RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Stanford Rose Bowl Standout Christian McCaffrey, Who Had a Record 368 All-Purpose Yards In a 45-16 Victory Over Iowa, Is the Grandson Of Dave Sime, a Multi-Sport Athlete Who Was a World-Class Sprinter At the Drake Relays In the 1950s

Dave Sime in his sprinting days


Barry Crist of West Des Moines, a longtime Hawkeye sports fan, filed this interesting Facebook post in the wake of Stanford's 45-16 romp past Iowa in the Rose Bowl football game:

"Childhood memories flooded my mind when Brent Musburger talked about Christian McCaffrey's heritage. I did not know that his maternal grandfather is Dave Sime,  a hero of mine when I was a young boy.

"Sadly, the Des Moines Register did not have a feature story on Dave Sime before the Rose
79-year-old Dave Sime now
Bowl, as he is a Drake Relays legend. The Register is now just a local McPaper.


"On a cold rainy day at the Drake Relays in 1956, Dave Sime beat Abilene Christian's Bobby Morrow in the 100-yard dash on a cinder track that had standing water. Mud and water were exploding from their feet as they sped down the track. Sime won in the time of 9.4. I know this because, as a young boy, I was in the stands with my father. The picture of that finish was in the Drake Relays programs for many years.

"Sime later held the world record in the 100- and 220-yard dashes and the 220-yard low hurdles. However, he hurt his leg before the Olympics and Morrow went on to win the gold in the 100, 200 and 4x100 relay in the Olympics in Melbourne.

"Sime was a baseball player at Duke. At 6-3, he was a swashbuckling centerfielder with a shock of bright red hair. He signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers, which thrilled me, as I am a Dodger fan. Either an inability to hit the curveball or the lure of Duke Medical School ended his baseball career. Players in those days did not earn astronomical salaries like they do today. Sime became a successful eye surgeon.

"The Duke football coach asked him to come out for football due to his astronomical speed. Special plays were designed for him and he torched Notre Dame in his first year of football with long plays. He was drafted by the Detroit Lions, but never signed in the NFL.

"Duke University honored Dave Sime as their greatest athlete of the century."

[RON MALY'S COMMENTS--Well done, Barry. Great memories of long ago, when Dave Sime starred at the Drake Relays.  I've got to hand it to Brent Musburger, too--or at least the
Christian McCaffrey in the Rose Bowl
researchers at the ESPN network--for calling viewers' attention to the fact that Christian McCaffery, the Stanford back who stole the offensive show at the Rose Bowl, is the grandson of Dave Sime [pronounced Simm]. ESPN kept showing former NFL standout Ed McCaffrey, Christian's father; Lisa McCaffrey, Christian's mother, and another son of Ed and Lisa in the grandstand during the Rose Bowl while Christian was running wild against Iowa. McCaffrey scored on a 75-yard pass play with the game only 11 seconds old and set a Rose Bowl record with 368 all-purpose yards.  The 19-year-old sophomore became the first player in Rose Bowl history to total more than 100 yards rushing and receiving.
McCaffrey looms as the favorite to win the 2016 Heisman Trophy. Barry Crist mentioned that the paper didn't carry a word about the fact that Christian McCaffrey is the grandson of Dave Sime.  Obviously, no one at the Register knew about that connection. Furthermore, after Musburger's mention on ESPN of the McCaffrey/Sime family connection, no one in the Register newsroom relayed the information to the two reporters covering the game. That didn't surprise me, and it shouldn't have surprised anyone else.  The understaffed paper. and the naive people working there, missed a lot of interesting stuff before, during and after the Rose Bowl. That's just how it goes these days at that place].