t-and-f: Odd doubles

2000-10-04 Thread Ed Grant




Netters:
    The 
unsual doubles beind posted for some athletes just indicates how much talent 
there is out there which never gets to our sport. The posts which I have 
received on Marla Runyan---and I thank all who sent info---also point to this 
as, without her vision problems, she may have stuck to soccer and become another 
Mia Hamm.
 
    We 
have had a number of cases like that here in NJ, with the transfers coming 
mostly from soccer (usually because the athletes got a chance to run either CC 
or indoor/outdoor track and had more success there) or gymnastics (also because 
of success, but occasionally because of injury). Our best ever girl miler 
started off as a gymnast but had trouble with her hands breaking out with 
blisters and switched over (Michelle Rowen). And a tragic case was a girl who 
lost her arm as a esut of a gymn accident, but became a very successful (if on a 
smaller scale) Hs and college runner.
    Track 
and field simply has to accept that, in the current climate (and in the past as 
well), we never get to see a lot of the talent out there.
 
    Our 
best stories of transfer are of a HS baseball player at Fair Lawn who ran only 
one race in HS and another at South Side HS, Newark, who ran perhaps three or 
four. The first was talked into running at the Englewood Memorial meet when NJ 
athletes could still compete in two strenuous sports in the same season. He went 
on to set a WR in the straightaway 220 and take a silver medal at Rome (losing a 
relay gold to a d/q). His name was dave Sime. The second, who always imagiuned 
himself as another Willie Mays, bunted and legged his way to a .500 batting 
average, running only indoors in the years when we had no state indoor meet. But 
he became part of a WR SHR team in college, barely missed making two Olympic 
teams, one in the HH, the other in the IH, and is now coaching successfully in 
college. His name is Russ Rogers.
    
Ed Grant
 
PS: 
    And then, of course, Marty 
Liquori (and Tommy Farrell as well) went to HS imagining themselves as 
basketball players.
 


Re: t-and-f: Odd doubles

2000-10-05 Thread JimRTimes


In a message dated 10/4/00 7:54:09 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

>   Our best stories of transfer are of a HS baseball player at Fair Lawn
>who ran only one race in HS and another at South Side HS, Newark, who ran
>perhaps three or four. 

The Rippowam (Satmford CT) school record for the indoor 50 yd. is still held 
by NY Mets manager Bobby Valentine, set while winning the state title back in 
the late 60s/early 70s. Valentine did  4 sports (FB, basketball & indoor 
track, and obvioulsy baseball) and was all-state in 3 of them. He was in fact 
offered a scholarship to USC as a running back, but chose baseball instead, 
and the rest, as they say, is history. Would have been interesting if he had 
opted for USC, he could have been another OJ (FB/track star, that is, not 
suspected killer).

Jim Gerweck
Running Times



Re: t-and-f: Odd doubles

2000-10-05 Thread A.J. Craddock

Wasn't he the outfielder with the Angels that went up the
cyclone fence in the outfield to catch a fly ball, caught his cleats in
the fence, and suffered a hideous career-ending fracture of his lower
leg?

Or am I thinking of someone else?

Tony Craddock

At 08:48 AM 10/5/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

In a message dated 10/4/00 7:54:09 PM,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

>   Our best stories of transfer are of a HS baseball player
at Fair Lawn
>who ran only one race in HS and another at South Side HS, Newark, who
ran
>perhaps three or four. 

The Rippowam (Satmford CT) school record for the indoor 50 yd. is still
held 
by NY Mets manager Bobby Valentine, set while winning the state title
back in 
the late 60s/early 70s. Valentine did  4 sports (FB, basketball
& indoor 
track, and obvioulsy baseball) and was all-state in 3 of them. He was in
fact 
offered a scholarship to USC as a running back, but chose baseball
instead, 
and the rest, as they say, is history. Would have been interesting if he
had 
opted for USC, he could have been another OJ (FB/track star, that is, not

suspected killer).

Jim Gerweck
Running Times


Re: t-and-f: Odd doubles

2000-10-06 Thread JimRTimes


In a message dated 10/5/00 1:33:24 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

>Wasn't he the outfielder with the Angels that went up the cyclone fence
>in 
>the outfield to catch a fly ball, caught his cleats in the fence, and 
>suffered a hideous career-ending fracture of his lower leg?

Yes, he's the one. Happened against Oakland, b/c A's owner Charlie Finley was 
too cheap to put in a solid fence in the outfield.

Jim Gerweck
Running Times