Living on the Black

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Living on the Black Page 53

by John Feinstein


  Friends, never more important than in the past year: Keith and Barbie Drum, Bob and Anne DeStefano, Jackson Diehl and Jean Halperin, David and Linda Maraniss, Lexie Verdon and Steve Barr, Jill and Holland Mickle, Shelley Crist, Bill and Jane Brill, Terry and Patti Hanson, Mary Carillo, Bud Collins and Anita Klaussen, Doug and Beth Doughty, David Teel, Beth (Shumway) Brown, Beth Sherry-Downes, Erin Laissen, Bob Socci, Pete Van Poppel, Omar Nelson (who owes me a lot of food), Frank DaVinney, Chet Gladchuk, Eric Ruden, Scott Strasemeier, Billy Stone, Mike Werteen, Chris Day, Chris Knocke, Andrew Thompson, Phil Hoffmann, Joe Speed, Jack Hecker, Dick Hall (my hero), Steve (Moose) Stirling, Jim and Tiffany Cantelupe, Derek and Christina Klein, Anthony and Kristen Noto, Pete Teeley, Bob Zurfluh, Vivian Thompson, Phil Hochberg (who proved he can take a hit), Al Hunt, Bob Novak, Wayne Zell, Mike and David Sanders, Bob Whitmore, Tony Kornheiser, Mike Wilbon, Mark Maske, Ken Denlinger, the ever-patient Matt Rennie, Kathy Orton, Camille Powell, Dan Steinberg (who needs a real job), Jim Brady, Jon DeNunzio, Jim Rome, Travis Rodgers, Jason Stewart, Mike Purkey, Bob Edwards, Tom and Jane Goldman, Ellen McDonnell, Bruce Auster, Jim Wildman, Jeffrey Katz, Mike Gastineau (Seattle’s Best), Mary Bromley, Kenny and Christina Lewis, Dick (Hoops) Weiss and Joanie Weiss, Jim O’Connell, Bob Ryan, David Fay, Frank Hannigan, Mike Butz, Mike Davis, Mary Lopuszynski, Jerry Tarde, Mike O’Malley, Larry Dorman (to quote Paul Henreid, “Welcome back to the fight”), Marsha Edwards, Jay and Natalie Edwards, Len and Gwyn Edwards-Dieterle, Chris Edwards and John Cutcher, Aunt Joan, Tom Watson, Andy North, Neil Oxman, Bill Leahey, Dennis Satyshur, Mike Muehr, Bob Low, Joe Durant, Bob Heintz, John Cook, Peter Jacobsen, Paul Goydos, and Brian Henninger. Extra special thanks to Olga Rivera.

  And more of the same to Mark Russell, Laura Russell, Alex Russell, Steve Rintoul, Jon Brendle, and Slugger White.

  Norbert Doyle might well have won three hundred games if not for a bad hip, a bad knee, a bad shoulder, and a bad arm.

  Basketball people: Gary Williams, Roy Williams, Mike Krzyzewski, Rick Barnes, Mike Brey, Karl Hobbs, Phil Martelli, Fran Dunphy, Jim Calhoun, Jim Boeheim, Billy Donovan, Rick Pitino, Thad Matta, Ed Brennan, Tom Brennan, Tommy Amaker, Dave Odom, Jim Larranaga, Mack McCarthy, Jim Crews, Billy Lange, Pat Flannery, Emmette Davis, Jeff Jones, Billy Taylor and the irrepressible Ralph Willard, David Stern, and Tim Frank. Frank Sullivan should be coaching. Harvard should be ashamed of itself. Thanks again to orthopods Eddie McDevitt, Bob Arciero, Gus Mazzocca, and Dean Taylor, and my official trainer Tim Kelly. It takes a village to try to keep me in one piece.

  Howard Garfinkel cannot be made up — there is only one of him. Tom Konchalski will always be the only honest man in the gym.

  Swimmers, in spite of my miserable year in the water: Jeff Roddin, Jason Crist, Clay F. (Daddy) Britt, Wally Dicks, Mike Fell, Erik (Dr. Post) Osborne, John Craig, Mark Pugliese, Doug Chestnut, Peter Ward, Penny Bates, Carole Kammel, Margot Pettijohn, Tom Denes, A.J. Block, Danny Pick, Warren Friedland, Marshall Greer, Paul Doremus, Bob Hansen, and Mary Dowling.

  The China Doll/Shanghai Village Gang: Aubre Jones, Rob Ades, Jack Kvancz, Joe McKeown, Stanley Copeland, Reid Collins, Arnie Heft, Bob Campbell, Pete Dowling (still in absentia), Chris (the right winger) Wallace, Herman Greenberg, Joe Greenberg, Harry Huang, George Solomon, Ric McPherson, Geoff Kaplan, and Murray Lieberman, who continues to be the group’s representative to Boston. Red, Zang, and Hymie are still there. I just wish Red could have seen this Celtics season, even with cheerleaders.

  The Rio Gang: Tate Armstrong, Mark Alarie, Clay (LB) Buckley, and, in the role of Alberto Gonzales, Terry Chili.

  The Feinstein Advisory Board: Keith Drum, Frank Mastrandrea, Wes Seeley, Dave Kindred, and the only man I know with a press room named in his honor, Bill Brill.

  This has been a long year for my family. I am more than lucky to be Danny and Brigid’s dad. I am also fortunate to have Bobby and Jennifer, Margaret and David, and Marcia supporting me through the proverbial thick and thin. I have a cadre of smart, funny nephews: Ethan and Ben, Matthew and Brian.

  Believe it or not, I owe a lot to every single person mentioned here. It’s a long list. I must be very lucky.

  John Feinstein

  Potomac, Maryland, January 2008

  John Feinstein is the bestselling author of Tales from Q School, Last Dance, Next Man Up, Let Me Tell You a Story (with Red Auerbach), Caddy for Life, Open, The Punch, The Last Amateurs, The Majors, A Good Walk Spoiled, A Civil War, A Season on the Brink, Play Ball, Hard Courts, and three sports mystery novels for young readers. He writes for the Washington Post, Washington Post.com, and Golf Digest, and is a regular commentator on National Public Radio’s Morning Edition.

  ALSO BY JOHN FEINSTEIN

  Tales from Q School

  Last Dance

  Next Man Up

  Let Me Tell You a Story

  Caddy for Life

  Open

  The Punch

  The Last Amateurs

  The Majors

  A March to Madness

  A Civil War

  A Good Walk Spoiled

  Play Ball

  Hard Courts

  Forever’s Team

  A Season Inside

  A Season on the Brink

  Last Shot (A Final Four Mystery)

  Vanishing Act: Mystery at the U.S. Open

  Cover-up: Mystery at the Super Bowl

  Running Mates (A Mystery)

  Winter Games (A Mystery)

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  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Welcome

  Dedication

  Introduction

  Chapter 1: The Gifted Lefty

  Chapter 2: The Lawyer’s Son

  Chapter 3: Cy Young. . . Cy Almost

  Chapter 4: Crossroads

  Chapter 5: Rich and Richer

  Chapter 6: From Camden Yards to Yankee Stadium

  Chapter 7: A Bitter Divorce

  Chapter 8: One More Contract

  Chapter 9: The Rites of Spring

  Chapter 10: Starting Over

  Chapter 11: Getting Serious

  Chapter 12: Real Baseball

  Chapter 13: A Cold Spring

  Chapter 14: Spring in New York

  Chapter 15: Back on Track

  Chapter 16: Subway Series I

  Chapter 17: Drought

  Chapter 18: Bumps in the Road

  Chapter 19: F—— the Process

  Chapter 20: Road-Trip Blues

  Chapter 21: Limping to the Break

  Chapter 22: Good News, Bad News

  Chapter 23: Hardball

  Chapter 24: The Number Gets Named

  Chapter 25: Autopilot

  Chapter 26: Crash

  Chapter 27: On a Roll

  Chapter 28: We Suck

  Chapter 29: The Final Days

  Chapter 30: Götterdämmerung

  Chapter 31: Into the Twilight

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  Author Biography

  Also by John Feinstein

  Newsletters

  Copyright

  Copyright

  Copyright © 2008 by John Feinstein

  All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher is unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Little, Brown and Company

 
; Hachette Book Group

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  First ebook edition: May 2008

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  ISBN 978-0-316-03233-9

 

 

 


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