Bob Sproule – Society for Baseball Research (SABR)

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Bob Sproule, Society for Baseball Research (SABR) (July 11,  2011):

First, How did the association and your chapter start?

SABR began as an organization in 1971.  To my knowledge the Pittsburgh Chapter, or Forbes Field Chapter, has been around since the early1990’s.

How did you get interested and involved?

I first joined SABR sometime in the 1980’s.  This was pre-internet days and everything was done via mail.  I had joined primarily to receive the publications that SABR produces.  I never really got involved, and I had other things going on in my life, so I let the memebership lapse.  

I rejoined in 2001, and I can’t really remember why.  By then, though, I had discovered that there was a fairly active Chapter in Pittsburgh.  The Internet also expanded the world of SABR.  My first true involvement came in 2003 when Ed Luteran and I did a presentation at the Pirates FanFest that year on the first World series in 1903 between the Pirates and the Boston Americans (they were not yet the Red Sox!).

Who uses your data and how?

Not sure I can fully answer that.  I know that SABR as a national organization does work with MLB teams in sharing some statistical data.  An arrangement is in place with the Pirates to do so, for example.

There’s occasional pushback by some on the overemphasis of statistics  in baseball. How so you respond to that concern?
 
I suppose that I am old school to the extent that I believe that there is indeed too much emphasis on SABRmetric type stats.  For example, we had a member a few years back present some stats that “proved”  that Ronny Paulino was a better catcher than Jason Kendall.  Really?  

I also think that when SABRmetrics are used as a basis to award a Cy Young Award to Felix Hernandez with 12 wins then I think that the obsession with these stats has run amok.   But that’s just me.

Why do you think statistics hold such an overwhelming appeal for baseball fans, even compared to other sports?
 
I think that stats in baseball are important because they are a way to measure, compare, and argue about players from different eras.  How does Greg Maddux compare to Sandy Koufax to Warren Spahn to Lefty Grove….you get the idea.  

Of course, the steroids era has put a whole new spin on such arguments, but that is a whole other issue.

Any examples of how your statistics  have made a difference with a player or team- especially with the pirates?
 
You only have to be a casual fan to realize that Neal Huntington is a “SABRmetric” guy.   

I think that the Pirates, and all of baseball, are using these newer statistical models in conjunction with older style of scouting methods, if only to get every possible bit of information before them as they comtemplate making decisions that could and often do involve multi-millions of dollars, which the signing of Gerrit Cole will mean.

Any last thoughts for readers?
 
People should realize that SABR is a number of things.  

The image is of a group of stats-freak, baseball nerds who sit in front of computers all day and come up with all of these arcane statistics.  Do some of these people actually watch a ball game?

There is that element to it, of course, but SABR is also, primarily, I believe, a group of baseball fans.  Men and women who love to watch a ballgame, argue about it, compare different eras, and simply enjoy the game and its history.

The Pittsburgh Chapter is primarily comprised of those kinds of fans.  We meet on a formal basis twice a year – in the Spring and the Fall.  We also gather for two informal “hot stove” sessions in the winter and summer.

At our formal meetings, we do have members give presentations on any topic that they may have researched on their own.  Topics have ranged from locating home plate at Exposition Park to the history of Greenlee Field to the 1909 World Series to the Hollywood Stars as a Pirates farm club to…well, you get the idea.  

We also like to try to get guest speakers (Bob Friend, Chuck Tanner, Steve Blass, Dave Littlefield, and Frank Coonelly have been our guests in the past) and visiting authors.

Our informal hot stove sessions are just that – informal.  No agenda, no speakers, no presentations…just people gathering together to have a sandwich and beer or soda to talk baseball.  Our next session is set for Wednesday, August 10 at the SoHo Restaurant in the Springhill Suites across from PNC Park.  Anybody should feel free to stop on down and join us.
 
I would also use this forum to appeal to anyone to join SABR and become a part of the Forbes Field Chapter.

Info on joining can be found at www.sabr.org, or please feel free to drop me a note at rfsmms@verizon.net

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Randy Baumann – WDVE

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Randy Baumann – WDVE Morning Show Interview (March 3, 2011):

First, where can readers find you on the air and online?

They can find me on 102.5 FM www.dve.com @DVERandy and on Facebook

What’s the best thing about your job – and is there anything coming up on your show that fans should watch out for soon?

Best thing about the job has to be working with a tremendous amount of talented people and getting paid to goof off. I think people are really going to dig what DVE has planned for the web. They’re making a concerted effort to be THE site for both expatriate Pittsburghers and those still living here.

Who’s funnier – you or Jim?

Jim. Wait, I thought you asked ‘Who smelled funnier’. Still Jim. But no, really- Jim

Tell readers something about yourself that we’d be surprised to know.

I’m Banksy

Who are the sports journalists and broadcasters that you follow most closely, and why?

Locally Collier leads the way, but I like Molinari, Dejan, Rossi and Bouchette. Nationally, I’m so immersed in the web each day that I usually follow what guys are doing online.

So Peter King, Bill Simmons, Jason Stark, Deadspin guys, whomever is writing on my Fantasy league sites.

A special nod goes out to the Pensblog guys, who provide great satire/coverage of the Penguins. Somebody should really be paying them to do that because, to my knowledge, no other website has ever defined a sense of humor and created a language for an entire fan base. THATS influence.

What teams and players do you follow most closely?

The two local pro teams and the Pirates.

What have been some of the more interesting Pittsburgh sports figures you’ve met and what made them so?

Mario. People stand up straighter when he walks into a room. I’ve seen it. People straighten up like caddies as Lacie Underall walks past them

Which Pittsburgh sports figures that you have encountered had the best senses of humor – and how so?

Brett Keisel has an awesome dry sense of humor. He’ll never be known for it because the beard looms too large, but he should be known for it. Max Talbot and Colby Armstrong together could at times be fall down funny, Steve McKenna was a natural comic, much like Josh Miller, and the entire Pirates front office is hilarious.

Ward on Dancing with the Stars. Thoughts? Is this almost too easy? Are you going to ride him for this and how bad will his teammates do so?

As long as he dances to ‘Renegade’ every time, I’m fine with it.

What’s your funniest/most shocking on-air experience with a Pittsburgh sports figure?

Edgar Snyder hijacking a segment with Myron Cope, where he proceeded to bring up a couple of things that Myron would’ve rather he didn’t. The message on our producers voicemail after that show would’ve been Lee Elia good. I’m glad it got erased.

Any last thoughts for readers?

I think the Pittsburgh Power has a legitimate shot at a division title.

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Aaron Skirboll

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Aaron Skirboll, Author, Pittsburgh Cocaine Seven (July 5,  2011):

First, how did the idea for your book, The Pittsburgh Cocaine Seven, come about?

It was one of those stories that just sort of haunted me for years, in that I knew there was something there, although I originally looked at it in terms of a screenplay.

But either way, after so many years, it was too interesting to pass up— you had a drug dealing parrot, a coked up defense attorney at the biggest drug trial in MLB history, and a Bucco reliever, who once ditched the bullpen and finished a game at his dealer’s pad on the North Side.

The story had a little bit of everything; baseball, FBI investigations, reporters breaking the “big” case, courtroom drama, and drugs.

Are you surprised at how seemingly forgotten the 1985 Pirates drug trials seem to be now?

Yeah, that was another reason I was interested in writing it.

At the time I began this project, the Mitchell Report was coming out and all that stuff was going on, and nobody really remembered anything about the cocaine era, particularly outside of Pittsburgh.

Also, from the feedback I’m receiving, a lot of people born around or after this period really had no idea that this occurred on in baseball.

In your opinion, why did then U.S. Attorney J. Alan Johnson decide not to go after the players, give them immunity, and instead focus solely on the dealers – do you think then MLB commissioner Ueberroth had anything to do with the investigators lack of focus on the players?

In talking with Mr. Johnson and the Assistant U.S. Attorney, James Ross, this was just the standard way the Western District of PA handled such cases.

In order to get to the dealers, you had to get somebody to talk. Faced with the choice of going after the supplier or the user, the Govt. chose the former. In this case the people buying the drugs just happened to be millionaire ballplayers.

This made it hard for the public to accept. The rich get a slap on the wrist and the poor get prison. Pampered athlete versus the bartender. It didn’t sit well. But if it was poor man vs. poor man, the argument was that it would have been handled the same way, somebody was going to get away with something.

The problem the seven arrested men had was not with being arrested so much, they understood that they’d broken the law, it was the fact that the ballplayers were all getting off scot free, across the board, and the dealers thought many of these athletes were doing the same thing, which in many cases amounted to being the middleman in transactions— one guy going to pick up drugs for the rest, which the ballplayers certainly did.

It was interesting that right after this case in ’85, the Justice Dept. issued a statement that said it would be much more stringent in regards to immunity for professional athletes in drug cases moving forward. If this case went down today, who knows how it would have played out. As you see with the Clemens case, it’s almost as if the roles have been reversed with McNamee the one getting immunity.

Do you think Ueberroth and players union head Donald Fehr did enough during and after the trial to help prevent further drug usage in MLB? Why/why not?

Ueberroth surely went for it, he pushed for drug testing, which Fehr, who was just coming into his job as Union Chief at the time, wholeheartedly opposed.

It’s hard to say how Fehr’s stance on testing was beneficial to his players, beyond the right to privacy stance adopted at the time. Believe it or not, there was an incredible push for testing in baseball at the time of these trials in Pittsburgh, to some it was almost a foregone conclusion. But Fehr and Co. put a stop to such talk.

It’s interesting that right before Fehr and after Marvin Miller, a guy named Kenneth Moffett was head of the union, and it was said that he was very keen on working out a deal with the owners on the drug problem. Moffett was fired by the players after serving less than a year.

How hard was it to research this subject – did you find many of those involved willing to speak on the subject?

It was tough, but something I enjoyed.

Most of the dealers were more than happy to talk, sort of like “what took you so long, this a story that needs to be told.” Of course many of the people I spoke with also thought their part of the story should have been the sole basis of the book.

Those who investigated this case; FBI agents, U.S. Attorneys were great in describing their roles. As for the players, many were extremely forthcoming, particularly Dave Parker and Lonnie Smith. In fact, it was with the former players who were reported to have not been mixed up with drugs who were tougher to get to talk.

The ones who were accused, sort of took the position, “Yeah, I partied, it was the eighties, for christ’s sake.” But with the so-called “clean” players, a lot of them didn’t want to have anything to do with talking about cocaine.

How has the trial affected the Pirates players involved in terms of their careers and personal lives- short and long term? Did you have the opportunity to speak to any of them before or after the book was written?

The two Pirates players who I think were most affected by the trial and/or cocaine use in general were Rod Scurry and Dave Parker. Scurry, of course, battled addiction, every day he was in the league, basically since the day he became a professional ballplayer to the day he died because of drugs.

I talked extensively with his brother, and he spoke of a guy who’d barely even touched a beer prior to signing with the Bucs as a teenager a week out of high school. Scurry’s story really highlights what was going on in the league in the seventies and early-eighties, how once you get passed everything else, these were just twenty-something year old kids, sometimes younger, thrust into an environment with greenies and cocaine.

Some managed to stay clean, many didn’t? Parker, meanwhile, was the best player in the game at the end of the seventies and this past year was his final year of eligibility to get into the hall. He has a pretty good idea why he wasn’t inducted.

So many fans then seemed to be unfaltering on their support of the Pirates players involved. Why do you suppose that was?

Some were, many weren’t. You had the line of thinking with many fans, when this all came out, that “there’s no way I’m going to pay for some guys drug habit.” Attendance was sparse. Of course it didn’t help that the team was pretty awful.

In your research, did race play much of a part in the investigation’s direction or in the reaction by fans and media?

Not really.

What was the most startling fact to you that you uncovered as you researched the book?

I was amazed at just how prevalent cocaine and amphetamine use was in the league— the stories of guys sleeping in the dugout and bullpen during games, and of course, about Tim Raines sliding headfirst  so he wouldn’t bust his coke vial he carried in his back pocket.

But overall, just the fact at how close they were to addressing the drug problem more than twenty-five years ago, with all the same tests the players now go through. Sure, initially the testing would have been for drugs of abuse, but with steroids coming into the league, according to trainers, as early as 1987, it would have been much easier to tweak the system to include different drugs, as happens today, as opposed to getting the union to agree to test at all.

That was where the battle was, not what’s being tested, simply being tested.

While the focus was on the Pirates players, was there any evidence that this trial was endemic of drug usage throughout baseball?

Absolutely, investigators said this could have happened in any city in the league.

Do you have plans for further books on baseball?

I’ve just narrowed the choice for my next book down to three a few days ago. One of them is on baseball. It’s a little nerve-racking to pull that trigger and know that you’re going to be tied down to that particular subject for the next two or three years, so I’m trying to make sure it’s something that’s going to hold my interest like this one did.

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Wilfred Santiago

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Wilfred Santiago, Author, “21” (August 30,  2011):

Tell us about your work and what attracted you at the start to a graphic novel format?  

21 is a graphic novel biography of Roberto Clemente.  To tell the story of the baseball legend and humanitarian is to also tell the story of Puerto Rico and Pittsburgh.  The graphic novel medium gives me the flexibility and range to tell all of these stories and to appeal to a wide audience.  

Where can readers find your catalog of your  work?  

Readers can go to my website, www.wilfredsantiago.com, for a catalog of work.

Why did you choose Clemente as a subject for a graphic novel?  

There were a few people that I considered as potential subjects before narrowing it down to Clemente.  

As a subject, he has a compelling story, and he means so much to people whether they grew up on the island or whether they saw him play in Pittsburgh.  No where was this more evident than on a recent trip to Pittsburgh when it became clear that Clemente was still alive for many people.  

I also enjoyed baseball as a kid and thought it would be fun to capture the action of the game.

How does graphic novel format change the approach to telling a story like this?  

The format allowed me to really open up the story so that Clemente’s World Series triumph was also the story of Pittsburgh’s triumph of the underdog, Clemente’s upbringing was also the story of the complex interplay between religion, race, and politics that is Puerto Rican culture.

How long does it normally take you from concept to finished product?  

For this particular project, it took around 6 years.

How long does it take you to work on a graphic novel and did this one take longer?  

The length of time varies.  21 did take a little longer because it was important to get the details right.  As any baseball fan will tell you, the sport is about the nuances, the stats, the details.  In addition to the wider audience, it was important to me that baseball fans enjoyed this book.

What surprised you most in your research of Clemente?  

That most of the things people associated with him as a legend turned out to be true to life.  

What were some of the major issues you attempted to address in the novel and why?  

Through Clemente’s experiences, we can also see the relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States.  The complexity of this relationship needed to be addressed because the challenges that Clemente faced off the field were an important part of his story, from institutionalized racism to learning English, to the politics of statehood.

What is your impression of how Clemente  was received during his playing days in Pittsburgh and how has that changed now?  

During his time in Pittsburgh, it seemed like Clemente had a close relationship to his fans and to the people of Pittsburgh, and that despite what the critics or press might say, for him, it was really about the people, the fans who went to see him, the kindness of people like the Garlands whom he lived with for a period of time, and the kids.  

And so, that is what people in Pittsburgh remember of him, in addition to the wicked arm, and why he is beloved.

Have you gotten any feedback or worked with the Clemente family or MLB on the novel?  

21 received positive feedback and was well received by the Clemente family which was very important to me.

There’s talk of a Clemente movie. What are your thoughts on how they should approach this?  

A successful Clemente movie would have to be like the man himself, accessible and complex.  

What other sports graphic novels are you planning?  

I am working on a graphic novel about John Brown.  Yes, that John Brown.  For more information, readers can go to www.captainjohnbrown.com

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Jim O’Brien -70’spirates-steelers

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Reunions of ’71 Pirates and Steelers of ‘70s Rekindle Great Memories – Jim O’Brien 

I have often been told I have a nice job.

         Then again, my younger daughter, Rebecca, has often reminded me, “Dad, you never had a real job.”

         Many sports fans through the years have told me they wish they could have tagged along with me and met all the great sports stars I have been fortunate to meet and interview as a sports writer and author.

         I always recognized I was blessed to turn a boyhood fascination with sports and writing into a lifelong career.  Yes, in my own way, I was able to make it to the major leagues in all sports.  

         I was never a one-sport guy.  I covered more sports on all levels than any other sportswriter to come out ofPittsburgh.

         I was reminded of this over the past extended weekend when I spent time in the company of the Steelers of the ‘70s, as well as some of the great players of opposing teams in the National Football League, and the ’71 Pirates.

         These were the ballplayers that made the Steelers the “Team of the Decade” in the NFL in the ‘70s, and produced title teams – four Super Bowl champions and two World Series winners – and prompted sportscaster Howard Cosell to label Pittsburgh“The City of Champions.”

         It stuck and we still like to think of ourselves in that respect.

         Last Thursday evening my wife Kathie and I attended a gala party at Heinz Field for the 34th Annual Andy Russell Celebrity Classic, and then I joined many of the celebrities and participants at a breakfast the following morning at the Club at Nevillewood where a golf outing was held.

         From there, I hustled off to Robert Morris University, where I signed books in my “Pittsburgh Proud” series Friday through Sunday at the 33rd Pittsburgh Sports Card Show that featured the 30th anniversary reunion of the 1971 Pirates.

         I worked at The New York Post from 1970 till 1979 and took pride in thePittsburgh sports successes from a distance.  I was covering all the sports teams inNew York, but I still reveled in the accomplishments of my hometown teams, including the 1976 Pitt national college football championship team.

         I returned home to work for The Pittsburgh Press, where I had worked while in high school and at Pitt, in April of 1979.  I got back just in time to celebrate another World Series triumph by the Pirates in 1979, and to cover the Steelers when they won their fourth Super Bowl in six years.

         Danny Murtaugh had managed the Pirates in 1971, and Chuck Tanner was at the helm of the ship in 1979.  Chuck Noll, of course, coached the Steelers, still the only coach to claim four Super Bowl championships in as many outings.

         And I wrote the first of 20 books I would write about Pittsburghsports achievements when Marty Wolfson and I edited and published Pittsburgh: The Story of the City of Champions.

         Andy Russell has raised over $5 million at his celebrity golf outing for local charities, most recently the UPMC prostate cancer research program.  I remember covering one of his early outings with Arnold Palmer as the co-host at the Latrobe Country Club, and I have attended about 15 of these events ever since.

         The former Steelers present this time were John Banaszak, Craig Bingham, Rocky Bleier, Mel Blount, Emil Boures, Robin Cole, Glen Edwards, Neil Graff, Gordon Gravelle, Jack Ham, Dick Hoak, Bill Hurley, Todd Kalis, Marv Kellum, Louis Lipps, Mike Merriweather, Edmund Nelson, Myron Pottios, Lynn Swann, Paul Uram, Mike Wagner, J.R. Wilburn and Dwayne Woodruff.

         Bobby Bell and Willie Lanier, both Hall of Fame linebackers for the Kansas City Chiefs, were there, along with Isaac Curtis of the Cincinnati Bengals, Pierre Larouche and Phil Borque of the Penguins, Kent Tekulve of the Pirates, Tom Mack, a Hall of Fame center for the Los Angeles Rams, and Billy Van Heusen of the Denver Broncos.

         I particularly enjoyed taking a trip down memory lane with Bobby Bell.  I was stationed at the U.S. Army Home Town News Center inKansas Cityfor ten months in 1965 when the Chiefs were assembling one of the greatest teams in NFL history.  Lenny Dawson, a former quarterback with the Steelers, was the team’s offensive leader andBelland Buck Buchanan were the leaders of the team’s defensive unit.

         I helped out in the press box at Municipal Stadium for home games for the Chiefs and Athletics, a real perk since I was getting about $10 a day in meal money from the Army.  I spent time in the home of Bobby Bell when I interviewed him for a feature story in Sport magazine.   He was sharing the pad with a defensive back named Fred “The Hammer” Williamson, who gained fame for his ferocious hits and went on to star in a series of black exploitation movies featuring fearsome black tough guys and gals (Richard Roundtree and Pam Greer) ala “Superfly” and “Shaft” that were popular with urban audiences in the early ‘70s.   Williamson had once played briefly for the Steelers.

        Belland Williamson were an odd couple, andBellhad a few belly laughs over reflecting on his roommate.

        Bellhas been a regular at Andy Russell’s Celebrity Classic for many years, and is popular with whatever foursome gets him in the draw.  KDKA’s Bob Pompeani, who was a student of mine once upon a time atPointParkUniversity, is the only other member of the media at these outings.  He emcees the auction and plays in the golf outing.  He’s got a green jacket to prove it.  Those who participate in at least ten of the classics rate the same kind of blazer that is given to Masters champions atAugusta.

         I was not as familiar with the ’71 Bucs because I was inNew York at the time as I am with the ’60 Bucs and ’79 Bucs.  It was good to see Gene Alley, Tony Bartirome, Steve Blass, Vic Davalillo, Dave Giusti, Mudcat Grant, Richie Hebner, Jackie Hernandez, Bob Johnson, John Lamb, Don Leppert, Bill Mazeroski, Al Oliver, Bob Robertson, Charlie Sands, Manny Sanguillen, Bob Veale and Bill Virdon.

         I covered the New York Yankees when Virdon managed the team during the 1974 and 1975 seasons.  He is the answer to a trivia question: Who managed the Yankees for two years and never managed one game at Yankee Stadium?  The Yankees played at Shea Stadium, the Mets’ home field, during that span as major renovations were being done on Yankee Stadium.  The venerable ballpark has since been leveled when a new stadium was constructed next door.

         Terry Hanratty, a quarterback for the Steelers in the ‘70s, was the lone Steelers’ player to be signing autographs among all the ’71 Pirates at Robert Morri sUniversity.  Promoter J. Paul Stogner said he wanted to have something for the Steelers’ fans in attendance.

          Jim Tripodi, who operates Diamond Jim’s, a sports card and memorabilia shop in Beaver, is a regular at these card shows.

         “I’m really getting into magazines, sports publications of all kinds and press guides,” Tripodi told me.  “I swear I keep seeing your name in all of them.  I don’t know where you found the time to have two kids.”

         I told him I hustled pretty good in the ‘70s and ‘80s as far as free-lance writing was concerned.  I loved writing about sports stars and seeing my byline in all the national publications.

         Sportswriters weren’t making good money in those days, so I moonlighted and took advantage of all opportunities to get my stuff published and make some money on the side.

         I saved nearly all of that extra money.  The fees for such stories ranged from $50 to $500 in the early years, and got better later on.  I started out making $12,500 a year for editing Street & Smith’s Basketball Yearbook in 1970, and was up to $65,000 for editing three annuals for the Conde Nast Publications by the mid-80s.

         I was able to save about $100,000 for each of our daughters, Sarah and Rebecca.  That included $65,000 earmarked for their college education and $35,000 for their weddings.  I was right on the mark for what I needed for them to go to theUniversityofVirginiaandOhioUniversity, for Sarah and Rebecca, respectively.  Rebecca’s wedding money is still drawing dividends and interest.

         I invested the rest in retirement funds for Kathie and myself.  That’s how you are supposed to manage your money.  That’s why I have little tolerance for the complaints offered by pro athletes these days during the labor contract disagreement in the NFL.

         The players have this sense of entitlement, which is rampant in this country among many people.  With the kind of money they are making they should be stashing away the majority of their money for future use.  When NFL players compare their situation to being slaves I have to question their mentality.

         They say the average NFL playing career is just over four years, yet many of them think they should be set for life and never have to work again.  In truth, if they saved and invested their money wisely they would be set for life.

         I worked for the New York Post for nine years and Street & Smiths’s for 32 years, and The Pittsburgh Press for four-and-a-half years – the average NFL career – and draw a pension from none of them.  I saved and funded my own pension.

         I did what I did because I enjoyed the life.  I remember Dick Young, the best baseball writer ever, when asked why he was a sportswriter, saying, “I don’t want to be a millionaire, I just want to live like one.”  Exactly.  My sentiments, indeed.

         It’s a great life.  The Pirates, Steelers, Penguins and other pro athletes who were in Pittsburgh this past week ought to know that by now.  It was good to see them again.  We were lucky they came our way.

 Pittsburghsports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien has written a series of “Pittsburgh Proud” books that area available at area book stores.  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com 

 

 

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O’Brien-Ohlendorf

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Ross Ohlendorf poster boy for what’s wrong with   Pittsburgh Pirates – Jim “O’Brien

 I actually felt some compassion for Ross Ohlendorf and that surprised me.  He looked so forlorn and lost as he sat on the bench after he was knocked out of his last two starts as a Pirates’ pitcher.

Ohlendorf looked like a man who was wondering whether he would be wearing a Pirates’ uniform next season.  He looked like a man who was wondering how everything was going wrong for him, and what was to become of him. 

         I don’t think Ohlendorf will be back with the Bucs.  I don’t think another pitcher with similarly awesome stuff, Paul Maholm, will be back either.  They can’t win, they’re high maintenance and they make more money than they’re worth.  Catcher Ryan Doumit may not be back, and shortstop Ronny Cedeno could be gone as well.  Pedro Alvarez must improve or be a bust.

         The Pirates made significant progress this past season, but they had a losing season for the 19th consecutive year – a record for all major sports – and they must make some changes if they are to become a legitimate contender for a championship in Major League Baseball.

         Ohlendorf is a 29-year-old righty with a hard-biting sinker and he can hit 97 miles per hour with a two-seam sinking fastball.

But he hasn’t stayed healthy and he hasn’t been able to win.

         During the last off-season he rejected the Pirates’ contract offer and took them to arbitration.  When he did this I offered the thought that the Pirates should have told him, “Sorry, but we’re not interested.  You should look elsewhere for future employment.  Good luck.”

         But Ohlendorf knew what he was doing.  He was a Princeton grad, an all-Ivy standout, and he’d written a 140-page paper atPrincetonabout the financial aspects of the draft in Major League Baseball.  He majored in Operations Research and Financial Engineering atPrinceton.

         Now this was a guy who had posted a record of 1-and-11 and an earned run average of 4.07 in his previous season as a pitcher for the Pirates. He won his arbitration hearing and a $439,000 raise to $2,025,000 for the 2011 campaign.

         How’d he do that?  In truth, though, the Pirates aren’t the only team that operates this way.

         Ohlendorf is making almost as much as another overpaid pitcher, Todd Graham, the first-year head coach and pitchman for Pitt’s “high octane offense” this season.  Graham is getting $2.25 million.  Hopefully, the fine win againstSouth Floridais a preview of what’s to come for the Panthers.

         This year Ohlendorf missed most of the season with arm ailments and didn’t join the team until the final six weeks of the season.  He posted a 1-3 record with an 8.15 ERA.  So he’s been paid more than $3.5 million for two pitching victories over the last two seasons.

         His one victory last month came against the Dodgers, but he followed it up with two disastrous and short-lived appearances in the stretch run.  I witnessed both games on television.  It was hard to watch.

         He was shelled for seven runs in two plus innings in an 8-5 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks, the team that drafted him out ofPrinceton.  The D’Backs managed to pull off two double steals on Ohlendorf, a club record.  I’d never seen that happen in my lifetime.

         In his last outing, against the Brewers inMilwaukee, he gave up a monster home run to Prince Fielder and then an even longer one to Rickie Weeks, the next batter.  The Bucs managed to tie the game at 2-2 and Ohlendorf singled in a go-ahead run, but he couldn’t hold the 3-2 lead.

         Afterward, Ohlendorf said, “I wish I could have held the lead but that was a lot of fun.”

         Did he really think so?  That was a lot of fun…

         But Ohlendorf talks like that.  At spring training, he was brought along carefully because of arm problems.  After he pitched an extended inning (four outs) in spring training, he declared himself fit for the coming season.

         He likes to put a positive spin on his efforts. 

         When he was ripped by the D’Backs, he said, “I felt like the ball was coming out of my hand real good and I made good pitches, but they took good swings. I had some really good pitches but I didn’t make enough good pitches.”

         Even the late Chuck Tanner was never that positive and upbeat.

         I’ve seen where the Pirates have fired their trainers since the season was completed, so maybe they were to blame for Ohlendorf missing so many games, or the Pirates falling apart after the All-Star Game.  It was said some of the coaches were in jeopardy of losing their jobs as well.

         The problem with the Pirates is that they just don’t have enough good players, and I think that’s going to be a problem for the Penguins and Steelers as well.  Oh my oh my.  Imagine if Sidney Crosby can’t play. 

         There would not be any Pittsburgh Penguins playing at theConsolEnergyCenterexcept for Sidney Crosby coming here.  There wouldn’t be anyConsolEnergyCenter. And they wouldn’t be tearing down the Civic Arena. See the domino effect?

         That’s why sports command our attention.  This past weekend there were some great last-game of the schedule outings in baseball, some terrific match-ups in collegiate and professional football, and some hockey and golf thrown in for good measure.  The Steelers lost inHoustonbecause their offensive line can’t block for Big Ben or any of the running backs.

         The Red Sox took a monumental dive and that, along with his own words, cost Terry Francona ofNew Brightonhis job as manager inBoston.  Maybe he’ll end up with the White Sox.

         It was good to see Jim Leyland leading the Detroit Tigers into the playoffs against the New York Yankees.

         But, for some reason, I kept thinking about Ross Ohlendorf.  He’s probably a fine fellow.  He’s taken advantage of a system that doesn’t make any sense.  There are no NBA pre-season games going on right now because they have followed the lead of the NFL in having a labor dispute.  There is never enough money to go around.

         Unemployment is high in this country and in the world right now, and the Average Joe is hurting.  But the ballplayers never make enough money.  Prices are going up after a long hiatus for the Pirates next season.

         They need more money to pay for the kind of players they need to make a serious run – and not just to the All-Star Game like they did this season – for a National League playoff position.

         Sometimes I think the Pirates’ broadcasters would be speechless if they didn’t have statistics to spew out throughout the telecasts and broadcasts.  But one statistic caught my attention last week.

         Greg Brown came up with a gem. He said that the great Walter “Big Train” Johnson, who pitched for the Washington Senators way back when and was a charter member of the Baseball Hall of Fame, was a pretty fair hitter, too.

         Brown said there was a ten-year stretch where Johnson had a higher batting average than his earned run average during the same span.  Now that’s impressive.     

           Johnson surely didn’t make as much money as Ohlendorf’s raise of $439,000 during those ten years combined.

         It’s a different day, of course.  I thought about my friends Bob Friend and Bob Rowe.  They both had their right shoulders surgically replaced this past year.  Friend pitched every fourth day for the Pirates back in the ‘50s and ‘60s, and Rowe was a lineman for ATT, working a high-wire act with a hook.  The wear and tear on their shoulders finally got to be too painful.

         They didn’t need rehab until they retired.

          Pittsburghsports author and historian Jim O’Brien has a series of “Pittsburgh Proud” books available at area book stores.  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

 

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Rob Ruck

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Rob Ruck,  Pittsburgh Sports Historian and Author of Sandlot Seasons: Sport in Black Pittsburgh and Rooney: A Sporting Life – (June 19,  2011):

Thank you for taking the time to answer questions for us Rob. First, can you let readers know about you – your sports history background and your research on Pittsburgh sports teams and culture?
 
I began studying sport as a grad student in Pitt’s History Department in the late 1970s.  

History then was going through a radical change by focusing on the people whose stories had largely been ignored in favor of the rich and powerful.  This ‘history from below’ focused on working people, immigrants, sharecroppers, and the like.  I had been studying labor history with David Montgomery and thought I would write about the rise and fall of the steelworkers union.  Instead, I began looking at what people did with their free time in addition to their working lives.  

I began studying the role that sport played in black Pittsburgh prior to integration.  My dissertation was about the old sandlot and Negro League teams and what they meant to people at a time when sport was not defined primarily by profit motives.  It became “Sandlot Seasons: Sport in Black Pittsburgh,” and was the basis for “Kings on the Hill: Baseball’s Forgotten Men,” a documentary that uses Pittsburgh and its Negro League clubs to tell a national story.

What books and other research/projects have you done in these areas, and what projects are you working on now?

I began traveling to the Caribbean to study baseball after “Sandlot Seasons.”  It was a logical next step from looking at the Negro Leagues, given that black players played in the winter leagues in the islands and Latinos played in the Negro Leagues if they were dark-skinned, in the major leagues if they were Caucasian or could pass for white.  That work became “The Tropic of Baseball: Baseball in the Dominican Republic.”  

A few years ago, Dan Manatt and I made “The Republic of Baseball: Dominican Giants of the American Game,” another documentary.  

My most recent book is “Raceball: How the Major Leagues Colonized the Black and Latin Game.”  

It came out in March.  “Raceball” brings together the story of baseball in black America with that of the Caribbean and the major leagues, before, during, and after integration.  It connects the work I’ve done in both areas and takes the story up to the 21st century.  The story of African Americans and Latinos have been intertwined for over a century, first by major league baseball’s segregation, then by integration.  

While baseball’s integration had profound social ramifications for the nation (and changed the game itself by bringing in the best waves of talent yet to play), it came at a cost to black America.  African Americans lost control of their own sporting lives and institutions.  Integration did not bring black owners, managers, and teams into the majors but took black players, often without compensation, and their fans.  

As a result, the Negro Leagues collapsed without their owners, front office, or teams integrating into the majors.  While peaking at over a quarter of all major league players in 1975, African Americans make up only about 8 percent of players today.

Latinos, however, have since remade the game.  They comprise over a quarter of all major leaguers, about half of those in the minors, and are over-represented at the highest levels of play.  They’ve put a new face on baseball and are its future.

Your 2006 documentary on Dominican baseball players (The Republic of Baseball: The Dominican Giants of the American Game) was highly acclaimed. What made you decide to focus on this subject?

In 2000, Dan Manatt asked me to work with him on a documentary about Dominican ball.  He was a great collaborator and became a close friend.  Doing an independent film is a difficult venture, because they’re so costly to make and because distribution is uncertain.  But we felt that baseball had become the story by which Dominicans were able to tell their story to the world and that it was a great story at that.  

We focused on the first generation of Dominicans to make it in the majors: Felipe Alou, Juan Marichal, Manuel Mota, Ossie Virgil, and Mateo and Jose Alou.  They are tremendous guys and we felt privileged to tell their story.  I try to stay as connected with baseball on the island as I can.

A recent New York Times article
(//www.nytimes.com/2011/06/12/sports/baseball/clementes-3000th-hit-helmet-raised-to-a-sparse-crowd.html?_r=2&emc=eta1) brought forth the notion that Roberto Clemente was not appreciated in Pittsburgh until after he died due to the fact he was both Black and Latino. What are your thoughts on this – do you agree? It seems to contradict the research you did earlier on a more progressive Pittsburgh, or is this an “apples and oranges” comparison?

David Maraniss, who made that comment, wrote an astounding biography of Clemente, but I disagree with him on this point.

There certainly was (and is) racism in Pittsburgh but anybody who saw Clemente play had to acknowledge how brilliantly he played the game.  It is true that Clemente, playing in Pittsburgh, was overlooked by much of baseball America until the 1971 World Series.  I think it would have been different if he was in a larger media market or had not been such a principled advocate for civil rights for Latinos and African Americans.  

It’s also true that the way he died elevated him to an iconic level and made him larger in death than he was in life.

Your book “Sandlot Seasons, Sport in Black Pittsburgh” showed how those Black sports teams in Pittsburgh helped the Black community realize its potential for self-expression. What made you decide to write on this subject – and do you feel Pittsburgh was more progressive than most cities in it’s acceptance of Black sports teams like the Pittsburgh Crawford and Homestead Grays baseball teams and Garfield Eagles football team?

I wrote that book because I saw sport as playing a very important role among African Americans and suspected that those historic roles were key to figuring out how and why.

African Americans in Pittsburgh embraced their teams and athletes but given that they had created those teams, their passion for sport should come as no surprise.  I think that white fans and sandlot teams alsoappreciated the Grays, Crawfords, Eagles, and other black teams.  

I’ve had any number of older white men tell me how proud they were to stand on the mound and pitch to Josh Gibson or bat against Satchel Paige.  Of course, most said that Josh hit a long home run off them and that Satchel struck them out.  But these games validated white teams, too.

If your question is whether there was less racism in Pittsburgh than elsewhere, I’m not sure that would have been the case.  Certainly, the sporting arena brought out a less racist, more progressive set of relations in the city.  The sandlots were more of a level playing field—more egalitarian.  That was true for earlier generations of immigrants from Europe, too.

Nearly 20 years after the writing of the book, Pittsburgh has an African American football coach and an NFL team owner that was the driving force of the “Rooney Rule” requiring teams to interview African American candidates for head coaching jobs. Do you think the days of the “African American athlete” distinction in the Pittsburgh sports community/fandom is over? Or do you feel there are still big differences in how Pittsburgh fans view the African American versus white athlete?

I think that racial attitudes in sport, as in the nation as a whole, have improved immensely.  

There is little doubt that African Americans and Latinos are center stage in American sport and have been so in this city for some time.  The 1971 Pirates were an international squad, the 1979 champs were the “We are Family” Bucs with diverse line-ups.  

The Steelers were as evenly integrated as could be during the 1970s and today they are led by a player of Samoan descent and one who is part African-American, part Korean.  That matters, as does the way the Steelers operate—and have long operated due to Art, Dan, and Art II—when it comes to race.

I also think that each generation has a more progressive and tolerant set of views on race than previous ones.  Having said that, there are enormous and serious issues regarding race and sport in Pittsburgh, especially pertaining to health, access to leisure and recreation, and in longevity.  Socio-economics and class have much to do with that.  

There are also important questions regarding ownership and power in sport that have yet to overcome a racial imbalance.

Your biography on Art Rooney. “Rooney: A Sporting Life” was a major undertaking. Can you tell readers what surprised you most about Rooney as you did your research on him?

I had known that Art was quite an athlete but I came away from the research realizing that he might have been the best all-around athlete in the city during the 1920s.  

He was fast, tough, had great eye-hand coordination and had the ability to think ahead of the play.  That combination made him a top baseball and football player as well as one of the top welterweights in the nation.  He would have represented the US in the 1920 Olympics but did not enter the tournament because he had made money playing semi-pro baseball and did not want to have his amateur status questioned.  He beat the man who won the gold medal before and after the Olympics.

The other surprise was just how critical Rooney was to the making of the NFL.  

He was at the core of the decisions to create a league that operated on a one for all—all for one ethos.  That approach—via the draft, equal distribution of broadcast revenues, recognition of the union, and in scheduling—has made the NFL the most successful pro league in American sporting history.  

This approach, of course, is under great duress this summer.  I think it’s also apparent how much Art’s son Dan and now his grandson Art II have continued to play this role of finding win-win solutions in the league and with the players’ union.
 
How did you go about the research – what sources were you able to tap into that really helped define who he was?

In addition to the standard tools of research—scrutiny of newspapers, public records, and the like—we (and there were two co-authors of Rooney: A Sporting Life.  One was the late Michael Weber with whom I began the book; the other is Maggie Jones Patterson, Mike’s colleague at Duquesne and my wife who jumped in after Mike’s death in 2001) interviewed about 100 people, some, like Dan Rooney, many times.  

That oral history is the only way to get at this sort of story, which is largely something that lacks written sources.

Much of your prior work covered the social/cultural elements of Pittsburgh sports. In your research on Rooney, how much of his work did you find influenced the culture of the city and it’s acceptance of minorities – and how so?

It’s at the heart of this story.  No city uses sport more than Pittsburgh to tell its story to the world and to itself.  It’s a story about people who work hard, but play harder; who lose but persevere and in the end become the city of champions.  That story rings true because no city of comparable size had the sort of sporting record that Pittsburgh did across the board in sport in the 20th century.  

African Americans and later Latinos were at the center of that story—the Homestead Grays and the Pittsburgh Crawfords, Clemente, Stargell, Harris, Blount, Greene, Dorsett, and so many others.

What were some of the more interesting examples of Rooney’s behavior you unearthed in your research that helped you define Rooney’s character in the biography?

That he was at ease with a down-on-his-luck horseplayer, a guy from the neighborhood, or ex-pug as he was with Mayor David Lawrence and the Bishop.  He was a regular guy who stayed that way all his life, even when he became a national icon.

What do you think Art Rooney would say about the state of Pittsburgh sports and sports culture today?

I’m sure he would be telling both sides of the NFL struggle to compromise and settle so that the working folks in the industry are not harmed by a lockout.  And I think he would rue the amount of money and the influence of television in the game today.  

And I believe he would be appalled at the pressure to extend the season to 18 games, given what we know about the damage football inflicts on the body and mind.

I also think he would know that the last decade has been a second golden age for sport in Pittsburgh and appreciate just how well the Steelers, Penguins, and Pitt basketball has done.

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George Von Benko

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George Von Benko, Witer/Author (August 25,  2011):

First , can you tell readers about yourself – how you got started in broadcasting/sports Journalism and where listeners can find your work now?

I started in radio at the age of 15 on WPQR radio in Uniontown, PA. Just turned 59 – so I’ve been around awhile. Various stops along the way in Morgantown, WV at WTAE during the heyday of sports talk radio.

It was Myron Cope, Stan Savran and then me at night. Play-by-play for football and basketball for the University of Cincinnati and color for Duquesne basketball up until last season. I still do a sports talk show on Saturday’s from 10:15 am to 12 noon on WMBS Radio 590 AM in Uniontown.

I do a lot of freelance writing for MLB.com and the Pittsburgh Sports Report and do a weekly column called Memory Lane every Tuesday in the Uniontown Herald Standard. I also run the Pirates website for
the Scout network and you can find that at pirates.scout.com.

You’ve covered the Western Pennsylvania sports scene for a number of years, including color commentary for Duquesne basketball. What have been some of your most memorable experiences you’ve had doing so?

Covering all of the Steelers Super Bowl appearances was a big thrill and the Penguins first Stanley Cup in 1991 really sticks out. Having covered the team from its first season in 1967 – I never thought I would see that.

Who were some of the athletes you covered that left the biggest impressions with you – and why?

The super Steelers of the 1970’s were great to cover, I really enjoyed working with those teams, just a great bunch of guys. Maybe the most memorable interview that I did was with Muhammad Ali at his training camp at Deer Lakes.

You’ve covered many teams across a number of sports. What sport/team have you enjoyed covering most, and why?

Doing play-by-play for the 1999-2000 Cincinnati Bearcats basketball team. They were number one most of the season until Kenyon Martin broke his leg in a meaningless Conference USA tournament game. It still hurts because I believe they would have won the national championship had that not occurred.

You’ve come out with a new book – “Memory Lane”. Can you tell readers about the book and what inspired you to write it?

Memory Lane is a compilation of some of my favorite Memory Lane columns about athletes from western Pennsylvania and in particular the area where I grew up in Uniontown. When I was unexpectedly let go by Duquesne before last basketball season my father said now you have time to do the book and I did it. Dad who passed away on June 26 was the driving force behind me doing the book.

What are some of the things that surprised you most as you researched the book – and why?

Since I had written the articles previously there were no real surprises, putting the book together and going through that process for the first time was an eye opener.

The book focuses much on some of the more under-appreciated athletes in Western PA. Who were some of the athletes that deserved more accolades than they received – and why in your opinion didn’t they get that attention?

The first black All American quarterback was Sandy Stephens and his disappointment at not being given an opportunity to try to play quarterback in the NFL still sticks with me. He passed away in 2000 and I think it is great that he was just elected to the College Football Hall of Fame, I just wish that honor had happened when he was still alive. T

he accomplishments of some of the black athletes illustrates what trail blazers they were. There are other forgotten gems like basketball player Sam Sims who put up some amazing point totals in the 1950’s and Dick Washington the first black athlete to score a touchdown in Notre Dame football history.

How can readers purchase the book?

You can purchase the book at all Bradley’s Book Outlets, there are eight of them in Western Pennsylvania. Online the best place to get it is this link to buy the book on the front page of the Fayette County Sports Hall of Fame website on the right hand side of the page.

//www.fayettecountysportshalloffame.com/

Taking a step back and looking at the Western PA sports “scene” today versus years ago, how has the Western PA sports landscape changed over the years and what trends have you noticed

The biggest thing for me is the emergence of the hockey franchise. Years ago I couldn’t get any of my friends to go to a hockey game and when I covered a game it was a sparse press box. Now hockey is booming with the fans and the media coverage is amazing. The Steelers remain a constant, but I was a huge baseball fan growing up and the losing has been tough to take – I’m hopeful that the Pirates are on
the right track.

On sports journalism as a whole – how do you think the coverage of sports has changed over the years – and is it for the better now?

I have worked on both sides as a publicity director for the old Eastern Eight basketball conference and as a journalist and it is much more adversarial and contentious than it used to be. Also as far as the broadcasting business experience was the biggest factor in gaining employment. That has changed drastically and in a lot of cases experience can be a detriment – they don’t want to pay for experience these days.

Any predictions for Duquesne basketball this season?

I remain in contact with Coach Everhart and I am hoping he can continue to move the program forward. T.J. McConnell should continue to improve, but they will be hard pressed to replace Damian Saunders and Bill Clark.

Any last comments/thoughts for readers?

Just enjoy the sports scene and be thankful that we have been blessed with some tremendous athletes over the years and we are still lucky to be able to watch some of the talent that wear the uniform of the various Pittsburgh teams

 

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David Maraniss

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David Maraniss – Author, Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball’s Last Hero

Tell us about your book and what attracted you to the idea of writing about Clemente?  

I grew up in Wisconsin with the Milwaukee Braves, and loved the teams of Aaron, Matthews, Spahn, Burton,  et al, but Clemente was always my favorite player.

There was something about the way he looked in his Pirates uniform, the way he walked, the way he worked out the crink in his neck, the way he threw bullets  from right field, his outsiderness as a black Puerto Rican, all of that attracted me to him.

But I decided to write about him for other reasons beyond all of that, because he was that rare human being who was growing as his sporting talents were diminishing, and that he died a heroic death.

What surprised you most in your research of Clemente?

I never answer the question about what surprised me most. I look at the research of a book as an endless series of surprises. If you keep an open mind, it is all new.

What is the biggest misperception people have about Clemente, in your opinion?  

Some people thought he was a complainer, lazy, the stereotypes of a Puerto Rican in that era unfortunately.  He was the opposite. He was a perfectionist, and he was always worrying about his health, a hypochondriac of sorts, but he played more games in a Pirate uniform than any other player in history and always played hard, with a fury.

How was Clemente received early on by fans and players –and how did his race/ethnicity affect that acceptance?

It was not an easy entry for Clemente into the US.

The Pittsburgh sports writers condescendingly quoted  him in broken English. None of them knew Spanish of course. And he did not have his first great season until 1960, five years into his time with the Pirates.

As the years went on, he had to overcome a lot of bias against him. I raised a fuss in Pittsburgh earlier this year by suggesting that not everyone who now say they loved him really did love him back then. I didn’t say that he wasn’t beloved – he certainly was, especially by young people, old people, anyone who came into contact with him. But it took a long time for all of Pittsburgh to accept him as a mythological beloved figure. Really not until he died.

You address Clemente’s health issues (from a 1954 automobile accident) as having a big affect  on his approach at the plate. How so?

His soreness from the back and neck injury never left him.

It is one of the reasons he was always moving his neck as he approached the plate, trying to work out the kinks. It was not just the lingering injury but also the huge outfield at Forbes Field that affected him, and he molded his batting style, not trying to hit home runs, to compensate for that.

What were some of the major issues you attempted to address in the book and why?  

The central themes are, first, the drama of the story of a black Puerto Rican coming to America to make his way, and succeeding, despite all he had to overcome as the first truly great Latino ballplayer, second, the beauty and frustrations of a true athletic artist, and third, the passion and commitment to humanity that distinguished him from most athletes yet led tragically to his death.

What is your impression of how Clemente  was received during his playing days in Pittsburgh and how has that changed now?  

When Clemente arrived in Pittsburgh he had to build his own sense of community. He felt somewhat apart from both the white community and the African American community and the city at the time had an extremely small Latino population. Over the years he was able to bring a diverse group of friends into his life to make him feel more comfortable.

There’s talk of a Clemente movie. What are your thoughts on how they should approach this?  

I hope there is a Clemente movie. His story needs to be told to the largest possible audience. I would want the movie to be realistic, not romanticized propaganda, but present the real man with all of his talents and flaws, and base it in his Puerto Rican heritage, not so much in Pittsburgh.

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Scott Blasey of the Clarks

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Scott Blasey of the Clarks (September 28, 2011)

First off, can you tell readers what you’ve been up to lately and about your new album and upcoming gigs?

Well,  I just wrote a new song last night so that’s exciting.  The last Clarks record was in ’09 and I wouldn’t mind making another one in the next year or two.  Show-wise, we’re in the college season- lots of schools and our annual Halloween cruise on the Gateway Clipper.

The Clarks have been a stalwart of Pittsburgh’s music scene for a number of years. How did you get started and what advice would you give other local musicians who want to make it as well?

We started as a cover band at IUP in ’86. We put out our first record (on vinyl and cassette!) in’88 and made Pittsburgh our home.  WDVE started playing our stuff in the early 90’s and it just took off from there.  Starting out in the music business is very different today than it was back then.

Play anywhere and everywhere. Write great songs (easier said than done). Get on the youtube and get yourself out there.  

Many see the life of a musician as all bright lights and glamour, but it’s a tough business.  What’s been the most difficult aspect of the music business for you and how have you been able to overcome it and stay active for so long?

Traveling is difficult. I’m a homebody. I like routines and working out and eating good, and those things are hard to do on the road. Getting along personally and creatively with three other guys for 25 years ain’t easy either.

How has the band managed to stay together through the years when so many bands seem to struggle doing so?

It boils down to respect. You have to respect each other’s ideas, lifestyles and choices, even if you don’t embrace them.  That’s hard.  And you have to compromise and have common goals.

I know there are hundreds to choose from, but what have been some of the most memorable  experiences you’ve had as a musician and what made them so?

The Late Show with David Letterman was a career highlight. It legitimized us to a lot of people. The first Surge Festival at Starlake Amphitheater in 1997 was a defining moment.  We headlined a show with Gathering Field and Brownie Mary that drew over 17,000 people.  

Who influenced you most in terms of your approach to music and how have you been able to use that influence to create your own sound as opposed to just “copying” another’s?  

We were influenced early on by bands like the Replacements, R.E.M. and U2.  The Replacements were a big influence because they embraced the punk ethic of it’s more important to be passionate than good.

I think it took a couple albums for us to find our own sound, maybe Let It Go was the first where we took our influences were more subtle and our own voices were coming through.

What would surprise fans/readers most about you and the band?

I didn’t pick up a guitar until I was in college, same with Greg. I joined the band 6 months later and learned on the job. The Clarks are the only band I’ve ever been in.

The Pittsburgh music scene has been growing in prominence but hasn’t launched that huge  local artist recently. Is anything missing from the local scene to foster more musical talent?

Actually, hip hop artist Wiz Khalifa is from Pittsburgh and he broke through huge this year. Mac Miller is next I hear.

As far as rock/pop bands there hasn’t been anything big nationally since Rusted Root in the 90s. Anti-Flag tours internationally but they’re not a mainstream success. I don’t know why it hasn’t happened.  There are a lot of talented people here. It’s a tough industry and I don’t think it’s anything that Pittsburgh is not doing that’s keeping it from happening.

On to sports….are you a sports fan –and if so, what teams to you follow most and just how  avid a fan are you?

I’m a big sports fan, but not huge one like some folks in this town. I can walk away from a Steelers loss without feeling suicidal!

I was a Pirates fan first. My dad used to take me to games at Three Rivers Stadium in the early 70’s. Steve Blass was a hero, and I’ve had the pleasure of talking to him a few times. Then I became a die-hard Steelers fan. Four Super Bowl victories will do that to a sports-loving teenager.  

Then of course the Penguins in the early 90s when I was living in Shadyside made me a hockey fan. I got to drink beer out of the Stanley Cup late one night at Doc’s Place thanks to Paul Steigerwald.  

Have you had any experiences playing for/around some of the area athletes or hanging out  with them?  If so, what were those experiences and players like?

I had the pleasure of performing for the Lemieux family at the home of a mutual friend. The kids are fans of the band and Mario and Natalie are great to talk to.  Bob Errey is a fan and I’ve talked to him a few times, same with guys like Craig Wolfley and Tunch Ilkin. Walter Abercrombie came up to me after I performed the National Anthem at a Steelers game, shook my hand and told me I did a great job.

Those things stay with you. Everybody I’ve met has been a class-act.

If you could be the GM or player for any local team, which would it be and what would be the first thing you’d do?

Pirates- sign Derrick Lee.

Any last thoughts for readers?

Thank you for all these years of support. Pittsburgh has been very good to us and we love this place.

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