Showing posts with label Steve Kelley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Kelley. Show all posts

Monday, January 28, 2013

Steve Kelley Nostalgic In Sunday Column

As Steve Kelley winds up 30 some years as Seattle Times Sports Columnist, he picked the 30 top sports stories during his tenure with the paper you can click here for the entire list but here are his top 10:
10. Mookie Wilson's dribbler trickled through first baseman Bill Buckner's glove, scoring Ray Knight and giving the New York Mets a Game 6 win. Two days later the Mets won the deciding game of the 1986 World Series.
9. With the score tied 52-52, Derrick Wittenburg's desperation jumper fell short, but Lorenzo Charles read the shot's arc, grabbed the air ball and dunked the game-winning field goal. North Carolina State beat the heavily favored Phi Slamma Jammas of Houston in the 1983 title game and coach Jim Valvano ran around the floor looking for someone to hug.
8. In a jaw-dropping sprint, Tyus Edney dribbled the length of the floor in the final 4.8 seconds and scored at the rim over Derek Grimm to stun Missouri 75-74 in the second round of the 1995 NCAA tournament. UCLA eventually won the final Final Four played at the Kingdome.
7. The Sonics and Utah Jazz, two teams playing at their absolute best, gave us a classic seventh game of a dramatic 1996 Western Conference finals. It was Gary Payton vs. John Stockton and Shawn Kemp against Karl Malone. Kemp had 26 points and 14 rebounds in Seattle's 90-86 series-clinching win that still gives me chills.
6. In a hold-your-breath moment, Michael Phelps beat Milorad Cavic by one hundredth of a second in the 100 butterfly to win the seventh of his unprecedented eight gold medals in the Beijing Olympics. Even every sportswriter was cheering for Phelps.
5. Dodger Kirk Gibson painfully limped to home plate to face Oakland's Dennis Eckersley in the ninth inning of the first game of the 1989 World Series. I don't know how, but he slammed the game-winning home run and as he hobbled around the bases, broadcaster Jack Buck put words to our feelings, saying, "I do not believe what I just saw."
4. Edgar Martinez doubled down the left-field line. From first base, Ken Griffey Jr. expertly cut the edges of second and third and slid home into a delirious celebration as the Mariners came from a 2-0 series deficit to beat the New York Yankees 3 games to 2 in the 1995 American League Divisional Series.
3. All morning, Seattle was in a state of nervous anticipation as it waited for the first pitch of this one-game playoff with California for the 1995 AL West title. But Randy Johnson calmed the city's fears, pitching a complete-game three-hitter in the M's 9-1 win.
2. Michael Johnson hit some gear I've never seen from a human as he rounded the turn en route to setting a world record and winning the gold medal in the 1996 Olympic 200 meters. I thought it was the most thrilling performance I'd ever seen, until ...
1. Usain Bolt easily pulled past the world's fastest humans and was heading for a world record in the 100 meters, when he raised his hands and celebrated his 2008 gold medal about 10 meters before the finish line. Sitting about 15 rows from the track, I thought he'd blown his chance at the world record. And then I looked up at the scoreboard. And then I heard the roar inside the Beijing Bird's Nest. He did it.

Sunday, January 06, 2013

Steve Kelley Leaving Seattle Times


Steve Kelley, perhaps the best known  newspaper sports columnist in town for over 3 decades, has announced that he is leaving his position at the Seattle Times.  Known for his candor and measured criticism of local teams, owners, players, and fans,  Kelley's column was a "must read" after any significant college or professional sports event in the area or around the nation.
 Kelley sited the posted reader's comments on line for one of the reasons that he is leaving.  The forums at the end of newspaper articles provide for anonymous comments that are often mean spirited.   Like veteran sports talk show host Mike Gastineau, who left KJR last year,  Kelley also spoke of repetition of covering the same things continuously, that made the position less enjoyable.

Friday, March 02, 2012

50 Years Ago, Wilt Did This...

On May 2nd, 1962, Philadelphia's Wilt Chamberlain scored 100 points in an NBA game, no other player had done that before or since.  Seattle Times Sports columnist, Steve Kelley, a native Pennsylvanian, wrote this piece on the big game. Click here.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Another Bummer At Qwest

The Seahawks continued to show that it cannot compete with the NFL's better teams dropping a 34-18 contest to the play-off bound Atlanta Falcons. In his Seattle Times column, Steve Kelley suggests it may now be time for the Seahawks to bench Matt Hasselbeck in favor of Charlie Whitehurst.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Sunday Surprise


Every Sunday, I read the letters to the editor in the Sports section of the Seattle Times. Yesterday, I surprised to see that mine was published, I had written to columnist Steve Kelley to comment on a column that he had written on the late UCLA coach John Wooden. The Times decided to publish it, you can read it here....
The picture above is Coach Wooden with Lew Alcindor from the 6os, along with a more recent picture of the pair. Alcindor, of course, would change his name to Kareem Abdul Jabbar and go on to a long and storied NBA career.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Griffey Snooze Causes Uproar

While Tiger Woods is amerced in a scandal for sleeping with an unknown amount of women, Mariner Ken Griffey, Jr is making headlines for just sleeping. Veteran Seattle Times columnist Steve Kelley weighed in with his harshest critique of Griffey. The controversy started with this column by Mariner beat writer Larry LaRue.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Ken Griffey, Jr Is A Mariner Again


It is a dream come true for Mariner's fans, although Ken Griffey, Jr may resemble Ken Griffey, Sr when he finished his career with the ball club, the fact that Griffey is returning to Seattle is great news for Mariner fans, heartbroken when he left for Cincinatti several years ago. Perhaps it was this heartfelt column by Seattle Times sportswriter Steve Kelly that persuaded him.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008