In my working years, I covered a number of collegiate basketball teams that had players who were fathers.
Grace and Aaron. Photo by @yepmkelsieberg/Twitter |
Some players had become fathers while attending major colleges, some had become fathers while attending junior colleges.
For all I know, some had become fathers while still in high school.
Some of the players were married, some weren't.
Some of the kids lived in the same town as the fathers, some didn't.
That's life.
Stuff happens.
We all know that.
Whatever, the fact that a player had a child didn't seem to cause a big stir among people who dealt with the team once, twice or three times a week during the basketball [or football] seasons.
I mean, in postgame interviews, I never heard a player say something like, "I scored those 25 points and grabbed those 10 rebounds for the wife and kids."
And I can't ever recall a player announcing in an interview that he was becoming a father.
There was, of course, nothing called Twitter in those days.
All of which leads me to Iowa player Aaron White.
Whitey, as he is known in the Hawkeye circle, has broken new ground.
I have a Twitter account, and I use it daily. Whitey has tweeted that he and his girlfriend, Grace Burns, will become the parents of a child in August.
George Burns and Gracie Allen |
Congratulations to Whitey and Grace.
Upon hearing the news, a longtime Hawkeye fan emailed me with this comment: "Maybe it's my warped sense of humor, but when I saw the expectant mother's name is Grace Burns, I thought of George Burns and Gracie Allen. Therefore, I came up with the name George if Aaron and Grace have a son."
Burns and Allen were husband-and-wife humorists who appeared together on vaudeville, TV, radio and in movies.
Very humorous line.
Thanks for that email.