Bobby Cox died over the weekend at the age of 84. He managed in MLB for a total of 29 seasons – – five in Atlanta, four in Toronto and then twenty back in Atlanta. He is in the Hall of Fame, and he ranks fourth in MLB history in terms of wins by a manager. His overall record on the bench was 2504 – 2001 which is a win percentage of .556. His teams made the post season seventeen times and the Braves won a World Series under him in 1995.
Bobby Cox was famous for his confrontations with umpires; a few of those “encounters” have become the stuff of legends. He was ejected from games more than anyone else in baseball history and most appropriately he was tossed 162 times in his career – – the exact number of games in a season. Many fans think of Earl Weaver as a super-hotheaded manager who was always involved in situations that got him ejected from games; Weaver was a piker compared to Bobby Cox; Weaver was only ejected 95 times in his career.
Rest in peace, Bobby Cox.
Moving on … There are four NFL coaches who have LOST 4 times in Super Bowl games:
- Bud Grant
- Marv Levy
- Dan Reeves
- Don Shula
There are three NFL coaches who have LOST 3 times in Super Bowl games:
- Bill Belichick
- Tom Landry
- Andy Reid
If you combine those two lists and if you assume that the Pro Football Hall of Fame voters eventually decide to honor Belichick and Reid – – as they certainly should – – the only coach left out of the Hall of Fame would be Dan Reeves. Like Grant and Levy, Reeves had teams there 4 times and lost them all. It took the Hall of Fame gatekeepers a while to recognize Grant’s and Levy’s worthiness; I wonder if they will ever look back and think the same about Dan Reeves.
Switching gears … The FIFA World Cup will get underway here in North America exactly one month from today. Globally, this is the biggest sporting event – even bigger than the Olympics – and there is almost no “buzz” around here as the kickoff time approaches. I was not in Rio when the World Cup was there or in South Africa or in Qatar, but I have to think that there was more energy around the upcoming event in those places than seems to be the case here in the US. There is a bar near Curmudgeon Central that is known as a “Soccer Bar”; its clientele is there to watch and to engage in soccer not other sports when there are conflicting schedules. I happened to drive by that establishment over the weekend, and the only evidence of the impending World Cup was a small sign on the window near the neon sign that said, “OPEN”. That small sign had the image of the World Cup Trophy and the dates of the Opening Ceremonies – – June 11 and June 12.
I don’t get it. Soccer in the US continues to expand its fanbase. It is not yet nearly the same size as the fanbase for American football or baseball or even basketball if you combine NCAA and NBA fans, but soccer is much more important in the sports landscape today than it was 10 years ago. And still, there is no sense of energy around the World Cup. I hope this spectacle does not fizzle out here in North America, but someone or something is going to need to provide a spark of interest sometime very soon to overcome what seems to be a whole lot of inertia.
Finally, a few comments about the “importance” of the World Cup:
“The first World Cup I remember was in the 1950 when I was 9 or 10 years old. My father was a soccer player, and there was a big party, and when Brazil lost to Uruguay, I saw my father crying.” Pele
And …
“For me soccer provides so many emotions, a different feeling every day. I’ve had the good fortune to take part in major competitions like the Olympics, and winning the World Cup was also unforgettable. We lost in the Olympics and won in the World Cup, and I’ll never forget either feeling.” Ronaldinho
And …
“I can still remember watching Italy win the 1982 World Cup. I was just an eight-year-old kid in Naples, my hometown, watching the games with a bunch of people in the houses of relatives and friends. I can recall that when Italy scored, we would shout and hug, even though we did not all know each other.” Fabio Cannavero
But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………