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______ Passed Away Today, RIP (3 Viewers)

One of my favorite Bulls growing up, Bob Love 81 - cancer.

Butterbean was a great cornerman

Those Bulls teams had four great starters, but in an era dominated by all time great Centers, they had a big hole at the 5 spot

Tom Boerwinkle would like a word

:lol:

Dennis Awtrey says hello

+ Clifford Ray

between the 3 of them you had decent defense and a chance at getting defensive rebounds

Clifford Ray was the starting center for a NBA champion and has another ring as a coach.
 
Clifford Ray was the starting center for a NBA champion and has another ring as a coach.
Did he have red hair.....he could have had an awesome nickname of Clifford - The Big Red Dog! Take that to the bank brochacho (just seemed like it needed that SWC'r phrasing to complete the comment)
 
No one y'all know, but my best friend's dad passed away this past weekend. He was an amazing guy, incredible cook (came here from Italy), and man I can remember some awesome summer evenings at their place. He'd cook the most amazing pasta. My and my buddy and his little brother were in a band together and I'd spend pretty much the entire day and evening over there during the summers. And of course since I lost my own dad just about two years ago, it kind of reopened that wound so now I'm really missing him.
 
Clifford Ray was the starting center for a NBA champion and has another ring as a coach.
Did he have red hair.....he could have had an awesome nickname of Clifford - The Big Red Dog! Take that to the bank brochacho (just seemed like it needed that SWC'r phrasing to complete the comment)
Wayyyy off topic, but this is a great story:


Dolphin rescue​

In 1978, Ray made headlines for saving a dolphin's life at the Marine World/Africa USA amusement park in Redwood City, California. A bottlenose dolphin named "Mr. Spock" had swallowed a bolt with a protruding sharp screw while maintenance was being performed on its holding tank. The park veterinarian was unwilling to perform a risky operation to remove the bolt from the dolphin's first stomach where the object lay just beyond his reach. His remark that he needed longer arms led Marine World president and basketball fan Mike Demetrios to ask for Ray's assistance, as his arms measured at three feet nine inches (114 centimeters). With gloves, lubrication, and guidance, Ray successfully reached into the animal's throat and retrieved the object without causing any additional harm.[6][7][8]
 
my very good friend Ed Varner, man his wife just let us all know yesterday and it’s been a kick in the nuts. He was only mid 50’s but the damn prostate cancer got him after 3 years of battling with it. A great person and one of our regular golfing partners who always made us laugh because he had changed his grip and figured it out :lmao: :cry: ****
 
One of my favorites from before the internet age when I read USA Today a lot

==============

Sad news: Rudy Martzke, the legendary sports media reporter/columnist, has passed away, according to NBC Sports EVP of communications, Greg Hughes.

Before social media, TV sports figures and execs talked to each other -- and the public -- through Rudy Martzke's USA Today column, a bulletin board of sorts.

Footnote: Martzke earlier had been VP of operations for the ABA's St. Louis Spirits, hiring a 22-year-old play-by-play man named Bob Costas.
 
Tom Thumb, Tom Cushman or Tom Foolery
I date women on T.V. with the help of Chuck Woolery


RIP. I guess he won't be back in 2 and 2. 😪
Thought the same...

In HS we went on a field trip to see Love Connection. That's my Woolery story.
 
In HS we went on a field trip to see Love Connection.
What an odd field trip.
When I was a sophomore in high school we went on a chemistry class field trip to the Proctor and Gamble plant in KC. They were making Irish Spring at the time, so one of the guys on the plant floor gave my chem teacher a sample of Irish Spring that was basically residue from one of the machines. This thing was shaped like a dong. So our teacher is carrying around this large Irish Spring dong all day. Flipping it from hand to hand, tossing it up in the air and such.

It was amazing.
 
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In HS we went on a field trip to see Love Connection.
What an odd field trip.
When I was a sophomore in high school we went on a chemistry class field trip to the Proctor and Gamble plant in KC. They were making Irish Spring at the time, so one of the guys on the plant floor gave my chem teacher a sample of Irish Spring that was basically residue from one of the machine. This thing was shaped like a dong. So our teacher is carrying around this large Irish Spring dong all day. Flipping it from hand to hand, tossing it up in the air and such.

It was amazing.
I now have a crapton of Irish Spring jokes that will get me banned.
 
In HS we went on a field trip to see Love Connection.
What an odd field trip.
When I was a sophomore in high school we went on a chemistry class field trip to the Proctor and Gamble plant in KC. They were making Irish Spring at the time, so one of the guys on the plant floor gave my chem teacher a sample of Irish Spring that was basically residue from one of the machine. This thing was shaped like a dong. So our teacher is carrying around this large Irish Spring dong all day. Flipping it from hand to hand, tossing it up in the air and such.

It was amazing.
I now have a crapton of Irish Spring jokes that will get me banned.
laugh emoji.
 
One of my favorite baseball players passed away today:
Rico Carty
He started with the Braves and led the NL with a .366 average in 1970.
He was really slow but man, could he hit!

really solid for batting average hitter - bad when we were following the league-wide leader stats almost daily in the newspaper
Sundays were the best when they would sort the entire league by average.
 
In HS we went on a field trip to see Love Connection.
What an odd field trip.
When I was a sophomore in high school we went on a chemistry class field trip to the Proctor and Gamble plant in KC. They were making Irish Spring at the time, so one of the guys on the plant floor gave my chem teacher a sample of Irish Spring that was basically residue from one of the machine. This thing was shaped like a dong. So our teacher is carrying around this large Irish Spring dong all day. Flipping it from hand to hand, tossing it up in the air and such.

It was amazing.
I now have a crapton of Irish Spring jokes that will get me banned.
Best to keep it fesh and clean as a whistle in here.
 
1970 Carty was a WIS cookie if you didn't mind the hit on OF defense. :nerd:

missed a lot of that ..."WIS cookie"what is that?

Baseball nerds on the Baseball forum used to hold 24 team all-time player drafts with the seasons played out on whatifsports.com (aka WIS).

Carty's 1970 season with the .366/.454/.584 slash line was one of the greatest offensive seasons of his era which were known as cookies for some reason. He'd always get drafted whenever he was eligible but his team would have to live with his bad defense.

Good times.

@Koya

ETA: Carty's 1964 rookie season was almost as good offensively but with even worse d.
 
1970 Carty was a WIS cookie if you didn't mind the hit on OF defense. :nerd:

missed a lot of that ..."WIS cookie"what is that?

Baseball nerds on the Baseball forum used to hold 24 team all-time player drafts with the seasons played out on whatifsports.com (aka WIS).

Carty's 1970 season with the .366/.454/.584 slash line was one of the greatest offensive seasons of his era which were known as cookies for some reason. He'd always get drafted whenever he was eligible but his team would have to live with his bad defense.

Good times.

@Koya

ETA: Carty's 1964 rookie season was almost as good offensively but with even worse d.
The only reason he didn't win Rookie of The Year was that Di*ck Allen was also a rookie that year and took the award.
 
Carty's 1970 season with the .366/.454/.584 slash line was one of the greatest offensive seasons of his era which were known as cookies for some reason.

The days of sim-fishing were a good 20 years ago now. 20 years. Wow.

Where have you gone?
Mister Harrier?
Larry turns his lonely eyes to you
Woo, woo, woo
What's that you say, Mister Harrier?
Cupid Childs has left and gone away
Hey, hey, hey
Hey, hey, hey
 
Most of you probably aren’t familiar with the name…but Bill Battle died today…a legend in the south and licensed consumer products industry.

He worked a deal with Bear Bryant to trademark his houndstooth cap…and the Collegiate Licensed industry was born. Played for the Bear, Coached UT, AD at Bama outside his business career. RIP Coach.

Aw Man.

When I was born in 1964, the President of the University of Tennessee was my father's godfather. I have a nice letter from him congratulating me on my birth and he said he'd informed Coach Battle that I should have a Football Scholarship waiting for me. :lmao:

Never cashed that in but Coach Battle always had a soft spot in my heart after that.
 
Legendary St. John’s basketball coach Lou Carnesecca, 99.

IMO college basketball was at its historical peak during the 1980s when the Big East reigned supreme.
Still one of my all time favorite teams led by Looie.

Chris Mullin, Mark Jackson, Walter Berry, Bill Wennington and Shelton Jones. [chefs kiss]
Don’t forget hard-nosed Matt Brust doing the dirty work under the boards.
 
Legendary St. John’s basketball coach Lou Carnesecca, 99.

IMO college basketball was at its historical peak during the 1980s when the Big East reigned supreme.
Still one of my all time favorite teams led by Looie.

Chris Mullin, Mark Jackson, Walter Berry, Bill Wennington and Shelton Jones. [chefs kiss]
Don’t forget hard-nosed Matt Brust doing the dirty work under the boards.
I may be mistaken but I don’t think Brust was on the final 4 team. I think he came a year or two later.
 
Legendary St. John’s basketball coach Lou Carnesecca, 99.

IMO college basketball was at its historical peak during the 1980s when the Big East reigned supreme.
Still one of my all time favorite teams led by Looie.

Chris Mullin, Mark Jackson, Walter Berry, Bill Wennington and Shelton Jones. [chefs kiss]
Don’t forget hard-nosed Matt Brust doing the dirty work under the boards.
I may be mistaken but I don’t think Brust was on the final 4 team. I think he came a year or two later.
I think you’re right. He was there when I was a freshman there in 1986/87.
 

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