To be sure, there were other games on October 6, 1968, that didn’t make headlines, let alone get broadcast on national television. In Greenville, S.C., for instance, Baltimore Bullets center Wes Unseld, the second pick of the ’68 NBA draft, fouled out of a preseason game against the Hawks after scoring just 13 points and missing 12 of 17 shots in front of a paltry crowd of 1,500. Watching him play that night, it might have been hard to predict that Unseld would become just the second—and most recent—player to win the NBA’s Most Valuable Player award as a rookie.
Gibson. Brock. Kaline. Shula. Sayers. Unseld. They were all legends in their respective sports and they all provided proverbial bright spots throughout that brutal year. And they all died within six months of each other in 2020.
Of course, not every sports luminary who passed away this year was of that same vintage. Before the global coronavirus pandemic set in (taking the lives of such performers as Tom Dempsey, who for almost 45 years held the record for the NFL’s longest field goal), the biggest story of the year was arguably the death of 41-year-old Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter, Gigi, in a helicopter crash. And throughout the year—as in every year—figures from all over the sports world left us.
Maybe the parallel between 1968 and 2020 shouldn’t be completely ignored, though. As grim as the world might have seemed that afternoon 52 Octobers ago, the people who held the attention of so many fans did go on to greater things. Shula got his perfect season five years later. Brock broke Ty Cobb’s career stolen base record. Kaline got his 3,000th hit. The following year brought one of the great feel-good stories in all of sports history when Tom Seaver (who died this August) led the Miracle Mets to the World Series championship.
Sports perseveres. Memories last. And every given day—no matter how dreary it may seem—provides us fleeting moments of brilliance, to be appreciated and savored for years.
***
The list of sporting deaths in 2020 is long; this tally is far from exhaustive. These are the stars whose lives we chronicled over the years in SPORTS ILLUSTRATED’s pages:
DON LARSEN
August 7, 1929 – Jan. 1, 2020
Two years after going 3–21 with the Orioles, he threw the only perfect game in postseason history, blanking the Brooklyn Dodgers in Game 5 of the 1956 World Series for the Yankees.

DAVID STERN
September 9,1942 – January 1, 2020
In three decades as NBA commissioner, Stern embraced the game’s stars, broadening its appeal and growing the league into a global empire.

SAM WYCHE
January 5, 1945 – January 2, 2020
One of the first coaches to embrace the no-huddle offense, the outspoken Wyche was known for leading the Bengals to Super Bowl XXIII and dissing his team’s in-state rivals, the Browns, over the P.A. during a game in 1989.

KOBE BRYANT
August 23, 1978 – January 26, 2020
Three years into his retirement, the Black Mamba was settling into his second act as a children’s content creator and doting father when he was killed in a helicopter crash.

GIGI BRYANT
May 1, 2006 – January 26, 2020
Kobe’s daughter, who died alongside him, seemed well on her way to following in her dad’s footsteps as a dominant baller, making an impact on many of the older players and coaches she touched.

MICKEY WRIGHT
February 14, 1935 – February 17, 2020
The World Golf Hall of Famer won 82 tournaments, including 13 majors, and she was described by a rival as “our Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Tiger Woods, Nancy Lopez all rolled into one.”

AL KALINE
December 19, 1934 – April 6, 2020
Mr. Tiger played in 18 All-Star Games, finishing his career with more than 3,000 hits. He played a key role in Detroit’s 1968 World Series win, knocking in the go-ahead runs late in Game 5 and finishing with a team-high eight RBIs.

DON SHULA
January 4, 1930 – May 4, 2020
The winningest coach in NFL history (347 victories, counting the playoffs, in 33 seasons) is also the only man to guide his team (the 1972 Dolphins) through a perfect season. As a player, he picked off 21 passes in 73 games.

PHYLLIS GEORGE
June 25, 1949 – May 14, 2020
The groundbreaking broadcaster spent years in the 1970s as a host of The NFL Today on CBS and also covered horse racing.

JERRY SLOAN
March 28, 1942, 1935 – May 22, 2020
A tenacious guard for the Bulls, Sloan twice lost to his former team in the NBA Finals as coach of the Jazz, the team he guided to 15 straight winning seasons, earning himself a place in the Hall.

WES UNSELD
March 14, 1946 – June 2, 2020
Though he stood just 6' 7", Unseld was the prototypical center, a ferocious rebounder (14.0 per game over 13 NBA seasons) who set jarring picks but had the deft touch required to start countless fast breaks with perfect outlet passes.

JIM KIICK
August 9, 1946 – June 20, 2020
A power runner and adept pass catcher, Kiick teamed with Larry Csonka on Don Shula’s Dolphins. The two were so inseparable they became known as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and were the subject of a made-for-TV movie.

JOHN THOMPSON
September 2, 1941 – August 30, 2020
A two-time NBA champ as a player with the Celtics, Thompson turned around a moribund Georgetown team as a coach, stalking the sidelines with a towel on his shoulder and a scowl on his face while working tirelessly to offer opportunities to young Black athletes.

TOM SEAVER
November 17, 1944 – August 31, 2020
Tom Terrific was SI’s Sportsperson of the Year in 1969, when he led the Miracle Mets to the world championship. At the time of his Hall of Fame induction in ’92, Seaver (who died of complications from Lewy body dementia and COVID-19) received the highest percentage of votes in that institution’s history.

LOU BROCK
June 18, 1939 – September 6, 2020
Acquired by the Cardinals from the Cubs in what might be baseball’s most notorious trade, the speedy outfielder led the league in steals eight times in nine years, including a then record 118 in 1974. You can’t steal first, though: Brock retired with 3,023 hits.

GALE SAYERS
May 30, 1943 – September 23, 2020
The record holder for touchdowns in a game (six) was one of the shiftiest runners ever, but he’s just as well-known for his relationship with his teammate Brian Piccolo, which became the basis of the movie Brian’s Song.

BOB GIBSON
November 9, 1935 – October 2, 2020
The imposing righty’s 1968 ERA of 1.12 remains the lowest in the live-ball era. That came the year after the future Hall of Famer had three complete-game wins in the World Series as the Cardinals took the title in seven, over the Red Sox.

WHITEY FORD
October 21, 1929 – October 8, 2020
The Bronx Bombers were known for their bats, but the Chairman of the Board was the one constant on the hill. He won six World Series rings between 1950 and ’62 and is still the Yankees’ career leader in wins, with 236.

JOE MORGAN
September 19, 1943 – November 11, 2020
Though he stood just 5' 7", the second baseman made the Big Red Machine run, winning back-to-back MVPs in 1975 and ’76, the same years he led Cincinnati to championships.

PAUL HORNUNG
December 23, 1935 – November 13, 2020
The Golden Boy won a Heisman Trophy (he was the only player from a losing team—2–8 Notre Dame, in 1956—to do so) and an NFL MVP award, all the while earning a reputation as the life of the party.

DIEGO MARADONA
October 30, 1960 – November 25, 2020
A joint-winner of the FIFA Player of the Century award, the midfielder led Argentina to the World Cup in 1986, beating England along the way with two iconic goals: the Hand of God and a mazy run through the Three Lions’ defense that was voted the Goal of the Century.

DICK ALLEN
March 8, 1942 – December 7, 2020
The wildly underrated, fiery slugger missed out on the AL triple crown by 10 points (six hits) in 1972, one of the seven seasons in which he was an All-Star.

K.C. JONES
May 25, 1932 – December 25, 2020
Before becoming the second (and most recent) Black head coach to win multiple NBA titles—two with the Celtics—the ragged defender collected eight rings in nine seasons as a player for Boston. He also won a pair of NCAA championships at San Francisco and an Olympic gold medal.

PHIL NIEKRO
April 1, 1939 – December 26, 2020
Known for his longevity, the knuckleballer, who pitched until he was 48, was one of the most dominant pitchers in the NL in the 1970s, with six straight seasons of at least a 6.7 WAR for the Braves. He finished his career with 318 wins and 3,342 strikeouts.

0 Comments:
Post a Comment