Quick Takes

 

    In our four major pro sports, the one that shows the greatest advantage to a home team is basketball. The W-L records show it. It’s NBA, NHL, NFL and MLB in that order.

 

    Donald Fehr is the Executive Director of the MLB players union. He is suggesting collusion on behalf of MLB owners for not coming forth with a contract offer to the heavyweight baseball champion of steroids. Donald, Bonds is not getting an offer because he is of little-to-no value. Have you considered that?

 

    U. of Memphis, my favorite team:
Really good news: They beat Mississippi State and advance to the Sweet 16.
More good news: They shot 91.3% in the process.
Really bad news: The 91.3% is the total of their FG% (44.4) and their FT% (46.9). In other words, their stats suck for a #1 seed.

 

    Bill Parcells is at it again. He’s the new head of football operations for the lowly Miami Dolphins that went 1-15 last season. He’s signing coaches, players, and anyone else who can make the Miami Dolphins a winner. And he will have a major positive impact on that team. Just watch their improvement in 2008; it won’t be an accident. I don't know what the "over" is, but no doubt the books have already built Parcells into it.

 

Story of the Week
JIM PLUNKETT

 

    Jim Plunkett was a fine QB, and is a man to be respected. Plunkett's background gave him every excuse for failure. He refused to take any.

    Despite his Irish surname, Plunkett is 90% Mexican-American. Both his parents, William and Carmella, were blind, having met at a school for the sightless in New Mexico. They moved to San Jose, where William Plunkett worked at a post office news stand to provide his wife and three children with a meager but honorable living, although for awhile they subsisted on welfare. But they were not bitter. "My folks were poor and uneducated," Plunkett later observed, "but they accepted life for what it gave them." In an effort to aid the family's financial situation, Plunkett worked a series of odd jobs while growing up. All the while, he never gave up his dream to play football. If you’re looking for a role model for modern-day youth, you need look no further than Jim Plunkett.

 

    It should be noted that Jim Plunkett was the first QB to earn this impressive trifecta: Heisman Trophy winner, #1 overall draft pick, and Super Bowl MVP. Plunkett won the Heisman with Stanford in 1970. He was drafted #1 in 1971 by New England. He earned MVP honors after leading the Raiders past the Eagles in Super Bowl XV.

  

    The following was written by Sarah Lorge of Sports Illustrated:

In the summer of 1970, Bob Murphy, Stanford's sports publicity chief, felt compelled to issue an unusual release.

"Gentlemen of the Press," it read. "My title is Sports Information Director, not Campaign Manager! This is by way of saying that our great quarterback Jim Plunkett will win his awards on the field, and not in the publicity office."

The Heisman Trophy campaign had started to resemble a national election. As a glut of talented passers -- including Plunkett, Notre Dame's Joe Theismann, Mississippi's Archie Manning and Kansas State's Lynn Dickey -- vied for college football's most cherished prize, SIDs courted votes with elaborate public relations schemes. (The Mississippi precinct was well covered with Archie dolls and bumper stickers.)

But with a candidate like Plunkett, it was easy for Murphy to stay above the fray. Plunkett's numbers spoke volumes: He led Stanford to an 8-3 regular-season record, threw for 18 touchdowns and ran for three others, amassing 2,898 yards total offense in the process, and 7,887 in three years, then an NCAA standard. His strength was legendary, and he had the finesse to go with it.

"We worked every summer on our timing, and he was always right on the money," says Jack Lasater, one of Plunkett's receivers. "It made your job a lot easier. Plunk didn't miss much."

If Plunkett was a leading passer, he was also a sentimental favorite. The press made much of his personal story. His parents in San Jose were both blind, and his father died his junior year, so Plunkett and his sisters worked to support their mother. He could have graduated the previous June, skipped his remaining year of eligibility and let a pro contract ease the family's financial strain. But he and several other veterans made a vow in the summer before the '70 season: They would return to Stanford, beat USC and go to the Rose Bowl.

Easier said than done. Southern Cal had been to Pasadena each of the past four years, and conference rival UCLA was formidable as well. Stanford, on the other hand, had finished in the Top 20 only once since 1955.

The day before the USC game, Stanford Stadium was the target of a bomb threat. Police searched the stadium, found nothing, and the game proceeded under extra security. The only bombs were those thrown by Plunkett, who passed for 275 yards and one touchdown, a 50-yard pass to tight end Bob Moore. Stanford had overcome the frustrating losses of the two previous years and defeated the Trojans 24-14.

Meanwhile, the Heisman electioneering raged out of control. "Back then we all thought there was too much pressure," Lasater says. "We tried to stand between Jim and the rest of the world as much as we could."

Plunkett felt it, nonetheless. "I was, I guess you'd say, shy," he says. "But everywhere I'd turn, people would ask me what it was like. It was a tough situation. I just felt the weight of the world."

When the results were finally tabulated, Plunkett's victory was decisive. He won 510 first-place votes; Theismann was second with 242. Plunkett was actually in New York City appearing on television when the announcement was made. When he arrived back in San Francisco, a large contingent of Stanford fans was waiting at the airport to greet him.

"Up to that point, it was certainly the biggest thrill in my life," Plunkett says. "And Bob Murphy was very proud of the fact that while everybody else was spending X number of dollars to hype their candidate, he spent 179 bucks on fliers. That's true."

With the Heisman suspense lifted, Plunkett led his team to an upset win over second-ranked Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. The team had kept its vow-and finished eighth in the country in the process.

Plunkett's NFL career was much more difficult. The draft's No. 1 pick, he won AFC rookie honors with the Patriots in 1971, but he was traded to San Francisco five years later and eventually released. The Raiders then signed him in 1978 and won two Super Bowls behind Plunkett, who was the game's MVP in 1981. Jim Plunkett spent 17 years in the NFL.

These days, the once-reticent Plunkett does Raiders postgame radio interviews and a weekly TV highlights show and gives corporate speeches (as well as owning a beer distributorship).

"I'm much better [as a speaker] now, I can guarantee you," he says.

He keeps his Heisman in a trophy room at his home, a reminder of his Stanford career. And Plunkett's loyalty to the institution has never wavered. For 21 years he has hosted a golf tournament to raise money for athletic scholarships.

"Those were wonderful days for me," he says. "I played in the NFL for 17 years, went to college for four. And my best friends and associates are the people I went to Stanford with, to this day."

 

Last Week’s Trivia

 

    Before he became a fixture as head coach of the Minnesota Vikings, Bud Grant played for the Minneapolis Lakers from 1949-1951. Grant led the Vikings to four Super Bowls. He is one of the most respected head coaches in NFL history.

 

Trivia Question of the Week

 

    Who is the youngest goalie to ever guide his team to the Stanley Cup? See next week’s Sports Junkie for the answer.