Cousin Jeffrey
Active Member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2002
- Messages
- 2,264
The next day I drove home. Before I left I called Dick and wished him good luck on his hip replacement that was coming up in a week or so. He was looking forward to it; he'd been in pain for months.
I called him the night before the operation, and again the day after. He sounded great. He said the operation went fine, and he figured he'd be back on the set of "Sports Reporters" in a few weeks. He said he had to go, the nurse was coming in. "I'll talk to ya, kid," he said.
I never talked to him again.
A couple of days later I learned that Dick's body hadn't responded well to the surgery. There were heart problems, and later respiratory problems. He never recovered. All this time, and he never recovered. He never left the hospital, never walked out onto the streets of New York that he loved so, never went back to that office he thought was perfect for him.
Dick wrote a million books with a million people. His last book, "Flashing Before My Eyes," was a memoir, a collection of stories about all the famous people he'd known. The byline was "By Dick Schaap as told to Dick Schaap," a self-effacing jab at the volume of celebrity biographies he'd co-authored. What tickled Dick most was that the book didn't have an index. "That way my friends have to read it all the way through to see if I mention them," he said.
On the first page of the book Dick wrote, "Often I am asked what my favorite sport is, and I always say, 'People.' I collect people."
I was one of them. And happy to be one of them. I love Dick Schaap.
Schaap's subjects covered the spectrum -- from comedian Sid Caesar, who fought back from drug and alcohol addiction, to Bobby McLaughlin, a young man convicted of a murder he did not commit.
But he always came back to sports, fascinated by the athletes and their accomplishments, intent on trying to find out what made them tick.
His Sunday morning ESPN show "The Sports Reporters" was a lively debate with other journalists. And rarely did any of the panelists agree, which gave the show an energy that Schaap relished.
The roster of people he interviewed included presidents and pitchers, governors and golfers. He was quite possibly the only person who voted for the Heisman Trophy and the Tony Awards.
I called him the night before the operation, and again the day after. He sounded great. He said the operation went fine, and he figured he'd be back on the set of "Sports Reporters" in a few weeks. He said he had to go, the nurse was coming in. "I'll talk to ya, kid," he said.
I never talked to him again.
A couple of days later I learned that Dick's body hadn't responded well to the surgery. There were heart problems, and later respiratory problems. He never recovered. All this time, and he never recovered. He never left the hospital, never walked out onto the streets of New York that he loved so, never went back to that office he thought was perfect for him.
Dick wrote a million books with a million people. His last book, "Flashing Before My Eyes," was a memoir, a collection of stories about all the famous people he'd known. The byline was "By Dick Schaap as told to Dick Schaap," a self-effacing jab at the volume of celebrity biographies he'd co-authored. What tickled Dick most was that the book didn't have an index. "That way my friends have to read it all the way through to see if I mention them," he said.
On the first page of the book Dick wrote, "Often I am asked what my favorite sport is, and I always say, 'People.' I collect people."
I was one of them. And happy to be one of them. I love Dick Schaap.
Schaap's subjects covered the spectrum -- from comedian Sid Caesar, who fought back from drug and alcohol addiction, to Bobby McLaughlin, a young man convicted of a murder he did not commit.
But he always came back to sports, fascinated by the athletes and their accomplishments, intent on trying to find out what made them tick.
His Sunday morning ESPN show "The Sports Reporters" was a lively debate with other journalists. And rarely did any of the panelists agree, which gave the show an energy that Schaap relished.
The roster of people he interviewed included presidents and pitchers, governors and golfers. He was quite possibly the only person who voted for the Heisman Trophy and the Tony Awards.