Things I miss (Sports Version)

HarrisburgDave

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2021
934
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1. Jim McKay - Whether it was the Olympics or demolition derby on the Wide World of Sports, Jim McKay brought class and professionalism to all he did. In Munich, when he looked into the camera and told us "They're all gone", it was like hearing it from a member of the family. If there is an afterlife I hope he is announcing those races between Jim Thorpe and Jessie Owens.

2. "Harry we have a cake here sent to us from Edna Purdon of East Falls." Summer evenings were never better. God rest Richie and Harry.

3. For a few years in the early sixties there was one man who so clearly dominated his sport that love him or hate him you had to tune in when he pitched. Sandy Koufax was able to endure pain and perform at a level never matched before or since. That left arm coming over the top and every muscle in his body launching him towards the plate was something to see. My heart aches watching the clip of his retirement at the top of his career.

4. Jim Browne - He was 6'2", 235 lbs., and he could run like a deer. That isn't what made him the greatest RB ever. It was his heart. He played with a ferocity and desire to be the best. I hear it said he was a better lacrosse player than anyone of his time. Only one back in my lifetime came close to him...

5. O.J. Simpson - 6'2", 212 lbs., with the best vision any running back ever had. He is not given the credit he deserves for being tough. They handed the ball to him nearly every down and he never left the field.

6. Lou Brock - He was the heart of some great St. Louis Cardinals teams. An explosive athlete who seemed to be built of tungsten steel. If I had a base to steal he would be the first baserunner I would call in to do the job. He could hit with pop too.

7. John Halicek - The best sixth man ever. Then when the greats retired he became the leader and willed the Celtics to a couple more championships. I hated him so.

8. Tom Landry - Before we had every NFL game televised you were lucky to see two games on a Sunday in the Fall. More often than not one of the games would feature this man on the sidelines, stone faced, in a sports coat, his head topped with a classic hat. It always made me feel good to see him lose, but the man was class.

9. Dick Enberg - A real pro who I first heard announce UCLA basketball games back in the sixties. He became a fixture on CBS, bringing us most of the premier games televised for the next 30 years by that network.

10. Bill Campbell - Living near Philadelphia we were fortunate enough to get cable in the mid 1960s and I got to watch Big 5 games with him announcing. He was the radio announcer for nearly every Philadelphia professional sports team at some point between 1965 and 1980. I believe he did basketball best, college and NBA.

Oh, and one last thing. Did anyone else get a decent radio in the sixties and spend evenings tuning in radio stations from Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, St. Louis, Cincinnati? Every once in a while maybe Chicago or Atlanta would come in if the wind was blowing in the right direction. I still remember the night I tuned in "Sports Huddle" a radio call in show broadcast weekend evenings on WBZ in Boston. That show became the template for all the sports talk shows you see and hear today.
 
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MrTailgate

Well-known member
Oct 19, 2021
832
1,542
93
1. Jim McKay - Whether it was the Olympics or demolition derby on the Wide World of Sports, Jim McKay brought class and professionalism to all he did. In Munich, when he looked into the camera and told us "They're all gone", it was like hearing it from a member of the family. If there is an afterlife I hope he is announcing those races between Jim Thorpe and Jessie Owens.

2. "Harry we have a cake here sent to us from Edna Purdon of East Falls." Summer evenings were never better. God rest Richie and Harry.

3. For a few years in the early sixties there was one man who so clearly dominated his sport that love him or hate him you had to tune in when he pitched. Sandy Koufax was able to endure pain and perform at a level never matched before or since. That left arm coming over the top and every muscle in his body launching him towards the plate was something to see. My heart aches watching the clip of his retirement at the top of his career.

4. Jim Browne - He was 6'2", 235 lbs., and he could run like a deer. That isn't what made him the greatest RB ever. It was his heart. He played with a ferocity and desire to be the best. I hear it said he was a better lacrosse player than anyone of his time. Only one back in my lifetime came close to him...

5. O.J. Simpson - 6'2", 212 lbs., with the best vision any running back ever had. He is not given the credit he deserves for being tough. They handed the ball to him nearly every down and he never left the field.

6. Lou Brock - He was the heart of some great St. Louis Cardinals teams. An explosive athlete who seemed to be built of tungsten steel. If I had a base to steal he would be the first baserunner I would call in to do the job. He could hit with pop too.

7. John Halicek - The best sixth man ever. Then when the greats retired he became the leader and willed the Celtics to a couple more championships. I hated him so.

8. Tom Landry - Before we had every NFL game televised you were lucky to see two games on a Sunday in the Fall. More often than not one of the games would feature this man on the sidelines, stone faced, in a sports coat, his head topped with a classic hat. It always made me feel good to see him lose, but the man was class.

9. Dick Enberg - A real pro who I first heard announce UCLA basketball games back in the sixties. He became a fixture on CBS, bringing us most of the premier games televised for the next 30 years by that network.

10. Bill Campbell - Living near Philadelphia we were fortunate enough to get cable in the mid 1960s and I got to watch Big 5 games with him announcing. He was the radio announcer for nearly every Philadelphia professional sports team at some point between 1965 and 1980. I believe he did basketball best, college and NBA.

Oh, and one last thing. Did anyone else get a decent radio in the sixties and spend evenings tuning in radio stations from Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, St. Louis, Cincinnati? Every once in a while maybe Chicago or Atlanta would come in if the wind was blowing in the right direction.

Great List.

My memory of Big 5 was Big Al Meltzer and Charlie Swift. The Palestra double headers were epic as was Yoyo, streamers after first basket, the signs being unfurled across sections at the Palestra, etc.

Keith Jackson was the sound of CFB and although I wasn’t a fan of the Irish, I somehow watched the highlight show most weekends with Lindsey Nelson.

The Game of the Week and This Week in Baseball were staples of my youth.

Doubleheaders and Bat Day were wonderful.

A weekly must was getting the Sunday paper and looking at the stats for Average Leaders was diligently reviewed with underlining of all Phillies for easy reference.

I was a regular subscriber to SI, Sport, and The Sporting News and loved getting them in the mail and digging into them.

So many more.
 

saturdaysarebetter

Well-known member
Jun 28, 2018
753
1,136
111
1. Jim McKay - Whether it was the Olympics or demolition derby on the Wide World of Sports, Jim McKay brought class and professionalism to all he did. In Munich, when he looked into the camera and told us "They're all gone", it was like hearing it from a member of the family. If there is an afterlife I hope he is announcing those races between Jim Thorpe and Jessie Owens.

2. "Harry we have a cake here sent to us from Edna Purdon of East Falls." Summer evenings were never better. God rest Richie and Harry.

3. For a few years in the early sixties there was one man who so clearly dominated his sport that love him or hate him you had to tune in when he pitched. Sandy Koufax was able to endure pain and perform at a level never matched before or since. That left arm coming over the top and every muscle in his body launching him towards the plate was something to see. My heart aches watching the clip of his retirement at the top of his career.

4. Jim Browne - He was 6'2", 235 lbs., and he could run like a deer. That isn't what made him the greatest RB ever. It was his heart. He played with a ferocity and desire to be the best. I hear it said he was a better lacrosse player than anyone of his time. Only one back in my lifetime came close to him...

5. O.J. Simpson - 6'2", 212 lbs., with the best vision any running back ever had. He is not given the credit he deserves for being tough. They handed the ball to him nearly every down and he never left the field.

6. Lou Brock - He was the heart of some great St. Louis Cardinals teams. An explosive athlete who seemed to be built of tungsten steel. If I had a base to steal he would be the first baserunner I would call in to do the job. He could hit with pop too.

7. John Halicek - The best sixth man ever. Then when the greats retired he became the leader and willed the Celtics to a couple more championships. I hated him so.

8. Tom Landry - Before we had every NFL game televised you were lucky to see two games on a Sunday in the Fall. More often than not one of the games would feature this man on the sidelines, stone faced, in a sports coat, his head topped with a classic hat. It always made me feel good to see him lose, but the man was class.

9. Dick Enberg - A real pro who I first heard announce UCLA basketball games back in the sixties. He became a fixture on CBS, bringing us most of the premier games televised for the next 30 years by that network.

10. Bill Campbell - Living near Philadelphia we were fortunate enough to get cable in the mid 1960s and I got to watch Big 5 games with him announcing. He was the radio announcer for nearly every Philadelphia professional sports team at some point between 1965 and 1980. I believe he did basketball best, college and NBA.

Oh, and one last thing. Did anyone else get a decent radio in the sixties and spend evenings tuning in radio stations from Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, St. Louis, Cincinnati? Every once in a while maybe Chicago or Atlanta would come in if the wind was blowing in the right direction. I still remember the night I tuned in "Sports Huddle" a radio call in show broadcast weekend evenings on WBZ in Boston. That show became the template for all the sports talk shows you see and hear today.
Brown no e.
Havlicek
 
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BeerLion

Active member
Oct 12, 2021
187
375
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1. Jim McKay - Whether it was the Olympics or demolition derby on the Wide World of Sports, Jim McKay brought class and professionalism to all he did. In Munich, when he looked into the camera and told us "They're all gone", it was like hearing it from a member of the family. If there is an afterlife I hope he is announcing those races between Jim Thorpe and Jessie Owens.

2. "Harry we have a cake here sent to us from Edna Purdon of East Falls." Summer evenings were never better. God rest Richie and Harry.

3. For a few years in the early sixties there was one man who so clearly dominated his sport that love him or hate him you had to tune in when he pitched. Sandy Koufax was able to endure pain and perform at a level never matched before or since. That left arm coming over the top and every muscle in his body launching him towards the plate was something to see. My heart aches watching the clip of his retirement at the top of his career.

4. Jim Browne - He was 6'2", 235 lbs., and he could run like a deer. That isn't what made him the greatest RB ever. It was his heart. He played with a ferocity and desire to be the best. I hear it said he was a better lacrosse player than anyone of his time. Only one back in my lifetime came close to him...

5. O.J. Simpson - 6'2", 212 lbs., with the best vision any running back ever had. He is not given the credit he deserves for being tough. They handed the ball to him nearly every down and he never left the field.

6. Lou Brock - He was the heart of some great St. Louis Cardinals teams. An explosive athlete who seemed to be built of tungsten steel. If I had a base to steal he would be the first baserunner I would call in to do the job. He could hit with pop too.

7. John Halicek - The best sixth man ever. Then when the greats retired he became the leader and willed the Celtics to a couple more championships. I hated him so.

8. Tom Landry - Before we had every NFL game televised you were lucky to see two games on a Sunday in the Fall. More often than not one of the games would feature this man on the sidelines, stone faced, in a sports coat, his head topped with a classic hat. It always made me feel good to see him lose, but the man was class.

9. Dick Enberg - A real pro who I first heard announce UCLA basketball games back in the sixties. He became a fixture on CBS, bringing us most of the premier games televised for the next 30 years by that network.

10. Bill Campbell - Living near Philadelphia we were fortunate enough to get cable in the mid 1960s and I got to watch Big 5 games with him announcing. He was the radio announcer for nearly every Philadelphia professional sports team at some point between 1965 and 1980. I believe he did basketball best, college and NBA.

Oh, and one last thing. Did anyone else get a decent radio in the sixties and spend evenings tuning in radio stations from Boston, New York, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, St. Louis, Cincinnati? Every once in a while maybe Chicago or Atlanta would come in if the wind was blowing in the right direction. I still remember the night I tuned in "Sports Huddle" a radio call in show broadcast weekend evenings on WBZ in Boston. That show became the template for all the sports talk shows you see and hear today.
Gotta have some Keith Jackson...Whoa Nellie !
 

GrimReaper

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
6,419
8,872
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Great List.

My memory of Big 5 was Big Al Meltzer and Charlie Swift. The Palestra double headers were epic as was Yoyo, streamers after first basket, the signs being unfurled across sections at the Palestra, etc.

Keith Jackson was the sound of CFB and although I wasn’t a fan of the Irish, I somehow watched the highlight show most weekends with Lindsey Nelson.

The Game of the Week and This Week in Baseball were staples of my youth.

Doubleheaders and Bat Day were wonderful.

A weekly must was getting the Sunday paper and looking at the stats for Average Leaders was diligently reviewed with underlining of all Phillies for easy reference.

I was a regular subscriber to SI, Sport, and The Sporting News and loved getting them in the mail and digging into them.

So many more.
Lindsey Nelson's sport jackets.
 

Connorpozlee

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2021
2,331
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I do miss guys that just play the game without all the look at me stuff. I’ve adjusted to it, but it always looks ridiculous to me.
I miss my Islanders being a dynasty.
I miss admiring Pete Rose because I didn’t know anything about him other than what he did in the field.
I miss JoePa on the sidelines.
As much as I enjoy getting to see every Reds game, I do miss trying to tune the dial in just right to get 700 WLW (The Big One!) to come in as clearly as possible to listen to Marty Brenneman and Joe Nuxhall call the Reds games through alternating surges of static and clarity.
I miss playing one-on-one street hockey against my older brother in front of our house.
I miss sitting under the big tree in the yard on the side of my house on a Sunday morning in the summer looking through the NY Daily News at the stats of all the hitters and pitchers and discussing them with my father while he drank a case of beer (Budweiser if things were going good financially, Meister Brau when things weren’t).
 

retsio

Active member
Oct 13, 2021
188
461
63
The thrills and chills of sports memories - on a personal note and then some names crafted for history.
Personally - too many moments to recall

Temple basketball - John Chaney
the Sixers - Wilt Chamberlain, Dr. J
the Flyers - Bobby Clarke, Gene Hart, Mike Emrick
Hockey Night in Canada - Don Cherry
Boxing - Muhammad Ali
radio - WBZ in Boston, WLS in Chicago, CKLW in Windsor, Canada
 

LionJim

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
11,022
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The thrills and chills of sports memories - on a personal note and then some names crafted for history.
Personally - too many moments to recall

Temple basketball - John Chaney
the Sixers - Wilt Chamberlain, Dr. J
the Flyers - Bobby Clarke, Gene Hart, Mike Emrick
Hockey Night in Canada - Don Cherry
Boxing - Muhammad Ali
Penn basketball.
 
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Academic Probation

New member
Jun 10, 2023
6
7
3
The thrills and chills of sports memories - on a personal note and then some names crafted for history.
Personally - too many moments to recall

Temple basketball - John Chaney
the Sixers - Wilt Chamberlain, Dr. J
the Flyers - Bobby Clarke, Gene Hart, Mike Emrick
Hockey Night in Canada - Don Cherry
Boxing - Muhammad Ali
Wilt the Stilt. Indy 500 on the radio
 
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Karl_Havok

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2021
3,404
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I miss the 90's ESPN when you could watch sports highlights over and over without a cast of blowhard dickheads manufacturing "news" and drama with idiot "hot takes" with the purpose of just pissing people off.

Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk. I guess. 🤷‍♂️
 

MtNittany

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
1,657
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I miss the 90's ESPN when you could watch sports highlights over and over without a cast of blowhard dickheads manufacturing "news" and drama with idiot "hot takes" with the purpose of just pissing people off.

Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk. I guess. 🤷‍♂️
Years ago my turf company advertised w/ local espn radio in West Palm. It was actually a great campaign and more than paid for itself. Stephanie was the sales manager and she was the best. She would set up drinks or breakfast w/ clients usually at one of Tom Rooney's bars (another advertiser). It was there that I met Evan Cohen. We got in an argument in 30 seconds (and this was prior to 2011).

I ended up thinking this jackass has a future at espn national. I was right.
 
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Connorpozlee

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2021
2,331
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Years ago my turf company advertised w/ local espn radio in West Palm. It was actually a great campaign and more than paid for itself. Stephanie was the sales manager and she was the best. She would set up drinks or breakfast w/ clients usually at one of Tom Rooney's bars (another advertiser). It was there that I met Evan Cohen. We got in an argument in 30 seconds (and this was prior to 2011).

I ended up thinking this jackass has a future at espn national. I was right.
A sign that I really don’t watch ESPN anymore. I have never heard the name Evan Cohen. Is he an on-air personality?
 

laKavosiey-st lion

Well-known member
Oct 30, 2021
9,096
6,434
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I miss son 1 n 2‘s lax games from kindergarten to state club. I was so flush with like minded dad bros, it was glorious. free advice to current sideline dad bros, enjoy every second. Oh the fun we had
 

MtNittany

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
1,657
2,238
113
“Moving like a tremendous machine” My single most memorable sports call of all time. The nation loved Big Red. Nothing like him since.
I forgot about this race. If not for a bad KY Derby where he was boxed in, Risen Star would have won the Triple Crown. I think this is still the 2nd fastest time. Only behind his Daddy of course.

 

MtNittany

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
1,657
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Only person I'll ever call The King. Winnie was born in Williamsport and we had mutual friends. I spoke to him about that while next to him at the urinals in the locker room at PGA National. When we were done pissing, we shook hands.

Later that day (It was a PGA Seniors Championship) he said he wanted me to shuttle him to the range and back and wherever else he wanted to go the rest of the tournament.

Absolute hero.

 

PSUSignore

Well-known member
Oct 25, 2021
910
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I miss sports and the surrounding media focus being about the actual competitions, standings, game results, etc. Now all of the stories center on off the field crap like salaries, contracts, expansions, realignments, criminal activity, cheating, sanctions, made up ranking lists, and whatever else you want to include. With each passing day I care less and less about reading anything in the media related to sports as it's all garbage. There's hardly anyone spending time breaking down game results, strategies, plays, etc. It's all noise at this point.

Media outlets like ESPN have completely outlived their usefulness aside from actual game broadcasts. In the internet era I don't need Sportscenter to show me highlights that I can find on demand in 10 seconds at the click of a mouse.
 

MtNittany

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2021
1,657
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Equal time for Jack. This is a 3 hour video (Not hard to figure out where to FFWD to). Other than 9-11, this is the event that I most remember exactly where I was at while I was while watching it unfold.

The shot he hit on 15 that day was just him showing how good he was. It was that good of a shot.

 
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PSUFBFAN

Well-known member
Oct 7, 2021
1,134
2,804
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I do miss guys that just play the game without all the look at me stuff. I’ve adjusted to it, but it always looks ridiculous to me.
I miss my Islanders being a dynasty.
I miss admiring Pete Rose because I didn’t know anything about him other than what he did in the field.
I miss JoePa on the sidelines.
As much as I enjoy getting to see every Reds game, I do miss trying to tune the dial in just right to get 700 WLW (The Big One!) to come in as clearly as possible to listen to Marty Brenneman and Joe Nuxhall call the Reds games through alternating surges of static and clarity.
I miss playing one-on-one street hockey against my older brother in front of our house.
I miss sitting under the big tree in the yard on the side of my house on a Sunday morning in the summer looking through the NY Daily News at the stats of all the hitters and pitchers and discussing them with my father while he drank a case of beer (Budweiser if things were going good financially, Meister Brau when things weren’t).
"...and this one belongs to the Reds!!"

"...this is the old left-hander rounding 3rd and heading for home!"