Around
the newsrooms of the Wall Street Journal, where I used to work, the saying was
that the New York Times could do two things for a reporter that the Journal
couldn’t: make him or her rich and famous. That said, however, not every
Journal minion yearned to make the jump to our main journalistic rival.
I was a
prime example. During my tour with the paper in New York (1966-69) I received a
feeler to join the Times’ metropolitan staff, and while I was flattered I
turned it down without moving past the hand-holding stage.
One of my reasons for saying no was
geographical: going to work for the Times would have wedded me to New York, and
while I enjoyed my stay in that wonderful, messy city I didn’t wish to make it
my family’s permanent home. The other reason, I confess, was a reluctance to
test the unknown. I’d been with the Journal for about five years at that point
and felt that my abilities were being recognized and appreciated. I was loath
to have to prove myself to a whole new cast of editors.
I never regretted my choice (well,
hardly ever), but it had nothing to do with my estimation of the Times. It may
have been IA to the Journal’s 1 in quality or vice versa (the ranking depended
on whom you asked and when), but the Times was and is a great newspaper by any
measure. Now that I’m retired it’s my main window to the world. I pay upwards
of $800 a year for a subscription and believe the money to be well spent.
I don’t buy the Times primarily for
its sports coverage; I get the paper’s national edition, which is thin in that
department. Further, I’m not much interested in the doings of Mets, Jets, Nets
or the other New York teams that consume much of its space. True to its
mission, though, the Times applies some real journalism to sports, delving into
subjects and issues most papers merely scan if they mention at all. If you want
to be informed about the National Football League’s actions (or inactions) on
player concussions, reading the Times is a must. Ditto about the long-running
athletics scandals at Florida State University and the University of North
Carolina, medication abuse in horse racing and the chicanery in FIFA, soccer’s
world-governing body. Compared with
those of the Times, most other sportswriters are kids wearing propeller
beanies.
The best piece I’ve read in quite a
while on the NFL, and on the costs of playing there, was in the Times’ on
December 18. It was by staffer Bill Pennington about Chris Snee, a New York
Giants’ offensive guard who’d retired at this campaign’s start after a 10-year
run in the league.
Snee was not the sort of player most fans
notice. About the only times the TV cameras focus on offensive linemen is when
they incur holding penalties and he didn’t get many of those, never much rising
above the anonymity of his position despite two Super Bowl rings and four Pro
Bowl selections. He’s best known as the son-in-law of Tom Coughlin, the Giants’
head coach, and for being a kind of iron man, missing just one start in an
eight-year span (2005-12) before injuries ended his 2013 season and led to his
leaving the game.
But behind Snee’s indestructible façade
was a medical history that might make an Iraq War veteran flinch. The physical
toll the NFL exacts starts before some players take the field. Like many
football big men, Snee wasn’t naturally big, and it took year-round weight
lifting and gorge eating for him to maintain the 300-frame required to be an
offensive lineman in the league.
That subject was familiar to me
because in 1994 I did a piece on Jay Hilgenberg, the center on the Chicago
Bears’ 1985 championship team whose 13-season NFL career had just ended because
of a heart attack he suffered at age 35. He blamed the attack in large part on
playing the strenuous sport about 50 pounds above what he considered to be his natural
weight of 230 pounds. “I didn’t eat until I was full, I ate until I was tired,”
he said ruefully. Snee told Pennington pretty much the same thing. “To keep my
weight over 300 pounds I basically had to eat something bad for me all the
time,” said he.
Snee’s list of medical procedures
includes full-scale surgeries on both hips and three on his right elbow, arthroscopic
surgeries on his knees, regular epidermal shots for bulging back discs and
cortisone injections with foot-long needles to lubricate sore joints. He
carries in his cell phone a picture of a dinner plate filled with the bone
fragments removed in his last elbow surgery; I didn’t know there was that much
bone in the joint. He still can’t straighten the elbow, and, at age 32, his
weak hips make walking down stairs “unpredictable and hazardous.” He’ll need hip
replacements eventually.
All that was in addition to the
normal banging around every NFLer experiences in season. “The first couple of
years in the league, the day after the game would be fine,” said Chris’s wife,
Kate. “Five years after that he wouldn’t feel good for a couple of days
afterward. Ten years in, he’d be miserable for a full week.”
Snee considers himself lucky that
he sustained only one concussion he knew about, although he’s probably aware
that the cumulative effect of lesser blows to the head might lead to problems
down the road. He’s lost 55 pounds since
his July retirement and says he feels better all around. He’s running two miles a day, something that
would have been impossible six months ago, and enjoys playing with his three
sons, aged 11, 8 and 4.
The holder of a degree in accounting from
Boston College, he’s pondering his employment future, although his last Giants’
contract, signed in 2008, paid him $40 million, meaning that if he exercises
normal prudence making ends meet never should be a problem. He told Pennington
he was glad he played football but also is glad he’s done.
“I’ve had stress for the last how many years?”
he asked rhetorically. “I’m not pushing myself now.”
1 comment:
Mr Klein, I run a podcast, and work for CBS Radio in Houston. I would like to know if you had a few mins tonight to talk about why you did not vote for Jeff Bagwell, he is a VERY hot topic in town! My email is DyslexicSports@gmail.com
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