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His goal-oriented lifestyle, reverence for his family, and demeanor make Emmitt Smith
a role model.
Emmitt Smith
I have been a coach-educator for 15 years and have seen my young athletes idolize various players. I am going to cut out Smith 's list of goals and put it up on my office wall for my students to see. Keep on shining, Emmitt. The young people of America are watching. Thanks for a wonderful story. Now there's a swimsuit cover that I can appreciate! I don't know which is more tasteless about your article, the content, devoted mostly to Smith
's talking about how good he is, or the tone, a genuflecting adulation of Smith
. How revealing it is that of all the goals Smith
listed, every one was an individual statistic or accomplishment. Let's see some articles on real role models, not self-consumed megastars committed to topping Michael Jordan
in endorsement money as a primary ambition. Triple Crown In your discussion of near-miss Triple Crown seasons, you omitted a big one. In 1948 Stan Musial
of the St. Louis Cardinals
led the National League
in batting (.376) and RBIs (131), as well as on-base average (.450). He came within one home run of tying Ralph Kiner
of the Pittsburgh Pirates
and Johnny Mize
of the New York Giants
for the league lead (40)—and he had one homer rained out. But that's not all. Musial
also led the major leagues that year in slugging average (.702), hits (230), runs (135), doubles (46) and triples (18)! That rained-out home run kept Musial
not only from the Triple Crown but also from the first clean sweep of all the important hitting categories since Tip O'Neill
(no, not the congressman) did it for the St. Louis Browns
in 1887. My view is that Ted Williams was robbed of a third Triple Crown in 1949 when he won the home run and RBI titles but was deemed to have finished second in batting (.3427 to Detroit Tiger George Kell 's .3429). Because batting averages are listed only to three decimals, a difference of .0002 is surely de minimis and loses any real significance in the context of recordkeeping. Your article does not mention that when Carl Yastrzemski
of the Red Sox
won the Triple Crown in 1967, he actually tied with Harmon Killebrew
of the Minnesota Twins
for home runs, at 44. I do not object to this. I liked Yaz, and I'm glad that he got the crown. But measured by the same standard, Williams
should have won it again in '49.
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