Hi There:
So, summer started technically on Thursday evening, but the last few days have been dog days of summer like weather. Friday here in the NY area there were all sorts of new high temperature records set. It reached triple digits in Newark. And the humidity has been rough as well.
Don't get me wrong, I love the late sunsets that come at this time of year, but I would have preferred we eased into the heat and humidity. Instead, it hit us like a furnace.
Stay cool everyone.
Will start out this week with a couple of obits, one I should have done last week, but since each of these men were icons of their respective sports, we can discuss here..
Jerry West (1938-2024)- I like to think of myself as someone very familiar with sports history, and yet, one of the things that I always seem to forget is that in his career as a player, Jerry West won only one NBA Championship. Maybe it's because he played in so many NBA Finals or that he built a bunch of NBA Championship teams as an executive, I associate Jerry West with championships.
He played in 7 NBA Finals before winning his lone championship on his 8th trip, in 1972 against the Knicks. He was actually named the MVP of the 1969 Finals, in a losing effort against the Celtics, proving that these losses weren't his fault, though knowing the competitor he was, he probably didn't see it that way.
Much was made a couple of years ago about the way he was portrayed in HBO's Winning Time, based on Jeff Pearlman's book about the Showtime Lakers of the 80's. The golf club breaking, MVP Trophy through his office window tossing maniac may have been exaggerated, but his intensity was well documented.
John Feinstein most famously known for writing A Season on the Brink about Bobby Knight and the 1985 Indiana Hoosiers, also wrote a book about the infamous Rudy Tomjanovich-Kermit Washington incident in 1977 called The Punch. Washington was drafted by the Lakers in 1973, which was West's last year as a player, and he described how terrifying it was playing with West, first as a teammate, and then with West as his coach. He said he could practically feel West's eyes burning a hole in his back when he made a poor play.
But off the court and away from the game, West was beloved. And I think that's why so many in the game came to his defense when it seemed like the TV show was making him out to be out of control. (Pearlman's book did not BTW) He acknowledged that his silhouette was the inspiration for the NBA logo, though usually when asked about it, he talked all the great players he played with and against rather than himself. He was humble and gracious, which had as much as anything to do with the outpouring of accolades he received when he passed away on June 12 at age 86.
Willie Mays (1931-2024)- Any relatives that I had who were old enough to have seen Babe Ruth or Lou Gehrig play weren't big baseball fans so I've had to rely on reading about players from that era. I know enough people and have heard from so many who had seen Willie Mays play in his prime, and very few of them don't say that he was the best to have ever done it.
I remember when Mickey Mantle died in 1995. I remember Channel 2 broadcast his funeral from Dallas, and watching that with my dad. I then remember later on that day seeing TV news reporters who were at Mickey Mantle's restaurant watching the funeral with the fans there. How many grown men, in their 40's and 50's crying watching the Mick's funeral. Those guys might tell you that Mantle would have been, could have been the best. Except that he was betrayed by a bad knee and then by his own admission, by poor life choices.
Mays was blessed with a career mostly devoid of injuries. From his rookie year in 1951 through 1968 he played in at least 140 games. (He missed a year and half for military service in 1952 and 1953). Looking through his stats on Baseball Reference, the numbers are phenomenal, but they only tell a part of the story.
I came across a clip on Instagram on Friday, in which Mays visited with Vin Scully. I didn't see the date on the clip, but it had to have been not to long before Scully retired from the booth in 2016. After telling him that he was his favorite ballplayer despite the fact that he wore the wrong uniform :O), Scully remarked to Mays that what impressed him the most about his famous catch in the 1954 World Series (VIC WERTZ!), was not just the catch itself, which Mays made with his back to home plate, but the fact that he was able to turn around and get the ball back to the infield to hold the runners. The Polo Grounds was no bandbox like the modern version of Yankee Stadium or Citizens Bank Ballpark in Philly. That was 450 feet from center field. Mays had to have had a cannon to throw that ball back to second base.
I remember hearing George W. Bush talk about one of his earliest most cherished memories was his mother bringing him to NY to watch Willie Mays play for the Giants. There's also this picture of John F. Kennedy Jr. as a 12-year-old sitting next to Mays in the Mets before a game in 1972. Mays was a guy who sheer talent and love for baseball brought people together.
Donald Sutherland also died this week, and if ever the term versatile actor applied to anyone, it had to be Donald Sutherland. He played heroes, villains, dramatic roles, comedic roles, you name it. He went from playing Oddball in WWII movie Kelly's Heroes, to Dr. Benjamin Franklin (Hawkeye) Pierce in the original MASH Movie the same year (1970).
I once saw him in a movie called The Man on the Train where he played a college professor opposite a bank robber (played by U2 drummer Larry Mullen Jr.). The robber and the professor became unlikely friends and as they walked past a movie theater, the professor talked about taking a date to that movie theater when he was much younger. His date attempted to make like Lauren Boebert at Beetlejuice, which prompted Sutherland's character to write a poem
A boy said to his lady friend please
As he writhed in pain on his knees
It would give me great bliss
If you took hold of this
And released your grasp upon these.
I would have laughed if anyone delivered that poem, but Sutherland did it in such a way. Like Mays in baseball and West in basketball a true credit to his profession.
Now to other matters....
POLITICS: THOU SHALT POST THE 10 COMMANDENTS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS (at least in Louisiana)
Governor Jeff Landry (R-LA) signed a bill into law on Wednesday that requires all public-school classrooms in the state have to put up a "poster size display of the Ten Commandments in large easily readable font." Per the AP....
“If you want to respect the rule of law, you’ve got to start from the original lawgiver, which was Moses” who got the commandments from God, Landry said.
OK, I'll start here. All of you know that I'm a Christain, specifically a Catholic, even more to the point, I taught CCD a couple years ago at my parish in Oceanside, and I may do it again in the near future. I also try, to varying degrees of success to live my life in accordance with the Ten Commandments, as I believe most people of good will do.
Now, other religions or even atheists may not believe that God presented Moses with two stone tablets and declared these the law of the land, but still, most of the people in that demographic call their Mom and Dad, haven't killed anyone, don't cheat on their spouses, are fairly honest, and keep their hands off other people's stuff. If you can say that you don't make a habit of violating any of the above, congratulations, that covers commandments 4 through 10. Whether you believe in God or not.
And if you don't believe in God, or you believe in a different God than I do, or whatever, the beauty of this country, one of the basic tenets that this country was founded on, is that there is not official government sanctioned religion. The Ten Commandments don't belong anywhere on public property. You want to put them up in your house, fine. You want to put them in your church, well that's a probably a good idea. But in public libraries, public transportation and yes, public schools, they don't belong there.
And the true irony of all this is that the folks who are most hot to trot to get these easily readable 10 commandments posters up in the Louisiana schools, are the same people who are literally doing what the Israelites were doing while Moses was up on the mountain getting those easily readable stone tablets from the Big Guy. They are worshiping the golden calf. Or in this case, the orange calf. As I'm writing this, Captain Orange is in Philadelphia complaining about CNN's Dana Bash to a crowd of MAGA's.
Of course, Trump gave his stamp of approval to all of this on his Truth Social app, and he made no request that the Supreme Court make a ruling about striking down commandments 6 through 10, or those that Mr. Grab 'em by the p-$$y regularly violates. And brags about violating to boot.
John Fugelsang summed it up on Xwitter thusly:
Yep.
Now to give credit where credit is due, the Supreme Court ruled 8-1 this week to uphold a law that bars domestic abusers from owning firearms. I was both surprised and happy with this decision. The one justice who thinks it’s no problem for violent criminals to own weapons? Clarence Thomas. Because of course it was.
ROMANCE: Yeesh!
When he came to his mutual agreement to stop coaching the New England Patriots, I kind of hoped that would be the last we would hear of Bill Belichick for a while. 25 years of attempting and mostly succeeding in rendering my football team irrelevant was more than enough for me.
But now we come to find out that the 6- time Super Bowl winning head coach is currently in a relationship with a woman 48 years his junior.
Jordon Hudson is a 24 year old professional cheerleader according to People Magazine. She graduated from Bridgewater State University in 2022. They met on a Boston-Miami flight in February 2021.
They've apparently been an item for some time now, but their relationship was confirmed earlier this month by TMZ.
Look I know love does strange things to people, but if Belichick was a decent human being, I would still question her motives. The fact of the matter is he's a lying conniving creep, with the personality of a doorknob. She couldn't beat the faultiest polygraph machine on the planet if she tried to say she wasn't banging him for his money.
And yeah, there's a part of me that hopes she ends up taking him to the proverbial cleaners. But there is a small part of me that hates to any older man get taken advantage of in this matter. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe he has really charmed her, and she is really into him for more than his $$$. I can't see that though man, I really can't. From where I'm sitting, this is just a money grab. call me a cold-hearted cynic. I can't help it.
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I swore up and down that I would not watch one second of the 2024 Stanley cup Finals, so enraged as I was (and still am) about how the Rangers folded in Game 6 against the Panthers. And when it looked like the Panthers were going to make quick work of the Edmonton Oilers, I figured I would keep my self promise.
But in the meantime, the Oilers have stormed back from an 0-3 deficit to force a Game 7 in Sunrise, Fla on Monday night. I had held out till the third period of Game 6 on Friday, but I had to tune in when I saw that the Oilers were up 3-0 going into the third. The Panthers scored to cut the lead to 3-1, but a pair of empty netters got the Rogers Centre and I imagine most of Canada rocking.
The Panthers were up in arms because they had a goal disallowed off a review that showed they were offsides on the play.
I still think the Panthers will be skating around their barn on Monday night with the Cup. but on the off chance that the Oilers join the 1942 Leafs as the only teams to come back from 0-3 in the Finals*, I'm going to watch, against my better judgement of course.
Enjoy the late sunlight.
Stay safe
and Have a Great Week
*I need not be reminded that the Islanders also came back from 0-3, however that was not in the Finals
"No one need remind me of our responsibilities Brother"-Donald Sutherland as Brother Thaddeus in Heaven Help Us (1985)