Los Gatos Weekly Times

Bay Area NFL writer Soliday dies at 78

The area's `most underrated sports writer,' he covered the Raiders, 49ers

- By Jerry Mcdonald and Jon Becker Staff writers

Friends, family and former colleagues are mourning the loss of Bill Soliday, who kept Bay Area readers entertaine­d and informed for 40 years.

Soliday, who worked for the Hayward Daily Review, Oakland Tribune and this news organizati­on from 1968 through 2008, died Feb. 1 at age 78 after a twoyear battle with cancer.

Best known for his work covering the Oakland Raiders and the NFL starting in 1969, Soliday was also a columnist and versatile journalist who wrote with humor and perspectiv­e as well as tackling serious subjects and issues.

He covered the 49ers when the Raiders moved to Los Angeles, then returned to the Raiders beat upon their return to Oakland in 1995.

Carl Steward, a former Bay Area News Group columnist, called Soliday “perhaps the most underrated sports writer in the Bay Area . . . he had an engaging style, a crackling sense of humor, a wisdom grounded in personal experience and loads of raw perspectiv­e.”

Soliday became the Raiders' beat writer in 1969, which coincided with John Madden's first season as head coach.

“John Madden used to sit in his office with a handful of writers every day after practice and just shoot the (bull),” Soliday told the Napa Valley-register in 2016. “He would tell you what he really thought. It was understood it was off the record, and he trusted us. I learned more about football in those years than at any time since.”

Late Raiders owner Al Davis, who rarely talked with the media, called Soliday “Billy” and consented to a 21/2-hour interview when the Alameda Newspaper Group named Davis the most significan­t sports figure of the 20th century.

The following was Soliday's lead paragraph in a long-form story on Davis:

“He is a mover. A shaker. A rebel. An iconoclast. A plaintiff. A defendant. Some say he is the football version of a saint. Others say scoundrel.”

Davis had the story laminated and placed on a wall outside the door of his office at team headquarte­rs in Alameda.

Soliday covered 19 Super Bowls and was the beat writer for eight world champions — three with the Raiders and five with the 49ers.

A member of the Board of Directors of the Pro Football Writers of America, Soliday estimated he had traveled 1.5 million miles covering the NFL.

With a deep bass voice one colleague compared him to actor James Earl Jones, Soliday could be passionate and appear gruff but was generous with his time and wisdom with young writers.

“I was thoroughly intimidate­d by him,” said Matt Maiocco of NBC Sports Bay Area and a former co-worker. “It didn't take long for me to get to know him and discover the real Bill Soliday.

Under his rough exterior was a kind, fun-loving person who would have done anything for me or any of his friends and colleagues.”

Soliday kept copious and meticulous notes and brought volumes of research material on game days in addition to an oversized keyboard for his laptop.

He even used a stopwatch for the hang-time of punters, something he started when Ray Guy, a future Hall of Famer, joined the Raiders.

Always on the lookout for a story, Soliday one day saw Raiders backup quarterbac­k Wade Wilson injecting himself in the locker room. As a diabetic himself, Soliday later approached Wilson and ended up with a story on the challenges and dangers of playing in the NFL with diabetes.

Some of the best stories involving Soliday never made it into print. He once inadverten­tly knocked over Green Bay Packers coach Vince Lombardi at Kezar Stadium. Another time, 49ers defensive end Charles Haley pushed Soliday away from an interview scrum, the two went nose-to-nose. Haley backed down when Soliday, measuring every word, said, `Go ahead! Buy my house!”

Former Mercury News columnist Mark Purdy may have summed up Soliday best when he said, “It would have been far more interestin­g to have players write about Bill and his personalit­y than vice-versa. He was a singular and unforgetta­ble colleague.”

Soliday is survived by his wife Martha and adult children Heather and Kent. Plans for a celebratio­n of life are pending.

 ?? STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Bill Soliday, in driver's seat, covered 19Super Bowls during his 40years of covering the NFL. He and his colleague Carl Steward, top, go to Pasadena for Super Bowl XXI in 1987.
STAFF ARCHIVES Bill Soliday, in driver's seat, covered 19Super Bowls during his 40years of covering the NFL. He and his colleague Carl Steward, top, go to Pasadena for Super Bowl XXI in 1987.
 ?? COURTESY ?? Bill Soliday, an award-winning NFL reporter who entertaine­d readers of the Hayward Daily Review, Oakland Tribune and this organizati­on for 40 years, has passed away. He was 78.
COURTESY Bill Soliday, an award-winning NFL reporter who entertaine­d readers of the Hayward Daily Review, Oakland Tribune and this organizati­on for 40 years, has passed away. He was 78.

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