylor resigned after the 1978-79 season.

In April 1986, the Clippers hired Baylor as their vice president for basketball operations. The Clippers made the playoffs in 1992 and 1993, but the franchise became the modern model of sports ineptitude for most of his tenure with poor drafting, indifferent fans and skinflint financial dealings.

Sterling largely was blamed for the franchise’s ineptitude, while Baylor received both admiration for his tenacity and ricidule for his inability to fix the Clippers’ woes.

Their 22-year relationship ended abruptly in October 2008 when the club put coach Mike Dunleavy in charge of personnel decisions.

Baylor, then 74, filed a $2 million lawsuit against the Clippers, Sterling and the NBA in February 2009, alleging he was fired because of his age and race. Baylor also said the Clippers grossly underpaid him.

The Clippers denied the allegations and said Baylor had resigned voluntarily. A Los Angeles County jury unanimously ruled in the Clippers’ favor in March 2011, refusing to award any damages.

Besides his wife and daughter, Baylor is survived by a son and daughter, Alan and Alison, from a previous marriage, and sister Gladys Baylor Barrett.

Friday, March 12, 2021

2020-2021 NCAA Basketball

3/12/21 - Kansas, Virginia withdraw from conference tournaments due to COVID
3/11/21 - Duke withdraws from ACC tournament due to positive COVID case, ending season
1/4/21 - Entire NCAA tournament to be held in Indianapolis

Saturday, March 06, 2021

Memories of 70's baseball

The affection engulfs Clint Hurdle's voice as he appraises the list of those recently gone — childhood idols who became teammates and opponents, teammates and opponents who became acquaintances, acquaintances who became dear friends.

The 1970s memories surface fast for the man who has spent his entire adult life in baseball, as player and manager. Bob Watson, whom he first met while serving as a batboy for the Class A Cocoa Astros. Claudell Washington: "We used to just laugh." Bob Gibson, as nice off the field as he was menacing on it. Lindy McDaniel's big windup. The distinctive way Joe Morgan pumped his elbow at bat: "I watched him as a kid. I used to try to re-create the chicken wing for hitting."

All are members of a list disquieting in its length — those from the ranks of 1970s baseball rosters who have died in the past year alone.

The list: Perhaps it's no longer than any other list of those who were dying at other moments in baseball's history. But against the past year's backdrop — of pandemic-inflected grief, of baseball withering and coming back smaller, of a truncated season and crowdless stands — it feels unremitting. Just part of it:

Watson.
Gibson.
Morgan.
Al Kaline.
Lou Brock.
Don Sutton.
Hank Aaron.
Dick Allen.
Jay Johnstone.
Phil Niekro.
Tom Seaver.
Biff Pocoroba.
Billy Conigliaro.

Tommy Lasorda. And now, three weeks ago, from COVID-19 complications: Grant Jackson, who won the final Major League Baseball game of the decade as the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates took the World Series.

Theirs were the names etched on the Topps cards. The names that crackled from plastic, fruit-colored transistor radios. The names that shouted from the pages of Baseball Digest and hometown newspapers at a moment in the game's history that can seem like yesterday but, propelled by the past year's losses, is starting its inexorable fade.

"Every one of these guys, there's a memory," said Hurdle, now 63. "We all learn lessons different ways. And the one I keep learning — it seems like every week now — is take nothing for granted."

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Sunday, February 14, 2021

Ige says Aloha Stadium still safe and usable

2/14/21 - Aloha Stadium: a selection of bad options (editorial)
2/14/21 - Explaining Ige's decision (Richard Borreca)
2/12/21 - University of Hawaii unlikely to play in Aloha Stadium this season
2/12/21 - Aloha Stadium is seeking budgetary assistance to stay open in July
2/10/21 - What now for Aloha Stadium? (Ferd Lewis)

***

[2/9/21] Gov. David Ige questioned the wisdom of spending $350 million for a successor to Aloha Stadium and suggested the state invest further in the repair and maintenance of the deteriorating facility to keep it “usable for the University (of Hawaii) for many, many years to come.”

The comments on Monday, during a wide-ranging interview on the Honolulu Star-Advertiser’s Spotlight Hawaii, quickly stunned some legislators and proponents of the New Aloha Stadium Entertainment District.

“His announcement caught me by surprise and caught many advocates by surprise, and I question the wisdom of saying that we should pour any more money into keeping a 46-year-old rusting stadium alive for much longer,” said Sen. Glenn Wakai (D, Pearl Harbor-Kalihi), in whose district the stadium sits.

“We should really be done with that and put all of our valuable resources into something better for the public. His decision is taking us backward, not taking us forward,” Wakai said.

Ige said, “I’ve really been supportive that we ought to make the investments in repair and maintenance on Aloha Stadium. I’ve been to events there. I think we made significant investments to improve the current structure. I believe it is safe…”

Ige added, “There are a lot of things that we could do within the existing facility that would make it usable for the university for many, many years to come. And that would, in the overall scheme of things, cost us less in construction funds than we are currently talking about. The biggest challenge right now is that a replacement stadium would cost $350 million or more. And that’s really hard to take away from public schools and university needs, not to mention our health care and health needs that we have here in the state. That’s the biggest challenge. The current stadium is still safe and usable and we ought to be maximizing the use of it.”

Ige’s comments came as UH is gearing up to spend an estimated $6 million to retrofit the Clarence T. C. Ching Athletic Complex for use as an on-campus home for the football team for several years beginning with the 2021 season. The Aloha Stadium Authority announced in December that its facility would not be available.

Friday, January 22, 2021

Hank Aaron

Hank Aaron, who faced down racism as he eclipsed Babe Ruth as baseball’s home run king, hitting 755 homers and holding the most celebrated record in sports for more than 30 years, has died. He was 86.

The Atlanta Braves, his team for many years, confirmed the death on Friday in a message from its chairman, Terry McGuirk. No other details were provided.

[photo] Hank Aaron was among the greatest all-around players in baseball history, earning his home run record in the face of hate mail and even death threats.Credit...Mark Rucker/Transcendental Graphics, via Getty Images By Richard Goldstein

Playing for 23 seasons, all but his final two years with the Braves in Milwaukee and then Atlanta, Aaron was among the greatest all-around players in baseball history and one of the last major league stars to have played in the Negro leagues.

But his pursuit of Ruth’s record of 714 home runs proved a deeply troubling affair beyond the pressures of the ball field. When he hit his 715th home run, on the evening of April 8, 1974, against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, he prevailed in the face of hate mail and even death threats spewing outrage that a Black man could supplant a white baseball icon.

Aaron was routinely brilliant, performing with seemingly effortless grace, but he had little flash, notwithstanding his nickname in the sports pages, Hammerin’ Hank. He long felt that he had not been accorded the recognition he deserved.

He played for teams far beyond the news media centers of New York and the West Coast, and his Braves won only two pennants and a single World Series championship, those coming long before he approached Ruth’s record.

Aaron did not enjoy the idolatry accorded the Yankees’ Mickey Mantle or match the exuberance and electric presence of the Giants’ Willie Mays, his outfield contemporaries and rivals for acclamation as the greatest ballplayer in major league history.

But when he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1982, his first year of eligibility, Aaron received 97.8 percent of the vote from baseball writers, second at the time only to Ty Cobb, who was inducted in 1936.

Aaron grew up in Alabama amid rigid segregation and its humiliations, and he faced abuse from the stands while playing in the South as a minor leaguer. Years later, he felt that Braves fans were largely indifferent or hostile to him as he chased Ruth’s record. And the baseball commissioner at the time, Bowie Kuhn, was not present when he hit his historic 715th home run.

All that, and especially the hate mail that besieged him, seared Aaron for years to come.

As the 20th anniversary of his home run feat approached in the early 1990s, he told the sports columnist William C. Rhoden of The New York Times, “April 8, 1974, really led up to turning me off on baseball.”

“It really made me see for the first time a clear picture of what this country is about,” he said. “My kids had to live like they were in prison because of kidnap threats, and I had to live like a pig in a slaughter camp. I had to duck. I had to go out the back door of the ball parks. I had to have a police escort with me all the time. I was getting threatening letters every single day. All of these things have put a bad taste in my mouth, and it won’t go away. They carved a piece of my heart away.”

Aaron’s achievements went well beyond his home run prowess. In fact, he never hit as many as 50 homers in a single season.

He was a two-time National League batting champion and had a career batting average of .305. He was the league’s most valuable player in 1957, when the Milwaukee Braves won their only World Series championship. He was voted an All-Star in all but his first and last seasons, and he won three Gold Glove awards for his play in right field.

Aaron combined with the Hall of Fame third baseman Eddie Mathews for 863 home runs during their 13 years together on the Braves, the most ever for two teammates.

Aaron remains No. 1 in the major leagues in total bases (6,856) and runs batted in (2,297); No. 2 in at-bats (12,364), behind Pete Rose; and No. 3 in hits (3,771), behind Rose and Cobb.  He won the National League’s single-season home run title four times, though his highest total was only 47, in 1971. Matching his jersey number, he hit exactly 44 home runs in four different seasons.

[Image] On April 4, 1974, Aaron hit his 714th home run, tying Ruth’s record, during a game against the Cincinnati Reds before a sellout crowd of 52,154 at Riverfront Stadium.  Credit...Associated Press

At six feet tall and 180 pounds, Aaron was hardly the picture of a slugger, but he had thick, powerful wrists, enabling him to whip the bat out of his right-handed stance with uncommon speed.

“He had great forearms and wrists,” Lew Burdette, the outstanding Braves pitcher, recalled in Danny Peary’s oral history “We Played the Game” (1994). “He could be fooled completely and be way out on his front foot, and the bat would still be back, and he’d just roll his wrists and hit the ball out of the ballpark.”

Aaron was quick on the bases and in the outfield.

“There aren’t five men faster in baseball, and no better base runner,” Bobby Bragan, Aaron’s manager in the mid-1960s, told Sports Illustrated. “If you need a base, he’ll steal it quietly. If you need a shoestring catch, he’ll make it, and his hat won’t fly off and he won’t fall on his butt. He does it like DiMaggio.”

Aaron was a keen student of pitching and kept himself in excellent shape.

“I concentrated on the pitchers,” he said in his memoir, “I Had a Hammer” (1991, with Lonnie Wheeler). “I didn’t stay up nights worrying about my weight distribution, or the location of my hands, or the turn of my hips: I stayed up thinking about the pitcher I was going to face the next day. I used to play every pitcher in my mind before I went to the ballpark.”

Dusty Baker, later a longtime manager, was mentored by Aaron when he was a young player with the Braves.

“Nobody had concentration like he did, sitting there in the dugout, looking at the pitcher through the little hole in his cap to focus on the release point,” Baker once said. “Never saw anyone do that before Hank.”

Baker said Aaron had been hampered by sciatic nerve problems but had the ability to “think away the pain and to condition himself like no other baseball player of his time.”

The San Francisco Giants’ Barry Bonds surpassed Aaron’s home run record in August 2007 and went on to hit 762 homers. But many inside baseball and out considered Bonds’s achievement to be tainted by suspicions that he had used performance-enhancing drugs in what came to be known as baseball’s steroid era, when bulked-up players achieved stunning feats of slugging.

Aaron did not speak out on steroid use, but he declined to follow Bonds around the league to witness his 756th home run. When it came in San Francisco against the Washington Nationals, Aaron limited himself to a message on the stadium’s video board: “My hope today, as it was on that April evening in 1974, is that the achievement of this record will inspire others to chase their own dreams.”

[photo] Aaron began the 1952 season with the Negro leagues’ Indianapolis Clowns, but he was signed in June by the Braves, who were in their last season in Boston. Credit...Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, Inc.

A Path Away From Poverty

Henry Louis Aaron was born on Feb. 5, 1934, in Mobile, Ala., one of eight children of Herbert and Estella (Pritchett) Aaron. His father worked in shipyards. His mother joined with her husband in overseeing a close-knit family. She encouraged Henry (he never liked being called Hank, as he would customarily be known on the sports pages) to consider going to college.

In March 1948, a year after Jackie Robinson broke the modern major league color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers, Robinson was in Mobile for a spring training game. Henry Aaron was in the crowd of Black youngsters who had gathered in town to hear Robinson tell them of the possibilities that would be opening to Black people.

Robinson spoke of the need to strive for a good education. But Henry, only 14 but already a talented sandlot ballplayer, cared little for his high school studies. He idolized Robinson and envisioned professional baseball as the road to escaping poverty and segregation.

While a teenager, he played alongside men many years his senior as a shortstop for the semipro Mobile Black Bears. (Mobile over the years was a breeding ground for top baseball talent, producing Satchel Paige and later the Hall of Famers Billy Williams and Willie McCovey.) He was then signed by the Negro leagues’ Indianapolis Clowns, a barnstorming team that combined entertainment with baseball, much like basketball’s Harlem Globetrotters.

After beginning the 1952 season with the Clowns, Aaron was signed in June by the Braves, who were in their last season in Boston. They assigned him to play for their farm team in Eau Claire, Wis., and he was named the Northern League’s rookie of the year that season.

He was promoted in 1953 to play second base for the Jacksonville, Fla., team of the South Atlantic League, or the Sally League, becoming one of the circuit’s first five Black players.

Now he was back in the Old South.

“The whites used to yell from the stands and call us alligator bait,” Felix Mantilla, an infielder from Puerto Rico who roomed with Aaron at Jacksonville and later joined him in Milwaukee, told Howard Bryant in “The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron” (2010).  “Jacksonville wasn’t so bad. But places like Columbus and Macon, those places were wicked.”

Aaron led the Sally League in hitting and was voted its most valuable player. But he was a poor infielder, so he learned to play the outfield in Puerto Rican winter ball and in 1954 earned a trip to spring training with the Braves, who were in their second season in Milwaukee.

Historic Career Begins

When outfielder Bobby Thomson, newly acquired from the New York Giants (less than three years after his celebrated pennant-winning homer at the Polo Grounds), broke an ankle during the exhibition season, Aaron took his place.

He hit his first major league home run on April 23, at Sportsman’s Park in St. Louis, off the Cardinals’ Vic Raschi, the former Yankee standout. Thomson returned in July, but Aaron remained a regular until he, too, broke an ankle early in September. He finished with 13 home runs and a .280 batting average.

Aaron emerged as a star in 1955, hitting .314, and he won his first batting title the following season, batting .328. When he was voted the National League’s Most Valuable Player in 1957, he came close to capturing the batting triple crown, leading the league in home runs (44) and runs batted in (132) and finishing in a tie for third place in hitting with a .322 average.

[photo] In 1957, Warren Giles, the president of the National League, presented Aaron with the award for winning the league’s batting title in 1956. Credit...Associated Press

The Braves won their first pennant in Milwaukee in 1957, clinching it with Aaron’s 11th-inning home run against the Cardinals on Sept. 23.

In the World Series, Aaron hit .393 with three home runs as the Braves defeated the Yankees in seven games. Milwaukee won the pennant again in 1958, this time losing to the Yankees in a seven-game World Series.

Aaron had his only three-homer game on June 21, 1959, at the San Francisco Giants’ Seals Stadium, their home before moving to Candlestick Park. He won his second batting title that season, hitting .355, but the Braves lost a pennant playoff to the Dodgers.

Aaron’s younger brother Tommie joined the Braves in 1962, playing regularly as a first baseman and outfielder, and on June 12, the brothers hit home runs in the same game, against the Dodgers. On Aug. 20, 1965, Aaron and Mathews became the No. 1 home run tandem in major league history, surpassing the mark of 722 homers hit by Ruth and Lou Gehrig with the Yankees.

With the Braves no longer pennant contenders and attendance declining, they moved to Atlanta in 1966. But they returned to the top of the standings in 1969, capturing the National League West after a divisional alignment and the playoff system had been put into place.

In the first National League Championship Series, Aaron hit three home runs, but the Braves were swept in three games in the year of the Miracle Mets.

Aaron became the ninth player to achieve the 3,000-hit milestone when he singled against the Reds at Crosley Field in Cincinnati on May 17, 1970. In February 1972, he became the highest-paid player in baseball history, signing a three-year, $600,000 deal (about $3.7 million in today’s money).

When he won the home run title in 1957 with 44, Aaron was slashing line drives all over the park, almost half of them having been opposite-field homers, to right field. But by the early 1970s he was pulling the ball more. He hit 34 home runs in the strike-shortened 1972 season.

A Record Nears

As Aaron chased Ruth’s record in 1973, he finally emerged as a national figure. He appeared on the covers of Time and Newsweek and was sought out for television and newspaper interviews.

Charles Schulz, whose “Peanuts” comic strip had become a staple of national popular culture, turned his attention to Aaron in August 1973 with drawings that ridiculed the bigots besieging him.

Aaron received some 930,000 pieces of fan mail, but among the good wishes were numerous racist letters. Some contained threats, and those were turned over to the F.B.I. The Braves hired two Atlanta police officers to sit in the stands while off duty, overlooking Aaron in the outfield, in the event of trouble.

Aaron was 39 years old that season and appeared in only 120 games. After he hit his 700th home run on July 21 off the Philadelphia Phillies’ Ken Brett in Atlanta, he said he was “kind of disappointed” over the failure of Commissioner Kuhn to convey congratulations. Kuhn responded by saying he was one of Aaron’s biggest rooters, and he promised to lead the celebration when he hit Nos. 714 and 715.

Aaron hit 40 home runs in the 1973 season, leaving him one shy of Ruth’s record, with 713.

Image As Aaron chased Ruth’s record in 1973, he finally emerged as a national figure. He appeared on “The Flip Wilson Show” in October of that year.  Credit...United Press International

The off-season was filled with anticipation, and it also held commercial opportunities. Though Aaron had received few promotional offers in his career, the television manufacturer Magnavox signed him in January 1974 to a five-year, $1 million contract in anticipation of his breaking Ruth’s record.

But there were troubles anew as spring training loomed. The Braves’ ownership said it intended to keep Aaron out of the team’s three-game season-opening series in Cincinnati so that he would have a chance to tie and break Ruth’s record when the team returned for its opening homestand, a presumed box-office bonanza.

Aaron seemed amenable enough. “The people of Atlanta are the people I have to please,” he said at a sports dinner. “I believe I owe it to them.”

But Kuhn told the Braves that he expected them to play Aaron in at least two of the three games in Cincinnati, citing the integrity of the game.

Aaron was in the lineup when the Braves opened against the Reds on Thursday afternoon, April 4, before a sellout crowd of 52,154 at Riverfront Stadium. He came to the plate in the first inning with two men on base and one out, facing Jack Billingham, a 19-game winner the previous season. Aaron let the first four pitches go by, the count reaching 3 and 1, and then Billingham delivered a sinker that headed toward the outside part of the plate but tailed in. Aaron lashed a rising liner that cleared the 12-foot-high wall slightly to the left of the 375-foot sign in left-center field.

No. 714 flashed on the scoreboard above the upper deck in center field as a Cincinnati police officer caught the baseball on the first bounce after it had fallen into the gap between the outfield fence and a high wall fronting the stands. Aaron trotted around the bases, his head held high, his elbows back.

Image  Bowie Kuhn, the baseball commissioner, presented Aaron with a trophy on the field in Cincinnati after his 714th home run.  Credit...Bob Johnson/Associated Press

He received a standing ovation as his teammates swarmed out of their dugout to greet him. Moments later, Kuhn and Vice President Gerald R. Ford, who had thrown out the first ball, went onto the field to congratulate him. A member of the Reds’ grounds crew retrieved the baseball from the police officer, and it was presented to Aaron.

Later in the game, Aaron was retired twice and walked. He was not in the starting lineup for the second game in Cincinnati but played in the third game after Kuhn threatened penalties against the Braves if he were held out again. Aaron went homerless in that game in any case, remaining tied with Ruth.

The Braves opened their home schedule the following Monday night against the Los Angeles Dodgers, before a record home crowd of 53,775. In the fourth inning, with a misty rain falling and nobody on base, Aaron strode to the plate, facing the left-hander Al Downing. Ball one.

Next came a fastball down the middle, and Aaron connected. He drove the ball 400 feet over the left-center field fence for home run No. 715.

Image  Aaron watched the flight of the ball on his 715th home run. He broke a record that had stood since Ruth hit his last major league home run in 1935.  Credit...Harry Harris/Associated Press

The fans erupted with an 11-minute ovation, and Tom House, a reliever for the Braves, returned the ball from the Atlanta bullpen.

The veteran Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully waited while the roars resounded, and then he spoke to the history of the moment, on the diamond and beyond it.

“What a marvelous moment for baseball,” he said. “What a marvelous moment for Atlanta and the state of Georgia. What a marvelous moment for the country and the world. A Black man is getting a standing ovation in the Deep South for breaking a record of an all-time baseball idol.”

Aaron’s parents came onto the field, and there were hugs all around. Aaron was finally receiving the adulation that he had long felt his due. In addition to the Magnavox deal, there were some 230 “Atlanta Salutes Hank Aaron” billboards posted around the city, with corporate sponsorship.

Image  Aaron held aloft his 715th home run ball after Tom House, a reliever for the Braves, had returned it to him from the Atlanta bullpen.  Credit...Associated Press

But when Aaron hit homer No. 715, Kuhn was not present. The commissioner was in Cleveland, speaking to an Indians booster organization. He sent Monte Irvin, an official in his office and one of baseball’s first outstanding African-American players, with the New York Giants, to represent him. Aaron viewed it as a snub, and he did not forget it.

In mid-June, when the Braves played the Mets in their first series of the season at Shea Stadium, Aaron was presented with New York City’s Gold Medal, its highest award, by Mayor Abraham D. Beame in a ceremony outside City Hall. He toured Harlem in a motorcade and spoke to 5,000 young people at Marcus Garvey Park.

But there were discordant notes as well. When Mathews, his slugging teammate, was fired as manager just before the 1974 All-Star Game, Aaron said he felt “a little bit insulted” at not being offered the opportunity to become major league baseball’s first Black manager.

The post went instead to Clyde King, a veteran baseball man. The following season, Frank Robinson, who died in 2019, became the first Black manager, with the Indians.

Back to Milwaukee

Aaron had little interest in continuing to play for the Braves after the 1974 season. He felt that notwithstanding Atlanta’s reputation as a progressive representative of the New South, he had received only tepid backing from the fans as he neared Ruth’s record. And he heard racial abuse from some fans that reminded him of his minor league days in the Sally League.

“I didn’t expect the fans to give me a standing ovation every time I stepped on the field, but I thought a few of them might come over to my side as I approached Ruth,” Aaron said in his memoir. “At the very least, I felt I had earned the right not be verbally abused and racially ravaged in my home ballpark.”

The modern civil rights movement made historic gains during Aaron’s career, but he knew that the road to equal treatment remained long.

“Any Black who thinks the same thing can’t happen today is sadly mistaken,” he told The Times in 1994. “It happens now with people in three-piece suits instead of with hoods on.”

Early on in his career, Black players were barred from hotels where white teammates stayed during spring training in Florida. Aaron joined with Bill Bruton, the Braves’ African-American center fielder, in pressing management for change, with no immediate success. Although Aaron wasn’t vocal on the larger civil rights scene, he became interested in the writings of James Baldwin, decrying patience in the face of racism.

Aaron contributed a chapter to “Baseball Has Done It,” Jackie Robinson’s 1964 collection of first-person accounts from baseball figures telling of their battles against racism.

“I’ve read some newspapermen saying I was just a dumb kid from the South with no education and all I knew was to go out there and hit,” Aaron wrote. “Baseball has done a lot for me, given me an education in meeting other kinds of people,” he continued. But he added pointedly, “It has taught me that regardless of who you are and how much money you make, you are still a Negro.”

Following his record-breaking 1974 season, Aaron was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers of the American League. He signed a two-year contract at $240,000 a season that enabled him to close out his major league career in the city where it began. In those two years, he hit 22 home runs, his 755th and final one coming on July 20, 1976, against Dick Drago of the California Angels.

That same year, Aaron was named the Braves’ vice president in charge of player development, overseeing their farm system. He held that post until 1989. He was later a senior vice president of the Braves and worked on behalf of the Hank Aaron Chasing the Dream Foundation, which helped gifted children develop their talent. His business interests included auto dealerships and fast-food restaurants.

The Atlanta Braves retired Aaron’s No. 44 in April 1977 and unveiled a statue, depicting him swinging, at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium in 1982. They moved it to their second home, Turner Field, in 1997. The address of that facility, now known as Georgia State Stadium, is 755 Hank Aaron Drive.

A new statue that captures the moment of impact between bat and ball on Aaron’s 715th home run was created by the Atlanta-based artist Ross Rossin for SunTrust Park (now Truist Park), to which the Braves moved for the 2017 season.

Accolades in Later Years

On the 25th anniversary of Aaron’s 715th home run, Major League Baseball created the Hank Aaron Award, given annually to the players with the best overall offensive performances in each league.

Aaron received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award, from President George W. Bush in 2002. The citation said he “embodies the true spirit of our nation.” The Baseball Hall of Fame opened a permanent exhibit in 2009 chronicling Aaron’s life. His childhood home was moved on a flatbed truck to the grounds of Hank Aaron Stadium, which was the home of the Mobile BayBears, a former minor league team, and opened as a museum in 2010.

Aaron is the 10th Baseball Hall of Famer to die since last April, and the third this year alone. The longtime Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda and the pitcher Don Sutton both died this month.

Image  Aaron and his wife, Billye, at a ceremony celebrating the 40th anniversary of his 715th home run before the start of a game between the Braves and the Mets in Atlanta on April 8, 2014. Credit...David Goldman/Associated Press

Aaron’s survivors include his wife, Billye; two sons, Lary and Henry Jr., and two daughters, Dorinda and Gaile, all of whom he had with his first wife, Barbara (the marriage ended in divorce); and his daughter Ceci, from Billye Aaron’s first marriage. His brother Tommie, who played intermittently for the Braves for six seasons after his rookie year as a regular, died of leukemia in 1984 at age 45.

When Aaron celebrated his 80th birthday in February 2014, Billye Aaron and the baseball commissioner at the time, Bud Selig, hosted a party at the Hay-Adams hotel in Washington, where President Barack Obama and his family lived for two weeks before his first inauguration.

“There’s a young man who lives right over there whose life’s path was made easier by Henry Aaron,” Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. said as he glanced at the White House across the street, Sports Illustrated reported.

The Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery unveiled an oil painting of Aaron by Mr. Rossin to mark the occasion.

The Braves honored Aaron at their home opener on April 8, 2014, the 40th anniversary of his breaking Ruth’s record. Though weak from a partial hip replacement after a fall, he spoke briefly. The number 715 had been mowed into the outfield grass, where 715 fans held baseball-shaped signs, each with a number and a date signifying every one of those home runs.

Aaron, Mays, Sandy Koufax and Johnny Bench were selected by fan balloting as the four greatest living players in a promotion leading up to the 2015 All-Star Game at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. They were introduced on the field before the first pitch.

Unique Among His Peers

For virtually all his major league career, Aaron competed against Willie Mays.

“It’s just not my way to be flashy or flamboyant the way, say, Willie is,” Aaron said in a 1970 interview with Sport magazine. “I have my own even rhythm, and I guess it just doesn’t attract the kind of attention that a more colorful style does.”

Both were raised in Alabama (Mays in Westfield and then Fairfield, about 225 miles north of Mobile), and they both played in the Negro leagues. But there was a perception of frostiness between them. When they were interviewed together by Bob Costas in 2008 for his HBO program “Costas Now,” they played down any antagonism. Aaron said there had been “competition” but “no resentment, no animosity.”

Aaron crossed baseball paths with Mickey Mantle in two World Series and in All-Star Games.

“If they had a choice of who they wanted to break Babe Ruth’s record, it would have been Mickey Mantle first,” he once said. “Mickey was like Marilyn Monroe. He didn’t have to be the greatest ballplayer. He had that charisma. The Yankees had won all those pennants.”

When he was inducted into the Hall of Fame, Aaron felt he had finally been accorded the respect he deserved. But he did not slight the Babe.

“It was always this player and that player and then Henry Aaron, but now I think I’m appreciated,” Aaron said. As for Ruth’s devotees: “I never wanted them to forget Babe Ruth. I just wanted them to remember Henry Aaron.”

Monday, January 11, 2021

NFL 2020

1/11/21 - Eagles fire Doug Pederson three seasons after winning Super Bowl
1/7/21 - Chan Gailey resigns as Miami offensive coordinator
1/4/21 - Jacksonville fires Doug Marrone after 1-15 season
1/4/21 - Chargers fire Anthony Lynn after four seasons
1/4/21 - Jets fire Adam Gase after two seasons
10/26/20 - NFL fines Titans for COVID-19 violations
10/11/20 - Atlanta fires Dan Quinn and GM Thomas Dimitroff
10/6/20 - Houston fires Bill O'Brien
9/13/20 - NFL displays their stance on social injustice
9/5/20 - Deshaun Watson agrees to 4 year $160 million contract exension
8/17/20 - Washington hires Jason Wright as NFL's first black team president
7/29/20 - Joey Bosa signs 5 year $135 million extension
7/23/20 - Washington to be called Washington Football Team
7/22/20 - NFL cancels preseason games
7/7/20 - Mahomes signs 10-year contract extension worth a record $503 million
6/28/20 - New England signs Cam Newton for the minimum
5/22/20 - Flacco signing with Jets
5/2/20 - Andy Dalton agrees to sign with Dallas
4/30/20 - Bengals releasing Andy Dalton
4/26/20 - Jameis Winston to sign with Saints
4/21/20 - New England to trade Gronkowski to Tampa Bay for fourth round pick
4/8/20 - Tom Brady interview with Howard Stern
3/24/20 - Carolina releases Cam Newton after getting no trade takers
3/20/20 - Todd Gurley signs with Atlanta
3/19/20 - Rams release Todd Gurley [exiting with at least 34.5 million for two years]
3/17/20 - Tom Brady reportedly will sign with Tampa Bay for $30 million per season
3/17/20 - Philip Rivers signs with Colts for one year, $25 million
3/17/20 - Carolina will sign Teddy Bridewater for three years, $63 million to replace Cam Newton
3/17/20 - Tom Brady won't return to Patriots
3/17/20 - Drew Brees to stay with Saints for $50 million, two years
3/16/20 - DeForest Buckner traded from San Francisco to Buffalo for first round pick (13th overall)
3/16/20 - Marcus Mariota headed to the Las Vegas Raiders
3/16/20 - Houston trades DeAndre Hopkins to Arizona for David Johnson and second-round pick in 2020 and fourth-round pick in 2021.
3/16/20 - Amari Cooper staying in Dallas for five years, $100 million
3/16/20 - Stefon Diggs (and a seventh round pick) traded from Minnesota to Buffalo for first-round, fifth-round, sixth-round pick, plus fourth-round pick in 2021.
1/22/20 - Eli Manning announces retirement
1/17/20 - Giants hire Jason Garrett as offensive coordinator
1/14/20 - Luke Kuechly retires at 28
1/12/20 - Cleveland hires Minnesota offensive coordinator Kevin Stefanski as head coach
1/7/20 - Giants to hire Patriots wide receiver coach Joe Judge as next head coach
1/7/20 - Carolina to hire Baylor's Matt Ruhl as new head coach
1/6/20 - Cowboys to hire Mike McCarthy to replace Jason Garrett
1/2/20 - Redskins hire Ron Rivera as new head coach, Jack Del Rio as defensive coordinator
12/29/19 - Cleveland fires Freddie Kitchens after one season