[剪報] Auerbach adds to his legacy
Auerbach adds to his legacy
Eight honored at Sports Museum
By John Powers, Globe Staff, 6/13/2003
For Red Auerbach, who may need his own Smithsonian Museum wing to
stash his rings, plaques, medals, and honorary degrees, last night's
lifetime achievement award from The Sports Museum during a FleetCenter
ceremony was the latest of half a century's worth of awards. ''Red's
got a statue that the pigeons are already doing damage to,'' cracked
Tom Heinsohn. ''Does he need any more honors?''
But for the rest of last night's honorees - Heinsohn, Phil Esposito,
Steve Grogan, Luis Tiant, Mary Pratt, Don Gillis and Tim Horgan - being
named a `legacy' of the museum was a highlight of a lifetime.
''This is a huge thing for me,'' said Esposito, the former Bruin whose
number 7 hangs in the rafters. ''I have a special place in my heart for
this town. I never wanted to leave here. It was the best time of my life.''
So it was, too, for their chroniclers - Gillis, the original sports
anchor who did play-by-play for all four professional teams (`I'm a
lucky bugger.') and Horgan, the lyrical Boston Herald sports columnist.
''I don't know what a legend is,'' Horgan said, ''But it's good. I can
tell you that.''
For two nostalgic hours, while their film clips and photos were flashed
on the big screen, the legacies saw the clock rolled back for decades.
Here was Heinsohn with his crewcut and his hook shot, Tiant winding up
on the Fenway mound like an elaborate 17th-century clock, and Grogan
dashing and dodging on the Foxborough turf.
''I didn't have any idea what I was doing,'' said Grogan, who was just
hoping to make the Patriots roster in 1975 - and became a mid-season
starter. ''That's why I was running all the time. But I had fun.''
Mary Pratt, who lived the Title IX dream three decades before there was
a law, remembered playing softball on the concrete floor of the Boston
Garden. From there, she became a pioneer of women's professional baseball
and a role model for generations. ''Those were five happy summers,'' she
said. ''But the most important thing is the 48 years I taught school.''
For some of the honorees, like Heinsohn and Esposito, being back on
Causeway Street unleashed a flood of nostalgia. ''I first played here
in 1953 with Holy Cross,'' recalled Heinsohn. ''In those days, more
people came to the Holy Cross games here than were going to the Celtics.''
Esposito, a charter member of the Big Bad Bruins who won two Stanley
Cups, said the highlight of his career was having his number retired
here. ''When Ray Bourque took it off, I was speechless,'' he confessed.
Esposito's career didn't end here (the memory of him in a Ranger jersey
still seems a bad dream). ''But if anybody asks me for an autograph now,
I always send them a Boston picture,'' he said.
For Tiant, a Cuban emigre who finally returned to the island after more
than four decades, the Hub was his adopted home. ''You made me feel like
I never left my country,'' he said. ''You treated me with dignity,
respect, and love. You can't buy that with money.''
The man of the evening was the man who was here before all of them -
Auerbach, the 85-year-old Celtic patriarch whose MVPs now, he says,
are his cardiologist and urologist. He came here in 1950, a sharp-tongued
redhead from Brooklyn in argyle socks, built the world's most famous
basketball team and never left.
''Red nurtured all of us into believing we were basketball's Cosa
Nostra,'' said Heinsohn. ''The Celtics were `our thing'. We had pride
of authorship.''
Auerbach has spent so much time on Causeway Street that he probably
could reconstruct the old Garden from memory. He's certainly the only
man with lifetime cigar-smoking privileges on the premises.
''I'm going home to Kansas tomorrow and I'm going to tell everybody I
was at the same event as Red Auerbach,'' Grogan said. ''I'm going to
be the hero in town.''
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