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

Friday, August 26, 2016

Sully

By RON MALY

This is the night the football season--at least the high school variety--gets started in a bigtime way throughout the state of Iowa.

Jim Sullivan. Photo courtesy of the Waterloo Courier
Unfortunately for all of us, Jim Sullivan of Waterloo, a nice man with a nice writing touch, won't be part of it. 

Sullivan, a longtime member of the sportswriting staff  at the Waterloo Courier, died of an apparent heart attack early today.

Hollywood would love the story--a 61-year-old assistant sports editor being found unresponsive at his desk after putting the final touches to today's sports pages [as Pat Kinney of the Courier reported].

But this isn't Hollywood.

This is Iowa, and it's not make-believe.

A lot of us are experiencing sadness as a football season starts and Jim Sullivan isn't a part of it.

I worked alongside Sullivan [or Sully, as he was known to many] in press boxes around the country for a lot of years.

He was always pleasant, always helpful, always quick with some type of humor regardless of whether the team we were covering won or lost, or whether the coaches and players were in a good mood or a bad mood.

One of the last times I saw Sully was on a Friday in Denver. He was on his way to Boulder, Colo.,  to cover an Iowa State football game against Colorado.

I hadn't talked sports with him for a while, so I made arrangements to fly to Denver to have a late lunch with Sully on the eve of the game. 

In those days [and also presently], I was able to fly free anywhere I wanted to go on a space-available basis.

So it was off to Denver to talk football with a guy who knew all about what was going on at the collegiate and high school levels.
We had a great talk. 

He was the same old Sully.

Afterward, he drove to Boulder in his rented car, and I flew back to Des Moines.

I had seen Sully in a press box or two since, but not enough.

I'll miss Sully and his writing a lot.

His wife Kim and his son Pete survive.  My prayers and thoughts are with them.