Gene Raffensperger and I always had a lot to talk about.
He and I worked in the same newspaper office for 30 years or so, and we had many of the interests.
Indeed, I had countless conversations with Raff about the news business, such sports as football, basketball and baseball and the men and women who played those sports.
Raff and his wife Mary moved from West Des Moines to Cedar Falls a few years ago, so afterward he and I didn’t get the opportunity to visit as much as we would’ve liked.
However, I thought of Raff 2 or 3 days ago, and intended to contact him by phone one of these days.
Sadly, I won’t be able to do that now. Raff died Tuesday at 89 years of age.
So my conversations with him about the Hawkeyes, Cyclones, Bulldogs, Panthers, Lefty Mills, Walt Shotwell, overpaid baseball players, underpaid newspaper people, Otto Knauth, Gordon Gammack and other interesting subjects and people will have to wait for another time.
Raff had a lot of jobs in his 36 years at the paper, and one of those was sports editor.
He was the sports editor for just a few years—from the time Leighton Housh retired until the bosses wanted to promote Dave Westphal to the job so he’d be ready to be the next managing editor.
I was certain Raff didn’t like being an editor as much as he enjoyed running the paper’s one-man Eastern Iowa News Bureau for a long time.
He knew more about the goings-on in Keokuk, Burlington, Davenport and Dubuque than the mayors of those cities.
Raff came from a family that was directly involved with sports or had a keen interest in them.
His dad Leonard coached Iowa’s football teams in 1950 and 1951 after having powerhouse squads at East Waterloo High School.
Len Raffensperger was the man who coached the Hawkeyes between 2 guys who were regarded as gridiron giants nationally—Eddie Anderson and Forest Evashevski.
Evashevski’s teams won 2 Rose Bowl games, and he was the best football coach Iowa has ever had.
Anderson coached Nile Kinnick, this state’s only Heisman Troohy winner and the famous team he played on—the 1939 Ironmen.
Len Raffensperger’s teams twice tied Notre Dame, but his 1950 Hawkeyes lost to Ohio State, 83-21.
His 2-season record at Iowa was 5 victories, 10 losses and 3 ties.
Gene and I didn’t talk much about Iowa’s 1950 and 1951 football seasons.
Raff, I’ll miss you.