Houston Chronicle

Roy Halladay, Connie Hawkins among many notable sports deaths in 2017.

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Roy Halladay seemed from another time. He pitched deep into games — complete games, the vanished art — and won a couple of Cy Young Awards along the way.

Connie Hawkins got his chance to take his playground wizardry to basketball’s big stage, and insisted he was never bitter about the lost years.

Ara Parseghian came to South Bend and restored the glory of Notre Dame football, burnishing the Golden Dome as well as the myth.

Aaron Hernandez’s life was of another sort, an unfolding tragedy of ruin.

And days before Christmas, Dick Enberg died at his California home at 82. Enberg’s broadcasti­ng career spanned six decades, his voice the steady, welcoming soundtrack for sports. Whether it was the Olympics or Super Bowl, the Final Four or Wimbledon, horse racing or his beloved baseball, Enberg was there. And always with his trademark exhortatio­n, “Oh, my!”

“To me, Dick Enberg was the greatest allaround sportscast­er who ever lived and will never be emulated,” broadcaste­r Vin Scully said.

UT legend

Other lives, other deaths in 2017 left a large imprint.

Football lost Tommy Nobis, the middle linebacker out of Texas and the first player drafted by the Falcons in 1966.

And the sport is diminished without Dan Rooney, the Steelers chairman for whom the landmark minority hiring initiative is named; and Y.A. Tittle, the star 49ers and Giants quarterbac­k.

There was also Cortez Kennedy, the mighty Seahawks defensive tackle; Yale Lary, the safety/punter/return specialist for the best Lions teams.

The college game lost Frank Broyles, the powerful football coach and athletic director at Arkansas.

Hall of Fame senator

Baseball lost Jim Bunning, a Hall of Famer who pitched a no-hitter and perfect game before going on to a U.S. Senate seat; two tough hombres in Don Baylor on the field and Dallas Green in the dugout; Boston Red Sox great Bobby Doerr at 99; Yankees executive Gene Michael; star center fielder Jimmy Piersall, whose psychiatri­c problems were chronicled in the movie “Fear Strikes Out”; and Steve Palermo, whose umpiring ended in 1991 after he was shot in a parking lot.

Basketball said goodbye to two NCAA-winning coaches in Jud Heathcote of Michigan State and Rollie Massimino of Villanova; two NBA executives who presided over champions in Jerry Krause of Michael Jordan’s Bulls and Jack McCloskey of the “Bad Boy” Pistons; and Gene Conley, a twosport star who played for NBA and World Series champions.

Boxing’s Jake LaMotta died at 95. Also gone at 94 was Lou Duva, who handled 19 champs and seemed to be around boxing forever.

Tennis grieved for Pancho Segura, a champion of the 1940s and ’50s who coached Jimmy Connors; and Jana Novotna, the 1998 Wimbledon champ.

Golf said farewell to Roberto De Vicenzo, the Argentine whose incorrect scorecard might have cost him the 1968 Masters. Hockey is without Milt Schmidt, the center who led the Bruins to two Stanley Cups, and Johnny Bower, the goalie who led the Maple Leafs to four Stanley Cups and played until 45.

Horse racing marked the deaths of Hall of Fame trainers LeRoy Jolley and Jack Van Berg as well as Penny Chenery, 95, the owner of 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretaria­t.

In auto racing, the voice at Indy of Jim Nabors was silenced. U.S. bobsled star Steven Holcomb was found dead at 37 in his room at an Olympic training center. And sports writing lost some grace with the death of Frank Deford, the Sports Illustrate­d essayist.

Trio of centenaria­ns

A handful of centenaria­ns passed: John Kundla (101), the first coach in Lakers history; high school basketball coach Lewis D’Antoni (103), the father of Rockets coach Mike D’Antoni; and Margaret Bergmann Lambert (103), a German-Jewish high jumper banned from Hitler’s 1936 Olympics.

He was doing what he loved, exploring the skies. Then, less than 20 minutes after takeoff, his plane was down in the Gulf of Mexico and he died at 40.

Halladay, the son of a corporate pilot, loved to fly. It was in his bones. And so was pitching.

He was an eight-time All-Star and a Cy Young winner in each league during his 12 seasons with Toronto and four with Philadelph­ia. He had a career record of 203-105. There was that riveting season in 2010 when he threw a perfect game in May and a no-hitter in the NL Division Series for the Phillies, only the second postseason no-hitter in major league history.

Halladay, a 6-6 righthande­r, was a throwback to another era. He didn’t care if his long innings shortened his career. Giving his fullest was what mattered.

Tragic cautionary tale

It could have been so easy. After all, this was his job: catch passes from Tom Brady, throw some good blocks, draw on his $40 million contract and share in the bounty of the New England Patriots.

Instead, it went all wrong for the star tight end. Hernandez died at 27, found hanging by a bedsheet in his Massachuse­tts prison cell.

His was a grim tale that began with so much football promise and then spun wildly with fights, drugs and finally a murder conviction. Legal entangleme­nts followed his death, along with the medical determinat­ion he was afflicted with severe degenerati­ve brain disease.

Hernandez was cut by the Patriots in 2013 right after he was charged with murdering a semipro football player. In 2015, he was sentenced to life without parole.

Two years later, in another case, he was acquitted in the drive-by killings of two men in Boston. Days after the acquittal, Hernandez was dead, his family and friends baffled. He died the same day his former teammates celebrated another Super Bowl title at the White House.

Schoolyard legend

Before there was Dr. J or Magic or Michael, there was the Hawk.

Hawkins brought a pulsating, kinetic energy to the court, an aesthetic that is the currency of today’s game. His dazzling play took root in New York City schoolyard­s, his legend barreling across the boroughs like an express train.

But Hawkins, with all the soaring and swooping that would lead to the Hall of Fame, never got the platform he deserved until too late.

Hawkins, who died at 75, was wrongly implicated in a college pointshavi­ng scandal. The 6-8 forward went to the University of Iowa in 1960 but never played there. He was falsely accused of ties to gamblers. Not for nothing was his biography titled “Foul.”

The NBA blackballe­d him until a lawsuit forced its hand. Hawkins played with the Harlem Globetrott­ers and elsewhere before getting to the NBA with the fledgling Suns. He was an All-Star four straight seasons, averaging 24.6 points and 10.4 rebounds in his first. He also played for the Lakers and Hawks before retiring in 1976.

“People to this day,” he once said, “ask me if I was bitter — and I tell them the same thing: ‘Hell, no.’ I’m just glad I was able to play.”

Put Irish back on top

At Notre Dame, where football is in the school’s marrow, it is known as the “Holy Trinity” of coaches. First came Knute Rockne, then Frank Leahy and then Parseghian.

He brought the Fighting Irish back to the top, winning titles in 1966 and 1973. Notre Dame was in a barren stretch when Parseghian got there in 1964 — a 2-7 record the year before. He changed things in a hurry, not only liberating the offense but getting his players to believe in what they could do.

Parseghian retired at just 51 and died at 94.

 ??  ?? Parseghian
Parseghian
 ??  ?? Hernandez
Hernandez
 ??  ?? Novotna
Novotna
 ??  ?? Broyles
Broyles
 ??  ?? Halladay
Halladay
 ??  ?? Hawkins
Hawkins
 ??  ?? Enberg
Enberg
 ??  ?? Nobis
Nobis

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