icon caret-left icon caret-right instagram pinterest linkedin facebook twitter goodreads question-circle facebook circle twitter circle linkedin circle instagram circle goodreads circle pinterest circle

A Time of College Basketball Hope & Memories of Notable MLB Passings + TCM Tips

I am a rooter at heart. I can watch sports events dispassionately but life always seems more vibrant and hopeful when my teams are doing well. So let me begin with good news on my favorite basketball teams, Columbia women and Wisconsin men.   

 

On Fri night Jan 31 in a game televised nationally on ESPNU, the Ivy League-leading Columbia's women's basketball team virtually ran Harvard's contenders out of their own gym in an 80-71 triumph. If Jalen Hurts and Pat Mahomes throw long passes as accurately as Lions guards Cece Collins and Kitty Henderson did on the last day of January, it will be a helluva Super Bowl. 

 

The Lions' BST (Big Scoring Three) of sophomore standout guard Riley Weiss and senior captains Collins and Henderson accounted for 65 of the team's points, but the bigger story was the defense that forced Harvard senior star Harmoni Turner and her teammates into several early turnovers that set the tone early on.

Columbia junior forward Susie Rafiu has become a steady presence on the court on both sides of the ball.  

 

The next afternoon at Dartmouth (and kudos to the Ivy League for scheduling earlier weekend games these days), the Lions experienced a not surprising letdown after the intensity of the Harvard game.  They fell behind 17-10 after one period but quickly got control in the second quarter. Led by Weiss's 26 points they won 71-48. Many reserves played good minutes in the second half as the Lions coasted to the victory and didn't need help from the other members of the BST.  

 

It's hard to believe that the regular season is half over. After a 2P matinee at Brown on Sa Feb 8, Columbia returns to face Dartmouth again on Valentine's Night at 7P and the Harvard rematch will be Su Feb 16 at noon, again televised on ESPNU. The rematch with Princeton will be at Jadwin Gym Sa Feb 22 at 530P again with national TV coverage. The Lions end the regular season with 3 games at home: Brown Fri Feb 28 at 4P, Yale Sa Mar 1 at 2P and Cornell Sa March 8 at 2P.  The top 4 teams in the league play in the tournament on FSa Mar 14 & 15 at the Pizzitola Sports Center on the Brown campus this year. The men compete on SaSu Mar 15 & 16 with all games, men and women, broadcast on ESPN channels.

 

Meanwhile down in Greenwich Village, the undefeated NYU Division III Violets go for 50 in a row on Fri night Feb 7 at 730P against the University of Chicago

five who they beat in the Windy City last Friday.  Another reprise happens on Sun at noon when Washington U of St. Louis comes into the Paulson Center on Mercer Street.  The Violets host Carnegie Mellon and Case Western on Feb 21 730P and Feb 23 12N.  The first and second rounds of the Division III

tournament will be Mar 7 & Mar 8 (probably at NYU), Sweet 16 & Elite 8 Mar 14 & Mar 15 and the Final Four this year will be in Salem, VA, Mar 20 & Mar 22.  

 

An interesting trial balloon was sent up last week by NBA commissioner Adam Silver when he suggested that maybe the league should consider switching to 10 minute quarters like the WNBA and all international play.  It probably won't happen - the old guard seems happy with the 12-minute periods - but it is a testimony to how exciting the women's game has become.   It is such a fast-paced game - as is the men's game - that rests after ten minutes of playing time could allow for more recovery time and also give the players something to shoot for - like winning each quarter.  

 

Meanwhile my Wisconsin Badgers, picked for 15th in the geographically expanded 18-team Big Ten, are 7-4 in the league and 17-5 overall as they prepare to face Indiana at home on Tu Feb 4 at 9P (on Peacock).     The Wisconsin comeback victory against Northwestern on Sat aft Feb 1, aired on FS1, was very heart-warming because senior forward Carter Gilmore, a walk-on who only this season has earned a full athletic scholarship, set a career high with 15 points and added 7 rebounds.  Gilmore is a product of small town Wisconsin whose father Brian Gilmore played for retired Hall of Fame coach Bo Ryan when UW-Platteville won the Division III title in 1991.  Carter's mother is in the UW-Platteville Hall of Fame after her outstanding basketball career.  

 

The schedule ahead for the Badgers is not easy.  After Indiana, they go on the road to Iowa on Sa Feb 8 at 1P on NBC, the following Sa Feb 15 they meet powerhouse Purdue in their raucous building.  On Tu Feb 18 at home 830P on FS1, they face Illinois, another title contender that has beaten Greg Gard's team NINE times in a row.  How they compete with these big boys will give us an indication of how far this team can go in March Madness. But to even have modest hopes in early February is a plus after all the dire forecasts and the wails and whines of the doom-and-gloom fair weather fans. 

 

Here's the rest of the schedule:  On Sa Feb 22 Badgers host Oregon at noon on the main Fox channel, Tu Feb 25 they host at 9P U of Washington on Peacock, Su Mar 2 at 130P CBS, host perennial power Michigan State, W Mar 5 visit Minnesota 830P on Big Ten Network, and end regular season vs. Penn State at home, Sa Mar 8 1P - all times in all the listings above EST  

 

AND NOW IN MEMORIAM FOR BASEBALL LIFERS WHO RECENTLY LEFT US:

BOB UECKER, 90, passed away on Jan 16 at the age of 90 after a long battle with leukemia.  I never met Uecker but from all accounts he was a memorable personage deeply devoted to his home area of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  He parlayed a career as a rarely-used backup catcher into a successful broadcasting and acting career. The latter was aided by his self-effacing appearances on Johnny Carson's NBC Tonight Show, the host dubbing Uecker "Mr. Baseball".

 

Uecker was hilarious as the play-by-play man in "Major League" and its two sequels and he also starred in TV's "Mr. Belvedere" series (and as a regular in the Miller LIte Beer TV ads), but in reality he was an excellent and underrated baseball broadcaster.  His call of Mets first baseman Pete Alonso's home run off the Brewers reliever Devin Williams (now a Yankee) that knocked Milwaukee out of the playoffs last October will be remembered forever. But I think that the measure of Uecker as a man is the story told that on the last days of their lives, Hall of Famers Hank Aaron and Bob Gibson phoned Uecker so they could get one more laugh from him.      

 

JEFF TORBORG, 83, died on Jan 19 after a multi-year battle with Parkinson's disease. I knew Torborg in the 1980s when he was a coach for 9 years with the Yankees and I was doing my WBAI "Seventh Inning Stretch" radio program.  Jeff was almost universally admired for his even temperament and deep knowledge of the game. He loved to talk baseball and when I quoted Muddy Ruel's lament that the catching gear were "the tools of ignorance," Torborg demurred with a laugh: "No, they are the instruments of the intelligentsia."

 

Signed for $100,000 out of Rutgers University by LA Dodgers scout Rudy Rufer (who later inked another NYC area product Bobby Valentine from Stamford CT),

Torborg never developed as a hitter but had an ten-year career as an outstanding defensive catcher. He caught three no-hitters - Sandy Koufax's 1965 perfect game, Bill Singer's 1970 gem, and Nolan Ryan's first no-hitter in 1973 when Jeff was catching for the Angels.

 

His greatest success as a manager came with the White Sox when he was voted 1990 AL Manager of the Year leading the Pale Hose to 94 wins.  He broke in as rookies the future Hall of Famer Frank Thomas and third baseman Robin Ventura who remembered him fondly when told the sad news. "I smile as I think of him in the dugout wearing his soccer cleats as he managed his team," Ventura wrote on legacy.com.  Thomas told the LA Times that he "gave me a chance to shine right away." Torborg's time as skipper of the 1992-93 Mets, immortalized as "the worst team that money can buy," was not happy and he didn't have great success later with the Expos and Marlins but his intelligence and good spirits will be his enduring legacy.        

 

In closing, there are not too many TCM sports movie tips in this post as the network plays Oscar films all month.  Noir Alley doesn't return until Mar 8.

But here are a few movies worth noting in the next two weeks:

W Feb 5 2P "The Stratton Story" (1949) the film that cemented Jimmy Stewart's place as a star.  He spent many weeks learning how to act and play ball with a brace on his leg to make believable the story of the onetime major league star pitcher Monty Stratton who got injured in a hunting accident.

 

Th Feb 6 915A "Strangers On A Train" (1951) vintage Hitchcock with some memorable scenes shot at Forest Hills Tennis Club as Farley Granger plays but

       tries to avoid demonic Robert Walker

               4P "Million Dollar Mermaid" (1952) an Esther Williams swimming flick with Walter Pidgeon, Victor Mature

 

W Feb 12 a boxing night starting with 8P "The Champ" (1931) with Wallace Beery and young Jackie Cooper

               945P "The Fighter" (2010) with Christian Bale

               12M "Raging Bull" (1980) Scorsese directs Robert DeNiro in the Jake LaMotta story

 

and the next three have nothing to do with sports but are true classics: 

 

Th Feb 13 8A "Naked City" (1948) Howard Duff, Barry Fitzgerald & others in the Mark Hellinger classic that he never lived to see in theaters but

    at least he saw in previews

              10A "Picture of Dorian Gray" (1945) with Hurd Hatfield, George Sanders, briefly Donna Reed - based on Oscar Wilde classic story

 

F Feb 14   10P "Marty" (1955) the surprise hit of the year with Ernest Borgnine but sadly the last film that Betsy Blair made in America - as I learned in the

      wonderful volume of interviews about the Hollywood blacklist TENDER COMRADES (1997) ed. by Patrick McGilligan and Paul Buhle, Blair never got another          Hollywood offer after this film despite its success - she made London her permanent home and married director Karel Reisz.  The greatness of

      TENDER COMRADES are the nuances brought out in the interviews.  She remained friendly with her ex-husband Gene Kelly whom she married when

      she was a teenager. 

 

 

That's all for now.  Always remember:  Take it easy but take it, and still despite everything STAY POSITIVE TEST NEGATIVE & STAY HEALTHY AND STAY SANE.

 

 

 

 

 

  

Be the first to comment

Early December Reflections on My Alma Maters' Sports & The World Outside of Sports (updated + correction on time of Rutgers-Seton Hall game) + Some TCM Tips

First, here is the continuing good news about my two alma maters.  Columbia men's basketball continues undefeated before Ivy League play begins in early January. [Update: Columbia lost its first game of season at U of Albany, 88-73, after starting season with 8 straight wins. Before Ivy League season begins against Cornell at home on Sa Jan 11 at 2P, the Lions host Fairfield Sa Dec 28 at 4p and then visit Rutgers on M Dec 30 at 5P. It should be far more competitive than a 50-point loss that opened a Lion season a couple of years ago.]  

 

The Columbia women's basketball team is 7-3 playing a tough schedule that included a hard-fought but double-digit loss on Sunday Dec 1 to nationally-ranked Duke at fabled Cameron Indoor Arena. They hosted U of San Francisco at 11AM W Dec 4 in their last home game of 2024.

[Update: The Lions came away with a 81-79 victory before over 2750 fans on Education Day for city area school kids.  A 13-point halftime lead vanished in

less than 4 minutes of the 2nd half, but they regained their poise to come away with the nail-biting win over the never-say-die Dons from the Bay area.]

 

It took 63 years but unheralded Columbia football under rookie head coach Jon Poppe can call itself champions again.   The Lions finished strong with solid victories over Brown and Cornell to share the title with Harvard and Dartmouth.  They were a rare team that enjoyed wins led by three different quarterbacks.  

 

Injury ended Chase Goodwin's season during a Homecoming loss to Dartmouth. Cole Freeman took over for the next few games before first-year Caleb Martinez from the football HS powerhouse of St. John Bosco in southern California was at the helm for the last two victories. He could well be the QB of the future but the 2024 Lions will be remembered as a TEAM that came together at the right time.  14 Lions received recognition in the All-Ivy voting. 

 

The less said about Wisconsin football the better.  For the first time in over 20 years, the Badgers will not be going to a bowl game. After two seasons, head coach Luke Fickell is under fire and deservedly so although his lucrative contract has several more seasons to run. Fickell was always wearing a T.E.A.M. jacket on the sidelines but the obvious symbolism on the jacket was not put into practice in the locker room or on the practice and playing fields. 

 

Wisconsin basketball, on the other hand, both the proud men's program and the resurgent women under former UConn star Marisa Mosely, are exuding hope [and just announced that next year the squad will be augmented by two young Spanish players.]  Athletic director Chirs McIntosh wisely did not blow up the men's program the way he did football. Although the Badgers lost three key players from last year's team to the transfer portal - Connor Essegian to Nebraska, Chucky Hepburn to Louisville and peripatetic A. J. Storr to Kansas (Storr's 7th team in his last 7 years going back to HS!).

 

But veteran coach Greg Gard has utilized a key transfer of his own, John Tonge (pronounced like former MLB reliever Sid Monge) who hails from Hepburn's home area of Omaha, NE.   Holdovers John Blackwell, Steven Crowl, Max Klesmit, and Kamari McGee have provided continuity.  And lo and behold, the Badgers are scoring more than ever while handling the ball well. 

 

We'll find out soon how real the Badgers' improvement has been. In their Big Ten opener last night (Tu Dec 3), the Badgers couldn't hold a six-point halftime lead to one-loss Michigan and fell 67-64 at home. It's been a heady few days for the Wolverines who upset Ohio State in football at Columbus last Saturday, thoroughly shutting down the Buckeye offense in a 13-10 win. 

 

When Michigan players tried to plant a M flag at midfield after the game, the Buckeye gridders ripped it out, leading to quite a skirmish between many players on both teams. The Big Ten has fined each school $100,000, but it say here that the action is only a wrist slap that is unlikely to stop future ruckuses in the aftermath of emotionally draining rivalry games.  Similar incidents occurred after games this past weekend between North Carolina-NC State, Arizona-Arizona State, and Florida-Florida State. Winning and losing with grace is increasingly a lost art. 

 

I hope Wisconsin cagers bounce back soon from the disappointing loss because another three road challenges loom: Sa aft Dec 7 at 130P in an nationally televised afternoon game at fierce local rival Marquette in Milwaukee. Perennial Big Ten power Illinois follows Tu Dec 10 at 9P. Always plucky Butler in Indy comes on Sa Dec 14 at 230P. 

 

Consult your TV listings and beware that many games might be on the extra pay networks like Peacock. For Badger fans in NYC area, on M Jan 6 at 7P, the Badgers will visit Big Ten rival Rutgers which is also off to a promising start. Last season the Badgers were routed in Piscataway but avenged the loss later in the year in Madison. 

 

Led by coach Steve Pikiell and with first year Dylan Harper, another basketball prodigy from the family that produced Ron Harper Sr. and Jr., already drawing raves, Rutgers this month hosts Big Ten rival Penn State on Tu Dec 10 at 7P.  On Sat Dec 14 at 3P longtime Big East rival Seton Hall is the opposition. 

The Winter Village will open three hours before each game outside Jersey Mike's Arena in Piscataway.  (It will always be known to longtime Scarlet Knight fans as the RAC, the Rutgers Athletic Center). 

 

I've found that fandom of pro sports doesn't necessarily spill over into college sports in the NYC area, but this season could be a little different. Our two pro football teams, the Giants and the Jets, are mired in sub-mediocrity, always finding new ways to lose.So there are good reasons to follow the cagers at Columbia, Rutgers and Big East member St. John's which is also off to a promising start under controversial but usually successful head coach Rick Pitino.  The Red Storm will be mourning all season the death of former coach Lou Carnesecca who passed away last weekend at the age of 99. 

 

On the pro basketball scene, the Knicks are likely contenders and the unheralded Nets are staying above water.  It is a testmony though to the long NBA 84-game season that the current NBA Cup games are drawing a lot of attention.  To me, it just shows how ridiculously long the NBA season really is.  But nobdy is seriously talking about shortening it.  And ditto the virtually-as-long NHL hockey season and the twice-as-long MLB season.    

 

There is not much hard news to report on the MLB scene.  By the time you absorb this post, dear readers, there should be news of signings at baseball's winter meetings starting Dec 8 and running through Th Dec 12.  Oriole fans are intrigued at the possibility, howevelr unlikely, that new owner David Rubenstein may shell out big bucks to keep ace righthander Corbin Burnes and slugging switch-hitting right fielder Anthony Santander.

 

It may not mean anything but I don't recall ever seeing a baseball owner having three of his books plugged in a full-page ad as Rubenstein's were in this past Sunday's New York Times Book Review (Dec 1). (Two history books and one financial book befitting a man who won at auction a rare copy of the Magna Carta.) We will find out soon whether Rubenstein's literary and TV celebrity on Bloomberg News leads him towards a place at the high roller table with the Dodgers, Red Sox, Yankees, and perhaps the Blue Jays and the Giants.   

 

There are conflicting reports about when the biggest free agent on the market, Yankee outfielder Juan Soto, makes his decision. Agent Scott Boras loves to draw out the process to get phantom bidders involved.  Gullible owners and equally gullible media people play along with this ploy. So to repeat, we might not hear about Soto's decision for some time about where he wants to "take his talents" - to use LeBron James' phrase after he left Cleveland for the tax-free charms of Miami.    

 

During the winter meetings, a veterans committee will announce its latest selecctions for the Hall of Fame.  It's possible that the recently deceased Luis Tiant gets in as well as Dick Allen.  Speaking of recent passings, Fernando Valenzuela's passing at the age of 63 on Oct 22 was extremely bittersweet happening a little over a week before the Dodgers won the World Series.  Another notable left-handed pitcher, Rudy May, passed away just a few days earlier on Oct 19 at the age of 80. 

 

May pitched for a lot of bad teams but when he played for good teams like the 1980 Yankees he led the AL in ERA.  His overall record was 152-156 but his career ERA of 3.46 was actually slightly lower than Valenzuela's who finished his illustrious career with a 173-153 record and career ERA of 3.54. 

 

On the TCM front, there are not many flms to list with sports themes, but every Thursday in December will be Mickey Rooney day.  

Th Dec 5 at noon "Death on The Diamond" (1934) will be shown with Rooney having a small part in a film about a murderer loose in the St. Louis major league ballpark. Young Robert Young is a star pitcher trying to solve the mystery, Madge Evans is the team secretary who Young has the hots for, and Ted Healy, who once employed Moe, Curly, and Larry before they became the Three Stooges, plays a key supporting role as does Nat Pendleton.  Edward Sedgwick, known for his work in comedy, directs.  And Ernie Orsatti, who later in 1934 will win a World Series ring as the St. Louis Cardinals Gashouse Gang center fielder, has a cameo as a base runner who is shot trying to score between third and home.

 

At 115P "Diamond" is followed by the 15-minute short, "Diamond Demon" (1947). featuring the acrobatic trickery of Johnny Price, a minor league pitcher.

Going backwards to 1030A on Dec 5, there is a boxing-themed film "The Life of Eddie Dolan" (1933) with Douglas Fairbanks in the title role and Loretta Young and Aline MacMahon as the women who support him as he escapes to a rural hideaway to avoid a murder charge.   

 

The high brow highlight on Th Dec 5 comes at 8P: Mickey Rooney returns as Puck in the lavish "Midsummer Night's Dream" (1935) with Joe E Brown as Flute the bellows maker and Dick Powell and Olivia DeHavilland (in her debut year) as the lovers Lysander and Hermia. And many others in this long extravaganza with James Cagney and Victor Jory in featured roles. 

 

Late Th Dec 12/morning Dec 13, 12:15A:  Rooney returns opposite Spencer Tracy as Father Flanagan in "Boys' Town" (1938-39).  

 

Every Sun night in December, Carol Burnett guests, bringing her satirical interpretation of a movie.

On Dec 8 after 8P's airing of the Noir "Born To Be Bad" (1950) Nicholas Ray directing Joan Fontaine, Robert Ryan, Zachary Scott, Carol will introduce and show her satire, "Raised To Be Rotten". 

 

After some lackluster recent Noir Alleys, Eddie Muller hosts a real classic earlier on Su Dec 8 at 12M, repeated at 10A.

Fred Zinnemann directs "Act of Violence" (1948) starring Robert Ryan and Van Heflin as onetime POW's in Germany whose post-war lives go in different

directions and Ryan is out to wreak vengeance upon Heflin.  Janet Leigh and Mary Astor have important supporting roles. 

 

That's all for now.  Next post I'll talk more about my off-season baseball reading which has featured a lot of Ring Lardner's baseball stories as well as reading Ring Lardner Jr.'s family history, THE LARDNERS: MY FAMILY REMEMBERED (1976).  Ring Sr has been too often belittled as a bitter and cynical writer who "only" wrote short stories and never a novel. In truth, there is a lasting quality to his wry humor and his austere personalty among strangers masked a deeply caring heart. "How can you write if you can't cry?" Ring Jr. remembers his father's defense of the writings of Charles Dickens.  

 

In this age of bullying and power running rampant and seemingly unchecked all over the world, I am finding solace in reading the works of great writers of all kinds, using the dead as allies until more hopeful days arise. I recommend finding some riches in our past culture and not allow ourselves to get tortured by the dreck of the daily news cycle. 

 

Stay positive, Test negative, is still my mantra, and always remember: Take it easy but take it!  

 

1 Comments
Post a comment