Things to Do in 1999
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In 1999, the year of a Freeway World Series, an Inglewood title game, an Anaheim Stanley Cup and a Los Angeles professional football team, I hereby resolve:
* To stop taking androstenedione before writing these leads.
* To inform the NBA fools that for all of baseball’s labor problems, it never really hurt itself until it canceled the playoffs and World Series.
* To remind the NBA fools that as long as they finish with a champion, even a short season is better than no season.
* To tell Alonzo Mourning to stop wearing those silly glasses.
* To meet Lindsay Davenport, the coolest professional athlete in town.
* To continue to avoid even the most chance meeting with Marcelo Rios.
* To miss the ESPYs.
* To see the puck.
* To remember, no matter how far he falls or invisible he becomes, Casey Martin.
* To forget John Daly.
* To learn to work the VCR.
* To actually sit down and watch ABC’s “Sports Night.”
* To walk out on any televised anything featuring Rebecca Lobo, whom I’ve seen everywhere except the basketball court, where she continually disappears.
* To work on writing longer, more detailed paragraphs to satisfy the poor readers who complain that my habit of writing short, sometimes two-word, sometimes-shorter paragraphs is annoying and distracting and not in the true spirit of the English language or the basics of journalism or even the written word.
* Not.
* To figure out what the “T.J.” stands for in the first name of my buddy T.J. Simers. (All of you kind letter writers out there, feel free to guess.)
* To learn to work the remote control.
* To ask Kevin Brown if his family’s seat belts still have to be fastened with tray tables in their folded and locked positions?
* To not ask Mo Vaughn, under any conditions, about Mr. Clean.
* To write a story explaining how Teemu Selanne can be a great guy and great player at the same time.
* To explain to Ryan Leaf that, no matter what his pandering bosses say, he is neither.
* To tell Randy Moss that it is not too late to become both.
* To thank Mark McGwire; I don’t want any more interviews or stories or anything, I just want to say thanks.
* To say muchas gracias to Sammy Sosa. It’s the least I can do, considering he learned another language to communicate with us.
* To find out exactly which NHL players trashed those Olympic village rooms last winter.
* To find out why the powerful captains of a billion-dollar industry couldn’t find out first.
* To make the offending players play for the Kings.
* To convince my fourth-grade daughter to enter the science fair with a project involving a Chia Pet.
* To party with David Wells.
* To work out with Picabo Street.
* To get my hair cut with Ricky Williams.
* To shave with Joe Torre.
* To shop for sunglasses with Jeff Gordon.
* To recruit in the hollers of Kentucky with Tubby Smith.
* To have dinner with Phil Luckett. But only if we decide upon the restaurant by flipping a coin.
* To play hooky with Cal Ripken.
* To spy on Dominique Moceanu’s dad.
* To learn to work more than two of the 55 buttons on the car stereo.
* To give one more standing ovation to Joe DiMaggio.
* To go somewhere they’re not afraid to boo Mike Tyson.
* To write my 17th comeback story about Darryl Strawberry. This one, I’m guessing, would be real.
* To end a traditional night of bedside reading and television watching by turning off the lights with a clap.
* To keep voting for Tony Perez for the baseball Hall of Fame.
* To offer to sell my vote to anyone for the price of a college education at a university near a mountain where I can have unlimited free skiing.
* To take out an ad in the San Diego newspapers with the words: “The Padre owner persuades taxpayers to build him a new stadium with the implied promise of a competitive team . . . then immediately allows his best players to leave town because he refuses to pay them market value. And it’s the Dodgers who are bad for baseball?”
* To check Hale Irwin for a pulse.
* To check Albert Belle for a conscience.
* To check Lawrence Taylor for just about everything.
* To write not one more word about the WNBA until its officials agree to take the best players from the now-defunct ABL, even if it means half of the WNBA’s current players lose their jobs. Wasn’t it just a couple of years ago that the WNBA billed itself as champions of inclusion? Now it must walk the walk.
* To remind R. Jay Soward that wide receivers have won the Heisman Trophy.
* To not let Chris Claiborne know that linebackers have not.
* To coach the Clippers (Do you have any better ideas? Do they?)
* To fly to south Florida, track down a University of Miami football player on the street or in the dorms, and tackle the living hell out of him.
* To dress more dolls, play more catch, putt more purple balls, give more hugs.
* To keep reading Jim Murray.
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