Dick Schaap Quotes


Dick Schaap

My writing improved the more I wrote - and the more I read good writing, from Shakespeare on down.

My top three were Jim Brown, Wilt Chamberlain and Bo Jackson.

I worked with Rocky Graziano and Rocky was certainly a character.

Cliches and adjectives permeated my prose.

I think on balance, Don King has been bad for boxing. I think he`s done some very good things and I think he did a heck of a job of promoting Ali but I think I could have promoted Ali.

Today, it`s money. There`s no question about that. Unless you endorse a grill that cooks hamburgers and steaks, where else can you make the kind of money that you can make in the ring if you`re good?

I wanted to be a sportswriter because I loved sports and I could not hit the curve ball, the jump shot, or the opposing ball carrier.

Sugar Ray and talked about doing some articles together or writing a book together but dealing with Sugar Ray was a lot like fighting him. He would fake you in and then he`d drop you.

There is never going to be another Ali.

All of journalism is a shrinking art. So much of it is hype. The O.J. Simpson story is a landmark in the decline of journalism.

I got to know Sugar Ray but I certainly would not say we were good friends.

I began learning the sportswriting business very early in life.

I was also in love with the English language.

He`s in it for Don King and that`s understandable because that`s why people go into business. He`s just kind of slippery about it.

Also, I am driven by a wonderful muse called alimony.

I just can`t believe all the things I did that decade.

You need heroes like that for a sport to surge the way basketball did with Michael Jordan. Now he`s gone and that sport is having problems.

It`s kind of ironic that the two sports with the greatest characters, boxing and horse racing, have both been on the decline. In both cases it`s for the lack of a suitable hero.

I hate repetition and I love challenges, and that is why I`ve jumped from newspapers to magazines to books to television to radio to public speaking.

I think my mistakes were kind of common - leaning on cliches and adjectives in the place of clear, vivid writing. But at least I knew how to spell, which seems to be a rarity these days.

I did not choose necessarily on the basis of significance. If you have a vote for the most significant athlete, then you have Ali, then you have Babe Ruth, then you have Michael Jordan.

If I got paid, it was no more than five dollars a column, and I still think I was overpaid.

In fifty years of covering the sport, of course Muhammad Ali is by far the dominant figure.

Sugar Ray Robinson was at the top of the boxing world during the 1950`s when it seemed that he would either win or lose the championship about every three or four months.

Sportswriters have changed more than sportswriting.

I came up with new leads for game stories by being observant and clever, by using the many gifts of the English language to intrigue and hook a reader.

Sugar Ray Leonard was as close as anyone came after Ali to being Ali, but he wasn`t Ali.

Some people who love boxing might love Mike Tyson, but people outside of the sport are generally repulsed by him and therefore, repulsed by the sport.






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