Flashback: Recalling impact of Dick Young, who changed everything for sportswriters

I only heard Dick Young speak only once. During my first World Series in 1986, I squeezed into the back of the room during the baseball writers’ meeting at Fenway Park.

I recall Young gave a speech in which he implored writers to continue to fight for their turf. To not give to the bastards, etc.

The fiery New York sports columnist could see where things were going in regards to sportswriters, and he didn’t like it.

It turned out to be Young’s last speech to the writers in a World Series. He died in 1987 at the age of 69.

If you never heard of Young, or need a refresher on what he meant to the business, you must read this 1985 profile written by Ross Wetzseon for Sport Magazine. Deadspin posted the piece on its site this week.

Wetzseon writes:

In the evolution of sportswriting from adolescent mythologizing to tell-it-like-it-is honesty, Dick Young was arguably the single most important transitional figure. There’s a better way to describe the arc of Dick Young’s career than to say he was a street-smart kid who rose to patron saint who degenerated into crotchety old man. And that’s to say that while his politics may be as reactionary as Louis XIV’s, his professional role has been as radical as Robespierre’s. What his detractors fail to understand is that there are many battles they don’t have to fight because Dick Young has already fought them—and won.

There’s this exchange:

“Gimme a beer,” says Dick Young. “Whadda ya wanna know?”

Some of your younger colleagues think. . .

“Shit, those young guys. They don’t work hard enough, they don’t work the phones, they don’t have any respect for themselves as professionals. I remember when the New York Times started giving days off in spring training! They’re in Florida, for Christ’s sake, and they want a day off! Me? I only write five columns a week these days. Piece of cake.”

Mike Lupica of the New York Daily News says. . .

“Mike Lupica? He’s a newspaper version of a spoiled-brat ballplayer,” Dick Young snaps. “He writes bullshit based on his lack of experience.”

Dick Young’s not an off-the-record guy. Skipping all over the place, talking just like his Friday column, “Clubhouse Confidential,” a sentence, three dots, on to something else, three dots, on to something else. Next question?

Murray Chass of the New York Times? “He’d sell his soul for access.” Maury Allen of the New York Post? “Careless with facts and quotes.” Jim Murray of the Los Angeles Times? “Just a gagster.” Dick Young is the same with nearly all his colleagues. Not angry, not even sarcastic, just matter-of-fact rat-tat-tat. Next question.

Howard Cosell? “Howie the Shill? A fraud. An ass. A pompous ass. Those are the good things I can say about him. Now what about the other side?”

Then there’s this rant about sportswriters. Remember, this is 1985:

“Today’s writers don’t have enough guts,” he says. “They let themselves be pushed around. The players give them all that crap and they accept it”—it’s hard to tell who ticks him off the most, the players or the press. “They even have ropes around the batting cage in spring training! Jesus Christ, how’m I supposed to do my job?”

After reading it you can’t but wonder if things would be better if Young still were around.

 

 

3 thoughts on “Flashback: Recalling impact of Dick Young, who changed everything for sportswriters

  1. I grew up reading Dick Young and appreciate the role he played in revolutionizing sports writing…but calling him a crotchety old man as Deadspin does can be misleading; even in the early 60s (his mid- to late-40s) he was a bigot whose hatred of Muhammad Ali reached a fevered pitch that destroyed his credibility among many of us who were growing up without the overt prejudices that Young and others (Jimmy Cannon of the old Journal American comes to mind) were so proud of….that young people dismissed his views as out of touch may have led to the bitterness he later displayed, but the fault lay in himself……

    • instead of writing “as Deadspin does” I should have said, “as Deadspin quotes”…sorry about that….

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