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The original documents are located in Box 90, folder 70 - Sports (1)" of the Charles H. McCall Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to these materials. The Sports Boom Is Going Bust and so are a lot of the owners who brought you tax-supported stadiums, overpaid athletes, saturated TV coverage and astronomical ticket prices. & FORD TESCALD LIBRARY CONGRES PLAYERS SPONSORS OWNER LITTLE 5-foot 2-inch Fran Monaco The sports boom is ending with a World Baseball Association, a new sat shaking his head in his cramped bang and a lot of whimpers: league that is supposed to challenge office surrounded by football gear and Veteran builder and sports mogul the two entrenched leagues. explained in a halting voice how his Robert Schmertz lost around $1 mil- There are even rumors that Jack Jacksonville Sharks football team-his lion operating the World Football Kent Cooke, chairman of Tele- first love-had eaten him alive. In League's New York Stars' franchise PrompTer and the biggest sports mo- one season, the 48-year-old Florida last year. Besides, he recently gave gul of all, wants to sell out. That's businessman seems to have lost every away 50% of his Boston Celtics bas- doubly significant, because Cooke's cent he made in the last 22 years on ketball team to settle a $3.7-million timing is usually as impeccable as his his medical laboratory business and suit. That must really hurt, since the wardrobe. He entered sports in the running a supper club. "Before, I had stock of his Leisure Technology re- Fifties, later going to Los Angeles a good reputation," said Monaco, tirement home company has col- from Canada, where he owned a wincing. "I paid my debts." lapsed, and he has just been indicted string of radio stations. For around But no more. Thanks to his be- for bribery in connection with a $20 million invested over the years, loved Sharks, for which he paid the realty deal. But he's hoping the he got a slew of sports franchises, in- new World Football League $650,000 public will help him out by buying cluding basketball's Los Angeles Lak- last year, Monaco now has total the WFL team, now known as the ers, and built the 18,000-seat Forum. liabilities of around $1.8 million. Charlotte, N.C. Hornets, for $100 His rumored asking price: $90 mil- Monaco said sadly: "This is like a a share. lion. But as the boys on Seventh nightmare." Sambo's Restaurants' Sam Battistone Avenue say, "Wait; he'll take less." Little Fran Monaco has company. Jr. and friends are likely to lose about What happened to pro sports isn't A growing number of owners and pro- $1 million operating the National very surprising. All boom businesses moters are learning that the easy Basketball Association's New Orleans are started by the truly shrewd, then days are over for the sports boom, Jazz this season. Last year he and his inevitably become saturated by the which created scores of new teams, friends paid $6.2 million for the privi- misguided souls who can't resist get- fostered more than a score of new lege (and franchise). Battistone and ting in on a good thing. And, of arenas and stadiums costing over $1 other partners stand to lose another course, sports is especially attractive billion (see box, p. 26) and saturated $1 million on the WFL Hawaiians. to investors. It makes instant celebri- television with "spectaculars" like the Poor Sam! He jumped from his fry- ties out of unknowns-like the son of wrist wrestling championship. ing pans into a fire. a rich man or perhaps the anonymous Teams are folding in football, bas- Some even think that sports trou- executive referred to as "what's-his- ketball and tennis-to name a few- bles may have been one factor that name, the toilet-seat king." and some sports insiders now insist led investment counselor Charles Sports isn't dying; it is merely that the recession will eat up entire W. Call Jr. to shoot and kill his wife, shrinking to a more healthy size. leagues. Two candidates: the World a son and then himself last month in America's love of sports assures ever Football and World Hockey outfits. New Jersey. According to one organiz- more sports revenues. But those big- Beyond question, the in word in sports er, Sean Downey, Call was commit- ger dollars will continue to be today is shrinkage. ted to investing $600,000 in the stretched to the breaking point by 24 FORBES, FEBRUARY 15, 1975 70 WHETHER YOU PLAY OR PAY, SPORTS ARE BIGGER THAN EVER Just try to find an empty tennis court-or buy a ticket to a major football game. Even soccer is growing. Americans are on an athletic binge, both as participants and as spectators. There's a double-barreled boom in There's a boom in spectator sports as USN&WR sports in this country. well. Even the "armchair athletes" who Shorn of its country-club image, tennis is The biggest is in personal participa- prefer to watch rather than take part are now the fastest-growing participant sport. tion. Americans in record numbers are being swept up in this mounting enthu- turning to some form of physical activity siasm. More people than ever are paying cently been established in the West. for recreation. to watch organized sporting events— Since 1965 the number of major-league Fastest-growing sport of all is tennis, despite constantly rising admission teams in professional sports has jumped which, like golf, can be played by people prices in economically hard times. from 57 to 173. Additionally, touring of nearly all ages. Soccer is spreading Professional sports leagues, once con- golf, bowling and tennis professionals fast among the young. But today's ama- fined to baseball and football, now oper- crisscross the country the year round for teur athletes are gamely taking up ev- ate nationwide in hockey, basketball, weekly tournaments. erything from jogging and hiking to soccer and tennis. Professional lacrosse is With so much more going on, it's only mountain climbing and hang gliding. played indoors along the Atlantic sea- natural that attendance has risen. A board and a professional turnstile count of 12 varied sports, ama- Spectators at Major Sports Events volleyball league has re- teur and professional, shows 273.2 mil- Thoroughbred 1965 40,737,000 UP racing 1974 48,824,000 20% Auto 1965 39,000,000 UP racing 1974 47,500,000 22% College 1965 24,683,000 UP For ectator Sports: football 1974 31,235,000 27% Major-league 1965 23,437,000 UP SURGE baseball 1974 30,630,000 31% Harness 1965 26,899,000 UP ATTENDANCE racing 1974 29,976,000 11% College 1965 16,384,000 UP basketball 1974 24,630,000 50% Greyhound 1965 10,865,000 UP racing 1974 16,274,000 50% Professional 1965 2,823,000 UP hockey 1974 12,006,000 325% Minor-league 1965 10,194,000 UP baseball 1974 11,032,000 8% Professional 1965 6,956,000 UP football 1974 10,236,000 47% Professional 1965 2,356,000 UP basketball 1974 8,229,000 249% Professional 1965 1,743,000 UP boxing 1974 2,675,000 53% *National Football League TOTAL FOR THESE EVENTS IN 1965: 206,077,000 UP TOTAL FOR THESE EVENTS IN 1974: 273,247,000 33% Source: Triangle Publications 46 U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, Sept. 8, 1975 70 t was his 27th birthday and Ernie Holmes, defensive tackle ference, the toughest division in the N.F.L. Their biggest con- for the Pittsburgh Steelers, was picking up the meat for his ference obstacle on the way to the Super Bowl is a likely playoff party. Not at the supermarket or butcher's, though. Holmes showdown with the rugged Oakland Raiders. If the Steelers sur- was personally slaughtering a calf at his father's farm outside vive that, they will probably face either the Vikings or the Los An- Houston. "I gave him a forearm lift," says Holmes, describing geles Rams in the Super Bowl next month in Miami. his barnyard battle with the beast. "That knocked him into the A Super Bowl in Florida will be the natural conclusion for a fence. Then I put a full nelson on him." Finally Holmes dropped sunny N.F.L. season. Despite, or perhaps because of, the col- the animal with a high-powered rifle. "Forty-five minutes lat- lapse of the rival World Football League, the N.F.L. this fall is er," he says, "we had the calf skinned and dried." registering a jump in attendance (averaging 56,000 per game) The National Football League is full of quarterbacks who and an increase in TV ratings. And why not? Some 40% of the have been shown no more mercy. Not to mention running backs games are being won by 7 points or less, not to mention a rash and offensive linemen. Playing with a raw violence that is rare of sudden-death thrillers. even when judged by the bare-knuckle standards of his sport, It is ironic that four of the key protagonists of this season Ernie Holmes knows how to slaughter an offense. should be Charles Edward ("Joe") Greene, Dwight Lynn White, On most teams his performance-and personality-would Ernest Lee Holmes and L.C. Henderson Greenwood. Though make Holmes famous. Not on the Steelers. With Pittsburgh, he KLUETMEIER-SPORTS ILLUSTRATED is not even the best-known defensive lineman. There are three reasons: Fellow Tackle "Mean" Joe Greene and Ends L.C. Greenwood and Dwight White, each a prototype of menace at his position and a striking figure off the field. Greenwood, 29, is a brutal tackler, although he says he hates contact and would rather not be known as a football player. Greene, 29, after a sea- son of tossing linemen and runners around like rag dolls, goes home to cultivate his vegetable garden. As for White, 26, it is hard to know exactly what he will do at any time. "There's no question that I'm schizoid," he says. "I might be three or four peo- ple. I know I can be evil." These are the men who make up the meanest front four in football, a half ton of trouble for any offense. Moving like a COVER STORY HALF TON OF TROUBLE band of marauding behemoths (average size 6 ft. 4 in., 260 lbs.), they smother runners at the line of scrimmage, flatten passers, and send offensive linemen into disarray. "There are some great lines in the league," says Washington Redskins Head Coach George Allen, architect of one himself, "but the edge has to go to Pittsburgh. They put fear in the heart of a passer." They do more than that. Dumping quarterbacks a league- leading 40 times last season was only the beginning of the front four's contribution to the Steelers. They set the tone for the entire defense, and it was the defense that carried the 42-year-old Pitts- burgh franchise to its first Super Bowl championship last year. The creation of patient, low-key Head Coach Chuck Noll, who STEELERS' DWIGHT WHITE HURDLES OVER A FALLEN O.J. SIMPSON drafted all but two of the starting defensive players, and Steeler Founder and Owner Art Rooney, who gave Noll the backing he front fours have been well publicized in pro football-the Rams needed to build slowly over the past six years, the defense is the "Fearsome Foursome" and the Vikings "Purple People Eaters" cornerstone of Pittsburgh's leadership in the N.F.L. When Pitts- during the past decade-quarterbacks and running backs still re- burgh defeated Minnesota 16-6 in the Super Bowl, the defense main the celebrities of the sport. Certainly the action along the limited the Vikings to 17 yds. rushing. Minnesota Running Back line of scrimmage gets only passing attention from TV cameras Chuck Foreman spoke for the league when he pleaded with the and fans. But this trench warfare is as fierce as anything in Steeler front four: "C'mon, you mothers, give us a yard." sport. Grunting and cursing, players club, ram and pound each Before this season ends, that call may well be heard again. other in two- and three-second rumbles that begin anew with Going into last weekend's game against the stumbling New York every play. Jets, the Steelers were riding an eight-game winning streak and Until about 15 years ago, the defensive linemen's primary ob- an overall won-lost record of 9-1. That was good enough to put jective was to come out of the rumble stopping the run. No long- them in first place in the Central Division of the American Con- er. Faced with increasingly sophisticated passing attacks, the 62 TIME, DECEMBER 8, 1975 $1.00 APRIL 26, 1976 ® TIME BASEBAL SPRINGS ETERNAL 70 Sti COVER STORY t's a goddam good game," says ready as late as December 1975 to blow domiciled in these weatherproof bubbles Yankee President Gabe Paul, "to the Windy City looked solid as a line- never have to worry about slipping in survive what's been done to it." drive double-all because the greatest the rain, losing fly balls in the smog, get- What is being done to baseball promoter baseball has ever known was ting grass stains on their pants or suf- and by whom is a matter of sub- back in action. fering other terrestrial indignities. stantial contention, but the first In Atlanta, the Braves' new own- But even if undomed, the new Yan- half of Gabe Paul's statement has been er, a tough-minded, salty-tongued com- kee Stadium has more character than resoundingly endorsed in the past few munications czar and yachtsman named those sterile, round, modular units that days. Ted Turner, signed up the game's most have sprung up across the sports land- In New York, hallowed old Yan- sought-after right arm in a reported scape like mushrooms in a glen. It is ba- kee Stadium, the house that Ruth built, $1 million deal engineered by-of all sically the same looming, irregularly reopened in plushly refurbished form, its people-a fan who took the negotiating laid-out structure whose vast inner space dedication presided over by Mayor authority upon himself. With one stroke Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Abraham Beame. It was 53 years from of the pen, the moribund Braves had a Mantle roamed heroically. Only it is Babe to Abe, but the difference in what bright new look. The signee was a hand- clean, shiny and for the first time com- some, 30-year-old, bubble-gum-chew- fortable. The "Telescreen" on the score- ing pitcher named Andy Messer- board that was to flash messages like "Charge!" to the crowd was not work- ing, and some box-seat spectators com- plained that their view of home plate was blocked by the dugout roof. But the ugly poles that screened the vision of generations of fans have been removed, and the seats are now wide enough-22 in. instead of 18-to accommodate America's middle-age spread. This bow to our hippy culture reduced the stadi- um's capacity from 65,010 to 54,028. The distinctive, swag façade that once hung from the roof of the stands has been reproduced atop the new $3 million-plus scoreboard-only in con- crete, not painted copper. Because the value of copper has risen almost as dras- tically as ballplayers' salaries since 1923, the original façade was melted down and sold. Perhaps it is now plumb- ing in a renovated brownstone. The ON APRIL 18, 1923, THE BABE WARMED HIS HOUSE WITH ITS FIRST HOME RUN EVER playing surface is still alive: Merion blue grass, in texture irregular enough to a community will lavish on its sports smith, a free spirit and free agent whose promise a few historic bounces and in team could be measured in light-years. victorious legal battle against baseball's color a nice uneven biological green. Trembling at the thought that its Yan- "reserve clause" was reshaping the en- On April 18, 1923, close to 65,000 kees might leave town forever, the stone- tire sport. fans* flocked to New York's $2.5 mil- broke metropolis ponied up an estimat- Little wonder then that turnstiles lion house of baseball. New York Gov- ed $100 million to provide the likes of clicked like castanets as combined ma- ernor Al Smith threw out the first ball. 6,900 parking spaces and an electronic jor league opening-day attendance fig- The first one hit into the stands-fit- scoreboard for the fans, expansive lav- ures hit an alltime high. Baseball '76, tingly-was a game-winning home run ender-carpeted dressing rooms for the which for weeks had seemed unlikely by Babe Ruth that beat his old Red Sox players and a plush lounge, featuring to get launched at all, was off to a rock- teammates 4-1. Ruth's astonishing overstuffed chairs in the shape of field- eting start. The long legal arguments home-run hitting and his $50,000 sal- ers' gloves, for the owner's guests. over the rights of spring, at least for the ary had made baseball a different game In Chicago, Peg-Legged Bill moment, proved no contest for the and caused many to say the new sta- Veeck (see box page 76), dressed as a game's own rites of spring. dium should have been called Ruth Revolutionary soldier and playing a fife, The grandest new blossom of base- Field. stumped triumphantly across the 100% ball's most stimulating April ever was natural turf he has restored to Comis- Yankee Stadium, a glowing renovation *The announced figure of 74,200, the Yankees later shamelessly admitted, was impossible; the key Park. Marching to Veeck's tune of the most famous, nostalgia-imbued park at the time had only 62,000 seats. were White Sox fans in unheard-of num- house of sweat in America. Only New bers. There were 40,318 in the flesh at Orleans' Superdome, completed last opening day (compared with 20,202 last year, cost more ($173 million); Seattle's The Yanks doff their caps during opening year), season-ticket sales were up more "Kingdome," which opened this month, ceremonies, then give 54,000 fans an than 40%, and a franchise that had been was a mere $60 million. Of course, teams afternoon to remember. 70 SAHM DOHERTY AND JOHN ZIMMERMAN SPORT 5 CRIME AND TRIBUNE 1776 BETTMANN ARCHIVE BROWN BROTHERS STOCK & PILLORY IN BOSTON, CA. 1657; NEW YORK DRAFT RIOTS, 1863 Crime not only did not increase during the Revolutionary The following Bicentennial Essay is the seventh in a series War, but most of it, at least in New England, continued to in- that has been appearing periodically, surveying how America has volve religious and moral, not acquisitive or violent, offenses. Wil- changed in its 200 years. liam E. Nelson, analyzing the records of seven populous Mas- sachusetts counties, finds an average of 23 prosecutions for theft n the eve of the Revolutionary War, many colonists each year before 1776 and 24 a year in the five years after 1776, -and not only Tories-feared that if rebellion came, hardly indicative of a crime wave. But there was an average of "the bands of society would be dissolved, the harmony 72 prosecutions for sexual offenses each year before 1776 and 58 of the world confounded, and the order of nature subverted." a year from 1779 to 1786, along with about 24 prosecutions a Crime and lawlessness would surely accompany any challenge year for religious offenses, like missing church on Sunday. to authority, especially one involving a resort to arms. We have always thought of our colonial forebears as rather It did not happen-not, at least, during the war. In retro- puritanical. That there were so many prosecutions on moral and spect, that is remarkable. In 1776 there were no municipal po- religious charges suggests that this was, indeed, their attitude; 82 TIME, APRIL 26, 1976 PUNISHMENT POLICE 1976 BICENTENNIAL ESSAY FREED-MAGNUM ASBURY PARK, N.J., POLICE & RIOTERS, 1970; LOUISIANA PRISON, 1963 opinion not only dominated political decision making, but con- trolled most public and much private conduct as well. This is tuous in our history. Rioting became commonplace for reasons why there was such frequent resort to humiliation as a penalty. that were partly economic (depressions that put artisans out of Stocks, pillory, and tar and feathers were effective because the work or immigration that put them in competition with cheaper opinion of one's townsmen was so important. The colonists paid labor), partly religious (Catholics, Masons and Mormons were at- a price for government by communal consensus: there was not tacked and their buildings burned), partly political (the early anti- much privacy, and what we now regard as liberties of conscience slavery agitation), and partly sporting (the drunker members of TIME, APRIL 26, 1976 83