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No, you CAN'T root in the damn press box

I have no doubt her stalkers on here will breathlessly keep us updated.
Hey, Pearlman started it. We all just finished it.

Incidentally, I went back reading some of the early pages, and there were some great points/arguments -- on both sides. Bubbler's post on Page 7 was especially post-of-the-year stuff.
 
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If I'm DBing myself drown me in the Lake of Fail, but I've checked like 15 pages and am full of good wine and food, so screw it. When I had been on the job at the Boston Phoenix as George Kimball's replacement for about six months, I was at the World Series when the Phillies, my team since early childhood then and now, won their first Series in history (97 years at that point). What was my reaction? Steely-jawed and stone-faced as I headed down for interviews is what. I had no choice. The press box assignments, possibly due to stool pigeoning by my old pal George, had me seated down the line in the aux box between Red Smith and Roger Angell.
Later that night, at my friends' Ian and Mary's house in South Philly, there was drinking and yelling. But no colleague saw it.
 
If I'm DBing myself drown me in the Lake of Fail, but I've checked like 15 pages and am full of good wine and food, so screw it. When I had been on the job at the Boston Phoenix as George Kimball's replacement for about six months, I was at the World Series when the Phillies, my team since early childhood then and now, won their first Series in history (97 years at that point). What was my reaction? Steely-jawed and stone-faced as I headed down for interviews is what. I had no choice. The press box assignments, possibly due to stool pigeoning by my old pal George, had me seated down the line in the aux box between Red Smith and Roger Angell.
Later that night, at my friends' Ian and Mary's house in South Philly, there was drinking and yelling. But no colleague saw it.

My first year in the business I was covering LSU-Ole Miss football in Oxford. I'd graduated from LSU six months earlier and was still a fanboy at heart. LSU was down 31-10 in the fourth quarter, scored three touchdowns in the last 10 minutes — the last on the final play of the game to send it to overtime — and then wound up losing 37-31. The whole time I was sitting in the press box, biting my fist to keep from alternately cheering and cursing, at one of the biggest college football comebacks I've ever seen.
But I made it through it without embarrassing myself, and learned a valuable lesson. If I can make it through that without losing my cool, I can make it through anything. It's a memory that's served me well for 25+ years now.
 
My first year in the business I was covering LSU-Ole Miss football in Oxford. I'd graduated from LSU six months earlier and was still a fanboy at heart. LSU was down 31-10 in the fourth quarter, scored three touchdowns in the last 10 minutes — the last on the final play of the game to send it to overtime — and then wound up losing 37-31. The whole time I was sitting in the press box, biting my fist to keep from alternately cheering and cursing, at one of the biggest college football comebacks I've ever seen.
But I made it through it without embarrassing myself, and learned a valuable lesson. If I can make it through that without losing my cool, I can make it through anything. It's a memory that's served me well for 25+ years now.
Damn, Langston didn't get a chance to jump your ass. Well done, sir.
 
Damn, Langston didn't get a chance to jump your ass. Well done, sir.

LOL ... Couple of years later I gave him the opportunity to do that by going down on the field pregame and lingering down there after the game started. His exact words, said with as much menace as a KGB agent suggesting a vacation in Siberia, were, "We have a seat for you in the press box. Please use it."
I did, but not before I got to see the Ole Miss and Florida cheerleaders slap fighting each other for stepping on each other's turf when the teams were coming out of the tunnel. That was another career highlight.
 
LOL ... Couple of years later I gave him the opportunity to do that by going down on the field pregame and lingering down there after the game started. His exact words, said with as much menace as a KGB agent suggesting a vacation in Siberia, were, "We have a seat for you in the press box. Please use it."
I did, but not before I got to see the Ole Miss and Florida cheerleaders slap fighting each other for stepping on each other's turf when the teams were coming out of the tunnel. That was another career highlight.
Pics?
 
LOL ... Couple of years later I gave him the opportunity to do that by going down on the field pregame and lingering down there after the game started. His exact words, said with as much menace as a KGB agent suggesting a vacation in Siberia, were, "We have a seat for you in the press box. Please use it."
I did, but not before I got to see the Ole Miss and Florida cheerleaders slap fighting each other for stepping on each other's turf when the teams were coming out of the tunnel. That was another career highlight.
Love it.
I once got an intern credentialed to take pics for me. Kid also liked LSU and decided to wear a cap indicating so. Ole Miss wasn't playing LSU but on the drive I schooled the young man on why it wasn't a professional look, all the while thinking of Langston.
Worked with LR on some historical pieces and he was quite helpful and gracious. However, he is still the most intense gameday SID I've ever encountered.
 
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