Monday, July 31, 2017

In My Tribe: The Sport Scribes


           The moment I twisted the knob and pulled open the door, I entered a time warp.
            The décor of the Chet Cashman boxing gym screamed more quasi-vintage ’70s/’80s than those far-out flare bell-bottoms and bitchin’ denim jackets. The gym was encased in cinderblock walls caked with the color of manila. Six small glass block windows were aligned across the top of the walls, permitting just enough natural light while also providing a sense of seclusion. A packaged figurine of Elvis Presley was propped up against one of the windowsills. Multiple pipes ran across the ceiling, further contributing to the gym’s cellar-like character.  
            The gym is a historical gem, nestled underneath the Greater Ithaca Activities Center in downtown Ithaca, New York. As I stood in the entrance to this tucked-away gym, which was no larger than your average strip mall convenience store, I took in the surrounding sights and sounds.
The gym presented all of the boxing essentials. An assortment of boxing gloves rested across a set of three pipes. In the far left corner of the room was a speed bag in use, which echoed the rhythmic beating of a Native American bass drum during a pow wow, crescendoing gradually. Three body bags hung from the ceiling, two in the right corner and one in the left. With each strike from a trainee the thick slab of wholesale beef was tenderized.
And on the right was the main stage, the ring, dressed in red, white and blue. This was where my interview subject for the evening, Danny Akers, the head trainer of the gym, assisted in mitt workouts with his young pups. It was the 5’4” 135-pound stocky Shannon Davis’, the main subject of the article I was writing back in November of 2016, turn to toss some jabs at his sensei. Every single punch that met mitt boomed like the firing of a sixteenth century musket. I watched the session unfold and Davis tire, his arms reduced to linguine, but ultimately persevere through the grueling exercise.
As captivating as the spectacles that took place around me were, what truly captivated my attention were the collages of old newspaper clippings, fight promotions and worn photographs plastered across certain segments of the gym’s walls. Each of these “Walls of Fame” commemorated a range of boxers from Ithaca’s homegrown Ralph “Shocktime” Smiley to “The Greatest” in Muhammad Ali, as well as boxer/trainer Chet Cashman himself. More importantly, these shrines told the tales such as “Revenge At the Armory” and “Everyone’s a Contender: Chet Cashman is Ithaca’s Mr. Boxing.” Past class portraits recount the lineage of boxers who trained at the Chet Cashman gym decades ago. It is headlines and photographs such as these that for a group of individuals evoke stories that establish tradition and community. It is also artifacts like these that for sports writers like myself lay the foundation for who we are and why we put pen to paper.
When former Managing Editor of Sports Illustrated Terry McDonell wroteback in 2011 of the collective stories from sport’s history that the members of his “tribe” share, he observed that sport allows for the conception of a universal identity and how we as individuals “define ourselves in our sports.” Well, the same goes for us sports penmen and penwomen. Instead, with the exception of beat writers, we define ourselves in all sports rather than just a single one.
In his inaugural column for ESPN in 2007, NBA columnist J.A. Adande thought the most proper introduction he could give his new readership was simply listing more than a handful of the reasons of why he is enamored with task of writing about sports. He first stated that he “writes about sports because they somehow manage to incorporate every aspect of our world,” and then proceeds to catalog a litany of themes from “life, death, hope, disappointment” to “health, drugs, love, hate.” A couple of more paragraphs into his column, Adande proclaimed, “I am much more fascinated by the how and why a team wins rather than who wins.”
Youth sports fiction author Fred Bowen was asked, “Are you just going to write about sports?” It is a query that is posed to him from time to time, but Bowen welcomed the question, and answered it with care. He discussed the teaching value sports have for children, citing four significances. The third impact he mentions was how “sports are the place where many kids tackle some important issues.” Bowen referenced two novels of his, Winners Take All and Touchdown Trouble, and locates the plots of these books in the struggle of seeking answers to life’s toughest conflicts.
And then we have the sports scrivener Rick Reilly, who in his ever so whimsical and witty disposition, chose the Adande-route and issued a proclamation for why he too has the hots for composing sports literature. In his 2009 column for ESPNThe Magazine, Reilly described sports as being “real,” noting they “can’t be fake.” He comically compares them to Oprah, and recalled a once severed bond between a father and son that was re-stitched after the Boston Red Sox expunged the Curse of the Bambino in 2004. He said, “Sports has mercy,” and harked back to an Illinois prep football game the year the column was written, and how a kick returner passed up on scoring a touchdown and ran out of bounds at the one-yard line. The player and his teammates’ goal were for an autistic teammate to score the touchdown, which the player did. Reilly also declared “sports has honor.” The example he used to support this claim was during a Texas girl’s high school volleyball playoff match when one player suffered a head injury and was carried of the court on a stretcher. Her teammates were too emotional to continue playing and chose to forfeit the match. But the opposing team refused to accept the forfeit because it did not want to win in that fashion, and urged its adversary to reschedule the match.
If you were reading closely, you should have been able to hear the common melody sung within these three examples. Each one touched upon the main motive as to why sports writers as well as fans are so drawn to sports: the story. McDonell professed the importance of “the story” in his piece when he pronounced that “it’s not about the scores and stats,” in sports, “it’s about the stories.”
As much of a sponge as I am when it comes to sports statistics, I along with every other sports writer understand the power the anecdote has in enriching our work. We aspire to produce writing that is vivacious and animated. Writing that is dry and plain to us is the equivalent of eating a box of Wheat Thins that was left out for a week or two. We want our readers to immerse themselves in the moment and experience the raw emotions that are tied to it. And stories, not stats, do just that. We want our audiences to feel as if they are reading a John Grisham novel, not the encyclopedia.
Those newspaper articles, fight promotions and snapshots from the Chet Cashman boxing gym were what consumed my interest the most. I was that fiancé whose eyes were glued to the glass casings of the 24-karrot wedding bands; I was absolutely mesmerized. I became so invested in learning about the background and upbringing of the gym. Even if this was only a sliver of the pie of the article that I was writing then, my focus and curiosity still gravitated towards these remnants.        
I was profiling Davis at the time to discover the story behind how he began boxing at the amateur level. Davis previously wrestled at Ithaca College before sustaining multiple concussions in one season, and was advised by head coach Marty Nichols and athletic trainer Jess Anderson to walk away from the mat, which he agreed to do. Eventually, Davis began to self-train, pumping iron and hitting the heavy bag more, until he found his way to the Chet Cashman gym. It was there that Akers admired Davis’ raw talent and asked Davis the three fateful words, “You tryna fight?” Without hesitation, Davis retorted, “Yeah, I’m tryna fight,” and the rest was history.
My preliminary interview with Davis was one of, if not the greatest interviews I have had in my career as a sports writer. We chatted close to an hour. There were just so many rich details of this young man’s journey that I wanted to explore deeper and deeper. I learned he attended Blair Academy, which is one of the top-ranked wrestling high schools in the country. I learned that he came from a long line of successful collegiate wrestlers. Yet, he told me he realized over time he never truly had a strong enough passion for wrestling, unlike with his newfound love in boxing. He also described to me the times after school when he was sixteen-years-old and he would return to his house in Newton, New Jersey and take a couple of rounds on the heavy bag in his basement. A perfect foreshadowing, although Davis assured me he had no idea he would find himself in the boxing ring in the subsequent years.  
Even when I was interviewing Akers on Davis, I found myself more intrigued by the retellings of the history of the Chet Cashman gym than by his insight on Davis as a boxer. I was even more enthralled by Akers’ memory of the legendary Joe Frazier saying to him, “You riding with me, trainer,” and the two of them hopping in Frazier’s set of wheels and grabbing drinks at five-o-clock in the morning in Philly back in 1970. I knew all of this was more than likely not going to be incorporated into my article, but I did not consider once pushing the stop button on my recorder and cutting off the interview from there. The anecdotes he was sharing with me then were too precious to turn a deaf ear to.
It is narratives such as hitting up the bar with Joe Frazier and the articles pasted on the gym walls that emit a strong sense of nostalgia to whoever hears them or reads them. They let the listener or reader to fantasize, transporting him or her back in time to that moment and allowing him or her to experience a slice of history that is so personal that very few individuals can truly say they have lived. To what Adande and Reilly alluded to in their work, the stories in sports give us the rare opportunity to experience facets of life that we either have yet experience or do not have the chance to experience. Accounts reminiscent to Davis’ illustrate to the audience the similar lessons Bowen tries to teach in his novels, that even though there will be a time in our development when we face a road block, at some point we will find our true calling.
And like what McDonell iterated in his piece, these types of stories that arise through sports are what mold sport writers into their true identity: the yarn spinner. We are students of sport’s chronicles. We are the grandkids who cluster around grandpa’s rocker to listen to him reminisce about the golden years of the Say Hey Kid, Wilt the Stilt and Roger the Dodger. We are also memoirists of athletics’ antiquity. We desire to take the thread of the yarn from a person or group’s hand and spin it, so that even the grandest of epics such as Davis’ self-pilgrimage and to the smallest of tales of rides at dawn with Joe Frazier will continue to be told and heard by more and more generations, perpetually.