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Bob Ryan
Nationally acclaimed, Bob Ryan
has been writing for The Boston Globe for the past 30 years, and has
been an award winning columnist for the paper since 1989. A regular
on ESPN's The Sports Reporters, Ryan was awarded the prestigious Curt
Gowdy media award by the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1997. PSR editor
Tony DeFazio spoke with Ryan shortly before the holidays.
PSR: Who do you see as
the Super Bowl favorite right now - any horse you're ready to back?
Bob Ryan: I think that
the way the NFL has gone over the past several years, you jump on one
horse in September, another in October, yet another in November and
December and so on.
For a while it seemed no one was
going to touch Kansas City, then they came back to earth. Meanwhile,
the Patriots are chugging along in their strange little way - logic
says you're looking at a Patriots-Indianapolis-Kansas City trio on the
one side; and Philadelphia-St. Louis on the other. I think that's clear.
Indianapolis to me has to be one
of the favorites in the AFC. If it comes down to Indianapolis and the
Patriots it may depend on where the game is. The Patriots can win on
the road, they've proven that this year. But suddenly New England has
one of the most difficult places to play in the league. They've embraced
a psyche that says, 'We're the Green Bay of this decade, you can't beat
us here in a cold-weather, snowy condition.'
PSR: There is a school
of though that says a head coach can outlive his usefulness and stay
in one place too long. Do you think that may be the case with Bill Cowher?
Ryan: I think they've reached
that point in Pittsburgh. He's a fine coach, but it never quite got
done fully. They were able to withstand the ravages of free agency year
after year for awhile and stay competitive in a really remarkable way,
but they're not a factor anymore, and maybe it is time for a change
there.
Twenty-five years ago Red Auerbach
was talking about how coaching cycles are shorter now. Where an era
might have been 10-12 years before, Red said now it was down to five
or six, and this was 25 years ago he was saying this. Now I'm not so
sure it isn't down to three or four.
PSR: Has parity in the
NFL made is such that no team in the league is so far away from competing
that they need to rebuild and start over?
Ryan: It certainly is a
league that one can make a very large leap in one year. It has been
happening time and again
in the last six or seven years
where a team comes from nowhere. Every-body forgets the Bears were actually
13-3 two years ago. Teams can do a 180 as the Raiders have done this
season.
The way it's set up in the NFL
with free agency, the way teams cannot hold on to players, makes it
easier for some teams, if things fall their way, to make advances, and
easy for other teams, when things fall the other way, to have a quick
demise. It's a very volatile league in that regard. So if you can find
a way to manage your cap better than the other guys, and be able to
keep guys and have some sort of continuity, and have your money allocated
in just the right places and just the right ways, you can get it done.
PSR: Is that a good or
bad thing for fans?
Ryan: Well, that's the
debate that we have in sports... The NFL likes to trumpet the question,
'How many teams are alive with two weeks to go?'
And that is a good thing, I can't
deny that. I think because hope springs eternal it is a good thing.
It's a good thing if you're on the upswing, it's a bad thing if you're
on the other side. I think overall any team can have hope.
PSR: In spite of the fantastic
season the Patriots are having, have the Red Sox just blown them off
the headlines with all their wheeling and dealing this winter?
Ryan: Well, I'll give you
exhibit A: The Patriots are playing for everything - they're playing
to get the homefield advantage in the playoffs, and what greater prize
is there in the NFL? There is none - that's exactly what you're playing
for; the chance to give yourself the best possible path to the Super
Bowl. So there's nothing but positive stories with them.
Today, you have to take out the
magnifying glass to go to the lower left corner of my newspaper to find
the article on the upcoming Patriots' game.
The dominant story has been the
on-again off-again Manny Ramirez/A-Rod trade and all that goes with
that. It's been the dominant story of this winter so far... Baseball
has blown football out of the water in Boston even when you have a team
that might be going on to win the Super Bowl, and this trade talk is
a perfect example.
So much so, that during the winter
baseball meetings in New Orleans, Theo Epstein (general manager of the
Red Sox) told a writer from the Globe, 'Geez I hope the Patriots can
get the headlines they deserve tomorrow.'
This is a kid, he has yet to turn
30, and he's just rooting for his football team. But he's well aware
of what's been going on, and how the Red Sox have stolen the headlines
from a deserving football team. That's where we are - now how many other
cities in America could that happen in?
This is Fantasy Baseball come
to life. The people involved are the biggest people ever involved in
one transaction in the history of baseball and maybe in American professional
sports. So of course it's compelling. I don't know how important it
is to people in Fargo or Albuquerque, but it's pretty damned important
to people in Boston.
PSR: Are baseball fans
in places like Boston tired of hearing about so-called small market
excuses from teams such as Pittsburgh? Is that a valid excuse?
Ryan: They are valid. I
mean look at what the Red Sox are doing - they're waging a war of diplomacy.
They don't have as much money as the Yankees, but they are spending
more money than anyone in baseball is spending, other than the Yankees,
to do what they want to do. They're taking advantage of the revenue
they have. The fact that you can make money in Boston even with a small
ballpark that plays to 98% capacity or so, they have great broadcast
rights, tremendous corporate sponsorship and merchandising availability,
great tradition and all that - so yes, a small market is certainly a
valid obstacle. It's not an excuse.
Now, can you do better than Pittsburgh
has done, and can you do what Oakland and Minnesota have done, and what
Kansas City appears to be doing? Yes, that's where capable management
comes in, and the Pirates haven't come anywhere near the level of the
other three teams I just mentioned. They can do a lot better, but ultimately,
what have those teams won? They haven't gone all the way, they haven't
been able to do it, but they certainly have done a lot better than the
Pirates. It's ultimately about judgement as well as money.
PSR: You mentioned corporate
sponsorships. If you remember the James Caan movie 'Roller Ball,' where
corporations basically take over sports, can you see sports headed in
that direction? Is it as far-fetched today as it seemed 20 or 30 years
ago?
Ryan: Not at all. The new
breed of owner is best exemplified by Mark Cuban. Enter into this, a)
wanting to win a championship, but b) wanting to turn a profit and keep
people coming by any means necessary; and they buy into the idea that
if you send people home happy with their night out, whether the Mavericks
have won or lost, then we've done something good. They are willing to
do things that purists would have frowned upon years ago.
I think that's clearly the way
all sports are heading. The indoor sports got it first with the music
and the activities - shooting t-shirts into the crowd, shots from half-court,
all the promotional stuff - and now the outdoor sports are getting into
it. Football and baseball can't really shoot t-shirts into the crowd,
but they sure have the music, they are trying to attract younger people,
different people, the fringe people and not just the purists. The only
city where you don't have to do that is the one I'm living in, because
you don't have to do any of that stuff in order to attract people, but
most other cities do need it.
It has come that far. Radio's
going that way, television's going that way, sports are going that way.
In order to get people under your umbrella you have to broaden your
concept of what the whole purpose of going to a game is really about.
For me, it's simply the game. I don't need any noise, I don't need any
promotions. Obviously though, I'm an old-school guy and I have to recognize
the world is changing.
PSR: To that end, what
were your thoughts on Joe Horn's antics with the cell phone in the end
zone?
Ryan: It has been foreshadowed
and predicted that it would come to this. Mike Lupica, my colleague
and friend on the Sports Reporters, has a football novel out in which
a guy did just that. It was inevitable that something like this would
happen - It's too far, too much -
When you see a thing like T.J.
Duckett doing his dance when his team's losing badly, it's a mockery
of the game. There's got to be a respect for the game and a respect
for the opponent. I like what John Saraceno wrote in the USA Today the
other day, that he wishes Duckett would have done that against the Ravens
and seen what Ray Lewis thought of it. I'm not a pro-violence guy, but
football's a violent game and somebody needed to knock him on his butt.
It should have been somebody on his own team to knock him on his butt.
You'd like to think that, but hey, let's not kid ourselves. It's a whole
different generation of guys and a different frame of reference, and
I suppose most football players didn't see it as that much of a problem.
PSR: What are your thoughts
on the recent comments made by Matt Millen about Johnny Morton?
Ryan: Matt Millen's problem
is that his behavior goes back 20 years when he - as a player - got
into an incident after a playoff game with Patrick Sullivan, then the
Patriots' general manager. And Patrick Sullivan was acting punky that
day and antagonizing Millen, but Millen should have avoided a confrontation
with a civilian general manager.
But first, look who's talking?
I mean you're talking to someone who was put on suspension for something
I said on the air in Boston this year - so I'm all about full disclosure
here. I know the perils of speaking off the cuff without allowing the
filter to do its job for you. Believe me, I understand.
But Matt Millen is a repeat offender
here. He's got to be careful. You just can't, in his position, do that.
Not to mention, I think what he
said clearly underscores the basic thinking not only in football, but
in the entire world of professional sports. There's a real shockwave
for anybody who thinks that professional sports is ready for the first
guy during his career to come out of the closet; and think that it would
go over casually is kidding him- or herself. It's not close to that
point. The F-word he used is in fact the word of choice that would be
employed by 99% of people within sports. If someone were to come out
and say 'I am a homosexual' while they were an active player all hell
would break loose. That closet door is going to get an extra lock on
it right now because of this. |