1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Wednesday. “BILL WALTON & THE NATION”

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“NATION & BILL WALTON”
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The nation’s response to the Monday passing of Bill Walton has been amazing.

It was more than just a salute to his UCLA accomplishments.  The 73-game winning streak.  The back to back Player of the Year awards.  The NCAA championships.

It was more than just delivering the first championship trophy to the Portland Trailblazers in the Maurice Lucas era.

It was more than his Super utility role with the Boston Celtics.

And it was more than just his efforts to bring credibility to the woe-be-gone San Diego Clippers before Donald Sterling took the team to Los Angeles.

The nation’s salute in the last 24-hours was for what he became as a cult figure, beyond his love of the Grateful Dead, rock concerts and tie-dye shirts.  What he became in post playing career.

Read what they have written about Bill Walton, player and person, and be impressed.  He touched so many lives:

..Beacon of life
..World is less bright today
..Flower Child became a beautiful man
..Champion at every level
..Zest for Life
..Passion for helping
..Towering figure as a player-person
..Sentences without periods.
..Selfless star
..Life of charity
..Grateful Dead..Grateful Journey
..Wacky-wild-wonderful
..San Diego..from birth to death
..San Diego’s favorite son.

An amazing life-wasn’t it?

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Tuesday. “BILL WALTON–GOODBYE-GOOD GUY”

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Hacksaw’s Monday Bonus Podcast
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“BILL WALTON-GOODBYE-GOOD GUY
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Bill Walton has left us.
Heaven has picked up a really good big man.

Good is the key word in describing all things Bill Walton.

Cut from a very different cloth.
Intellectual, flamboyant, defiant, independent, free thinking, caring, honest.

His UCLA career superb, considering he was so polar-opposite from Coach John Wooden, personally and politically.

His NBA career, so promising, snuffed out by injuries to his feet and ankles.

His broadcast career so opinionated, spiced with knowledge of the game and his philosophies about the game, coaches, players, leadership

His post career life so special, his charity-foundation work on behalf of the homeless.

If there was an opinion to be expressed, you could count on him to say what he believed.

He cared about everything he devoted his time to, sports, government, community and charity.

You don’t see people like that coming down any turnpike these days.

A person-player of conscience, conviction and courage.

Bill Walton, glad I crossed paths with him. He meant so much to so many in so many different ways.

Goodbye to a very good man.
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Former NBA star and Hall of Famer Bill Waltonhas died at the age of 71, the league announced today (Twitter link). According to the NBA’s release, Walton passed away surrounded by family following a “prolonged” battle with cancer.

“Bill Walton was truly one of a kind,” NBA commissioner Adam Silversaid as part of a longer statement. “As a Hall of Fame player, he redefined the center position. … Bill then translated his infectious enthusiasm and love for the game to broadcasting, where he delivered insightful and colorful commentary which entertained generations of basketball fans. But what I will remember most about him was his zest for life. He was a regular presence at league events — always upbeat, smiling ear to ear and looking to share his wisdom and warmth.”

Walton played his college ball at UCLA, winning a pair of national championships in 1972 and 1973 and earning national college player of the year honors for three straight seasons from 1972-74. He was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1974 draft and won championships with the Trail Blazersin 1977 and the Celticsin 1986, as well as an MVP award with Portland in 1978.

Walton was the NBA Finals MVP in ’77 after having led the league in both rebounds and blocked shots per game during that season. He earned an All-Star nod and made the All-Defensive First Team in both ’77 and ’78, then won the Sixth Man of the Year award in ’86.

A long list of injuries affecting his back, knees, ankles, and feet cut Walton’s career short and limited his availability when he did play. He ultimately appeared in just 468 career regular season contests – the equivalent of fewer than six 82-game seasons – for the Blazers, Clippers, and Celtics, averaging 13.3 points, 10.5 rebounds, 3.4 assists, and 2.2 blocks in 28.3 minutes per night.

Walton was named to the NBA’s 50th anniversary and 75th anniversary teams honoring the best players in league history.

Following his playing career, Walton was an NBA and NCAA color commentator for several networks, including CBS, NBC, and ABC/ESPN. His sonLuke Waltonalso played in the NBA and has since gone into coaching — Luke spent the past two seasons as an assistant coach with the Cavaliers.
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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Monday “MEMORIAL DAY-ITS MEANING”

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“Memorial Day–It’s Meaning”

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Memorial Day weekend. Picnics, family, Padres games, the Indy 500, the NBA playoffs and the NHL playoffs, the Stanley Cup finals. Lots to see, experience and think about.

Memorial Day weekend is a time to remember also. We see hometown heroes amongst us in San Diego. The Padres icon broadcaster, the late Jerry Coleman flew fighters and even landed upside down on a flight deck. The late Red Sox hero Ted Williams was a fighter pilot both in the Pacific and in Korea, survived two crashes, and came home to super stardom.

There are two Purple Hearts in my house, family members who served in our World Wars, were wounded, killed, and whose relatives’ lives were forever changed.

When you come from an extended large family of that era, you are influenced by their experiences. Influenced by those you know, those you loved, those you lost.

I’ve been to Arlington, to the Punch Bowl cemetery in Hawaii, to Rosecrans Cemetery here, and went to the U.S. cemetery at Normandy-it left me speechless..

I wept when I went to the black granite Vietnam Wall in Washington and was moved by the D-Day Memorial in Virginia. If you go to the Balboa Naval Hospital you are impacted. When you know them, when you care about them, when you see them, when you ache for them and their memories, it leaves a lasting impression.

Maybe it is my Baby Boomer mortality catching up to me. Friends are passing, saying goodbyes to family members. Virtually all of them are linked to the military. In this situation, Memorial Day becomes more than a holiday.

I hardly know the full background, except my dad was a Sea Bee in the Navy, in the Pacific. He built runways as the Navy, then the Marines brought in planes to continue the assault to recapture all those islands from Japan. He told me only once about being shot at and diving under planes to avoid snipers. My dad was only 22 at the time and experiencing that.

Nick was my Godfather. He was slight of build, big of heart, with no fear. He was a point man hit by snipers in a hedgerow at Anzio. His life was forever changed. He spoke only once about it to me. Twenty-nine surgeries later, he died from wounds. They gave me his Purple Heart, ribbons, the 1944 telegrams that said he was killed in action, then missing in action, then rescued.

Jack was my uncle. A decorated journalist, island hopping the Pacific with Douglas McArthur. He wrote for the International News Service, the forerunner of UPI. He saw horror and death. He interviewed Tojo, who tried to commit suicide. He covered the Peace Treaty signing on the USS Missouri. He came home a broken man. He was never the same sports journalist covering the old Brooklyn Dodgers after that. They gave me his war photos, ribbons, and wire service stories when he passed. He never spoke of it.

Danny was another uncle. I never knew much, except that he was a teenager  from Maine, in the Marines, who died on the Bataan Death March. I found his name on a plaque, but like so many others, nothing else. Gone at 19.

Vin was a paratrooper. Jumped into the dark behind the Normandy lines. He was 24 and part of the glider brigade. He was wounded twice, but did come home. His Purple Heart is in a glass case, with a piece of autographed fabric from a crashed glider that went into the woods when they missed the landing zone. Virtually all with him perished.

Vito was in South Africa in tank command, chasing Rommel across the desert. All that heavy infantry fire led to his loss of hearing.

Joe was a medic in the heat, humidity and suffering in the Philippines. His lasting memory before he died was malaria and quinine.

Smitty was 19 and a turret gunner on B-17 and B-24 raids. The average life span of those crews was 13 flights. He made 35 missions, over places like Ploesti and Dresden. He laughs that his pilot was only 19, old enough to drop bombs, but not old enough to get a drivers license in Michigan. He told stories till dementia took over his mind.

Laddy was a waist gunner in a B17 sent on a mission deep into Germany,  they never came back from, on a day we lost 60-bombers heading to Regensburg-Schweinfurt with no fighter protection.  The day became ‘Black Thursday’

Memorial Day touches friends too. Seven in my tiny graduating class on Long Island were lost in my war, Vietnam.

Murph was a wrestler and a jokester. A land mine ended it all very quickly for him. Lew was a basketball player taken out on a ridge by either sniper fire or friendly fire. Charley went off on night patrol in the jungles; he never returned after the firefight. Three others were done in not by the VC, but by Agent Orange.

Memorial Day is also about brothers. One who is a career officer, with service time in Iraq and Afghanistan. He struggles with seeing wounded men booby trapped when our medics go to treat them. He angered many by saying “if you fire on my soldiers from a mosque, it is no longer a mosque.” He has sat on transports with the caskets and body bags of his soldiers.

The other brother is in anti-terrorism, who never forgot 9/11 and what he sensed the minute the second plane went into the towers. He won’t speak, but he knows much, and this weekend means much to him too.

I will visit a cemetery to say thanks and to remember. An aging friend, who landed on Normandy, told me the only thing missing from the movie Saving Private Ryan was the smell of diesel fuel. Another in a rest home was part of the Royal Air Force and the heroism of the Battle of Britain, with burns and ribbons as remembrances.

Fly a flag this weekend. Enjoy the picnics, the Padres, the Indy 500, the NBA and the NHL, but remember the past.

Many went and came back. Many went and never came back. Many went, came back, never the same.

Memorial Day is a hard time for me. Two Purple Hearts are in my house. A thankful heart. A heavy heart too.

 

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Friday. “YANKEES-PADRES–WHO IS BETTER TEAM?”

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Hacksaw’s GREAT SPORTS WEEKEND Podcast-Moved to Friday this week
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“YANKEES-PADRES–HOW GOOD ARE THEY”
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Fun weekend ahead at Petco Park, baseball fireworks this Memorial Day Weekend as the Yankees come to town to meet the Padres.

How good are they?  We find out soon.

PADRES…Still scuffle to be a .500-baseball team…A bit banged up (Bogaerts-Musgrove), but everyone has injuries.

The bigger story, how poorly they hit.  Machado-Tatis-Kim-all hitting well below career numbers.

Luis Arraez keeps hitting but needs people behind him to drive home runs and that has noit happened consistently.

Add in the lousy record against left handed pitching (.187BA) and the 11-losses  against bad teams, and you see why they are a distant second place in the NL West.  Hard to believe the Frairs are (10-16) at Petco Park too.

Interesting matchups though, Yu Darvish-Dylan Cease-Joe Musgrove against the Yankees bats, the Yankees big bats.

YANKEES…Surprising to see them (35-17) this season, without their ace Gerritt Cole on the mound…so this is an impressive start.

And the rotation behind him, all who have injury histories, have stayed healthy.  Carlos Rodon, Nestor Cordez, and rookie Luis Gil have been special.

And of course the arrival of Juan Soto (.312-13HRs) has had a huge impact on everyone else in the batting order.  NY finally has a healthy Aaron Judge (.276-15HR) on the field; Giancarlo Stanton has had 4-injury ravaged seasons in a row but is hitting (.246-12HR).  Anthony Rizzo-Alex Verdugo-Gleyber Torres-Anthony Volpe can also hit.

A potent and very deep batting order.

It’s suddenly a pretty good Yankees squad, and Cole could be back within two weeks to join the rotation.

So we find out Friday night, how good the Yankees really are, and determine whether the Padres can be contenders or are actually pretenders.

Wonder how many Yankees fans will be in the house too.

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1-Man’s Opinion on Sports-Thursday. “NHL PLAYOFF PREVIEW”

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Hacksaw’s Podcast…Moved from Thursday to Friday this week
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Hockey Headlines are everywhere, and it’s more than just the games, is it ever.

OILERS-vs-DALLAS….Firepower everywhere.  Connor McDavis-Leon Draisaitl have 10-goals..35-points in 12-playoff games.  What really stands out the Edmonton special teams…(15-for-30) on power play opportunities and a Penalty Kill unit that has killed off 35-of-38 power plays.  But can goalie Stuart Skinner hold up?

The Stars have 8-players with 20-plus goals led by the hot young forward Wyatt Johnson and they have a strong netminder in Jake Oettinger.

PICK: OILERS..

FLORIDA-NY RANGERS…This will be a war of attrition.  Both of these teams grind.  Both have snipers.  Artemi Paranin and Vince Trocheck lead the Blueshirts firepower, and this NY team skates, hits and can score from all four lines.

The Panthers are deep in goal scorers, have Sergei Bobrovsky in goal and a cross section of snipers led by Sam Reinhart and his 57-goal sceason.

PICK: PANTHERS

But that’s not all that’s making news on the ice.

NHL TV:  All time record average (1.1M) viewers per game on the 4-network partners for Rounds 1-and-2.  Complete coverage of all games has fueled interest.

TORONTO…New coach in Craig Berube, the ex Blues bench boss, likely changes on the roster, a possible Mitch Marner trade, and a change of culture.  A bit of a surprise hire.

NEW JERSEY..Ex-Leaf Sheldon Keefe brings his 200-win resume to the Devils, but will need more players.  Not a bad hire.

TODD MC LELLAN..The ex Kings coach is the next to come off the board; will it be Seattle or maybe Winnipeg.  There is a track record of decent success, from San Jose to Edmonton to LA.

JIM HILLIER…Career minor league guy, brought law and order to the Kings, going (21-12-1) down the stretch and getting them to the playoffs.  Big issues still to be solved, are the salary cap problems, and the need for a stud goaltender.  Rob Blake may have one final year as GM to get the team deep into the postseason.  They’ve lost 3-times in a row to the Edmonton Oilers.

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