SI Vault
 
Letters
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
May 05, 2008

Letters

View CoverRead All Articles
Print This PRINT E-mail This EMAIL Most Popular MOST POPULAR SHARE SHARE

Reverse Angle
How weird is this? For your 2006--07 college basketball preview (far right), one of your regional covers featured Julian Wright, with Mario Chalmers peeking out from behind him. Your NCAA championship cover features Chalmers making the game-tying shot—and if you look closely enough at the crowd, you'll see Wright, who departed from Kansas early to join the NBA, peeking out to the left of Mario.
David Johnston, Lawrence, Kans.

How fitting that the lone No. 1 seed bereft of an All-America would bring home the hardware (Rock Chalk, Champions, April 14). The Jayhawks showed us what a team-first ethic and good free throw shooting can do.
Rex M. Lowe, Naugatuck, Conn.

I noticed plenty of coincidences between this year and the last time Kansas won a title, in 1988. In each case a two-term Republican was about to leave the White House; Kansas played in Nebraska for the opening rounds, defeated a Lon Kruger team in the tournament and an ACC team in the national semifinals. And Kansas came into the final as an underdog.
Roger H. DeMott, Webster, N.Y.

As the father of a recent Kansas graduate, I was thrilled with the cover photo of Mario Chalmers's game-tying basket. Why, it made me think back to 1987 when Keith Smart of Indiana, my alma mater, made SI's cover with his game-winning ... uh, wait a minute. That week's cover was actually your baseball preview, featuring the Cleveland Indians. Not that I've held a grudge for 21 years. By the way, that season the Tribe finished 61--101, dead last in the AL East.
Alan Sutton, Deerfield, Ill.

Moises Off
Moises Alou now says he never would have caught the Bartman ball in the 2003 playoffs (PLAYERS, April 14). But I remember Alou's antics at the time. His outward frustration certainly fueled the reaction of those in Wrigley Field and Chicago against Steve Bartman; his admission is five years too late.
Jon Oliver, Darien, Ill.

Perfect Split
Your story about NHL teams divvying up goaltending duties (Who's Your Goalie? April 14) could have referred to Boston's 1972 Stanley Cup team: Coach Tom Johnson employed the most equitable sharing of goaltending duties in Cup history. Gerry Cheevers started eight of 15 playoff games while Ed Johnston started the other seven, and each won six times. This followed a regular season in which Cheevers started 40 of 78 games and Johnston the remaining 38, with each winning 27 decisions.
Joe Gill, Easton, Pa.

The Dixon Line
A die-hard Michigan fan, I watched Oregon's Dennis Dixon (Dennis, Anyone? April 14) annihilate my Wolverines last fall. I saw a quarterback with poise, leadership and the ability to take over a game. Any team that was afraid to draft Dixon because of his knee injury is just ignorant.
Jonathan Collar, Sterling Heights, Mich.

Dixon displayed courage and team-first attitude by risking injury and losing out on the individual accomplishments in order to help his team try for a championship. That would impress me if I were an NFL scout.
Nick Yoder, Goshen, Ind.

I don't want to hear about how great the facilities are at Oregon. Although it is great for Dixon, it stinks for the 20 or so wrestlers who had their program dropped because the school wanted to add baseball. Cut down to 10 stainless steel massage tables, and keep wrestling!
Jeff Hill, Petersburg, Ill.

Equal Time
I cannot believe you printed Andrew B. Williams's response to a PLAYERS poll on athletes' presidential preferences (LETTERS, April 14), in which he said that people vote Republican only if "they are millionaires or they are naive. Professional athletes are both." I wonder if you would have printed a letter that said, "There are only two reasons people ever vote Democrat: They have a sense of entitlement or they do not want to accept responsibility for poor choices. Professional athletes demonstrate both?"
James May, Orange Park, Fla.

Continue Story
1 2