By RON MALY
I'm happy for my friend Dan McCarney, whose North Texas football team hammered Nevada-Las Vegas, 36-14, in the Heart Of Dallas Bowl.
I admired the excellent work McCarney did in
Dan McCarney and his North Texas players |
All Iowans should be proud of what McCarney, a former Hawkeye player and assistant coach, is accomplishing at North Texas despite having some recent health issues.
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Another guy doing an outstanding job is Ray Giacoletti, who is in his first season as Drake's basketball coach.
The Bulldogs improved their record to 10-3 with a 28-point blowout of Evansville in their Missouri Valley Conference opener.
The only thing I question about the game is why the Valley scheduled it for New Year's night when a number of sports fans were either watching football bowl games all day and night, or were recovering from hangovers from New Year's Eve.
Or both.
It's hard to draw more than the 3,000 or so fans who showed up at the Knapp Center on a New Year's snowy night.
But nice going anyway, Ray Giacoletti and your Bulldogs.
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This is an item you won't see in a media column in any newspaper.
Speaking of football bowl games, I wondered in print a while back how many sportswriters the Gannett Co. papers in Iowa would send to the Outback Bowl, and if Pat Harty of the Iowa City Press-Citizen would be one of them.
Harty stayed home, as I expected, and it obviously was a decision made by Gannett's newsroom hean-counters.
I don't know if it was the bean-counters' call or not, but another guy who stayed home was Bryce Miller, the writer from Des Moines who, as far as I know, is still his paper's lead sports columnist.
Miller was obviously told by someone to not bother requesting press box credentials or buying a plane ticket to Tampa because he'd be watching the Outback Bowl on TV instead.
He wrote a story for today's paper about what the announcers said about the football game, then later wrote a column from the Drake-Evansville basketball game.
All I can say is wow.
The fact that Harty wasn't in Tampa means it was the first Iowa bowl game in history in which someone from the Iowa City paper wasn't represented.
The fact that a sports columnist from Des Moines' Gannett operation stayed home to watch the Outback Bowl on TV so he could write about what the announcers said was also a first.
Sad and embarrassing stuff.
But nothing should come as a surprise anymore in the sadsack newspaper business.
For all I know, in the future maybe all of the money-strapped papers will have their writers cover the games by watching them on TV.
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Photo courtesy of Google