The bad sportswriters hall of fame

The recent public caning of OC Register sportswriter Mark Whicker has been fun to watch. In response to the rescue of Kaylee Jaycee Dugard, the 11-year-old girl who was kidnapped and then kept captive by a maniac for some seventeen years, Whicker wrote a jovial column detailing all the major developments in sports Dugard had missed during her captivity.

A sample:

The Anaheim Ducks won the Stanley Cup in ‘07. Yeah, a hockey team came to Anaheim. Yeah, they built an arena in Anaheim.

Everyone jumped on the poor guy, but to me it was a distilled and perfect piece of local journalism. I mean, accusing a local newspaper columnist of leaden humor, brain-dead solipsism or freakish sentimentality is just a waste of time.

Anyway, Whicker apologized, and in the end I’m with Keith Olbermann, who pointed out that columnists are allowed to have bad days; it’s the guy’s editors whose heads should be on the chopping block.

The affair jogged something in my memory, but it took a few days before it coalesced. Many years ago, back in Chicago, a local sportswriter got off a column, written as well after an unspeakable tragedy, that I personally think deserves to be remembered in a hall of fame right next to Whicker’s.

At the time, I contributed a weekly column on music for the Chicago Reader. (It was called … Hitsville.) I wrote a piece about that column, which drew a couple of funny letters, including one from the guy who wrote it.

Some time went by and I had an occasion to revisit the topic, which generated a stream of letters it pleases me much to read to this day.

The first Hitsville entry came as the second item in a two part column:

Hitsville
May 19, 1994
By Bill Wyman

Bad Sports
A Quincy goes out to Rick Telander, a Chicago-based Sports Illustrated senior writer and a regular on the cable sports-talk show The Sportswriters. The award, its name derived from the famed punk-rock episode of the Jack Klugman TV series (”Why do people listen to music that makes them want to hate, when they can listen to music that makes them want to love?”), goes to people who say stupid things about rock ‘n’ roll. Telander contributed the unctuously written, awkwardly titled story “Sport no nirvana, but structure can be life-saver” to last Sunday’s Trib sports section. The splashily played article’s thesis was that if Kurt Cobain had been involved in sports, the natural bonding mechanisms of the game might have saved him. “There is something about sport that I feel could have helped fill a void in the Seattle grunge king’s life,” wrote Telander. “Cobain was a sensitive, small, and troubled youth, and his parents could not, or would not, give him guidance. And he had no team. And he had no coach.” Hitsville avoids reading sports sections as a matter of course: is this sort of analysis typical? Organized sports consists almost entirely of suit-and-tied strategists telling the players what to do every other second; rock ‘n’ roll is basically a forum for artists to express themselves. Even with this difference, however, there are in rock ‘n’ roll what Telander calls, with unbearable condescension, “authority figures.” Cobain, for example, had a powerful management company (Gold Mountain) and label (Geffen) behind him–and he repeatedly went out of his way to thank them publicly for their help, though it was fairly uncool from the indie perspective to do so. The second problem with Telander’s argument is that Cobain had an instinctive and thorough loathing of male rituals in general and of sweaty, macho corporate sport in particular. “Rock and sports,” writes the addlepated Telander, “are like restive siblings,…two flip sides of a two-metal coin. Those boys who can, play sports; those who can’t, play music.” Barf. Cobain needed sports like he needed a hole in his head.

The letters came in soon after:

It’s a Guy Thing
Surely Rick Telander deserves as much derision as one can heap upon him. If you’ve ever read one of his pompous, overblown articles in Sports Illustrated, or seen that silly Sportswriters show you know what I mean. Del Crustaceans indeed!
However, Hitsville [May 20] earned its own Quincy with the stupid statement that “Cobain had an instinctive and thorough loathing of male rituals in general.” Oh yeah? Then why was he in a rock band?
Despite the proliferation of wimpy college rock R.E.M. clones and wife-core bands (bands that include four members, one of whom is the guitarist’s wife or girlfriend, who plays bass or drums) rock ‘n’ roll is nothing if not a macho male ritual.
From Elvis on down through Hendrix and Paul Rodgers all the way to Nash Kato, B-Real, and most certainly Nirvana, it always has been. And that’s the way it should be. Rock on, righteous brothers!
Robert Heintz
Skokie

This one was from the columnist:

Bill’s Bitchin’
Dear Reader:
I was a little puzzled by Bill Wyman’s review [Hitsville, May 20] of my article on Kurt Cobain, suicide, and sport that appeared in the May 15 issue of the Chicago Tribune. While I welcome intelligent debate on any subject, I am curious as to what got Wyman so bitchy about a 900-word essay that basically asked if there was anything that might have prevented one of the world’s brightest young rock stars from taking his life.

I speculated that the best parts of the sports world–teamwork, discipline, nurturing instruction–might have been of benefit even to a tormented poet like Cobain. The worst aspects of sport–domination, subservience, repression–help no one, of course, and I have written often about this fact.

But there is a structure to games that seems to help athletes cope with bigger problems. NBA player Brian Williams, for instance, was suicidal last year, but his sport, his coaches, and his teammates helped him get treatment for his depression and become productive again. In rock, who tells the superstars no? So you overdosed on drugs, just cancel the concert. Cobain’s people made many excuses for the star, even denying that his near-death in Europe several months ago was a suicide attempt. The glorious freedom of rock is also its biggest pitfall.

I didn’t suggest that Cobain should have been a jock, as Wyman seems to think. I said, rather, that athletes “find shelter in the fabric and discipline of their game.” I only wish Cobain could have found similar comfort.

Beyond his misunderstanding of my point, Wyman used some words that I found unusual. I haven’t seen “addlepated” since Dickens, for instance. And “barf”–whoa, the creativity. But as the old saying goes: those who can, write; those who can’t, be critics.

Rick Telander

All was quiet for a few weeks, until yet another tragedy transfixed the country. I offered up this observation:

Hitsville
June 24, 1994
By Bill Wyman

Bad Sports II
Watching O.J. Simpson’s absurdist flight from the law last Friday night, Hitsville was suddenly struck by a thought: What if Simpson the celebrity had not been born and bred in the uncaring, rough and tumble world of sport, but rather had been nurtured in the more solidarity-minded world of rock ‘n’ roll? There’s something about rock ‘n’ roll that I think might have filled a void in the Hall of Famer’s life. In rock ‘n’ roll, the artist is never truly alone: he or she is surrounded by bandmates, producers, agents and managers and label people, all concerned with his or her well-being. In the world of sport, by contrast, even the most popular figure, like Simpson, apparently had no one around to help him work through his problems. Even after he was accused of a grisly double murder, no one could persuade him to handle the charges sensibly. As a rock star, he would have had a trustworthy and loyal drummer or bassist at his side, or at least a manager and a lawyer to help him out. As it was, Simpson had no authority figures around. And he had no bassist. And he had no drummer. Sure there are some wife-beaters and murderous stalkers in rock music, but they find shelter in the fabric and discipline of the world of music. That, tragically, was something O.J. didn’t have.

Some people remembered the previous exchange; others didn’t. The letters, including another from Telander himself:

The Big Hurt
Editor:
I didn’t pick up the most recent edition of the Reader till today; you must have already received dozens of letters in response to Hitsville’s pointless observation [June 24] of the O.J. Simpson car chase episode. In wondering how O.J. might have handled his life differently had he been in a rock band rather than on a football team, Bill Wyman points out that there are many concerned people around a rock star should he or she have a personal crisis. Wyman surmises that “the fabric and discipline of the music world” could have saved Simpson. I have two words for Wyman: Kurt Cobain.
While I firmly believe in the naive notion of the transcendent, healing power of rock music, with every music biz fatality we are constantly reminded that there is pain that cannot be soothed by anything or anyone.
Lori Malinski
N. Moody

Stupid Ahistorical Drivel
Dear editor:
I do not number myself among Bill Wyman’s detractors regarding his musical criticism, but I am outraged by the obscenely stupid, ahistorical drivel he slobbered recently about O.J. Simpson [Hitsville, June 24]. The obvious idiocies are stunning: first, the history of rock and roll all too plainly shows that managers, agents, producers, and label people do not consistently effuse benevolent “concern” about musicians’ “well-being.” Second, does Wyman seriously believe that O.J. had no manager, no lawyer, no agent? As for bandmates, the tender bassists and drummers lovingly extolled by Wyman, O.J. had teammates, first and foremost of which was his college and professional buddy Al Cowlings, who was his teammate for ten times longer than the average life span of a rock and roll band. Even more obvious, rock and roll bandmates are often less than supportive: Wyman needs to reread his history, sadly lacking for a professional rock critic, about the legendarily acrimonious and often destructive musical partnerships that pass for the “solidarity-minded” world of rock and roll. Wyman’s short-term memory is also deficient: not two months ago he mourned the passing of Kurt Cobain, a troubled rock star who had the full complement of bassist, drummer, agents, managers, etc, but still managed to off himself amid the oh so rosy world of rock music.
However, Wyman’s last statements anger me most. What does he mean that the “potential wife beaters and murderous stalkers in rock . . . find shelter in the fabric and discipline of the music world”? Is he asserting that there aren’t any actual wife beaters and murderous stalkers in rock music? Excuse me? Ike Turner, anyone? More importantly, one of the key aspects of domestic abuse is the way it is hidden, ignored, covered up, and sheltered from public knowledge, something Wyman is contributing to by erasing it from the history of music. Second, what is it these potential beaters and stalkers find shelter from? I would think that the objects of their beatings and stalkings would have to seek shelter from them. I assume that Wyman meant to say that those musicians with the potential to beat or stalk find that, in the nurturing world of rock and roll, they can control their behavior, which is a crock in and of itself. However, his unfortunate phrasing implies that the music world shelters and protects these desires and behaviors, giving the impression that Wyman thinks that the music world’s ability to shelter its wife beaters from harm to themselves, rather than to others, is somehow a laudable thing. Although I hesitate to accuse Wyman of intending this meaning (I do heartily accuse him of extreme stupidity, insensitivity, and at the very least carelessness), it sounds like he is saying that what the potential wife beaters and stalkers in rock and roll actually find shelter from, what O.J. “tragically” didn’t find shelter from, is justice.
Meaghan Parker
Hyde Park

The Critic From Another Planet
Whatever Bill Wyman feels about Rick Telander’s opinion about Kurt Cobain’s lack of a coach [Hitsville, May 20], it is just that–an opinion. Mr. Telander is well versed in the facts of his chosen field, something that cannot equally be said for Mr. Wyman.

Bill Wyman states, “Organized sports consists almost entirely of suit-and-tied strategists” whereas “rock ‘n’ roll is basically a forum for artists to express themselves.” What utopian planet does Bill Wyman live on? I’m sure many musicians would love to go live there too.

Sure, maybe at the level of bar bands and small indie labels music may be played purely for art’s sake–people who play ball in college and the minor leagues may play for the love of the sport. But once you sign to a major label you become part of a giant selling machine that refers to you and your music as “product” and your talent is assessed by how many “units” you sell. Who do you think caused Nirvana and Jane’s Addiction to change the cover of their albums for K mart? A bunch of their buds going “Whoa dude, I find this kind of offensive”?

Maybe the Reader should have Steve Albini write your music column. At least he knows what the music business is really like.

Mark Springer
Chicago

Rock vs. Jock
Dear Reader,

It was with great annoyance, and little amusement, that I read Bill Wyman’s latest volley in the continuing juvenile pissing contest between himself and Rick Telander (”Bad Sports II,” Hitsville, June 24). Shame Bill’s tongue, fat with promise. Telander’s piece on Kurt Cobain’s death was pretentious and misguided; Wyman’s initial response [Hitsville, May 20] was based on a misinterpretation of Telander’s point and appeared strangely defensive. The attempted chastising of Telander in last week’s O.J.-based missive was nothing more than unnecessary one-upsmanship. I read Hitsville every week to learn interesting things about the national and local music scene, not to read grown men quarrel like a couple of children on a playground. Since Telander has already been awarded one, Hitsville should give itself a Quincy and move on.
Brian Beck
Chicago

Sports and Drugs and Rock ‘n’ Roll
Dear Reader:

OK, I give. Hitsville psychologist Bill Wyman is right: sports are evil. Just look, as Wyman has [June 24], at what playing football has done to O.J. Simpson. Never mind that Simpson hasn’t strapped on a helmet in nearly 15 years, he clearly is representative of the athletes of the world.

Kurt Cobain killed himself while high on heroin, but as Wyman wants us to know, that’s just one of those little speed bumps on the road of rock creativity. Cobain couldn’t have handled somebody in a position of authority and respect offering him good, stern advice. Nah. After all, he had fellow junkie, er, wife, Courtney Love to guide him. And there was all that advice he could get from those other great Seattle band members, people like Stefanie Sargent of 7 Year Bitch or Andrew Wood of Mother Love Bone. Huh? They’re dead, too, of overdoses? Darn.

One of Cobain’s problems was increasing friction with Nirvana bass player Krist Novoselic. Cobain should have solved that by using the bassist from Hole, his wife’s band. Her name is Kristen Pfaff, and . . . what? She OD’d on smack two weeks ago?

Well, nevermind. Rockers are artists. They need no guidance. But beware those World Cup soccer players. Thanks for setting us straight, Dr. Wyman.

Rick Telander
Sports Nut


9 Comments so far

  1. Joe September 10th, 2009 1:27 pm

    Oh the memories. I don’t know how you piss so many people off Bill, but GOD I LOVE IT WHEN YOU DO!

  2. Diane September 10th, 2009 1:30 pm

    I think it was in terrible taste to write as Mark did; however, since the Orange County Register has filed Chapter 11, might be they’ll be trimming out anyone who over-steps (even a wee bit, since it seems that way to you).

    I spent 17 years in Orange County; a faithful reader and often had my letters published, as well as I was friends with a number of the writers.

    From the tenor of what you mentioned (I didn’t read the article), I’d said it’s not about ‘local journalism’ - it’s about common decency, and apparently he has little.

  3. Diane September 10th, 2009 1:35 pm

    Okay, now I’ve read it - and he’s apologized; all of this from the OCR:

    was not my intention to do so. But it’s obvious that I miscalculated the effect the column on Jaycee Dugard, and the events that she might have missed during her captivity, had on those who read, buy and advertise in our newspaper.

    For 22 1/2 years at The Register, I feel like I’ve had a good and direct relationship with our audience and I think most of the regular readers know how I go about reporting and commenting on sports.

    This column appears to have disconnected that bond with at least part of our readers. For that I apologize.

    It’s impossible to unring a bell or to bring back a column that has already been transmitted. In many ways the damage is done. I’m hopeful that I can be forgiven for this lapse of professionalism by those who were affected most profoundly.

    I’ll try to earn back the trust of those customers in my future endeavors.

    Again, I regret this incident and apologize to all concerned.

    The following are some samples from readers’ comments in response to Mark Whicker’s column:

    E-mails

    •I am writing in regard to the “sports” column Mark Whicker wrote and the OC Register published on September 7, 2009. The fact that Mr. Whicker used a young woman’s life tragedy in an effort to make a column reminiscing about some events in sports he finds interesting relevant to the OC audience speaks poorly to his skills as a journalist and his empathy as a human. The fact that the editor found it appropriate to publish speaks poorly of his judgment.

    Tiffany Beverly

    •I just wanted to say that Mark Whicker’s recent column filling Jaycee Dugard in on what she missed while abducted is one of the most atrocious, insensitive sports columns I’ve ever read. He completely trivializes the terrible ordeal she went through by offhandedly mentioning a bunch of stupid sports facts from the past 18 years, as if missing out on all of those is her biggest concern at the moment.

    Ben Jacobs

    •I just came across Mark Whicker’s article about Jaycee Dugard’s kidnapping and sports highlights from the past 18 years. I found the article to be offensive, insensitive, and ill-conceived. The Dugard kidnapping is a tragedy, which Whicker seems to have exploited for no reason other than to fill column inches. I’m sorry that the Orange County Register feels it appropriate to publish this sort of material.

    Jacob Lee

    Online comments

    •Unbelievable. This is journalism at its worst. Mark Whicker attempts to make a few witticisms at the expense of a young woman who was kidnapped at age 11, sexually abused, mentally tormented, and held captive for 18 years, and no one on the editorial staff raised an objection? I didn’t see one comment here that found Whicker’s column appropriate. I guess the general public has more common sense and compassion than the staff of this paper. There are some things that are off limits for jokes - the kidnapping of little girls is one of them.

    •There is a essay that comes out every year at about this time, talking about what the current college freshman know and don’t know. It’s a mildly amusing conceit used to highlight all the changes that has happened in the past 18 years. I recommend to the writer that if he would like to write another retrospective piece on the changes in the past 18 years, he should stick with that conceit. Don’t reminisce about the people who died 18 years ago and what they’ve missed. Don’t take a lighthearted account about what any kidnap victims who sustained years of abuse might have missed. Otherwise I’m afraid the writer may repeat the mistake he made with this column and write another loathsome, tasteless, witless, and sincerely unfunny column.

    •Great! I’m sure her and her family appreciate that! I’m also sure that after all of her years in captivity that she was rushing to find and read your column. Surely the weight of the world is taken from her shoulders now.

  4. Gina September 11th, 2009 9:16 pm

    I think exchanges like Bill’s hilarious one with Telander and other readers are what I will miss most about print news. It’s just not the same online.

  5. Rusty October 3rd, 2009 5:48 am

    Telander’s career took a weird turn in the years after that exchange. Chicago has two sports talk radio stations of roughly equal-sized audiences and one (WSCR-670) signed Telander to a big-bucks contract to anchor its afternoon drive-time slot. It was a disaster: Telander had been a decent contributor to the old local warhorse “The Sportswriters” talk show, but as chief host he was abrasive, condescending to his co-hosts, not to mention boring. His next regular radio gig was a weekend show on the other sports talk station where he co-hosted with a local infomercial real estate “guru” and a home repair consultant. Needless to say, it didn’t last.

  6. Noam Sane December 11th, 2009 12:06 pm

    Dead blog. Sad, that.

  7. Lena December 19th, 2009 8:55 pm

    This is pure linguistic beauty.

  8. Jon January 28th, 2010 9:45 pm

    Hope you can restart the blog sometime. Always enjoyed your writing.

  9. ken February 5th, 2010 8:48 pm

    It’s a sad day when I finally delete Hitsville from my favorites bar. I hardly know what to think anymore without you, Bill. Good luck.

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