Innocence lost

By Steve Woodward

We often react with surprise to news that a famous person from a bygone era has passed.

“Gee, I thought he’d died years ago.”

This was my reaction to the pending death of Sports Illustrated, the former gold standard of sports journalism powered by a roster of gifted writers, diligent researchers, world-class photographers and sage editors.

SI delivered context and depth in the aftermath of the riveting contests of the day. It also engaged in investigative journalism. More than 20 years ago the magazine essentially stopped baseball’s perilous downward spiral by exposing steroid abuse by its top players.

Reporter Tom Verducci produced “Totally Juiced” in May 2002, a bombshell anchored in the admissions of a declining player, Ken Caminiti of the Atlanta Braves.

A cold analysis of the demise of SI, along with numerous other formerly iconic magazines, is that the medium is obsolete, its business model is broken and sports fans of the social media age have no interest in reading “literature”. Today’s “journalists” are mindless masters of mere click bait. On steroids.

The parent company that fired more than 100 staffers last week claims SI is not going anywhere, that it’s merely transitioning into its next iteration. If that includes repeats of chubby swimsuit edition cover models, or Martha Stewart, don’t bother.

As a recovering sports journalist, memories of SI‘s always anticipated magazine covers, deft prose, and relationships I forged with some of its writers, do find me awash in nostalgia. But let’s face it, SI reigned supreme because it focused on sports and its glorious trivialities, on balls and strikes, on the quirky personalities of our idols, and on the drama of human athletic achievement.

It distilled into a tidy magazine all of the elements of sport that mattered to American culture in an age of innocence. Today, the culture is shattered and many uniquely American sports no longer matter (boxing, hockey, horse racing), or have been hijacked by the woke Left. The National Football League increasingly tolerates football games as platforms to denounce racism and inequality, even if that requires turning its back on the American flag.

When SI‘s Peter King was the dean of pro football writers, the NFL commissioner was not under a microscope addressing the league’s indifference toward systemic racism and concussion protocols. He was an entertainment czar, which is kind of the point of pro sports. Covering pro football used to be about stories of remarkable plays under pressure, the college draft, controversial penalties imposed by the refs, and occasional rules changes. Now? Taylor Swift. Polite tackling. The so-called black national anthem.

Through the decades, Sports Illustrated was an elegant messenger, conveying reverence accorded athletes and coaches of a forgotten era. Athletes were heroes, giants worthy of respect and awe. Ted Williams. Mickey Mantle. Johnny Unitas. Julius Erving. Arnold Palmer. Muhammad Ali. Willie Shoemaker.

And the coaches were well dressed, dignified field marshals. Lombardi. Wooten. Alston. Auerbach. Landry. Their players called them sir.

In a time when little was televised compared to now, SI brought the sports landscape to life by showcasing writers who often were as well known as their subject matters.

Hubert Warren Wind on golf. (A Cambridge English literature master’s degree scholar, and typical gentleman sports journalist of the day, credited with naming “Amen Corner” — holes 11-13 — at The Masters golf tournament). After Wind came the irreverent Texan, Dan Jenkins, who chronicled the mainstreaming of golf in the era of Palmer, Nicklaus and Player. There was William Nack on horse racing. Jack McCallum on the NBA. Ron Fimrite and Peter Gammons on baseball. Kenny Moore on track and field. Frank Deford on, well, everything.

An aspiring sports journalist, I viewed these guys as royalty. In later years, they became colleagues but never equals. By now many have died, as has their profession. Their legacies prevail but their craft is gone, as obsolete as a typewriter or a newsstand.

Jenkins knew all of golf’s luminaries but never lost his connection to his readers, tortured pursuers of the white ball. In one of his first renderings for SI, he wrote: “The devoted golfer is an anguished soul who has learned a lot about putting just the way an avalanche victim has learned a lot about snow.”

Nack, who became a friend as we prowled the backside of thoroughbred tracks such as Churchill Downs, was a particularly gifted writer best remembered as Secretariat’s biographer, back when horse racing still stirred the nation’s soul.

He was on hand for Secretariat’s final race in Toronto, of all places. “(Secretariat) had turned for home, appearing out of a dark drizzle at Woodbine … in the last race of his career, 12 in front and steam puffing from his nostrils as from a factory whistle, bounding like some mythical beast out of Greek lore.”

The media of the 21st century is not only largely uncurious and unserious but unburdened by responsibility and devoid of talent. It is maddening enough that activists have replaced journalists, seeking not to chronicle but corrupt, not to tell the story but to become the story, especially in the cultural and political realms. And it is saddening that the same betrayal of a noble craft has hijacked how Americans experience sports events and their central figures.

A recent front page headline in USA Today‘s Sports section, above a column by a lame excuse for a “writer”, blared, “NFL owners created league’s diversity woes. GMs of color shouldn’t have to fix them.” The wrist wringing piece of garbage laments team owners’ “long history of discrimination”.

The same columnist is a fierce defender of biological men and their right to compete in women’s sports. Yes, you read that correctly. Nancy Armor wrote the following and USA Today published it: “Don’t be fooled by the people who screech about ‘fairness’ to cloak their bigotry toward transgender girls and women, the transgender girls and women who have the audacity to want to play sports, in particular.”

There is good news. USA Today might as well be rebranded USA Yesterday. That’s when it was last relevant. Long ago and far away. In fact, you’re likely to find stacks of unread editions alongside cases of unopened cans of Bud Light.

R.I.P., Sports Illustrated. Journalism’s graveyard is running out of space, but there is still room for The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and, soon, USA Today.

RIP journalism

By Steve Woodward

In another lifetime I was a young newspaper journalist who had fallen in love with the profession as a teen after reading The Boys of Summer by Roger Kahn. It was a book about the 1950s Brooklyn Dodgers, but it also was a book about Kahn’s experiences as a cub newspaperman who eventually covered the team during a bygone, or more precisely, long gone era.

The Dodgers moved to Los Angeles in 1957, and Brooklyn never was the same. It was part of a decaying New York City in the 1960s and ‘70s. Today, pre-Wuhan virus, Brooklyn has made a ferocious comeback. All the cool New Yorkers want to live there, real estate is (was) sky rocketing. Brooklyn once again has a professional sports team, the NBA Brooklyn Nets. 

Journalism is not making a Brooklyn style comeback. Sportswriters are, today, cultural commentators. They have no time for games, box scores or the crack of the bat. Journalists generally have forsaken everything that moored a Roger Kahn.  Apart from sportswriters, newspaper legends such as Jimmy Breslin, or Jack Anderson, or even, in his prime Bob Woodward, are not being replaced. 

Unlike Don McLean who can pinpoint “the day the music died” (1959), I cannot say for sure when journalism died. It’s demise probably is similar to a senior relative who is the life of the party until, one day, he’s not. It just happens and you do not see it coming. 

Journalism’s illness probably was undiagnosed, or, in the current vernacular, asymptomatic, around the time that the political media dropped all pretense of objectivity to worship at the altar of Barack Obama. And, thus, began the revolution that would deem all of American life irredeemable and racist. Before we knew what had hit us, journalism was compromised and became an agenda driven cause, no longer a legitimate profession (although they’ll still take the money to masquerade as hard-hitting reporters).

This is a rather lengthy pretext to explain why I am not capable of being shocked by the revelation, reported by our new generation of citizen journalists, that the editor of The Pilot, John A. Nagy, and the Director of Communications of Moore County Schools, Catherine Murphy, are partners in a real estate transaction that will result in ownership of a lot on which, presumably, a home will be built. 

If you are surprised that journalists are readily compromised by the company they keep, you have not been paying attention. This is small time collusion, friends. In Washington, the celebrity journos are married to scions of power and influence. Their children attend the same private schools. They attend the same parties in the Hamptons and on Martha’s Vineyard. And at 6 am weekdays, they all receive the “talking points” issued by the keepers of the Deep State. This is not conspiracy theory. This is certainty. But be not dismayed. Journalism is committing suicide right before our eyes. Knowing this, we can do their jobs for them until there are no more jobs. For them.