Forever piloting the ship
- Share via
Roger Carlson may not have written the book on how to cover high
school sports, but for anyone who would care to look it up, he has,
at one time or another, at least written the story.
As a sportswriter wannabe who first walked into the Daily Pilot
newsroom as a college intern in 1985, there was no better guiding
light than the one he carried with lunch-pail consistency through all
the time I’ve known him and his work. On the frequent occasions I
sought a clue as to how to do this job, his thoughts and deeds helped
illuminate my path.
From the mechanics of charting football statistics to the
sometimes delicate task of presenting the glass half full, even when
there wasn’t a drop in sight, Roger Carlson’s aura touched my
keyboard nearly as often as my fingers.
For that, I am forever grateful. And for that, I find it hard,
just now, to concentrate on my computer screen.
I find my eyes drifting slightly to the right, where a window to
his office so often revealed the back of his head. It was there,
facing his computer, he burrowed through even the most imposing and
pressurized situations this deadline-driven business has to offer.
Yet, however deeply immersed in this work -- and if there is a
harder worker anywhere, I have yet to encounter him -- he would drop
everything to field a question, concern, or maybe just a trivial
anecdote that had been burning a hole in my notebook. To my delight,
these intrusions would sometimes induce a smile, or, better yet,
prompt him to share one of the myriad memories he had stored away in
a treasure trove of experience that covered parts of five decades.
In the days when our paper went to press in the same building,
Roger, like a child on Christmas eve, would insist on hanging around
the extra hour after deadline, so he could pluck a fresh copy of the
next day’s paper before heading home.
It was during these intervals, always after Friday night football
games as I recall, I would stick around, often leaving just the two
of us. Unburdened by the work that would begin anew the very next
morning, these late-night sessions often allowed for conversation
beyond shop talk, though there was plenty of that, too.
It was during these talks, I recall, Roger would share things
about his life, the funny thing his wife, Dorothea, said to him that
morning, or, if prodded effectively, how his grandchildren were doing
at school. He would also indulge my inquiries about Newport-Mesa
sports nostalgia, as well as other aspects of covering sports for a
living.
His job, of course, had less to do with making a living than
investing his life. Even in his 60s, Roger could outwork anyone in
the newsroom, working, during certain extended stretches, more
consecutive days than Cal Ripken.
Those days, now, are no longer cluttered by relentless deadlines,
temperamental computers, irrational reader complaints and the
challenge of filling pages 365 days a year with locally-generated
sports news. Now, Roger can fill his days with padding his DVD
collection, doting on those grandchildren, and even attending the
occasional Friday night football game, a passion made virtually
impossible by his desk duty for the last several years.
Here’s hoping you enjoy each of those richly deserved days, Roger,
knowing your legacy lives with those who, now, humbly carry the
torch.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.