Tonight I went to the TD Garden (is that the offical name yet?, whatever, it will be soon) for an event that honored a few Boston sports figures.
The program for tonight’s “The Tradition” event was as follows:
Masters of Ceremones: Dale Arnold and Michael Holley (of WEEI’s “The Dale and Holley Show”)
Ken Hodge (Award presented by Milt Schmidt)
Sam Jones (Award presented by Aubre Jones and Bill Russell)
Nancy Kerrigan (Award presented by Jerry Solomon)
Jack Parker and Jerry York (Award presented by Mike Lynch)
Troy Brown (Award presented by Bill Belichick)
Curt Schilling (Award presented by Dr. William Morgan)
Prior to the presentations, there was a period of time where people at the event enjoyed some food and drink and mingled with one another. I had the pleasure of attending this event with Jan Volk, who, among other things, was the GM of the Celtics from 1984 to 1997 and also serves as a member of the Board of Trustees at The Sports Museum, the organization that put the event together.
I had the opportunity to meet several people, including John Havlicek, Tommy Heinsohn, K.C. Jones, and Sam Jones, among others. Each had a different story to tell and it was nice to get a chance to see a little bit of each person’s personality. This was sort of cool for me to meet some of these people, but the presentations themselves were quite entertaining.
The presentations opened with a slight recap of this decade in Boston sports. A video tribute of the championships won by the Patriots (3), Red Sox (2), Celtics (1), BC Eagles (2 NCAA National titles in Ice Hockey), and the BU Terries (1 National title in Ice Hockey). It truly was a nice tribute even though I knew about each one of those championships and, in the case of the professional championships, I was either present in person (for the Celtics), or was watching on television with the rest of New England. Sometimes it’s nice to be reminded of the good times. I always enjoy video of players and coaches celebrating victories and especially championships because it just looks like it was a lot of fun when it happened. On top of that, I remember how I felt the night the Boston teams won their respective championships and the video tributes just put me back in that zone.
Then, each presentation occurred in the order mentioned above. The presenter announced the award and then the recipient came onto the stage and had a medal put around their neck. Followed by that, the presenter(s), recipient, and both Arnold and Holley sat down and the audience heard some stories about the athletes. Some of those were quite interesting.
Sam Jones and Bill Russell played together and have won 21 championships combined, the only two players in sports who have won that many championships. A story they told was about Jones making the team after he was drafted. Jones was the only member of those teams to be drafted out of a Division II basketball program and make the team (and then win 10 championships). The story goes that Red Auerbach asked Russell about Jones and Russell responded with “Well I don’t know all of ‘em!,” referring to black players, since at that time, there really weren’t too many opportunities for black athletes. It turned out Jones made the team and he says he was told he made the team because “Russell needed someone to talk to” and Jones’ response to this person was to tell Russell “Thank you very much.” Needless to say, it was very entertaining.
During Troy Brown’s presentation, Belichick said some very good things about Brown, and they talked about Brown playing DB for the Patriots for some time as well. The team went into a game and Belichick says he remembers saying to Romeo Crennell that they’d be OK as long as they didn’t lose another corner during the game. Then next thing you know, Asante Samuel was injured on the second play of the game. Belichick recalls looking at Crennell and saying “You’ve got to be kidding me!” Then it was time for Troy Brown to enter on the defensive side and wouldn’t you know it, he played the position pretty well for the rest of the year. I think the most interesting moment though was when Brown made a statement that left Belichick absolutely speechless. Brown talked about why he was a champion and gave a lot of credit to Belichick for it, saying it took the great coaching and leadership of Belichick to make everything that happened late in his career possible. Belichick really had no response for that.
Schilling’s presentation was interesting, as his presenter was the doctor who performed the surgeries on Schilling’s ankle during the 2004 season. Schilling revealed that he was getting injections in his ankle almost every game during the season because of pain that was caused by a known condition in his ankle. If Schilling altered his delivery, he knew he would lose a few miles on his fastball so he continued to pitch through the pain all season long, and ultimately shortening his career in the process. He put it all over the top with the procedures on his ankle during the post season that allowed him to pitch in Game 6 of the ALCS and in the World Series. The most telling thing Schilling said was that he did what he thought everyone else in the locker room would have done if they were in his position (in reference to procedures on his ankle). Many in Boston might refer to what Schilling did as heroic, but he never will.
All in all it was good night and extremely entertaining. Was it worth the $150 admission? I haven’t decided yet, but I would probably go again next year, so I guess that means I have decided.