Let’s talk about Pinball’s pitiful prattle…Turtle Man’s frolic with Blue Bombers freshmen…the final adios for Bones…the return of Coach Q?…and so long to Smiles, a fun and funny guy

Smiles

In a nutshell, this is what went down in the Canadian Football League during the past week:

Commissioner Randy Ambrosie and the Lords of Rouge Football told Chad Kelly to go stand in the corner for being an oinker, and the Toronto Argos told Commish Randy and the Lords to go to hell.

Well, okay, Michael Clemons likely didn’t use those exact words, because Pinball is the gosh-darndest, cute-as-a-buttonest guy in the game. You just want to pinch his cheeks. So, no, he wouldn’t say crap if his mouth was full of pigeon droppings. At least not for public consumption. That’s not his style. The man who generally manages the Argos is a charmer who wins you over with childlike enthusiasm and a smile that could make the dark side of the moon light up like Times Square on New Year’s Eve.

Except much, if not all, of that charm was whisked away last Thursday by a brisk breeze that, at times, muffled his words but failed to mute his message.

Make no mistake: In allowing his suspended starting quarterback to step onto the practice field for Day 2 of rookie camp, Pinball was telling the Lords of Rouge Football that they could take their nine-game banishment of Kelly and shove it where there ain’t no daylight.

I mean, this was just two days—count ’em, two!—after the CFL had excused Kelly from preseason play, plus the first nine skirmishes (minimum) of the Argos 2024 crusade. In the same directive, Kelly was instructed to spend quality time with people whose know-how is in the area of gender-based violence/abuse/harassment. And yet he was on the field, smiling and smirking and making nice with Argos wannabe QBs? It was business as usual.

“He’s allowed to be out here,” said Pinball, standing before a bevy of microphones on the wind-swept sidelines of Alumni Stadium at the University of Guelph. “The league has given him that permission and we will follow the league’s direction.”

Can you say “copout,” kids?

Seriously, just because the Lords of Rouge Football suspend Kelly yet are daft enough to permit the toxic nogoodnik to act as if he’s a choirboy who didn’t sexually harass and torment a female co-worker, it doesn’t mean the Argos should play monkey see, monkey do.

The Argos know Kelly said and did the abhorrent things he denies saying and doing, and surely they have their own moral compass, one that should have told them to kick Kelly to the curb or, at the least, keep him out of sight and out of mind until he’s up to speed on acceptable behavior in mixed company.

But no. Instead, they flaunt it. They make a mockery of it.

“I don’t want to be flippant here,” said Pinball, being flippant, “but I don’t know how many workplaces you’ve been in where it doesn’t have an issue. These are two employees who had an issue and that happens.”

Good gawd, man, zip your lips before any more dumb assness spills out.

Granted, it’s true that one employee certainly had an issue. That would be the female conditioning coach who, in February, (a) filed suit against Kelly for his sexual advances last season, and (b) challenged the Argos for ignoring the QB’s oinker antics and putting her on the unemployment roll call.

(I suppose Kelly also has an issue—the inability to understand the word “no” when spoken by a female, which is the reason he’ll have a tete-a-tete or 10 with experts in the field of sexual impropriety if he wishes to fling a football in the three-downs game again.)

Anyway, Ambrosie and the Lords of Rouge Football recruited a squadron of Pigskin Pinkertons, their mission being to look under rocks and suss out evidence of wrongdoing. Lo and behold, it was determined that Kelly had been in violation of the CFL’s gender-based anti-violence dictates. Not even a reasonable doubt. “Unequivocally” is the word they used in confirming the Toronto QB’s guilt.

At no moment during Pinball’s 15-minute copout with news snoops did he disagree with the findings, nor the punishment, but he did mutter something about the existence of women in the Argos orbit, as if to say, “Hey, look at us! We’ve got females on staff! And we don’t even ask them to cook our meals or wash our socks! We are sooooooo not the 1950s!” (It reminded me of homophobes who, after spewing their anti-gay bile, say, “But I can’t be homophobic. I know gay people. I think there’s one of them in my family.”)

Pitiful, Pinball, just pitiful.

And, before we move on to another topic, I don’t want to hear anything about Kelly and second chances. He’s had more second chances than the Kardashians have had Botox treatments. He knows what the world looks like from the wrong side of jail bars, and Pinball and the Argos were aware of that before they unleashed him on the unsuspecting females in their workplace.

Bottom line: The Argos should have punted Kelly, pronto, thus allowing female employees to find comfort in the knowledge that they can perform their duties without some creep hitting on them.

Alas, the Argos are allowing the creep to loiter, and he’ll just use more stealth the next time he fancies a female who tells him “no.” They’ll then grant him his fifth, sixth or seventh second chance because the Lords of Rouge Football say they can, right Pinball?

I had to chuckle at the suggestion that folks in the Republic of Tranna might boycott the Argos due to their shoddy handling of L’Affaire Kelly. Sorry. Too late for that. The rabble in The ROT have been boycotting the Boatmen for the past 20 years.

I’m uncertain what Milt Stegall was attempting to prove by joining Winnipeg Blue Bombers newbies on Day 1 of their training exercises last week, but I suppose a 54-year-old man grabbing grass and growling with rookie football players 30 years his junior is less hazardous than a 58-year-old man (hello, Mike Tyson) climbing into a boxing ring with a guy 30 years younger. I mean, what’s the worst that could have happened to Stegall? An extra coating of RUB A535? Still, I don’t get it. “It’s because I have a big ego—let’s be honest, that’s it,” the Bombers legendary pass-catcher informed news snoops a couple of days prior to strapping on the pads for his frolic with the blue-and-gold freshmen. And that’s okay. I’ll take Turtle Man’s novelty act in Good Ol’ Hometown over the Pinball Clemons’ circus act in the Republic of Tranna any day.

On a happier note, Rick Bowness is out as head coach of the Winnipeg Jets, and I use the word “happier” because Bones vamoosed on his own terms and is free to spend his remaining days with his bride, Judy. I imagine Bones would have some tabloid-worthy stories to tell after 40 years as a bench puppeteer, but if he has an inclination toward putting his National Hockey League reflections on paper he’ll likely feel obliged to self-censor. He’s too nice a guy to get down and dirty. All the best, Bones.

Is it just me, or did anyone else take note that the last two men hired as bench puppeteer of the Jets—Bones and Paul Maurice—quit on them? I’m not sure what that means, if anything at all, but it strikes me as interesting.

I note that Maurice continues to sell snake oil as head coach of the Florida Panthers. This was part of his sound bite after his guy, Matthew Tkachuk, and David Pastrnak of the Boston Bruins threw down the other night. “Chuckie’s a hundred point guy all day long.” Well, no, he isn’t. Tkachuk has been a 100-point player twice in eight seasons and had just 88 in the past crusade.

On the subject of NHL bench bosses, the Toronto Maple Leafs are on the hunt to replace the defrocked Sheldon Keefe, and here’s a ghastly take from Steve Simmons of Postmedia Tranna: “The Maple Leafs’ first phone call should be to Joel Quenneville. The second call should be to Gary Bettman, asking the commissioner what it would take to bring Quenneville back to the National Hockey League. Bringing him back will be greeted with some screaming—but everything these days is greeted with some kind of screaming. He’s been out long enough.” I’m uncertain which experts in the field of sexual abuse Simmons spoke with to determine that Quenneville has been in exile “long enough,” but the last thing men’s hockey needs is the return of a member of the Chicago Silent 7, the ol’ boys who chose to shield a sexual predator, Brad Aldrich, rather than support the victim, Kyle Beach. They kept the sex assault of Beach on the hush-hush for more than a decade, so perhaps that’s how long Quenneville, the Chicago Blackhawks head coach at the time, should remain in exile. But, hey, I’m not an expert on sexual abuse and I haven’t spoken with any, so I’m just spitballing here.

Mitch Marner says the Leafs are “kind of gods” in the Republic of Tranna. No, Mitch. When the rabble in The ROT watch you flit about the freeze and they shriek “Oh, my god!” it’s because you and your playmates have performed another face plant in the opening salvo of the Stanley Cup tournament, not because you walk on water.

Truth is, I hear Marner. I mean, when I was a sprig and we were force-fed Maple Leafs games on Hockey Night in Canada most Saturdays, I looked at the players who appeared on our black-and-white TV screen as god-like creatures. Even when I saw them in their sports jackets and narrow neck ties one September morning in the lobby of Victoria Memorial Arena, they still held the bearing of deity. But the Leafs long ago ceased being god-like for one basic reason—I’m not 12 freaking years old anymore!

That first close encounter of the Maple Leafs kind for me was a bit unusual. I had just stepped off the freeze after a Pee Wee practice at Vic Memorial, and there stood my favorite god-like Leaf, Dickie Duff, to the right of Frank Mahovich. I didn’t have a pen or paper, but I approached Duff with a level of reverence normally reserved for our parish priest, and I asked for his autograph. He turned to the Big M, who reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a pen, handing it to Duff. My hockey hero signed his name on the inside of my leather hockey helmet, then returned the pen to a smiling Mahovlich. It never occurred to me to ask the Big M for his autograph. I simply thanked “Mr. Duff,” stared at his signature (it was very legible) and walked away. I’ve often wondered if that snub from a 12-year-old urchin was the reason the Big M suffered his mental breakdowns.

And, finally, I close this morning with a salute to, and fond memories of, a departed friend, Brian Smiley, who fought the good fight against cancer until last weekend. I worked with Smiles at two newspapers, the Calgary Sun and Winnipeg Sun, and I’m here to tell you he could track down, and tell, a good story. I didn’t know what to make of Smiles when he came on board at the Sun in Calgary. He peered at the world through a set of squinty eyes, and there was a hint of “don’t mess with me” in his carriage. I quickly came to the inescapable notion that he was a fun and funny guy. We spent more than one night in Alberta cowboy bars, and I was always confident that Smiles had my back should a chucking of knuckles develop. There would have been 69 candles on his birthday cake come August, and I say that’s too soon for him to go. Damn cancer. My best to his bride, Linda, and their boys, Lane and Blake, and grandson Theo. I share their sorrow.

Let’s talk about in-your-face female athletes…Kim blah-blah-blah Mulkey…the Cult of Dumb on Hockey Night in Canada…Jack and jackasses…and other things on my mind

Caitlin Clark

This just in: Female athletes cuss.

Who knew?

Moreover, female athletes also get royally PO’d and act out, waving their arms like those tall, inflatable thingies that you see on used car lots. The women holler at game officials, they screech at foes, fans and sometimes their own coaches/teammates, and some spit.

You know, just like the guys do.

Yet many among the rabble were shocked—shocked, I say!—when Iowa hoops star Caitlin Clark was observed on ESPN cameras telling unknown somebodies to either “Shut the f–k up!” or “Get the f–k up!” during a rather tense tussle with West Virginia in the madness that is NCAA March basketball stateside.

Either way, it was an F-bomb and, no surprise, social media was abuzz with chatter about improper, boorish behavior, even though it wasn’t anything we hadn’t seen or heard before.

Just last summer, for example, there was a nasty collision during a Canada-Australia women’s World Cup footy skirmish, whereby Allysha Chapman and Hayley Raso made like bumper cars while challenging for a free ball. Raso took the worst of it, prompting Matildas’ coach Tony Gustavsson to chirp Chapman from his perch on the sideline.

Sensitive off-pitch microphones failed to pick up Gustavsson’s trash talk, but there was no mistaking Chapman’s verbal volley.

“She f–king jumped into me, you tw-t!” the Canadian defender snapped back at him.

The decorous sport of curling offered another e.g. during the recent Scotties Tournament of Hearts, whereby a mic’d-up Val Sweeting of Team Einarson was overhead dropping back-to-back F-bombs about how she was having so much “f–king fun.”

So here’s what I find myself wondering: Are female athletes still held to a different standard than their male counterparts when it comes to bedside manner? Are they still expected to be prissy missies, like so many June Cleavers in sneakers or skates? Has Caitlin Clark been battered fore and aft in large part because she’s a she?

I’d like to think not, but I suspect otherwise.

As much as female sports is experiencing a considerable, long-awaited growth spurt (see: Professional Women’s Hockey League, international futbol, women’s college hoops), it comes with greater scrutiny and I’m not convinced everyone is peering into the same lens. That is, when we see Caitlin Clark acting out, do we see an athlete whining to a referee and flailing with her arms, or do we see a female athlete whining to a ref and flailing with her arms?

There should be no such distinction.

Females athletes at the elite level have the same yearnings as men. They want to win. Did anyone want to succeed more than Hayley Wickenheiser or Christine Sinclair?

Call it passion.

Watch the upcoming women’s world hockey tournament and you’ll see passion on public display, most notably when Canada and the Yankee Doodle Damsels are on the same frozen pond. No male hockey player is more “into it” than Marie-Philip Poulin or Hilary Knight.

And because female athletes are as passionate about their work as men, they’re prone to emotional outbursts. That can mean a moment of madness, or a potty mouth.

And, by god, female athletes need not make apologies for any of it.

This is their time and they’ve earned it. They’re confident, they’re proud, they’re loud (hello, Megan Rapinoe), they’re ruthless, they’ve got attitude, some of them are angry, they’re in your face, and they aren’t interested in being ladylike once inside the lines just to satisfy a dog-eared stereotype.

And, hey, keep this in mind: Between the National Hockey League and the PWHL, only one of the two has the word “Lady” in the name of an individual award, and it isn’t the women’s league.

Having said all that, few people in sports get up my nose quite like Kim Mulkey, head coach with the LSU women’s hoops team. I swear, she’s up both my nostrils. She’s a first-class boor who seems to hold to the misguided notion that it’s her world and the rest of us are allowed to participate in life only at her beckoning. She’s Bobby Knight in pumps and a clown suit. Her threat to sue Washington Post award-winning reporter Kent Babb last weekend (for a so-called “hit piece” that turned out to be a Nothing Burger) is a case in point: “Not many people are in a position to hold these kind of journalists accountable, but I am, and I’ll do it,” she said. Well, la-di-da, your Royal Haughtiness. Let us all bow and grovel.

Mulkey was at it again on Saturday, delivering another sermon and claiming that the “hall-of-famers, legendary coaches” who taught her “probably couldn’t coach in this generation.” Right. She’s better. Other talking points were sexism, requiring her players to pray on Sundays, and a Los Angeles Times article that she decided was “awful.” It was all spoken in a pontifical tone, with Mulkey trying to look and talk as tough and menacing as a school-teacher nun with a wooden ruler in her hand, but it was a pathetic piece of theatre.

Happy Easter to all. My favorite Easter-themed athlete names:
Bunny Shaw
Rabbit Maranville
Bugsy Watson
Hopalong Cassady
Bunny Larocque

True confession time: Way back when, I figured there would be palm trees, coconuts and a nightly luau at Portage and Main before Connor Hellebuyck became a top-drawer NHL goaltender. D’oh! The guy just played his 500th game for the Winnipeg Jets, and there hasn’t been a whole lot of clunkers in the bunch. A tip of the bonnet.

Ted Wyman is miffed that Rink Rat Scheifele was excused from the Jets skirmish Thursday night, a 4-1 loss to the Vegas Golden Knights. “The penalty to Scheifele was excessive,” Wyman wrote in the Winnipeg Sun. “They could have simply called him for roughing instead of giving him an instigator penalty and fighting major. His actions didn’t warrant being banished for 17 minutes, which would have kept him out through overtime had the game gone on that long.” Well, let’s see. The Rink Rat started a fight with Nicolas Hague. That’s two minutes. He fought Hague. That’s another five minutes. And instigating fisticuffs calls for 10 more minutes in stir. Seems to me the gendarmes got it right.

The Scheifele-Hague punch-up is part of NHL rot. One guy, Hague of the Golden Knights, flattened a foe, Vlad Namestnikov, and a third party, the Rink Rat, was so mortified at the sight of his comrade laid out on the freeze that he bared his knuckles and sought retribution. To fight for no reason is, of course, the NHL “code,” except the NHL “code” is a con job that players like Scheifele swallow whole, even if it means taking dumb penalties when a game hangs in the balance. Really, about the only thing dumber than the “code” are NHL players dumb enough to believe that a bodycheck is a command to open a can of whoop ass on an opponent. So when Kevin Bieksa and Kelly Hrudey go on Hockey Night in Canada to inform us that Scheifele’s brain fart was “admirable” and “honorable,” they’re merely reminding us that they’re also card-carrying members of the Cult of Dumb.

Saw this thread on X the other day:
“I don’t expect xG and G to track as closely at 5v4 as at 5v5.”
“NST showed a modest xGF/60 bump during the hot streak—but their GF/60 went bananas.”
“Depends on the xG model. Some are trained with state taken into account, some are not.”
That’s what passes for hockey talk with the kids these days. Bless ’em.

Dumb headline on the Sportsnet website last week: “Darryl Watts and PWHL Ottawa are heating up at the right time.” Say again? The “right time?” I must have missed a memo, because I thought Ponytail Puck had shut down for three weeks and Ottawa won’t crank it up again until April 20.

Just wondering: Am I supposed to care that golf great Jack Nicklaus pals around with Donald Trump? I mean, sure, the former U.S. president tells fibs (real whoppers), he paws and gropes women, he mocks men for their disabilities, he sends his stooges to storm the Capitol, odds are he’ll spend some time in an orange jump suit, he’s a grifter like we’ve never seen and is now peddling bibles to prove suckers are born every minute. He’s total cringe, a rancid human being. But, last time I checked, none of us, including the Golden Bear, requires permission to put on a red MAGA cap and act every bit the Trump toady. Nicklaus’ political leanings won’t change my life any. But, damn, it’s still kind of sad to see ol’ Jack playing the fool instead of playing golf.

If there’s a Jackass of the Year Award, UFC fighter Julian Eroso is the clubhouse leader, and I suspect he’ll still be at the head of the pack nine months from now. I mean, how else do we explain his wacko rant after beating Ricardo Ramos last Saturday, except to say he’s a jackass? If you missed it, for reasons known only to himself and the voices emanating from inside his tin foil-lined cap, Eroso thought his post-fight natter with news snoops was the proper time and place to challenge Lia Thomas to a fight in the octagon. Yes, that would be law student and former collegiate swimmer Lia Thomas, a transgender female. The way Eroso has it sorted out in his vacuous brain pan, he would make the transition to a woman while Thomas would skip a few law classes in order to hone her mixed martial arts skills. They would then get it on in the octagon, whereupon Eroso would kick “the dude’s ass.” Good grief. How many nights did Eroso lay awake coming up with that bit of dimwitted blather? But, then, Eroso also confirmed that he’s “not the smartest crayon in the box.” None among his audience disagreed.

But, wait. Closing fast on the inside as Jackass of the Year is Chris DiMarco, who has his fingers and toes crossed in the hope that Saudi-backed LIV Golf purchases Old Fogey Golf, which is to say the PGA Tour Champions. That way, he and the rest of golf’s 50-plus fossils can start making “real money,” rather than settle for the Monopoly money available to them on the geriatric tour. “We don’t really play for much money,” he moaned to the boys on something called the Subpar Podcast. “It’s kind of a joke.” Excuse me, but it’s not like the ol’ boys are playing for beads and trinkets. There’s $67 million available to them this year, including a $2.2 million purse at this weekend’s Galleri Classic. One of the fossils, a dude named Steve Alker, has pocketed $555,707. For three months of work. DiMarco pleading poverty is like Streisand begging for singing lessons.

For the record, DiMarco has cashed cheques totaling $22,656,443 as a PGA golfer, placing him 94th for all-time loot. Unless he has Homer Simpson for an accountant, $22-plus million should have been enough to make him nice and comfy as he greys at the temples. Golf should be a hobby by now. But, no, he’s still out there hacking away, and “hacking” is the operative word—he’s earned $36,591 this year. So it’s quite simple: If DiMarco wants more coin, shut the hell up and play better golf.

On the subject of coin, if you’re bored and want to prove there’s a sucker born every minute, you can make tracks for Arlington, Texas, where Mike Tyson and Jake Paul promise to throw punches at each other in a cash grab disguised as boxing on July 20. The sticker price to watch the con job at AT&T Stadium is anywhere from $359 to $16,097. I’m guessing Chris DiMarco can’t fit that into his budget.

And, finally, interesting post on X from Paul Samyn, editor at the Winnipeg Free Press: “HIRING ALERT: Come join a newspaper that wants to grow rather than gut the newsroom. Opportunities include the chance to work in our legislative bureau.” This is terrific news. Now, if only he’d recruit a female sports scribe and a sports columnist, then they’d be up to speed.

Lordy, lordy, the Winnipeg Sun is turning 40

The ultimate underdog.

That’s what the Winnipeg Sun was, is and likely always shall be.

The tabloid—pooh-poohed and tsk-tsked by many as a tacky, tawdry, kissing cousin of the National Enquirer—wasn’t supposed to be around much longer than a pork chop on a pit bull’s dinner dish, but here we are, four decades after rising from the ashes of the Winnipeg Tribune, and the Sun presses continue to roll.

Go figure.

***

I wasn’t a day-oner at the Sun, although I must confess there have been many moments of quiet reflection when I wish I had been there on the morning of Nov. 5, 1980, the day the tabloid hit the streets of Good Ol’ Hometown for the first time.

The Sun’s first front page.

By the time I arrived, which is to say the mid-1980s, the Sun had bulked up from a three-days-a-week sheet trying to find its groove to a six-day publication about to truly hit its full stride, which it did later in the decade and through the entirety of the 1990s and onward.

The Winnipeg Free Press was, of course, the neighborhood bully. Still is.

But, although recognizing that we were the underdogs against a daily that had pushed the Tribune to extinction, damned if any of us in the toy department at the Sun would allow it to define us.

From the get-go, whether it be Big Jim Bender on curling, or young Eddie Tait on the Bombers, or Judy Owen having a natter with Manon Rheaume, or Tom Brennan sharing bon mots from the camp of world light heavyweight boxing champion Donny Lalonde, or Ed Willes on the Jets, we refused to let the Drab Slab push us around.

Oh, they got their licks in, to be sure. But so did we, most notably when the Blue Bombers went on the prowl for a head coach in the wake of a 1996 Canadian Football League crusade that found Winnipeg FC sadly lacking.

The Bombers didn’t just lose their West Division semifinal skirmish v. the Eskimos at Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton that year, they were Hindenburged. That’s right, scorched. Beyond recognition. Final score: Edmonton 68, Winnipeg 7.

Cal Murphy

It didn’t take long for the Bombers board of directors to sift through the wreckage, and the main casualty was Cal Murphy, a legendary coach whose guiding hand as sideline steward and/or general manager had directed the Bombers to three Grey Cup titles. He was swept away pronto, and the hunt for his successor would become the biggest sports story of the year.

We had young Eddie Tait and Judy Owen on the scent, and a managing editor who was, frankly, a gnat-like irritant.

“You gonna get that story first?” Glenn Cheater, the ME, asked me one day.

“Yes,” I told him. “We’ve got the right people on the job. They’ll get it.”

“You better. I don’t want to read it in the Free Press or hear it on the radio.”

Cheater, a man with a reluctance to smile, was a bothersome buttinski during the process. He expected everything to unfold to his urgent cadence, as if his nagging would magically put the Bombers board into a hurry-up offence simply because he was impatient. He would ask the same thing, and I would tell him the same thing. Every day.

All the while, young Eddie and Judy soldiered on, leaning hard on their contacts, instincts and reporting skills until the day/night of Jan. 6, 1997, when they became 99.9 per cent convinced that off-the-wall, surfer dude Jeff Reinebold would land the head coaching gig.

Judy Owen

OWEN: “(Team president) Lynn Bishop seemed to want someone opposite from Cal Murphy and we considered Reinebold the dark horse in the race. The night of our big scoop, I was working the phones, including talking to Bishop. I got the gut feeling that it was going to be Reinebold by the way he was answering questions, plus I was having trouble reaching Reinebold, who usually returned my calls. There were rumors, though, that he might be skiing. When we were digging into the rumor about Reinebold skiing, Cheater suggested we send a pizza to Reinebold’s house and if it was successfully delivered, we’d know he was still in B.C. And he said to put anchovies on it. Never understood where that came from.”

TAIT: “At one point (Cheater) came down to our little corner with a brilliant idea. We thought we knew what hotel (Reinebold) was staying at for some reason—maybe this was before we had confirmed he had left for Winnipeg. Cheater said, ‘Reinebold is a vegetarian, right? Why don’t you order a vegetarian pizza and have it delivered to his hotel room with a note to call us?’ I mean, I’m open for any and all ideas to get a story, but…”

There was no pizza order. There was not pizza delivery. Not even in 30 minutes or less.

Young Eddie began cranking out his copy, with contributions from Judy, and we were prepared to go to press declaring Reinebold the new man. But his unknown whereabouts provided a sliver of doubt.

Granny Granger

Granny Granger was working the copy desk that night. He was from the West Coast and harbored a healthy familiarity with flight schedules out of Vancouver, and he informed us that there’d be a few more planes touching down later.

“You guys keep doing what you’re doing,” I told them, “and I’ll go to the airport. I’ll stake it out until the last flight from Vancouver is in.”

I don’t recall precisely how long I loitered at the airport, but I do recall repeatedly moving from one baggage carousel to another. Then I spotted Jeff Reinebold. In the flesh, earrings and all, fresh off Air Canada flight 268. It was just past 11 p.m. He had a phone clamped to his left ear, his eyes darting east, west, north and south. At one point, he attempted to hide behind a pay phone. I immediately called Granny in the newsroom and advised him that I could see the whites of Reinebold’s eyes. Shortly thereafter, club president Bishop and his bride, Lesley, joined Reinebold and made their way toward an exit. I intercepted them, asking the new coach if he had anything to say to the championship-starved Bombers faithful. He flashed a crooked smile, mumbled a few words about looking forward to “the great skiing” in Manitoba, then disappeared into the night.

GRANGER: “That was such a rush, even if I was getting it vicariously through your reporting.”

OWEN: “We all cheered in the newsroom. We knew for sure we had the scoop. I then called Lynn Bishop and when he answered, I screeched something like, ‘We gotcha.’ I think he laughed and remember hearing his wife, Lesley, yell in the background, ‘Way to go Judy,’ or something similar.”

Still, we didn’t know for certain if we’d scooped the Freep on the biggest story of the year. It was quite possible that their man on the beat, the very capable Dave Supleve, also had the goods. Nope.

Jeff Reinebold

OWEN: “Supleve had a story on the front of the sports section that Reinebold was skiing. We celebrated pretty hard.”

GRANGER: “We went to Picasso’s afterward to celebrate and we were all pretty happy. But we really got giddy after Mr. Golf (Darron Hargreaves) went by the Freep building and picked up a copy of their early edition and Supleve basically dismissed Reinebold as a candidate and put forth one or two others likely to get the job. That’s when the gathering turned from being a self-congratulatory pat on the back into a hubristic celebration. Not only did we have a scoop, but the other guy was waaaaaaay off base! We had killed the big bad bunch on Mountain on the biggest sports story of the year! And even CJOB didn’t have the scoop! Although I played a minor role, that night is a big highlight for me.”

The Bombers introduced a Harley-riding Reinebold as the head coach the following day, and a glum Supleve was standing at the doorway when I entered the room.

“How long did you wait at the airport?” he asked.

I felt bad for him. I truly did. We all know what it feels like to get beat on a big story, and Supes is a good guy. There would be no gloating from me. Just deep, delicious satisfaction that the little, underdog paper had whupped the neighborhood bully.

***

Later that day, I retreated to the newsroom and found Glenn Cheater.

“I told you we’d get the story,” I said, full of impish cheek. “Maybe next time you’ll let our people do their job without getting in their face every five minutes.”

He smiled.

I went home to write my column on Reinebold. Once finished, I ordered a pizza and told them to hold the anchovies.

***

I spent 13 of my 30 years in the rag trade at the Winnipeg Sun, and that was my most memorable day/night. I was happiest for Judy, who latched onto the task and refused to let go. But she was just one of the truly wonderful people and terrific journalists with whom I worked at the tabloid. Topping my list of faves would be Dave Komosky, one of the funniest men I know and a friend for close to 50 years, dating back to our formative days at the Tribune. Like myself, Davey Boy did two tours of duty as sports editor and was a boffo layout person. He could make the pages sing. So, too, could Homer Connors, a lovely lad. There were so many others that I admired, respected and genuinely liked: Tom Brennan, young Eddie, Judy Owen, Abby St. Rose, Pat Watts Stevens, Rhonda Brown, Jim Ketcheson, John Kendle, Bob Holliday, Paul Friesen, Granny Granger, John Danakas, Brian Smiley, Jon Thordarson, Denise Duguay, Shaun Best, Mark Stevens, Big Jim Bender, Mr. Golf, Marten Falcon, Barry Horeczy, Bill Davidson, and the lovely songstress Rhonda Hart. It’s a lengthy roll call, too many to mention.

***

It wasn’t all fun and games at the Sun, but sometimes it was exactly that—fun and games. A couple of the boys—I believe it was Davey and young Eddie—screwed a mini basketball hoop to a wall in our corner of the newsroom and they’d shoot hoops during downtime, while waiting for phone calls to come in. My gig was tossing coins (quarters) against a wall. I took on all comers, but mostly young Eddie. I believe he still owes me $37.25. Same with John Danakas. He’d try his luck every now and then, but it was a fool’s bet. I’m not sure how much he owes me, but I know I’ll never see it. No problem. John is one of the really good guys.

***

One of my favorite Sun stories goes back to the first of my two runs as sports editor. It’s a yarn I’ve told a few times, but it’s worth repeating.

Young Eddie Tait

Young Eddie Tait was an aw-shucks, freshly scrubbed greenhorn when I dispatched him to North Dakota for a weekend gig, covering either high school or college hockey. It was his first road trip. Ever. He was geeked up and I don’t recall giving him specific directives, other than to get the story, enjoy himself and return to us safely.

“And keep your receipts,” I emphasized. “You’ll need them for your expense report.”

So I’m sitting at the desk in the closet-sized cubbyhole that passed for my office on the second floor of the Sun building when young Eddie returned from the fray.

“How did it go?” I asked.

“Great,” he answered, still geeked up from his maiden journey.

“Nice. Very nice. You did a great job. We’ll have to get you on the road again. When you’ve got time, fill out your expense form and make sure you include your receipts.”

He left and, scant seconds later, young Eddie was back in my bunker.

“Here,” he said, handing me the lid from a pizza box.

“What’s this?” I asked, staring at a rumpled piece of cardboard coated with tomato sauce stains.

“That’s what I ate.”

“That’s it? That’s all you ate for the entire weekend? One pizza?”

“No, but…”

“How much did it cost?”

“Ten bucks.”

“You spent $10 for the entire weekend? Just $10?”

“No, but…”

I have no idea what else young Eddie shoved down his pie hole that weekend, but I suspect a few bags of chips and Big Gulps were on the menu. He likely splurged on two or three packs of bubblegum, too.

***

Although I served in management on three occasions, I was never big on management. They always seemed to be getting in our way, or at least trying to.

I liked Paul Robson as a publisher, because ol’ Mad Dog was a jock who understood jocks. But John Cochrane, a nice fellow and veteran newsman who moved from CJOB to the big office in the Sun building, baffled me.

Serge Savard

For example, when Montreal Canadiens president Ronald Corey got the axe out and whacked both general manager Serge Savard and head coach Jacques Demers, that bloodletting was our sports front story. Homer Connors and I put our grey matter together, him designing the page with a large picture of Savard and me providing the all-caps headline: SAVARDIAN SACK-O-RAMA. It was boffo stuff.

The next day Cochrane wandered down to the toy department for a fireside chat.

“Tell me something,” he began, speaking in a non-confrontational tone. “Why did you run a photo of Savard on the front page instead of Ronald Corey?”

“Because Savard and Demers were the story. Savard is a multi-Stanley Cup winner with the Canadiens, both as a player and a GM,” I replied calmly. “Savard is a Habs legend. Nobody cares about Ronald Corey.”

Ronald Corey

“But the Globe and Mail ran a photo of Corey, not Savard. Don’t you think that was the right thing to do?”

He handed me a copy of the Globe, which featured a pic of Corey sitting in front of a bank of microphones and looking very much like a hangman.

“No, I don’t think they made the right call,” I said, still quite calm. “We were right, they were wrong, and I’d do the same thing again. We don’t really concern ourselves with the pictures the Globe runs.”

He arched his eyebrows, turned and walked away. That was our first and final fireside chat.

***

I’m saddened by what’s become of the Sun sports section.

I know the boys on the beat—Paul Friesen, Ted Wyman and Scott Billeck—fight the good fight, but Postmedia has handcuffed them with a distant, centralized sports desk that force feeds them copy from hither and yon, too much of it focusing on athletes/teams based in the Republic of Tranna.

Local amateur sports coverage has become next to non-existent, and it’s never a good thing when a newspaper turns its back on its constituents.

I don’t think it’s as cheeky, sassy, brassy and irreverent as it once was, but the Sun’s existence makes Winnipeg the only true two-paper town west of the ROT, and that is a good thing.

So happy 40th to my old battalion on Thursday.