Monday, May 14, 2012

They aren't all winners, but this one's OK

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A kind reader posted a comment at the end of a recent blog asking where he could find the column I wrote for newspapers of Nov. 3, 1999. The column, written after the death of the great Walter Payton, was about living life to the fullest because none of us can know when it's our time to go.

I did a quick search and was able to find the column in a couple of paid-archive sites but wasn't able to find it for free. So I scanned the hard copy of the column I had saved and am making it available here. I apologize if the print's a little small. You might need to magnify it in your window.


One might say it was fortuitous that I happened to have in my possession a column that a reader wanted to see nearly 13 years later.

Well, I saved a hard copy of every one of the nearly 2,400 newspaper columns I  wrote over the years. I always wanted to have something to show my kids and my grandkids that represented what the old bald dude did for a living. As it turns out, my bound volumes serve as kind of a history of the most important sports stories from my time in Minneapolis and Chicago. Not sure why, but I think that's cool.

When I was AP's Minnesota sports guy from 1985-94, I used to write a weekly column. My goal was to be a daily newspaper sports columnist, so even if I was in the middle of a 12-hour work day and a 60-hour work week, I made time to write that column. And I knew I'd need examples of my work -- we used to call them "clips" -- to land the kind of gig I wanted.

Every few weeks, usually late some night after having covered a Twins or Vikings or Gophers game, I'd go into the bureau's back room and look through the stacks of newspapers from around the state. I'd find the best presentations of my columns, carefully clip them and then Xerox them. Then I'd punch holes in the page, put them in one of the binders and number them.

One night, my colleague Jimmy Golen -- a young'un then but now an award-winning sportswriter for AP Boston -- saw what I was doing and asked: "Why do you number them?"

I said something like: "I want to know when I match Cy Young with No. 511."

Not missing a beat, Jimmy said: "Hate to break it to you, Mike, but all of Cy Young's 511 were winners."
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5 comments:

  1. Thanks for posting that again. It was most definitely worth the 2nd read. I always read your articles in the Springfield (IL) paper....always...and miss seeing them there. I even wrote you once that I so appreciated the article you wrote around 9/11 and got back a nice thank you from you.

    I think it's wonderful you kept a hard copy of your articles....and Golen's retort to you was awesome. heh

    ~Bev

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  2. I second Bev's comments. Thank you for taking the time to find and post the article. I do not remember this specific one, but I do remember how hard it hit me that Payton was dying. He was a childhood hero of mine. I had a poster of him on my wall growing up. I remember him running up those hills to train for the season... I'd like to take it a step further... I wouldn't mind reading some of your "greatest hits" if you ever feel nostalgic enough to go back through some of your memorable articles (but I'd understand if you would not be interested). Like Bev, I also miss reading them. I faithfully return to your blog due to the impression that you made. This is the only blog I go to. I always looked forward to reading your interpretation of the major sporting events in the Peoria, Champaign, Chicago, St. Louis area. Furthermore, I appreciated your fairness, insights, and sometimes vulnerability (openness). I'm just sorry that it ended the way it did.
    - Sean

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  3. Maybe I should do a "greatest hits" book. Hmmm ... who would by such stuff?

    Thanks Sean and Bev for the many kind words. I don't miss the weasels at GateHouse, but I do miss the many great folks at Copley. And I do miss the craft of writing. The blog is an outlet, but sometimes I don't feel like writing for free, so on those days I don't do it. Anyway, thanks for being loyal readers. It means more to me than you know.

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  4. Have you ever read "Marley and Me"? You buy the book thinking its about the dog, but its really about the author's life. Your writing reminds me of that book. I hope you take that as a compliment. BTW, I would buy your book. :-)

    - Sean

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  5. I've had some crazy experiences -- as a youth, as a husband, as a dad, as a sportswriter, as a homeowner, etc., and have often thought about doing a memoir. But I think my wife might veto it ... or at least censor it!

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