Bobby Shaw, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1998-2001

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First, can you let readers know what you are doing with yourself   professionally since your time in the NFL and how you got started in this line   of work?

I’m doing very little now – I was working in real   estate for a little while, but the way the market is…I’m not doing that   anymore. I had a golf shop for a year and a half – from 2007-2009, That was my   primary thing then. I had lots of   fun doing it, but unfortunately I had to close it.

I’m enjoying being a husband and dad now.   I have two boys – 5 1/2 and 1 1/2 year olds – and am  really enjoying being a full-time dad. I enjoy spending quality time with them   – it’s all about my boys.

Continue reading “Bobby Shaw, Steelers Wide Receiver, 1998-2001”

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Jim O’Brien: Wild Things still chasing the big-time dream

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JIm O’Brien: Wild Things still chasing the big-time dream

Pittsburgh sports author and Pittsburgh Business Times columnist Jim O’Brien

The won-lost record and the ballpark attendance are down, but the principal owner of the Washington Wild Things remains up.

Stu Williams is aware that his Wild Things have not been playing as well as they have in the past, or drawing the kinds of crowds they traditionally attracted at CONSOL Energy Park, but he is an indefatigable optimist and is thrilled to have a franchise in the Frontier League.

“We are doing our best,” said the 58-year-old attorney from Upper St. Clair who provides legal guidance for Mylan Corporation among many top-tier clients, and has been involved in the ownership of the Wild Things since their origin in 2002.

“We couldn’t do this without Consol Energy, Washington Financial, or the Coury Family.  It doesn’t happen without them.  Without them there are no Wild Things. I’m optimistic.  I’m confident.  I love this.  I want this to work.”

His group bought the ballpark, originally known as Falconi Field, for $3.9 million last year.  Williams is working on establishing a Frontier League franchise in Bridgeport, W.V. as well as maintaining the one in Washington.

Former Steelers’ center Dermontti Dawson, soon to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, is one of the investors, along with Jeff Coury, president of Coury Financial Group in Pittsburgh. Stu’s wife, Francine or Frani Williams, joins him as a managing partner.

Four of their six children were all working at some task in the ballpark on Friday the 13th when the Wild Things celebrated Halloween in July.  Frani was doling out free chocolate chip cookies and mini-milk cartons during the fifth inning, a ritual at all home games.  It’s a family affair.

The oldest of the Williams’ children, Louis, 27, was not there; he’s in med school at Albany (N.Y.) Medical College.  Nicole, 25, a graduate of Hofstra University, is going to play pro basketball in Israel next season.  Elana, 20, was serving food in the suites section; she’s a student at Pitt.  Philip, 18, is a sophomore at Pitt and a Chancellor’s Scholar.  Amanda, 14, and Shane, 8, were there as well.

Marketing Director Christine Blaine came to the ballpark that night in the spirit of “Halloween in July” dressed as Snow White, and Operations/Special Events Director Wayne Herrod came with his face painted green and black as a camouflaged soldier.
Anything for the cause.  Both put in long days and are respected by the media they serve.

“All we need are 3,000 fans per game,” said Herrod.  “If we could get 8 per cent of the population within a 30-mile radius of the park we’d be happy.”

Williams wants to see that happen sooner than later.

“I think we’re doing everything right,” said Williams. “I know that sounds boastful, but we have a lot of things in the right place.  We have a beautiful field, good coaches, a good staff throughout, good music.  Kids can go out on the field after every game.  We’re more open here.  We just haven’t won yet.”

He’s pleased the Pittsburgh Pirates have been playing so well this summer, drawing bigger crowds and increased TV ratings, even if it has made his job more challenging.

Some fans complain that parking was raised from $3 to $5 and concession prices went up a bit.  Even so, a family of four can have an evening of fun for less than $50.  The general admission seats are $5 and the most expensive are $15.  A beer is $6.  For $10 fans can buy a Wild Dog Combo – a hot dog, French fries and a 32-ounce soda.

He pointed out a huge video screen on the right field wall that was showing images of the ballplayers.  “We just put that in,” said Williams.  “It cost a million dollars. We’re making improvements to the field and to every aspect of the operation.”

He pointed to a pink sky over a sylvan setting framing the outfield wall at sunset.  The backdrop reminds older fans of Forbes Field in Oakland, looking out into Schenley Park.  Announcer Bill DiFabio calls it “The House of Thrills” over the public address system throughout the games.

“We have a different set of fans,” said Williams, “and they like coming here.  We’ve got to get back some of the fans who came here because the park was new and the team was new.  We’ll get there.  Our kids are playing their hearts out.  I hope the Pirates do well.  The Pirates’ experience is first class; we’re not at the same price point.”

The Frontier League player payroll per team is $75,000 for a 24-man roster, with a salary range of $600 to $1600 a month, based on experience.  Age limit is 27.  Teams can keep one veteran player beyond that.

Williams knows the players, even some of the best of the opposing players, and he’s focused on the field as well as the stands during the games.  He blanches if a sore subject is introduced in the conversation, but he stays focused.  “Those are tough questions,” Williams said several times.

“We’ll get the players and we’ll be fine,” he said.  “We love what we’re doing here, and we believe we have become a real asset to Washington County.  We provide a real entertainment option here.  We have brought in a big-time circus, wrestling shows, provided a first-class ballfield for youth baseball and softball teams, we have plenty of promotions and fun nights, mascots the kids love, and we’re having fun.”

The team has been flirting with seventh place or last place in its division, and the average attendance of 1,537 (after 52 games) is next to last in the 14-team league.  It’s a league with teams called the Evansville Otters, Lake Erie Crushers and Schaumburg Boomers and visiting teams stay at the Red Roof Inn when they come to Washington.  The London Rippers folded their franchise following Tuesday’s game in Washington, and Williams watched the game more intently than usual because he picked up four players from the Rippers.

That’s all you need to know that this is not the National League or the American League.  It’s an independent league with no major league affiliations, but the teams are stocked with eager young men who love to play the game, many of them still holding on to a dream that someday they will make it to the big dance.

One sees catches, throws and double-plays that are as good as anything offered by the Pirates at PNC Park.  “I’ve been out there, and I was impressed with the quality of play,” said Joe Gordon, the former publicist for the Pittsburgh Steelers who played baseball at Pitt and is a big fan of the sport.  “Like the Pirates, they do a great job in the entertainment business.  It’s a great setting.”

The 3,200-capacity baseball field, a gem of a facility, is located just off Route 70, next to the Crowne Center Mall, 30 miles from the Pirates’ PNC Park, but it’s a world away from the life of  Andrew McCutchen and Neil Walker.

Former Pirates’ pitcher and present-day broadcaster Steve Blass stopped by CONSOL Energy Park with his wife Karen.  “We have a break for the All-Star Game,” said Karen, “so what’s he do?  He takes me to a baseball game.”

Blass came because he was invited to see a young man from his neck of the woods in Connecticut pitch for the Traverse City Beach Bums.  Blass would have been a good fit on such a team.  “I wish when I played we had a park like this,” observed Blass, standing behind home plate.  “We didn’t have this.  This is a gem.”

Blass beamed as he took in the scene.  “This is a lot more fun for the ballplayers,” he said.

Paul Fox, the orchestra director at Upper St. Clair High School, and his wife, Donna, who does the same at Peters Township High School, brought her father Donald Stark to the game.  “We broke him out of Country Meadows (senior care facility) for the night,” offered Paul Fox.  “We’re here about three times a year and it’s the friendliest place you want to be.”

Alex and Ria Kartsonas accompanied a dozen kids from an under-8 softball team in Peters Township on a group package.  “We’re having a ball,” reported Ria.

Alex, 45, who played baseball at the University of Pittsburgh, said, “You’re so close to the field here.  There are so many things going on here the kids don’t have a chance to get bored.”

Chris Bando, who has been in professional baseball for 28 years, is in his first year as field manager for the Wild Things.  “I’m passionate about baseball,” he said.  “Player development and community development are keys for me.  I see what the team owners are doing and I want to be a part of bringing a championship to the Wild Things.”

His bench coach is the ebullient Lenny Randle, who has 17 years of professional baseball experience, 11 in the Major Leagues.  He’s quite a character. He once gained national attention when he was with the New York Mets and got down on all fours and tried to blow a baseball off the baseline into foul territory.  He’s a real ambassador for the Wild Things and banters with fans during breaks in the action.

“He’s a lot of fun,” said Williams.  “He’s training these youngsters to be big leaguers.  He’s a big brother, a swag daddy.  We have the youngest team in the league, and he’s teaching them. I think this would make for a good reality TV show.”

Two of the home grown players are  Andrew Heck and Rick Devereaux who were students at Duquesne University when the school dropped baseball as a varsity sport two years ago.  Heck, an outfielder from the North Hills, transferred to Oklahoma State, and  Devereaux, a catcher from West Allegheny High, to Pitt.  Gus Benusa, an outfielder, played at Riverview High School in Oakmont.

“This is an opportunity to play professional baseball,” said Heck.  “I’m 23 and I’m still young enough to do something like this.  I’m still living the dream.  If I didn’t love baseball, I wouldn’t be here.  We both have our college degrees so we’re prepared for the next step.”

“It’s an opportunity to play ball,” said Devereaux.  “I’m not playing here for the money.  I live at home and my family is supportive. I hope to get picked up somewhere. I’m putting everything into it.”

Randle, ever the cheerleader, said, “When I look at Heck and Devereaux, I see future major leaguers.”

Williams pointed out a young woman who was walking deliberately across the aisle, pushing a baby in a stroller.  “Her husband is one of our infielders,” said Williams.  “She pauses and watches him at bat and then resumes strolling.  That’s what this is all about.”

The young woman, Erin Garvey was pacing with her 11-month-old son Levi.  Her husband, Robbie, played baseball at Southern Nevada Junior College when she was on the softball team.  “We were engaged for three years before we got married, so we’re patient about all this,” she said.  “Right now, I’m fine with what he’s doing.  We’re both 23.  He wants to make it in the big leagues.  That’s his dream.  I’m in school now and I want to be a nurse.  I’m trying to follow my dream, too.”

Two of the hardcore fans who are still wild about the Wild Things are Emily Narsavage and Martha McNutt, both in their 70s, who come to all the games from Woodlands Village, a senior community ten minutes from the ballpark.

“I’ve always loved baseball and I played mushball when I was young,” said Ms. Narsavage.  “Martha and I even got dressed up for Halloween. See we’re wearing Wild Things shirts that are orange and black.”

Ms. McNutt said, “We enjoy the atmosphere at this ball park as much as the baseball.  We see friends here.  We talk to people.  The employees are great; it’s just a fun time.  Everybody is nice to you, all the way up to the big guy, Stu Williams.

“He’s really trying to make something of this.   You have no idea of how hard they’re trying.  They just haven’t found the right combination yet.”

John Chambers, a 60-year-old coal miner from Carmichaels, is a season ticket holder with front-row seats along first base.  He’s had season tickets from the start.

“I like the family atmosphere here,” said Chambers.  “I like the hustle.  I see major leaguers dogging it and not running out ground balls.  I like watching these kids who don’t make much money who are trying so hard.”

ATTENDANCE FOR 48 HOME GAME SCHEDULE THROUGH THE YEARS

Provided by Frontier League

Year       Total Attendance      Avg. Attendance

2002      132,901                        2,768

2003      156,276                        3,255

2004      154,276                        3,214

2005      154,963                        3,228

2006      152,805                        3,183

2007      155,894                        3,247

2008      154,444                        3,217

2009      133,881                        2,789

2010      116,722                        2,431

2011      104,635                        2,179

Pittsburgh Business Times columnist Jim O’Brien has written 20 books in his “Pittsburgh Proud” sports series.  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

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Jim O’brien: Munhall’s Jack Butler knows how to say “Thank you”

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Jim O’brien: Munhall’s Jack Butler knows how to say “Thank you”

Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien

Jack Butler was the best speaker of the six former National Football League players who were inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame this past Saturday evening in Canton, Ohio.

         Butler was at the microphone in Fawcett Stadium for exactly 3 minutes and 55 seconds.  That contrasts with the final speaker on the program, Curtis Martin, who spoke for 27 minutes.  It took three hours to induct six players.  That’s overkill.

         Butler said “thank you” or some form of that phrase nine times in that span.  He said he was thankful, grateful, honored, humbled, happy and proud.  What more is there to say?

         Hey, he’s 84 years old and moving as fast as he can on two bad wheels.  He said he was “thankful to God.”  He concluded his reflections by saying, “Heck, I’m thankful to be here.  I thank you all.”

         Butler was midway through his nine-year (1951-1959) playing career for the Steelers when Britain’s Roger Bannister broke the four-minute mile for the first time – that was on May 6, 1954 – and the Oxford student completed the distance in 3 minutes and 59.4 seconds.

         So Butler broke Bannister’s record on Saturday night by a few seconds.

         Martin, who came out of Hazelwood and Taylor Allderdice High School and the University of Pittsburgh, told some harrowing tales about an alcoholic father who beat his mother, giving her black eyes, burning her in hot water in a bath tub, setting her hair on fire with a lighter, and putting lit cigarettes out on her legs.

         It might make for an interesting magazine story, or for a book, but not for a Hall of Fame acceptance speech.

         In short, rather in long, Martin told his life story, way too personally as some saw it.  Martin received rave reviews in some publications for his honest account of a dysfunctional family, but drew some strong criticism in social media.  Some observers said it was “the worst speech in Hall of Fame history.”

         Martin went into too much detail or TMI, as my daughter Rebecca says when I do the same.  TMI is for Too Much Information.  I felt the same way when I read “West on West,” Jerry West’s life story, when he revealed so many ugly details about his dad and his upbringing in backwoods West Virginia.

         It’s a good thing Martin spoke last and not first.  Butler was second on the program and he might have packed his bags and gone back home to Munhall if he had to sit through Martin’s marathon talk before it was his turn to speak.

         Butler thanked his wife and his eight children, but he didn’t mention them all by name, thinking that he’d go over his allotted five-minute acceptance speech.  That’s how long Hall of Fame officials ask you to speak.

         I recall that Butler was the best speaker, even though he started out by saying “I’m not much of a speaker,” at a dinner to honor his teammate Fran Rogel of North Braddock.

         That dinner lasted from 6 o’clock to just after midnight at the Churchill Country Club and Butler told a buddy “some of those speakers killed it by talking too long.”

         Butler has always been a man of few words.  He probably spoke longer than former Pirates’ star Bill Mazeroski did the day he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, but both were well received because they are “so damn real,” as Steve Blass once said of Maz.  They are down to earth and uncomfortable in the spotlight, and that’s part of their appeal to Pittsburgh sports fans.

         I don’t think the induction ceremony of the Pro Football Hall of Fame is an appropriate place to put out your family’s dirty laundry.

         I have been guilty of staying too long at the mike at the Sports Night Dinner at the Thompson Club in West Mifflin, and I have learned my lesson in that regard.  Nowadays, I make sure I know how long I’m expected to speak and keep a close eye on my wristwatch to make sure I don’t go into overtime.

         I remember going to a football banquet in Belle Vernon in the mid-80s when I was to be the featured speaker.  I got there a half hour early, as is my custom, to meet people and pick up some items I could use in my talk to localize my remarks.  The dinner started at 6 p.m.  By 10 p.m. I still had not been called to the podium.

         A long-time assistant soccer coach was given a surprise award upon his retirement.  He said, “I don’t have a script,” before he went into a 24-minute ramble.  Midway through his remarks, I told the head football coach who was sitting next to me, “Get him a script!”

         When I got up to speak I had to remind those in attendance of why we were there.

         I was happy to see Butler and Martin get inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.  I knew Chris Doleman, one of the other inductees, from our days at Pitt.  He was about to start his junior season (1983) when I was hired to be the assistant athletic director for public relations at Pitt.

         I remember Doleman got hurt in the first game of his senior year (1984), a season-opener at Pitt Stadium against BYU, and missed most of the season.  He was one of several players who were in the doghouse with Coach Foge Fazio.  The Panthers lost to BYU 20-14. That setback in the first game set the tone for the rest of the schedule and the Panthers finished with a 3-7-1 record.

         There was a lot of talent on that team.  When the Panthers finished 5-5-1 the following season, Fazio was fired as the head coach.  I thought he deserved another year, just as I thought Dave Wannstedt should have been given another year.  Both had recruited the talent to turn out a winner.

         I recall being in the press box in Martin’s junior season (1993) at Pitt when he ran for over 200 yards against a tough Texas team.  There were two Steelers’ scouts in the press box that day.  Martin did suffer some injuries at Pitt that limited his playing time.  That’s why he lasted till the third round in the NFL draft before the New England Patriots, coached by Bill Parcells, took him in the draft.

         I ran into Martin’s mother a few times when I was signing books at Ross Park Mall.  She’d be wearing a New England Patriots’ jacket and she’d make sure you knew she was Curtis Martin’s mother.  I got a kick out of her brassiness.  She seemed like a strong woman, happy and proud of her son’s achievements.

         She told me stories about her son.  She never shared any stories about her husband.

         I was no longer on the Steelers’ beat when Dermontti Dawson came along in 1988.  But he seemed like a good guy, and he was definitely a great center, following in the tradition of Mike Webster, Ray Mansfield and Bill Walsh as outstanding Steelers’ centers.

         This is the second time that Pitt has had two former players inducted into the Hall of Fame on the same day.  Russ Grimm and Rickey Jackson were inducted in the Class of 2010.

         Doleman commented in Canton that this could help Pitt in its recruiting efforts.  He mentioned the problems in the Penn State program, with players abandoning ship at State College in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky Scandal and NCAA penalties.

         He said that Pitt should get some of its Hall of Fame football players, and other alumni, to convince some of the Penn State players that Pitt would be the perfect place for them if they are considering transferring to another school.

         Doleman’s idea sounds good, but it would be illegal and might draw NCAA penalties to the Pitt program.  Todd Graham advanced some similar ideas when he became the head coach at Pitt.   He wanted Bill Fralic and Tony Dorsett to do that.  You would think a head coach in college would know the rules better than that.  Former players and alumni are not permitted to talk to prospects about coming to any college.

         I have been asked many times in recent weeks what I thought about the NCAA penalties against Penn State.

         At first, I wrongly thought that the NCAA should not have anything to say about this scandal since Penn State broke no rules in its conduct of its football program.  But I guess Todd Graham is not the only one who doesn’t know what the NCAA can and cannot do.

         I think Penn State officials were so eager to not draw a four-year “death penalty” that they accepted the terms of this penalty.  But I thought the NCAA went too far.

         I think it was ridiculous and uncalled for to strip Penn State of so many victories in recent years.  They didn’t want Joe Paterno to remain the winningest college football coach in Division I so they cut back on his victory total.

         Hey, Joe Paterno didn’t win those games.  The football team did, and it’s not fair to those players and those students and alumni who were part of the program to penalize them in such a manner.

         I thought it was okay to ban the team from post-season bowl games for four years, and to reduce their scholarships by five each year.  The new coach, Bill O’Brien, was most upset by the decision to permit present Penn State football players to transfer to another school without having to sit out a season.

         Coaches always react to such things on a personal level.  This was the one aspect of the penalty that was going to make O’Brien’s job more challenging.  I am sure he didn’t buy into such a situation when he left the New England Patriots in favor of Penn State.

         I think things will work out fine for Penn State.  O’Brien is right to say Penn State is still an outstanding academic institution and there aren’t any bowl games you can go to and have 110,000 people in the stands as they have at Beaver Stadium.

         I think Penn State will attract a certain kind of kid who wants to help turn things around in the program.  Penn State still has one of the greatest environments any kid could ask for to play college football.  Some of the great prospects will go elsewhere because they want to play in bowl games.

         I think Penn State will appeal to the best kind of kids.

         I have to take O’Brien to task for saying that because of his prior experience as a pro football coach that he can better ready players to move to the next level.  Dave Wannstedt used to say that when he was the head coach at Pitt.

         I don’t think O’Brien’s job is to prepare players for the pros.  How many kids are we talking about here?  Few make it to the pro level.  His job, and Wannstedt’s job, is to develop a clean and proud college football program, to turn out winning teams.

         Joe Paterno set the bar high in that respect.  Paterno made a mistake in judgment when he didn’t see to it that Jerry Sandusky was fired and forced to leave the State College campus.  I have friends, including Franco Harris, who disagree about this, and remain firm in their belief that Paterno did what was required of him.

         Joe Paterno is dead.  Taking his victories away doesn’t punish him.  It punishes people who had nothing to do with the Jerry Sandusky Scandal.  I am a proud Pitt man, but I feel sorry for Penn State people who truly cared about the school’s football team and athletic program, and have been hurt by all this.

          Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien can be reached at jimmyo64@gmail.com

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Michael Minter, Steelers Defensive Lineman, 1987

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First, can you let readers know what you have been doing with yourself since your time in the NFL and how you got started in this profession?

I moved back to my home state of Texas when I left Pittsburgh. With my sports background, I felt led to coaching. I wanted to give back to the youth.

So, I returned to school to finish up my degree and got a teaching certification from the University of North Texas. I coached football and track for about ten years at Denton High School.

I currently teach at Denton High School . This is my 20th year of teaching. I also own a driver’s education school (NorTex Driving School). I spend a lot of my time coaching select baseball on my son’s team. I have seven kids (four boys, three girls).

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Joe Gordon, Former Steelers Director of Communications

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First, can you tell readers how you first became the Steelers’ Director of Communications in 1969?

I worked for the Hornets minor league hockey team then the Penguins and developed a reputation as being a confident and professional PR person. I had a relationship with Dan and with Art. Art was a big Penguins fan – he attended seven-to-eight Penguins games a year.

In 1970, the Steelers moved to Three Rivers Stadium. It was Dan’s opinion that they needed to expand the staff – including PR. The Steelers had one of the smallest staffs in the league at the time, and with the league merging with the AFL, Dan knew they needed to expand the staff. The NFL-AFL merger meant more opportunities for the team and NFL. Plus, we had an antiquated stadium. They had to generate more revenue to compete and playing at Pitt stadium – that was built in 1927 and had only bleacher seating – well,  it was not even up to the standards of the current league much less the merging league.

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Chris Kolodziejski, Steelers Tight End, 1984

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First, can you let readers know about your post-NFL career, including your new investment – Chella Skin Care Products?

I was fortunate to graduate from University of Wyoming with a finance degree and after my career ending injury, I moved back home to California and started a real estate development and construction company.  That was a great business to be in from 1985 to 1991, however in 1991 we went thought a dramatic real estate collapse that lasted until 1996.

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Antwaan Randle El, Steelers Wide Receiver, 2002-2005, 2010

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First, can you let readers know about the Antwaan Randel El Foundation. How it got started and why this cause is so special to you?

I started the foundation eight years ago. It started off as football camps for the kids. I’ve been living my life for Jesus – that’s my background – I’ve been living for God for ten-to-twelve years. There’s not many football camps that teach that to kids. So, I tied it to the social part – what it is to be a man. That’s what we teach the kids.

I got that from my upbringing – from my mom and dad. When my dad got saved when I was a kid, everything changed in my house. God transformed my dad – he was a big drinker, heavy into the alcohol. He used to kick us out the door when it was time for church. He wouldn’t go but he wanted us too. The way the household changed when he was saved – it was so different.

Now we teach the kids to follow God. Who can you help? We serve the kids this way.

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Jim O’Brien: From Hazelwood to London still long jump for Douglas

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Jim O’Brien: From Hazelwood to London still long jump for Douglas

Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien

Herb Douglas Jr. is a boyhood hero who has stood the test of time.  As a 26-year-old graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, Douglas won a bronze medal in the long jump in the 1948 Summer Olympic Games in London, and parlayed his celebrity status in sports into a successful business career.

He lives in Philadelphia, but he has maintained his boyhood home in Hazelwood and stays there when he returns to coordinate special recognition programs for track & field and African-American athletes at his alma mater.  He has served on the board of trustees at the University of Pittsburgh and now enjoys emeritus status.  He is in the Taylor Allderdice High School Hall of Fame.

“He’s a good friend and counselor,” said Chancellor Mark Nordenberg.  “Herb has always been a point of pride for the University of Pittsburgh, and leads us in so many ways.”

Douglas is departing Philadelphia on Thursday, July 27 for a week-long stay in London during the Olympic Games with several of his teammates from the 1948 USA Olympic team.  At 90, he is the oldest surviving Olympic track & field medalist, and will serve as an ambassador for the University of Pittsburgh.

He returned to Pittsburgh last month to place his memorabilia in a time capsule on a wall where many prominent Pittsburghers are honored at the Heinz History Center. Douglas has been cited as a “History Maker” at the Senator John Heinz History Center, is hailed in the Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum and he celebrated his 85th and 90th birthdays at gala events there that were attended by Olympians and sports celebrities, as well as family and close friends.

“Herb Douglas has a special place in so many respects here at the Heinz History Center,” said Andy Masisch, the president and CEO of the center in the city’s Strip District.  Douglas has become a good friend of Franco Harris.  “He’s taught me a lot about our history,” said Harris, who chairs the Champions Committee there.

Douglas spoke over the telephone from his apartment in Philadelphia earlier this month, and a sense of excitement and anticipation resonated in his usually steady voice.

“There was a photographer here yesterday from The New York Daily News who took a picture of me and my Olympic medal,” declared Douglas.  “That’s the first time, strangely enough, that has happened.  I needed that, too, to pass along.

“I feel good about all of this, everything.  It was 64 years ago that I won that medal, but it stays with me. I was a person who used the Olympics to open up business opportunities.”

He says he was inspired by the gold medal efforts of Jesse Owens and John Woodruff and what African-American athletes achieved in the 1936 Olympic Games.  “We didn’t have role models before that,” said Douglas.

In 1950, Douglas became a sales representative and district manager in Milwaukee for Pabst Blue Ribbon.  In 1963, he left Pabst to join Schieffelin & Company, importers of such premium brands as Hennessy Cognac, Moet and Chandon Champagnes.

Douglas was credited for boosting sales in urban communities, and for promoting minority hiring in his company.  He was named a vice-president of special markets in Milwaukee in 1968, and a vice-president of urban market development in 1984.  He worked for the company, now known as Moet & Hennessy for 30 years, 24 years as an employee and six more years as a consultant.  He formally retired in 1987.

He is reputed to be among the first African-American athletes, along with Jackie Robinson and Joe Black of the Brooklyn Dodgers, to use sports as a springboard for success as vice-presidents for national concerns.

Douglas met President Barack Obama in Denver this year.  “He put his arm around me and said, ‘I stand on your shoulders.’  He said he hopes he looks as good as me when he is 90.  I told him he’d look better because he’s better-looking.”

Douglas believes four basics serve anyone well.  His motto has been “analyze, organize, initiate and follow through.”

To which he adds, “Get yourself someone you can trust like a brother, a good finance person, a good business lawyer, and work hard and you have a chance to be a winner.”

Jim O’Brien is the author of “Hometown Heroes” and 20 books in his “Pittsburgh Proud” series.  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

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Jim O’Brien: Just enjoy the games as they are played

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Jim O’Brien: Just enjoy the games as they are played:

Pittsburgh sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien

This is a great time to be a sports fan in Pittsburgh.

         The Pirates have been playing so well and have created so much excitement in the city over their improved prospects.

         The Steelers opened their training camp at St. VincentCollege at mid-week and many of their fans will be making their annual pilgrimage to Latrobe to get an up-close look at their favorite pro football team.

         The Summer Olympic Games are underway in London and we will be rooting for our U.S.A. competitors in a wide selection of sports.  Since I was 14, back in the Summer Olympic Games in Rome in 1960, I have been a big fan of this international competition.

         Golf fans had to enjoy the British Open – I still call it that – in which the veteran Ernie Els made a great stretch run to overtake Adam Scott to win one of the majors.  I don’t play golf but I love to watch it on TV.  I was also glad that Tiger Woods was in contention nearly all the way.

         Anyone who has a high definition flat screen TV these days has to enjoy the extended coverage of sports in every spectrum.  I even watched the NASCAR race in Chicago on Sunday.

         If only they could clean up the mess at PennState sooner than later.  I’m a Pitt man but I root for PennState and I want to see the school resume being the great school it has always been.

         As I was writing this column, the Pirates had just swept a series with the Miami Marlins for a season-high five consecutive victories and were 14 games over .500 with the Chicago Cubs coming to town.  Who saw that coming back in April?

         Andrew McCutchen, Pedro Alvarez, Neal Walker, A.J. Burnett & Co. are the toast of the town.  So many Pirates have stepped up their games.  It would be great if they can continue to win more games than they lose.  I will be happy with a winning team this year.

         I don’t want them to trade off any of their top prospects for a rent-a-player to help them get into the playoffs.  I’d rather see this team grow from within.  I’m a patient man when it comes to the Pirates.  They are missing some pieces, but they have an inspired manager in Clint Hurdle.  He has a heartbeat, unlike his predecessor, and he has endeared himself to Pirates’ fans.  I’m worried that he will wear out his jaw chewing gum so vehemently during the games.

         I was looking forward to attending Wednesday afternoon’s contest with the Cubs at PNCPark, knowing there would be a great crowd, enhanced by the presence of plenty of Chicago visitors.  It promised to be a great afternoon for baseball.

         There’s been a real buzz in the ‘Burgh about these Pirates.  Some of the biggest crowds in PNC history have turned out to see the Pirates in action, and not just for the giveaways and fireworks for a change.  They were there to see the Pirates play baseball.

         Ticket sales for the remainder of the summer have been strong, and anyone looking for the best seats better hurry up and get their orders in because they are going fast.  People are buying up Pirates’ paraphernalia

         I may sound like a coach but I am enjoying each game on its own merits.  Overzealous fans are already talking about the Pirates’ playoff prospects – there’s an extra wild-card slot this year – and even about what the team might do in a World Series.

         People who recognize me as a sportswriter have started to ask me what I think about the Pirates and how far they might go.

         I usually disappoint people when they ask me those kinds of questions, whether we are talking about the Pirates, the Penguins, the Steelers, or one of the Pitt teams.

         For starters, I don’t know what any of these teams are going to do in future games.  I pride myself on knowing the history of these teams, and sports in general. 

         I have been surprised and delighted by the Pirates’ play to date.  Who wouldn’t enjoy what we have seen so far?  But there are serious holes in their lineup, at bat and in the field, and the quality of pitching can turn on a dime.

         I think Pirates’ fans who want to discuss the playoffs and the World Series before July has even ended, with so many games in August and September and even at the beginning of October, are just setting them up for serious disappointment.  It would be nice if they could win their division, but don’t count on it.  There are many games still to be played.  And just because an opposing team has a poorer record does not mean the Pirates will prevail.  That’s baseball; that’s sports.

         Here’s my suggestion: just enjoy the games as they are played, and be enough of a baseball fan to be able to deal with a defeat here and there, because it’s going to happen.  A team that can win five straight can also lose five straight.  Or more.

         The same goes for the Steelers.

         How do I think they will do this year?

         I think they will be a contender.  I think they will be in the mix.  They still have enough key players back to be in the running. The Steelers don’t have to win the Super Bowl to have a great season, at least not in my mind.  They have a first-rate coach in Mike Tomlin and great players showing the way on both sides of the ball in Ben Roethlisberger and Troy Polamalu and strong supporting casts, with or without Mike Wallace.

         Like the Pirates, I think they will provide us with some great games, some victories to make our day, and that there will be days they will disappoint us because they did not play well, or they did not win the game.

         The same goes for the Penguins.  Why does the Stanley Cup come into the conversation at the start of every season?  Or already this summer?

         Pittsburgh sports fans are more spoiled than most sports fans because we have enjoyed so much success in sports in this region, more so than most cities in this country.   We have enjoyed more than our share of championships.

         Sports are an outlet, entertainment to take our minds off some of the stories that fill the front pages of our daily newspapers each and every day.  It’s a pastime.

         I’ve been following sports for a long time.  I first got interested in the Olympic Games when I was 14 and became the sports editor of the bi-weekly newspaper in my hometown – The Hazelwood Envoy.     

         The gold medalist in the shot put that summer was named Parry O’Brien from Southern California.  That caught my attention understandably.  I became a big fan of track & field.

         I learned that there was a man in my hometown named Herb Douglas Jr. who had won a bronze medal in the long jump at the 1948 Olympic Games in London.  We later became friends.  Herb celebrated his 90th birthday here in Pittsburgh in mid-March and he is in London for the next seven days, sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh, his alma mater, to witness these Olympic Games.

         I will be especially interested in watching track & field, basketball, swimming and gymnastics.

         I will be rooting for Swin Cash of McKeesport, the oldest player at 32 on our women’s basketball team, to contribute to a gold medal effort.  I recall having lunch with Swin at an Eat’n Park Restaurant on Lyle Boulevard in McKeesport when she was a star player at the University of Connecticut.

         I recall seeing Swin Cash honored at the Heinz History Center and looking so beautiful posing for pictures with the likes of Herb Douglas and the late “Bullet Bill” Dudley, a Steelers’ star in the ‘40s.       

         Swin Cash keeps coming back to McKeesport and lends her presence and her money to help make things better in the projects where she grew up.  There have been killings in her old neighborhood and she knows the families of some of the victims.

         Whether there is violence in McKeesport, or Aurora, Colorado or in so many countries in Europe and Asia and Africa, it makes one realize how lucky we are to have some relief, or an outlet, to have fun with our games, with our sports.

         It’s fun to argue about sports, and to make comparisons and contrasts.  I see where Kobe Bryant is bragging that this edition of the men’s basketball team would beat The Dream Team that represented the U.S.A. when Michael Jordan was the team’s star.

         I go back to that 1960 men’s basketball team that is now overlooked, but had enough great players to beat any team at any time.  You can’t play ten or twelve players at the same time and I think we’d be better off with some lesser talents who recognize that they are role players, and contribute in ways that are more difficult to measure.

         Our 1960 team included Oscar Robertson, Jerry West, Walt Bellamy and Jerry Lucas – who are all in the Basketball Hall of Fame – and such other stars as Terry Dischinger, Bob Boozer, Darrell Imhoff and Adam Smith.  They went 8-0 and outscored their opponents by 42.4 points per game. 

         Pirates’ broadcaster Steve Blass has been reminding us during each game of what fun it is to be at PNCPark these days.  The Pirates and their fans have suffered through 19 straight losing seasons, the most of any team in professional sports, and that’s why this is so sweet.

         I hear the Pirates’ broadcasters using phrases such as “can of corn” to describe a pop fly in the outfield, and it brings Bob Prince to mind.  Prince used that phrase when he was “the voice of the Pirates,” and it brings back memories of better days at the ballpark.

           I think it’s unrealistic to expect our teams to come out on top all the time.  It doesn’t work that way.

         Save your prayers for the real problems in the world or in your neighborhood, and simply root for the home teams to prevail.  Don’t damn them when they don’t play up to your expectations.

         Just enjoy the games.

          Sports author and Valley Mirror columnist Jim O’Brien has a series of “Pittsburgh Proud” books at area bookstores.  His website is www.jimobriensportsauthor.com

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Chuck Finder, Author, the Steelers Encyclopedia

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Chuck Finder

First, can you tell readers about your new book – the Steelers Encyclopedia. What inspired you to write the book and how it differs from other Steelers books?

It wasn’t so much an epiphany or lightning bolt from above. Rather, about a month after I took a voluntary buyout from half my life as a newspaper wretch, a call came from a publisher: “How’d you like to write a Steelers book?”  It’s an idea that knocked around my cranium for years. But I held back, wanting to wade into the deep end of the sports-book pool with a craft more seaworthy than a ducky innertube (nothing against them, so long as you’re under the age of five).

These publishers found a niche with an Encyclopedia-style book, and that concept struck a chord with me. It allowed a laser focus on the coaches, the players, the Rooneys, the important moments and the few people who comprised the down-then-up arc of the Pirates/Steelers franchise. Moreover – and here’s where this book differs from the rest – this broad approach allowed for nearly 100 different voices and 150 rare photographs. From Hall of Famers to assistant coaches to trainers to media, from Joe Greene to the virtual Joe Blow, men with roles big and little in the 80-year history were given the ability to show their faces and share their oral histories. It’s a fun ride. It’s a fun read, I hope.

How can readers order the book?

It comes out Sept. 8, but you can preorder already via online sales:

+ Amazon at  //www.amazon.com/Steelers-Encyclopedia-Chuck-Finder/dp/143990832X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1341545144&sr=1-1&keywords=%22Steelers+Encyclopedia%22

+ Barnes and Noble at //www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-steelers-encyclopedia-chuck-finder/1109647411?ean=9781439908327

+ And here is the publisher’s page //www.temple.edu/tempress/titles/2194_reg.html

Come September, it will be in bookstores throughout the Western Pennsylvania and, so we hope, anywhere Steelers fans shop. Make sure you ask for it!

How has your experience as a sportswriter and columnist for the Post-Gazette affected the way you approached the book – and did that experience make it in any way more challenging for you to come up with a different approach?

Actually, it felt as if that quarter-century of background and experience prepared me to write a better book on a familiar subject. Even beyond than that work experience, I was fortunate to grow up as a family friend of the Steel Curtain’s backup, Steve Furness. From an early age, I got to meet teammates and hear stories from behind the ‘70s scenes. So when it came time so many years later to call on folks I’ve known for so long, it seemed like renewing old acquaintances and them launching into, “Here’s one you never heard…..” Out poured stories that few outside of the team circle ever heard. Like when Gary Dunn prefaced one tale, “Here’s one you can retire on.” (If only that were true!)

Long answer short, my experience and familiarity allowed me to hold intimate conversations. My career as a journalist gave me the diligence and the doggedness to interview so many, to double- and triple-check stories, to back up statistics and to pore through accounts from a variety of different Pittsburgh media sources. Combined, those factors made the fresh approach – oral histories and hardly-seen photos – flow almost seamlessly together.

In researching the book, what are some of the biggest perceptions about the team that were debunked from the 100+ interviews you conducted?

Not sure if anything was debunked, but instead it was reinforced: somewhere between great fortune, divine providence and overdue karma came together this amazing amalgamation. Talent met character met camaraderie met fortitude met intelligence. These folks take you inside the draft room, inside the trainer’s room, inside the meeting room, inside the weight room, inside the locker room, through the tunnel, onto the practice field, into the game, to the Super Bowl. . . and on the raucous bus afterward. In quite a few occasions, they simply collided with dumb luck.

For example, take the John Stallworth story. Bill Nunn pulled some shenanigans in scouting Stallworth, then played poker on draft day: There was war-room sentiment to take Stallworth in the second round rather than Jack Lambert, but Nunn calmly convinced them that Stallworth would last until the fourth round (they had no third-rounder, remember). Later, on the practice field, Chuck Noll suggested that Stallworth shed his glasses for contacts. And from there Stallworth competed with Lynn Swann for Terry Bradshaw’s attention and passes. It all worked – the three each became Hall of Famers. Oh, and Stallworth owns a piece of the club now, too.

Hindsight and maturity allows many of the significant people of those ‘70s Steelers to talk about the rise of those players, those coaches. I found it to be a fascinating look inside a club I heretofore thought I knew pretty well. . . and I thought wrongly.

Who were some of the biggest characters you interviewed, and what made them so? Any examples?

So many characters have crossed the thresholds at Forbes Field, Pitt Stadium, Three Rivers Stadium and Heinz Field – Lord, how I wished Bobby Layne, Johnny Blood McNally and Bullet Bill Dudley were still around to take out for a brew. So many people whom you might not expect suddenly were outspoken, such as Dick Hoak’s recollections of the South Park training facilities or Troy Polamalu’s personal pick for his favorite coach of all-time.

Every person interviewed will have a story or quote to make readers laugh, think, drop their jaw. But my personal favorite was 95-year-old Chuck Cherundolo, a star center in the 1940s and a coach thereafter. The delight that Buck O’Neil brought to Ken Burns’ baseball documentaries (certainly on a grander scale), Cherundolo brought the same sheer joy to this Steelers history. Through his thick glasses, you could almost see him replaying moments in his eyes. Bullet Bill Dudley, he growled? Not that fast. Is Bill still alive? (No.) Walt Kiesling, he still living? He’s gone, too? I guess when you get to be 94, they’re all gone.”

What interviews stand out to you the most, and why?

Beyond Chuck Cherundolo (about whom so many older players raved and asked for his address) and Hoak and Polamalu, some open and honest and incisive and funny tales came in particular from Joe Greene, Andy Russell, Larry Brown, Mike Wagner, Gary Dunn (he had me howling), Jon Kolb (he has a great line about the Immaculate Reception), Frenchy Fuqua (speaking of), John Stallworth, Jack Ham (now he has quite the story to tell), Ralph Berlin (he misses the players’ poker games), many of the Rooneys… even Bill Cowher had a good crack about playing racquetball with Kevin Colbert.

Who knows, this might be the last book where Hines Ward, Aaron Smith and James Farrior talk together. I don’t want to give too much away quite yet, but they just were so at ease talking about their days that their words prove both entertaining and informative.

In speaking with many of the older players – the pre-70’s Steelers – do you think the post-NFL adjustment was easier for them versus the more modern day players because they had to create non-football careers and non-football for themselves while they were still playing since they got paid so much less?

There was little adjustment in those days. People tend to forget, but the NFL wasn’t a big deal until the 1970s… and even then it wasn’t as monolithic as it is today. Franco Harris rode a PAT bus to work his Rookie of the Year season, for goodness sakes. In the decades preceding, players HAD to make a living outside of football.

Tim Rooney Sr. remembered marriage being a barrier – some guys had to retire from the NFL so they could make a real living somewhere else and support their brides. Ernie Stautner, one of the toughest Steelers ever? He owned a drive-in theater in Lake Placid, N.Y. His business was so successful, he was allowed to report to camp late because it was still the high-season at the drive-in.

Who were some of the more under-appreciated players and coaches in Steelers history, from your perspective?

Wow, talk about an idea for a book!

As for coaches, I’m not sure Bud Carson receives as much credit. Several players loved telling how he could change gameplans in the tunnel before the game. And how they reveled in telling famed 49ers coach Bill Walsh how Carson solved Walsh’s offense all those years. The under-appreciated players could be summed up thusly: The Steelers historic line of centers doesn’t begin and end with Ray Mansfield (who came to the Steelers as a defensive player), Mike Webster, Dermontti Dawson and Maurkice Pouncey. No, Cherundolo and his replacement Bill Walsh (not the 49ers coach) were two of the best linemen in their day, let alone centers.

As a sportswriter and now author, you get to talk with players and see them outside of the on-field, game-time environment. How different is the perception that fans have of players from reality, and how much do you think that frustrates the players?

Some relish their roles and personnas, others spend careers – if not lifetimes – trying to avoid perceptions… or misconceptions. The intrusive, 24-7-365 nature of this society and media, and that includes social media, plays a role in that. Little is perceived to be either private or off-limits anymore. For some players, Pittsburgh actually is a haven: most fans give them their space, allow them to breathe and act for what to them is normally. Otherwise, a beard would never have its own Facebook.

What’s next for you – another book on the horizon? Or did you want to get back into sportswriting?

This was my first solo book project, and it was a lonnnng, draining process. But it was, and is, enjoyable, fulfilling and, if people like the book as much as I hope they will, rewarding. I’d love to do it all again. The future for me is, well, filled with unwritten chapters.

After I left sports writing, several roads opened: this book, some online work with CBSSports.com, some free-lance writing, teaching opportunities, and a new career in media relations. Hey, I still got two boys, a wife, a father and a mother-in-law, three dogs and two snakes to look after. The heck with a plate, that’s a full buffet in front of me.

Any last thoughts for readers?

The same as the Steelers quiz on your website – and many of those answers are found in “The Steelers Encyclopedia” – there is so much more to learn about this franchise. I spent twenty-five years around them, inside the locker room, and for years before that I knew many of them off the field. And in compiling this book I found out: You think you may know a team, but you really don’t.

Feel free to pass the time until September with blogs about the book every Friday on my immodestly named site, ChuckFinder.com (hey, it was available!). Once the season arrives, here’s hoping fans get an enjoyable season from the team and an entertaining education from “The Steelers Encyclopedia.”

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