OBITUARY

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supertyphoon

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OBITUARY

PostWed Dec 12, 2012 6:53 am

The Sporting News (print edition) passed away this week at the age of 126. Cause of death was officially listed as "the internet", but close relatives believe the actual cause of death was senility and old age. TSN, as he was known by his friends, was born in St. Louis Missouri in 1886 to Alfred Spink, but raised by his brother Charles. By the early 1900s it had become the primary source of baseball information for rural America, which lacked access to major league baseball and coverage by big-city newspapers. Under the tutelage of Taylor Spink, TSN established a comfortable life for himself, staking out a claim as the "Bible of Baseball". After Taylor died in 1962, his son Johnson took over as caretaker for the weekly newspaper until it was sold to Times Mirror in 1977. Without the support of the Spink family, his health began to fail as he approached his 100th birthday in the early 1980s, and various quick-fix cures were attempted to resuscitate the old man against various infectious diseases, which included ESPN and USA Today. Even an expansion from baseball-only into other sports with growing popularity such as football and basketball failed to revive him, and his health began to fail. Near-death, he was moved to a health care facility in Charlotte NC to finish out the remainder of his life. Friends commented that he seemed to be malnourished and was often found wandering aimlessly around the grounds. He ceased publishing a weekly magazine in 2011, and last week finally succumbed to the effects of advanced age brought on by various self-inflicted wounds over the years. While many remember with cherished memories the joy TSN brought them in the golden age of baseball while he was still young and vibrant, those days are long gone, and the funeral yesterday was attended by only a handful of close friends and distant relatives.
Rest in Peace.
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RangerJoe

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Re: OBITUARY

PostWed Dec 12, 2012 10:08 am

What I used to enjoy most from TSN (late 60s through 70s) was getting to read many of the top sports columnists from all of the major newspapers around the county: Red Smith, Dick Young, Joe Falls, Furman Bisher, Art Spander, etc. The paper also listed every major league box score, along with the line scores of the various minor leagues, including the Mexican League. Through TSN one could learn that middle-aged Minnie Minoso was still going strong in the latter during the 1970s. I subscribed again years later in the 90s, but it was no longer your father's TSN.
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pwootten

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Re: OBITUARY

PostWed Dec 12, 2012 10:36 am

Like Ranger Joe I have wonderful memories of The Sporting News in the 70's. I still remember that Joe Falls loved the brats with red sauce in Milwaukee; that Dick Young had a tremendous dislike for Howard Cosell whom he referred to as "Howie the Shill" in his column, "Young Ideas;" that Art Spander and Furman Bisher were often over my head; and those great team reports that ended with random happenings with names customized for each team:

Metscellaneous
Astronotes
Tiger Tales
Gi-antics

Anyone remember any more?
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ROBERTLATORRE

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Re: OBITUARY

PostWed Dec 12, 2012 11:26 am

For me it was the junior high school and high school library during study hall. I grew up with the Newark Star Ledger sports page which was very good, but I think I read every Sporting News cover to cover from Sept to June for years in study hall.

I never made the transition to reading it online though. They had a free offer of a "daily" sporting news that you could get via an app or in pdf, and it had a lot of great stories and info in it, but with no real extra time in the AM, i didn't continued with it.
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PillPop

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Re: OBITUARY

PostWed Dec 12, 2012 11:30 am

pwootten wrote:Like Ranger Joe I have wonderful memories of The Sporting News in the 70's. I still remember that Joe Falls loved the brats with red sauce in Milwaukee; that Dick Young had a tremendous dislike for Howard Cosell whom he referred to as "Howie the Shill" in his column, "Young Ideas;" that Art Spander and Furman Bisher were often over my head; and those great team reports that ended with random happenings with names customized for each team:

Metscellaneous
Astronotes
Tiger Tales
Gi-antics

Anyone remember any more?


Athletics Addenda
Red Hots
Mets Musings, Met Memos
Yankee Doodles

I loved that there was a report from every single major league team. I grew up in New York, but even in a media capital, it was still hard back in the 60's and 70's to get any info on any out of town teams.
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Quincy Wilson

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Re: OBITUARY

PostThu Dec 13, 2012 1:43 am

I also read it for the articles on each team and it's complete box scores. This was a bit earlier- the late'40's. I remember
once a week in the summer riding my bike to the next town(For those who know the Chicago area from La Grange Park
to Brookfield) to buy a copy at a news agency.I think the price was 25 cents.

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