Rick Telander

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Rick Telander is the senior sports columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times. Hired in 1995 from Sports Illustrated, where he was a Senior Writer, Telander's presence at the newspaper was expected to counter the stable of sports columnists the rival Chicago Tribune had.

Early life

Telander is a native of Peoria, Illinois, and attended Richwoods High School, where he was an All-Conference quarterback. He attended Northwestern University on a football scholarship. He played for coach Alex Agase as a cornerback (and punter junior year), making All-Big Ten his senior season and two-time All-Big Ten Academic. His teammates included Mike Adamle, who is also now a member of the Chicago media.[1][2][3][4] He is the father of notable youtube creator and Olympic-style weightlifting coach Zack Telander.[5]

Career

After graduating from Northwestern, Telander was drafted by the

Heaven Is A Playground, which later was made into a movie starring D.B. Sweeney. In the 1980s, Telander was a Senior Writer at Sports Illustrated and was quickly recognized as a rising star.[citation needed]As the college football beat writer in the mid-1980s, he reported on the scandals that plagued the University of Miami, University of Oklahoma, University of South Carolina, and Southern Methodist University. He also observed what he believed to be hypocrisy by the National Collegiate Athletic Association
as the college athletes would help the NCAA and the member schools make money, yet wouldn't share in the wealth.

His story about South Carolina’s Tommy Chaikin and the dangers of steroid use, ``The Nightmare of Steroids,’’ appeared in SI’s Oct. 24, 1988 issue. Telander's 1990 book The Hundred-Yard Lie addressed the problems in college football.

In December 1985, Telander was invited to be a regular panelist on The Sportswriters on TV, a debut weekly show featuring the Chicago Tribune's Bill Jauss, the Daily Southtown's Bill Gleason and former boxing promoter Ben Bentley. Telander was 25 years younger than the three other panelists. The show, the first of its kind, was nationally syndicated and developed a cult following before concluding its run in 2000 Sports Illustrated.

While with the Sun-Times, Telander continued writing for Sports Illustrated until 1998, when he signed a deal with ESPN. Telander would regularly contribute to ESPN: The Magazine and ESPN.com, appear on ESPN television shows like The Sports Reporters (which some critics viewed as a knockoff of the Sportswriters on TV), and host a radio program on ESPN radio. After the multi-year deal expired, Telander sporadically would contribute to Sports Illustrated, and host a radio show on WSCR.

Telander has won eight Illinois Sportswriter of the Year awards as voted by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. He has had his work collected in The Best American Sportswriting Anthology eight times and over two dozen other anthologies. He has won nine Peter Lisagor awards for sports journalism. He is the author of eight books, one of which, Heaven Is A Playground, was named one of the Ten Best Sports Books of All Time by Playboy Magazine, and one of the 100 Best Sports Books by Sports Illustrated.

2008 Hall of Fame ballot controversy

In January 2008, Telander caused controversy by refusing to submit a 2008 baseball

José Canseco and Ken Caminiti, in the previous year's Hall of Fame ballot. He did this, as he wrote in his Sun-Times column, as a protest, arguing that the shame of steroid users and the "Steroid Era" should be preserved this way for all generations to witness.[citation needed
]

The fury erupted very publicly after Chicago sports-talk radio show host Mike North took Telander to task while interviewing Andre Dawson on January 9, 2008. Telander eventually called Dawson personally, read his column to the former star, and the issue was laid to rest.[citation needed] Telander wrote an article that Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens should not get in the Hall of Fame because of their use of steroids and that they lack integrity.

Next Year Day

In 2008, Telander partnered with The Heckler and owner Brad Zibung to host the 100th Annual Next Year Day. Nearly 1,000 people attended, including famous Cubs fan Bill Murray, who sang with Telander’s band, the Del-Crustaceans. The 101st Annual Next Year Day was held Friday, April 3, 2009, at Harry Caray's Tavern in Chicago's River North neighborhood. Parties were held until the Cubs won the World Series in 2016 The Heckler.

2011

Former South Carolina assistant coach Jim Washburn, just hired by Philadelphia Eagles, apologizes again for steroid scandal he helped create (and which sent him to prison), as documented in Telander’s SI story with Tommy Chaikin. Ref: CSNPhilly.com, Feb 10, 2011, by Frank Reuben: ``Eagle’s Washburn Still Confronting Steroid Nightmare.’’

2014 Awards

Telander was awarded the Ring Lardner Award for Excellence in Sports Journalism by the Union League Club of Chicago. Frank Deford presented Telander with the award.[6]

2016 Awards

In 2016, Telander was the guest editor for The 2016 Best American Sports Writing anthology.[7]

2018 Awards

In June, 2018 he received the Sigma Delta Chi Award and Bronze Medallion for distinguished service from the Society of Professional Journalists, in Wash., D.C.[8]

Sportswriters Hall of Fame

In January, 2021 it was announced that Telander was voted into the National Sports Media Association Hall of Fame in Winston-Salem, NC [1].

See also

References

  1. ^ "Rick Telander College Stats". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  2. ^ "Mike Adamle College Stats". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.
  3. ^ "Ricktelander.com". www.ricktelander.com.
  4. ^ "Mike Adamle". IMDb.
  5. ^ Mat Fraser and Joe Rogan Weren't Completely Wrong. YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-11.
  6. ^ http://chicagoradioandmedia.com/home/root/news/6329-jeannie-morris-rick-telander-lloyd-pettit-to-be-honored-for-excellence-in-sports-journalism
  7. ^ https://www.amazon.sg/Best-American-Sports-Writing-2016/dp/0544617312
  8. ^ http://spjdc.org

External links