It's a hard day's night for the poor saps with these sports jobs
By Larry Dobrow | Special to CBSSports.com Follow LarryI have always believed that those who have the good fortune to work in sports should be whacked with a shovel if they bitch about their jobs. Only a teensy fraction of sports lunatics have the opportunity to cozy up to the business; thousands of outsiders devote inordinate amounts of effort trying to get past the bouncer. It goes without saying that the worst job in sports is far better than the best one in, say, aluminum smelting.
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| Cleaning up after Isiah Thomas can't be high on a prospective coach's wish list. (Getty Images) |
The media glare, the boos, occasional spots of owner/management interference -- these are things you accept when you enlist as the head coach of a sports team. The anonymous backstabbing, the hovering presence of corporate spies, the whimsical roster turnover -- these are not. Granted, the indignities are probably easier to swallow when your paycheck stretches into seven figures.
I'm rooting for D'Antoni. The never-won-nuthin'-in-Phoenix tag strikes me as unfair, given the Spurs teams he went up against in the playoffs. He's a bright guy and boasts one of the sturdiest pushbroom mustaches this side of Phil Garner.
It won't work. Unless Donnie Walsh proves more of a personnel magician than his Indiana tenure suggests he can be, the Knicks are asking D'Antoni to build a house with only a wrench and a tin of plaster. The job will continue to rank right down there with anything involving subterranean excavation.
But is it the worst job in sports? As D'Antoni gets trotted out for the handshake-fest press conference, let's look at some of the challengers to the Knicks throne.
Marketing director of the NHL: I can't imagine a more futile existence than attempting to interest non-diehards in the NHL, an entity that now ranks somewhere between competitive whaling and the senior bocce circuit in our collective sports consciousness. I say this as a fan who is begging for a reason to recommit, one who used to attend 8-10 games per season and participate in roto hockey leagues (side note: you could make a solid case for Martin Brodeur as the Hank Aaron of rotisserie sports).
Back in college, most nights out were preceded by a Rangers-n-refreshments session that primed my crew for the classy activities to follow. Now, I couldn't care less about hockey unless the Rangers are going well. I'm not just a fair-weather fan; I'm an unrepentant fair-weather fan. Why is it wrong for fans to treat a league or team as well as it treats them?
If the NHL has truly lost folks like me in the wake of the canceled season, I have no idea where the league's marketing folks go from here. Following the bungled expansion that left the league bloated with fourth-liners, you can't attempt to sell lapsed fans on the quality of play. Given the 142-game regular season, you can't lure them with the promise of night-in, night-out passion.
Basically, the NHL's best bet is to pray that Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin morph into the second coming of Messier/Gretzky, or that Alexander "You Can Call Me Al" Ovechkin becomes LeBron on skates. Alas, this can't happen unless the former pair wins the Cup this season or the latter scores 100 goals and starts dating Simpson sisters. It's a darn shame.
Anyone who has anything to do with John Daly who doesn't work for Hooters: Caddies, swing coaches, business managers, agents, wives, girlfriends, divorce lawyers, private investigators, process servers, Diet Coke bottlers, Marlboro Lights distributors, even nutritionists ... Daly has left more toadies-for-hire in his wake than Anna Nicole. He's Roseanne Barr with a putter. His elephantine girth has issued a challenge to pants manufacturers worldwide: Get more elastic, or be gone.
I love Daly's man-of-the-people shtick, which involves getting bombed with anyone who buys him a beer and refusing to dine at restaurants that use linen napkins. At the same time, he has pissed away a wealth of talent and pissed off just about everyone who has gotten close. Self-indulgence isn't a full-time job.
Daly can be a hoot. Watching him off the tee at Baltusrol a few years back was like watching Mark McGwire during batting practice, but sweatier. I still pity the professional enablers who have to cross his path on a regular basis.







