Posts Tagged ‘press’

Going out in style – ESPN

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

Updated: March 15, 2011, 6:02 PM ET

Julie Foudy talked to Seattle’s Kasey Keller on the eve of his final season

SEATTLE — Seattle Sounders goalkeeper Kasey Keller is considered one of the greatest American soccer players of all time. He was named to four World Cup teams and appeared more than 100 times for the U.S. national team. After playing 16 years in Europe’s best leagues — the English Premier League, Spain’s La Liga and the German Bundesliga — Keller, who grew up on an egg farm in Olympia, Wash., seized the opportunity to return home in 2009 with MLS expansion franchise the Seattle Sounders. At the age of 41, Keller is closing in on the end of a fantastic career. Julie Foudy sat down with Keller to discuss his upcoming final season.

Julie Foudy: Twenty years of playing professional soccer. How have you been able to stay on top of your game?

Kasey Keller: I think it’s multiple things. First of all, it’s kind of looking after yourself, making sure you’re not getting into the drinking culture that comes about in the English side of the game, because that will take its toll on you before anything. I’ve been very fortunate injurywise. I haven’t missed a day of training with a knee injury in 20 years.

JF: Haven’t missed a day of training? Wow.

KK: I mean, I’ve had injuries, but not anything knee-related. So many people are out of the game because of their knees and not even having that as an issue for a day of training. Genetics, looking after yourself, whatever you want to say … obviously some luck has to be involved there as well. I almost retired a few years ago, and the opportunity [to continue playing] came really kind of through Brian McBride to go to Fulham for a year, which was a great stopgap in between the Sounders starting up. I don’t know if I had retired if I could have taken a year and a half off and come back to this, so it was perfect timing. Obviously, then, with the Sounders joining and at different times people would ask me in Europe “Are you interested in going home?” Well, what is home? Is home playing in New York or playing in … I mean that’s still a five-to-six hour flight for me to get back to Seattle, so I might as well just stay in Europe. It’s a 10-hour flight as opposed to a five-to-six hour flight. When Seattle formed, it just couldn’t have been better timing for me. I had five months off just to rejuvenate the batteries and get started.

JF:You probably didn’t know what to do with yourself for five months.

KK: It felt really good, and at the same time, when I was ready to train it was great because of the relationship we have with the Seahawks. It’s not the nicest weather here in January, and so I made a few phone calls and was able to use the Seahawks’ indoor facility and train there.

[+] EnlargeKeller

Bob Thomas/Getty ImagesNo one rocked the mullet better than Kasey Keller back in the day.

JF: You can’t play 20 years without having some of these pictures come back to haunt you. [Julie holds up a picture of Keller with a mullet.]

KK: There’s no doubt. There’s plenty of those.

JF: All business in the front, party in the back.

KK: One of the kids was saying, I don’t remember which website, some mullet website …

JF: And this was on it?

KK: That one or one like it.

JF: Do you miss that hair?

KK: I miss hair. I don’t necessarily miss that hair. But in all honesty, I don’t care. What are you going to do?

JF: You went from an egg farm to living in Madrid, London, a castle in Germany for goodness’ sakes. How did that affect your life as well?

KK: I don’t know if it’s affected my life too much. It just was my life. There’s different times when you look back and say, “Wow, that was a little bit interesting and that was pretty cool.” I remember one time in Madrid, the kids were young and they were in the bath, and I got a phone call and I went into the bedroom to get the phone. I have a friend of mine whose secretaries are very formal, and so you answer the phone and you hear this very kind of formal secretary and I’m thinking, “Oh, it’s my friend calling and he’s going to pass it over.” But then it was like this is the assistant to the press secretary at the White House or something like that and we’re just wondering if you’ve gotten our invitation — the Clintons are holding a white-tie dinner for the king and queen of Spain and the king requested that you and your wife attend.

JF: The king requested?

KK: Yeah, yeah. You’re kind of sitting there saying, “Yeah, that happens every day.” So there are those few things, and then they said the reason we are giving more notice is because a white tie is more formal and it might take you awhile to get your suits and dresses and things to get organized. The club was great. It was on a Wednesday night and they let me take a Concorde over to not miss much training.

You just can’t really imagine coming from an egg farm in Olympia, Wash., that [playing in Europe] was going to happen.

” — Kasey Keller

JF: Because when the king asks …

KK: When the king asks, you don’t want to turn him down. It’s not even the Clintons, it’s like I’m being invited by the king. The king had so many people that he wanted — I think Meg Ryan sat next to him. That was one of his requests. Placido Domingo sang a couple songs at the post-dinner reception. It was cool to be in that. I was considered at the time within Spain as the most famous American living there on a permanent basis. It was cool.

JF: How difficult was that life or was it fun for the family and the kids?

KK: When my family moved back, my kids were 11 and it was their fifth school in their fourth country. So that was also another thought process to move home and be a part of something as cool as the Sounders and say can we be somewhere and let the kids go somewhere from sixth grade through graduation from high school. They were used to it [moving to different places], they were great, they did a tremendous job of adapting, but we knew it was going to get tougher the older they got. So we were hoping to get the someplace settled. My wife did a tremendous job as well. I remember once I got a phone call and the kids were at a birthday party. They were at a swimming pool and I stepped out of the party and had a phone call from [Monchengladbach manager] Dick Advocaat and walked back into the party and said we’re moving to Germany and I’m signing for Borussia Monchengladbach. My wife didn’t even flinch. That’s the game. If it wasn’t for that support and the adaptability of my kids and my wife, I wouldn’t have the 20 years as a pro and the 16-17 years in Europe that I had.

JF: After crisscrossing the globe, how nice is it to be home?

KK: Well, it’s the first time in the offseason where I was actually home as opposed to, OK, the season is over we’ll go to our house in Olympia, we’ll go to our house in Idaho for a couple weeks or we’ll go on vacation. We’re home and it seemed so normal for me to be like, “What are we doing here?” It got more difficult in England because of the way the school system worked. The kids weren’t out of school until we were back to preseason. So those last couple of years it got even more difficult to take the kids out of school, to take them home. It’s nice to be in one place.

JF: You seem to thrive in the role of playing superhero for a variety of teams you’ve played on that are either on the brink of relegation or have been recently promoted to the top division. Besides the incentive of playing here at home in Seattle, how enticing was it to come to a franchise that was brand-new?

KK: I think that was part of it. I think part of it also was being home. That was key. I had said in other interviews that if roles had been reversed, if Portland had gotten the franchise three years ago and Seattle not until this year, I would have felt just as comfortable going back to Portland as coming back to Seattle. But the way it’s worked out here in Seattle with the fans, the ownership, the way everything has been handled, it’s been the most seamless transition.

JF: Why?

KK: Because I think it would have been tough to come from cities such as London, Madrid and Dusseldorf and leagues where it truly is the sport. In Spain, in particular, in Germany, soccer is the NFL, Major League Baseball and NBA all in one. There are other sports, but they are nowhere near what soccer is. I remember we were leaving for winter break in Spain and it truly was walking through the airport and having cameras follow you from your car to the terminal. And you’re thinking, “Really?” And I was never a player that, I wasn’t a [Lionel] Messi or a Cristiano [Ronaldo] — those are few and far between. Go walk around a mall with Ronaldinho and you’ll see what a true superstar is. But to think you have gotten to the point where someone wants to follow you and I haven’t done anything wrong. There was no scandal — they were following [me] because I saved a penalty from [Luis] Figo in the 89th minute before it was over. So… to come home and to have a city embrace the team, embrace myself and family, it’s just a tremendous feeling and something I hope the sport can continue to grow on with the addition of Portland and Vancouver.

JF: How has your practice and game preparation changed over the years?

KK: It hasn’t really changed too much. I think in the two years that I have played for the Sounders, I have missed one or two trainings. I’m not a guy who is Band-Aided together — play on Saturday and train on Thursday or Friday and play. I train every session as hard as I can, or as hard as the preparation demands for the game.

JF:Are you surprised at all that you’re still playing at 41?

KK: Definitely. I remember when I was at Millwall and I was waiting for my first work permit, that is truly when my hair started to fall out. When I just truly felt that I got to the point where a team wanted to sign me. I had a chance to be a pro. I had a chance to do what I said from the first time I was a kid and [was] asked at school, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” And I said I wanted to be a professional athlete — I didn’t care what sport. That’s what I wanted to be and here I was in England and being able [to have] a team saying we want to sign this guy and not being given that opportunity because of a technicality would have just been devastating. But I remember saying to my wife, “If I could just get so many games or could you imagine if we could be in Europe for 10 years,” and 17 years later I’m finally coming home.

JF: What has been the highlight of your career?

KK: Impossible [to say]. But I think the one game that everyone always points to is the Brazil game, which was multiple things — not just my performance, but who it was against, the players it was against, and that we won.

[+] EnlargeKasey Keller

Hector Mata/AFP/Getty ImagesKeller was unstoppable in the U.S.’s 1-0 win over Brazil in the 1998 Gold Cup semifinals.

JF: 1998 Gold Cup.

KK: Right. That just doesn’t happen too often when a goalkeeper has a great game and the team wins. More often than not, you’re losing 2-0 or 2-1 because you’ve just been shelled so bad. I have been pretty fortunate, I have had other games — Italy in the World Cup and club matches. I’ve won at Barcelona, at Manchester United, at Arsenal, just some big draws, [like] at the Bernabeu. It’s been a good run.

JF: When you walked away from that Brazil game, did you know as a player that was one for the ages?

KK: I guessed it would be, just because of the circumstances. Just to be a part of the first [U.S. team] to beat Brazil and the things that Romario said after the game helped bring it into that status.

JF: You’re too humble to say it, but he said “I’ve never played against a goalkeeper that has played that well,” correct?

KK: Which was pretty cool and I think … the images that went around the world — that in the middle of the game Romario was so taken back by some of the saves that he shook my hand … And I thought [for that] to have it happen under those circumstances was a great occasion.

JF: Some of the players on the Sounders weren’t even born when you were on the World Cup team in 1990 — any fun nicknames they have for you on the team?

KK: You’d have to ask them. If they did, they are behind my back. Obviously, it is kind of funny. I don’t shy away from the fact that some of these kids are kind of young. We were down in Arizona for this last preseason and we had a party at Brad Evans’ house because his family is from Phoenix. The party was breaking up and the guys had gone somewhere, and I was hanging out with some of the parents and I realized I was closer in age to most of the parents than I was to the players. But I’m as silly as they come. I can still hang with the kids.

JF: How is MLS different from the European leagues that you’ve played in?

KK: Well, there is obviously, kids are signing a little bit different contracts in Europe. And with that comes just a little bit different lifestyle. You have to look at it from an NBA, football standpoint. That’s a close proximity when you’re talking about payrolls and all that kind of stuff. You have a kid who comes through the youth team and is on a pretty small contract and does well, then it’s Porsches and all the stuff, right or wrong. It’s just you still have guys here … where four guys are talking about finding a house to live together. It’s just a different way the game is being developed.

JF: What does MLS need to do though to ensure that the league is getting some of these players in their primes?

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KK: You can’t. You can’t do it. You can’t really try. I think what you have to do is … develop young kids and be able to sell them to those leagues and at the same time can we bring in guys near the end of their careers who are truly going to contribute to the league. But we’re not ready yet to compete with the leagues around the world.

JF: Let’s look even bigger picture — having played in four World Cups yourself and just having come off a World Cup year, what do you think the U.S. needs to do to win a World Cup?

KK: There’s a whole lot of countries around the world who have been playing this game a lot longer than we have who are asking that same question. Why have the Brazils won so many times? And the Germans and the Argentinians and the Italians? It is truly an exclusive club and to try to break into that when soccer is pretty much the fifth sport in your country is an extremely tough task. I think we have to be extremely proud of the tremendous strides we have made to get where we are right now. To think that Scotland, for example, has never gotten out of the first round at the World Cup and we have gotten out of the first round in three of the last six World Cups and gotten to a quarterfinal — that’s a huge task.

JF: You have publicly announced that you’re going to retire after this season. How will you handle the emotions of that last game?

KK: I don’t know. Good question. I think I’ll handle it well because I think I’m at the right time to [retire]. It’s also on my own terms. It’s not like I’m doing it because my body just won’t take it anymore and I really wish I could play two, three more years … I don’t want to be in that situation where everybody says, “Man, you really should have retired last year.” There’s been plenty of athletes throughout the years who wished they could have taken that last year back and finish with what everybody thought of them the previous year.

JF: What would be that perfect ending?

KK: Obviously, an MLS Cup would be great. … If you’re in England and you’re not playing for one of three or four teams, you’re not winning the championship. If you’re in Spain and you’re not playing for two, three, four different teams, you have no chance of winning the championship. If you’re in Scotland and you’re not playing for Rangers or Celtic, you’re not winning the championship. The coolest part of MLS is you truly have 10, 12, 14 teams in this league at any time [that] if things go right, you can win the league. I truly believe we are one of those teams. To be able to finish my career as MLS champion would be pretty darn cool.

JF: What about after you retire — what’s next for Kasey Keller?

KK: I think it’s going to be a multiple of things. There are some cool things in my contract that I am going to stay with the team. I think there will be some TV work. I think there will be some stuff with the community outreach side of the club. I would like to look into the coaching side of things, at the same time I have no problem going on the technical side — GM, that sort of thing. I also don’t think I would have much of a problem going into the commercial side of the club. I think it will be fun to do different things and see what fits. There is nothing there that is specific. I think what is cool is to be able to do different things and see what works for me or what works for the club. There might be a tremendous opportunity that comes up elsewhere. But I don’t foresee that, and that’s not in the plans. I said in my press conference that I wanted to be a part of the Sounders’ future for 30 years and that was kind of the reason why I came back to be part of this club.

JF: Could you see yourself running a team one day either as a coach or GM?

KK: I could. I would love to run a team either on the field or off it. I would have no problem running the league. I would have no problem running U.S. Soccer. I don’t know if I’m capable, but in my own mind, I would be up to the task to see what happens. I know I have had some pretty good experiences over this past 20 years and dealt with a lot of people in three of the best leagues in the world, plus national team stuff. I would feel extremely guilty if I didn’t take what I’ve learned and try to help this game get to the level.

Julie Foudy, a two-time World Cup winner and three-time Olympic medalist with the U.S. women’s national team, is an analyst for ESPN and ABC.

David Broder, 81, dies; set ‘gold standard’ for political journalism – Washington Post

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

David S. Broder, 81, a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Washington Post and one of the most respected writers on national politics for four decades, died Wednesday at Capital Hospice in Arlington of complications from diabetes.

Mr. Broder was often called the dean of the Washington press corps – a nickname he earned in his late 30s in part for the clarity of his political analysis and the influence he wielded as a perceptive thinker on political trends in his books, articles and television appearances.

In 1973, Mr. Broder and The Post each won Pulitzers for coverage of the Watergate scandal that led to President Richard M. Nixon’s resignation. Mr. Broder’s citation was for explaining the importance of the Watergate fallout in a clear, compelling way.

As passionate about baseball as he was about politics, he likened Nixon’s political career to an often-traded pitcher who had “bounced around his league.”

He covered every presidential convention since 1956 and was widely regarded as the political journalist with the best-informed contacts, from the lowliest precinct to the highest rungs of government.

Former Post executive editor Benjamin C. Bradlee called Mr. Broder “the best political correspondent in America. David knew politics from the back room up – the mechanics of politics, the county and state chairmen – whereas most Washington reporters knew it at the Washington level.”

Mr. Broder was praised at the highest echelons of political power. The White House issued a statement from President Obama that called him a “true giant of journalism” and added that he “built a well-deserved reputation as the most respected and incisive political commentator of his generation.”

Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.) said in a statement, “In his thoughtful and probing questions based on decades of scholarship and on-the-scene observations, David Broder set the modern ‘gold standard’ for those of us engaged in political life as we sought to persuade others, to legislate and to administer the successful progress of our country.”

Asking tough questions

Balding, sporting horn-rimmed glasses and measured in his speaking style, Mr. Broder was once likened to an MIT professor in appearance. He was a frequent and instantly recognizable panelist on TV news-discussion shows, a penetrating questioner who often put politicians on the spot and a clear-eyed analyst who could cut to the heart of an issue.

On “Meet the Press” in 1987, he probed whether then-Vice President George H.W. Bush, the GOP front-runner in the next year’s White House race, was too much an Eastern patrician to understand average Americans.

Mr. Broder asked the candidate whether he knew how many Americans lacked health insurance and how many U.S. children were born into poverty.

Bush said he didn’t know, adding: “We have the best medical-attention system in the world, and I don’t want to see it go into the mode of England or this whole concept of socialized medicine where the government provides absolutely everything. You are going to break the government.”

Remembering David Broder – Huffington Post (blog)

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

Our program for Thursday, March 10th is a repeat of my October 2010 interview with David Broder, who died Wednesday at age 81 in Arlington, Virginia. A Pulitzer Prize-winning political columnist for the Washington Post, David was the first interview guest when our program debuted on October 4, 2004. He gave The Bob Edwards Show instant credibility. Our conversations continued each week until David became ill in December.

He was tall and slim and had amazing posture. David Broder didn’t slouch or bend over like some of us of a certain height and age — he sat straight and walked tall. I mention that because he wrote as straight as he stood. He was a journalist of the old school, incapable of purple prose or leaving political fingerprints on his copy. One reporter called him “relentlessly centrist.” In the conversations we had each week, I’d try to provoke him into being a bit more partisan. He knew exactly what I was doing and never took the bait. Maybe the most remarkable thing about David is that he covered politics for nearly 60 years and never became a cynic. And he was from Chicago!

When I lost my job as host of NPR’s Morning Edition, David gave me a very public boost — writing a whole column about how much he liked my minimalist interviewing style. He was kind in other ways, inviting me to be his guest at Washington’s annual Gridiron Dinner where he and other journalists performed musical skits about national politics. He also took me to a ballgame and stayed in his seat until the last out. Hardly anyone does that at a Washington Nationals game.

David believed a lot of political reporters tried to emulate Theodore H. White and get so far inside a campaign that they’d forget elections are decided by voters. David never relied exclusively on a candidate’s national staff. He consulted the Democratic and Republican party chairmen in all 50 states. He talked to voters at the factory gates and in the coffee shops. He knocked on the doors of people’s homes to interview individual voters about political candidates. “The dean of the Washington press corps” was not an inside-the-beltway type at all. He logged more than 100,000 miles each year in pursuit of stories. He vacationed in Michigan and was a lifelong Cubs fan.

Sadly watching the deterioration of the American newspaper business, David had always embraced the newer media. He was the most frequent guest panelist in the history of NBC’s Meet the Press. In 2004, when we asked David to join us in the new field of satellite radio, he didn’t hesitate. Just four weeks ago he wrote about Egypt on his Facebook page.

The obituaries give David the credit he’s due for spotting new young political talent, for listening to political science professors ignored by most reporters, and for making early and accurate political forecasts. But David knew he wasn’t perfect. In his last column of each year, he used to list everything he got wrong that year. Who else in Washington admits mistakes?

 

Follow Bob Edwards on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@bobedwardsshow

Jane Russell, Monroe’s Sidekick in `Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,’ Dies at 89 – Bloomberg

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Jane Russell, the actress whose buxom figure often hid her talent for comedy in movies such as “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” with Marilyn Monroe, has died. She was 89.

She died yesterday of respiratory failure at her home in Santa Maria, California, the Associated Press reported, citing her family.

Russell’s film career started with her much-publicized discovery by billionaire Howard Hughes. The industrialist first cast her in “The Outlaw,” a western ostensibly about Billy the Kid that he produced and directed. He also designed a seamless brassiere to showcase his female star’s outstanding assets.

In her autobiography years later, Russell called the Hughes bra “uncomfortable and ridiculous.” She wore her usual bra in the movie and Hughes never knew the difference, Russell said.

Though Hughes began filming in 1941, the era’s censors held back the movie’s nationwide release until 1949. The “Outlaw” posters Hughes concocted made Russell a favorite pinup before the movie’s release. Her half-open blouse (and the censors) provided all the publicity the picture needed.

The judiciary also boosted the appeal of the movie and its star. “We have seen Jane Russell. She is an attractive specimen of American womanhood. God made her what she is,” declared Judge Twain Michelsen after a San Francisco jury acquitted “The Outlaw” of indecency charges.

Behind her sultry screen image, Russell was an evangelical Christian who had grown up in prayer meetings. She used some of her movie earnings to help build a rustic chapel for her mother’s ministry.

A year after filming “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” (1953), Russell formed a trio with Beryl Davis and Connie Haines that sang religious songs for 30 years, donating the proceeds to churches and adoption groups.

Jane Russell was born on June 21, 1921, in Bemidji, Minnesota. As a child she moved with her parents to Los Angeles, where her four brothers were born.

She began acting in plays at Van Nuys High School, where Bob Waterfield was the star quarterback, a future pro-football Hall of Fame member, as well as her future husband.

After high school, she took office jobs and modeled clothes for photographer Tom Kelley, who gained fame later for his calendar photos of Marilyn Monroe. A talent agent submitted one of Kelley’s photos of Russell to Hughes when he searched for an unknown actress to star in “The Outlaw.” She got the part after a screen test that featured a fight in a haystack.

Russell remained under contract to Hughes for 14 years. In 1948, he permitted her to accept the role of Calamity Jane opposite Bob Hope in “The Paleface” (1948).

Deadpan Delivery

She surprised critics with her deadpan comic delivery, providing her career with some momentum. Still, she said that most of her two dozen movie roles proved a letdown.

“I loved being on the set,” Russell wrote in her 1985 autobiography. “I loved the actual work. It was the results that were disappointing.”

When her film career came to an end, the actress made her Broadway debut in 1971, following Elaine Stritch in the role of Joanne in “Company.” Later, she made Playtex bra commercials for 15 years “for us full-figured gals.”

Russell and Waterfield were married while he was still the quarterback at UCLA. Unable to have a child, they adopted three children in the 1950s.

After discovering firsthand that adoptions overseas were mired in red tape, Russell succeeded in lobbying Congress to ease the regulations then in force. To aid her cause, she also founded and helped finance the Women’s Adoption International Fund to facilitate U.S. adoptions of foreign orphans.

Russell and Waterfield divorced after 25 years of marriage. Russell was widowed after two subsequent marriages. She had a daughter, Tracy, and two sons, Thomas and Robert.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Greiff at jgreiff@bloomberg.net; Laurence Arnold at larnold4@bloomberg.net

Dodgers remember Snider at spring training – Wall Street Journal

Monday, February 28th, 2011

Associated Press

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Tommy Lasorda remembered Duke Snider as a winner, a clutch player who also was easygoing and generous with young players.

“When I was a rookie on the team, he always seemed to make me feel good,” Lasorda said Sunday after hearing of Snider’s death during a spring-training game at the Dodger’s camp at Camelback Ranch. “He made me feel wanted. He made me feel like I was a part of the team.

“You know, when we’d ride on the bus, he’d call me back to where he sat and he’d have a beer with me,” Lasorda said. “When you’re that young and a guy like Duke Snider calls you back, you’re in good shape. You feel pretty good about that.”

Lasorda had not been able to speak to Snider much since the Hall of Famer was hospitalized. Before Snider’s health declined, Lasorda said he spoke to him often.

“We’d talk about Dodger baseball,” Lasorda said. “That was his love and it’s my love.”

Mostly, Lasorda remembers Snider for his home runs.

“Hitting balls out of Ebbets Field and trotting around those bases,” said Lasorda, who later became the Dodgers’ manager. “That was Duke Snider. He could throw. He could field. He was one of the great, great players of our time. Check his World Series accomplishments.

“He was a winner,” Lasorda added. “It is a tremendous loss for the Dodgers, for his family. I’m proud to say I was a teammate and friend of his.”

In the Dodgers’ clubhouse after a 5-0 victory over the Los Angeles Angels, a sticker remembering Snider had been placed on a bulletin board next to the daily work schedule. It included Snider’s jersey No. 4, with a red slash through it that said “Duke.”

None of the current Dodgers could recall Snider as a player, of course, but 28-year-old Andre Ethier had met Snider and knew how important he was to franchise history.

“He was very complimentary of what you were doing,” Ethier said. “He also had a bunch of information and stuff to give. He was eager and wanted to be with the guys.

“I had seen him before in camp and at Dodger Stadium,” Ethier said. “It’s tough to see a legend, somebody who has done so much for this team, pass away. He was one of the founding fathers for what this franchise is all about.”

The Dodgers’ longtime traveling secretary, Billy DeLury, remembered meeting Snider when he was teenager working as an office boy for the franchise.

“It was 1952 or 1953,” said DeLury, who is still working as a travel advisor for the Dodgers. “I remember a gentleman. He was just an outstanding individual. In Brooklyn, the fans just loved him. He played every day and the fans knew he would be there.”

DeLury remembered him best for two home runs in the 1955 World Series, but also for being friendly to an office boy who might otherwise have been intimidated by a big-name ballplayer.

“He would never push himself on you,” DeLury said. “He always had time for everybody, on the road and at home.”

First-year Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said he first met Snider three or four years ago.

“It was during winter development,” Mattingly said. “I just remember a very nice man. Obviously, he is a huge part of the Dodger history.”

Then, Mattingly remembered an old line from a Snider era — a lyric from Terry Cashman’s “Talkin’ Baseball” — that included Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle

“Willie, Mickey and the Duke, right?” Mattingly said.

—Copyright 2011 Associated Press

Weekend Talk Shows – Los Angeles Times

Sunday, February 27th, 2011

Click here to download TV listings for the week of Feb. 27 – March 5 in PDF format

TV listings for the week of Feb. 27 – March 5 in PDF format (from latimes.com/entertainment/news/tv)

Weekly TV Listings and more can be found at: www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/tv

This week’s TV Movies

 

SATURDAY

Good Morning America (N) 7 a.m. KABC 

The Situation Room 3 p.m. CNN 

The Chris Matthews Show Budget cuts and jobs; the economy: Dan Rather, HDNet; Savannah Guthrie, NBC; John Heilemann, New York Magazine; Trish Regan, CNBC. (N) 5 p.m. KNBC 

McLaughlin Group 6:30 p.m. KCET 

SUNDAY

CBS News Sunday Morning The work of photographer Herb Ritts with Cindy Crawford and k.d. lang. (N) 6 a.m. KCBS 

Today Prince William and Kate Middleton attend a ball. (N) 6 a.m. KNBC 

Good Morning America (N) 6 a.m. KABC 

State of the Union With Candy Crowley Middle East unrest: Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.); Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.). (N) 6 and 9 a.m. CNN 

Fareed Zakaria GPS Obama and Bush administrations’ Middle East policies; Iran: Paul Wolfowitz. End of financial crisis: Author Michael Lewis (“The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine”). (N) 7 and 10 a.m. CNN 

Face the Nation Gov. Chris Christie (R-N.J.). (N) 7:30 a.m. KCBS 

Meet the Press Libya; Middle East unrest: Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), from Cairo. Wisconsin budget standoff and protests: Gov. Scott Walker (R-Wis.). Panel: Gov. Haley Barbour (R-Mo.); Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II (D-Mo.); Richard Trumka, AFL-CIO; Lawrence O’Donnell, MSNBC; Kim Strassel, the Wall Street Journal. (N) 8 a.m. KNBC 

This Week With Christiane Amanpour (N) 8 a.m. KABC 

Fox News Sunday With Chris Wallace Gov. Mitch Daniels; Mike Huckabee; Bill Kristol, Mara Liasson, Dana Perino and Juan Williams. (N) 8 a.m. KTTV 

Reliable Sources Coverage of Wisconsin protests: Steve Pearstein, the Washington Post; Jim Warren, the New York Times; Amy Holmes, Talk Radio Network. PolitiFact: Bill Adair, PolitiFact. (N) 8 a.m. CNN 

60 Minutes Medical con artists prey on dying victims; a Department of Defense employee sells secrets to a spy. (N) 7 p.m. KCBS