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Suzyn Waldman makes broadcast history working World Series

David J. Phillip/AP Photo
David J. Phillip/AP Photo
"If I live to be 150, I could never thank George Steinbrenner enough," Suzyn Waldman tells Anthony DiComo. It was Steinbrenner who hired Waldman as a television analyst when, as DiComo writes, "Women simply didn’t hold such positions." Waldman, 63, this week as an analyst for WCBS radio has become the first woman to broadcast a World Series game. "It was very important to me, and it meant a lot," Waldman says. "It really meant a lot to me. It’s the highest thing you can do in baseball, broadcast a World Series game."
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Our Voices

Eric Deggans

Mike Wise’s biggest mistake: Not grasping the new world of online journalism

Sep 7, 2010

This will probably look like old news. Or that I’m piling on a well-dissected, long-resolved issue. But I want to devote one more column to suspended Washington Post sportswriter Mike Wise, who was given his involuntary month-long vacation by the newspaper last week after making up news about Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger in an unfortunate attempt to spoof the herd mentality of some sports media. My goal isn’t to take an easy potshot – though I’m not promising that won’t happen, too – but to explore one side of this that hasn’t been talked about much.

Dave Kindred

All kidding aside, Wise’s Twitter stunt “sad beyond sadness”

Sep 3, 2010

In March 1980, the late Kirk Scharfenberg of the Boston Globe wrote this headline above an editorial on a Jimmy Carter economic initiative: “Mush From the Wimp.” “I meant it as an in-house joke and thought it would be removed before publication,” he said. Uh-oh. Before anyone noticed, the headline appeared in 161,000 copies of the Globe. It was then replaced by a proper, dignified headline: “All Must Share the Burden.”

Jason Fry

The Curious Case of Jerod Morris and Damien Cox

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Two summers, two columns, two different results. Last summer, Jerod Morris of Midwest Sports Fans wrote a blog post about Raul Ibanez of the Philadelphia Phillies and the excellent season he was putting together. Responding to jibes from a fellow fantasy-baseball GM, Morris tried to prove it was unfair to speculate that Ibanez’s numbers were the result of performance-enhancing drugs. He reluctantly concluded that he couldn’t single out other factors that would clear Ibanez of suspicion, and blamed Major League Baseball for the fact that such suspicions are now routine.

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