Between the Bylines:: The Life, Love & Loss of Los Angeles's Most Colorful Sports Journalist
Doug Krikorian beat deadlines and made headlines for more than four decades as the Los Angeles region's most compelling sportswriter. His brash and combative style featured in the Los Angeles Herald Examiner," then in the "Long Beach Press-Telegram" and on radio with partner Joe McDonnell, profiled a wide range of athletes. Krikorian's penetrating coverage shaped fans' perceptions of Wilt Chamberlain, Tommy Lasorda, Muhammad Ali, Georgia Frontiere and many others. But his hard edge was softened through his marriage to a British physical therapist named Gillian, whose heroic battle with an incurable disease also broke his spirit. He picked up the pieces to do what he's always done best—tell the story. Now he recounts that harrowing love story—and more—from a life spent in sportswriting."
1114146507
Between the Bylines:: The Life, Love & Loss of Los Angeles's Most Colorful Sports Journalist
Doug Krikorian beat deadlines and made headlines for more than four decades as the Los Angeles region's most compelling sportswriter. His brash and combative style featured in the Los Angeles Herald Examiner," then in the "Long Beach Press-Telegram" and on radio with partner Joe McDonnell, profiled a wide range of athletes. Krikorian's penetrating coverage shaped fans' perceptions of Wilt Chamberlain, Tommy Lasorda, Muhammad Ali, Georgia Frontiere and many others. But his hard edge was softened through his marriage to a British physical therapist named Gillian, whose heroic battle with an incurable disease also broke his spirit. He picked up the pieces to do what he's always done best—tell the story. Now he recounts that harrowing love story—and more—from a life spent in sportswriting."
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Between the Bylines:: The Life, Love & Loss of Los Angeles's Most Colorful Sports Journalist

Between the Bylines:: The Life, Love & Loss of Los Angeles's Most Colorful Sports Journalist

Between the Bylines:: The Life, Love & Loss of Los Angeles's Most Colorful Sports Journalist

Between the Bylines:: The Life, Love & Loss of Los Angeles's Most Colorful Sports Journalist

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Overview

Doug Krikorian beat deadlines and made headlines for more than four decades as the Los Angeles region's most compelling sportswriter. His brash and combative style featured in the Los Angeles Herald Examiner," then in the "Long Beach Press-Telegram" and on radio with partner Joe McDonnell, profiled a wide range of athletes. Krikorian's penetrating coverage shaped fans' perceptions of Wilt Chamberlain, Tommy Lasorda, Muhammad Ali, Georgia Frontiere and many others. But his hard edge was softened through his marriage to a British physical therapist named Gillian, whose heroic battle with an incurable disease also broke his spirit. He picked up the pieces to do what he's always done best—tell the story. Now he recounts that harrowing love story—and more—from a life spent in sportswriting."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781626190047
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 03/05/2013
Series: Sports
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.16(w) x 8.38(h) x 0.68(d)

About the Author

A former sports writer and columnist for the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner from 1968 until its demise in 1989, Doug Krikorian became the sports columnist for the Long Beach Press-Telegram for two more decades. He has been a sports-radio talk show host for Los Angeles radio stations and ESPN Radio, and a sports commentator on L.A. television. Fourteen-time NBA All-Star Jerry West led the Los Angeles Lakers to the 1972 NBA crown. He is enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame and was named one of the NBA's 50 Greatest Players. Known as Mr. Clutch, " his silhouette adorns the NBA logo. During West's tenure as general manager, the Lakers won eight NBA championships."

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

I don't believe in serendipity and view as mountebanks those who claim to have powers of clairvoyancy. But what occurred that long-ago day that brought Gillian into my life does make one idly wonder about unexplainable phenomena.

It was the middle of a Friday afternoon, and I had walked to the Crystal Palace railway station from a nearby athletic facility where I had just finished interviewing an American football player. There were two benches on the station's platform, and I noticed one was crowded with young students, while another had only one person on it, a woman engrossed in a newspaper. I decided to sit by her.

My hair, clothes and shoes were damp from the rain that had been relentlessly persistent during the three days I had been in London.

I sat quietly, looked straight ahead and waited for the train that would take me back to Victoria Station. It was due in fifteen minutes, and one did arrive at the designated time but zoomed past without stopping.

In frustration, I turned to the woman next to me and asked, "What happened?"

"The train that was supposed to stop was canceled, and the next one won't come for another forty-five minutes," she said in a thick English accent as she peered up at the overhead board that displayed the train schedules.

The woman was adorned in an overcoat, and she had long, thick brown hair that hung to her shoulders and framed a youthful face that I immediately noticed was without makeup.

She returned to reading the paper — I believe it was The Guardian — and I cast a sidelong glance in her direction, instinctively curious about the shape of the anatomy that was camouflaged by her overcoat.

Then I noticed a revealing characteristic. Her fingers were long, thin and delicate, even elegant. Piano fingers. Angelic fingers. Fingers that indicated to me that perhaps I should engage her in a conversation.

Not that I had any ulterior motives toward this stranger who still was seated beside me only because of a train foul-up. A long, deteriorating relationship I had been in had just ended, and the last thing on my mind that dreary day was pursuing a woman, which actually is quite ironic since pursuing women had been such a dominant part of my life since the breakup of my first marriage more than a decade earlier.

"You from London?" I asked in commencing a dialogue.

There was no hesitation in her answer, which indicated to me she was willing to be sociable.

"Oh, I've lived here a few years, but originally I'm from Hartlepool," she said.

"Where in tarnation is Hartlepool?" I wondered.

"It's up in the northeast near Newcastle," she replied.

"I thought Newcastle was a beer, not a city," I said, trying to be humorous.

She smiled amiably.

I asked her what she did for a living, and she told me she was a physical therapist with the National Health Service.

"That's why I'm here in Crystal Palace today because I worked with some senior citizens in the swimming pool," she said. "What do you do?"

"I'm a newspaperman from Los Angeles," I replied.

"That's interesting. What brought you to Crystal Palace?'"

I paused momentarily in reflection and peered vacantly ahead, retracing the factors that had led to my coming to this faraway land, to my being at this spot at this moment in what was pure happenstance.

It was inconceivable earlier in the week that I would have been present. It was a mere three days ago that I was having lunch at a popular restaurant, Phil Trani's, in the California beach city of Long Beach with a couple of pals, Van Barbieri and Don Kramer, and hadn't the faintest notion at the start of it that later that afternoon I would be on a flight to London.

I was in a downcast mood that day because of my recent peripheral involvement in radio that had ended badly. At the time, I was naïve about the industry, was unaware of its maddening unpredictability, its ephemeral nature, its rampant personnel upheavals.

I long had been in the newspaper business, which in those pre-Internet, pre-iPad, pre-Twitter, pre-Facebook, pre-iPhone days was a thriving entity and not in the moribund state it is today.

I had been active in chronicling sports on the Southern California landscape for several decades, first for the Hearst-owned Los Angeles Herald Examiner, where I worked from May 1968 until it ceased publication on November 2, 1989, and then with the Long Beach Press-Telegram.

I never even had actively sought employment in radio and savored my job as a sports columnist covering Olympic Games, Super Bowls, World Series, Rose Bowls, NBA Finals, world championship fights and all the high-profile athletic events in the Los Angeles area.

I had become known for expressing strong, irreverent opinions in print — I had rows across the years with such American sports figures as Wilt Chamberlain, John Wooden, Joe Namath, Al Davis, Carroll Rosenbloom, Howard Cosell and countless others — and was a frequent guest on many of the Los Angeles radio and TV sports shows.

One of the radio stations I often was on was 710-AM, KMPC, which then was owned by the one-time cowboy film star Gene Autry. It long had been carrying the games of the Angels — Autry also owned that Major League Baseball team — and the Los Angeles Rams, but it was a station geared mostly to music.

I guess I had made a favorable impression with the KMPC management because it offered me a job when the station was set to change its format and become the first twenty-four-hour sports talk outlet in LA.

I was set to become a co-host with an outspoken local radio voice, Joe McDonnell, and we were going to work the midday shift, followed in drive time by Jim Lampley, the HBO fight announcer.

I actually was looking forward to the opportunity, not only for the increased visibility it would bring me in the LA media market, but also for the increased financial benefits.

But the week before our show was to debut, KMPC management suddenly decided to replace me as McDonnell's partner with the former Los Angeles Raider star tight end Todd Christensen.

"I hold the distinction of being the first person ever fired in radio before even going on the air," I had told Barbieri and Kramer.

Which, of course, was not true.

In the many years I would go on to be active in radio, I'd see a lot of people offered jobs — only for the offers to be withdrawn at the last moment for various reasons, most of them nonsensical.

"Don't be too down ... You still have your job with the newspaper, which is your real job," said Barbieri, a former fight publicist for Aileen Eaton at the old Olympic Auditorium in downtown Los Angeles who also had once served as an aide-de-camp for the Hall of Fame football coach George Allen, who long had been a close friend of mine.

"Working two jobs takes too much time anyway," said Kramer, a Runyonesque character and lifelong ticket scalper known by the sobriquet "Donnie No Win" for his peerless knack for making unsuccessful sporting wagers.

Then Kramer, given to mindless pronouncements, said, "Why don't you go fly to London to cool off ?"

For once, Donnie No Win made sense.

Why not? I thought to myself.

"For the first time in your life, Kramer, you said something that isn't outlandish," I responded, even though what Donnie No Win said was typically outlandish. "Good idea. I think I am going to take your advice and go to London later this afternoon. Why not? I've never been there even though I've visited Europe many times. I think I could use a week off to clear my head. I know there will be no problem from the paper getting the time off since I have a lot of vacation time saved up. And I already have a round-trip ticket."

"How's that?'" wondered Barbieri.

"I have one of those buddy passes, a non-revenue ticket in which I only have to pay for the tax, which is usually less than $200," I replied. "Airline employees get them, and mine came from a friend who works for Delta. The guy's allotted sixteen a year, and I always wind up buying five or six for travel in this country and abroad. And I always kept one in hand in case I want to fly somewhere quickly like I'm now going to do today."

I checked my watch. It was 1:30 p.m. Van Barbieri gave me a puzzled look.

"You're kidding, aren't you ... You're really not going to go to London today?" he said.

"Yeah, I am," I said.

And within four hours on that fateful Tuesday in early April, I was on a Virgin Atlantic flight to London and even wound up being seated in business class because the buddy pass allowed for such an upgrade (Delta Airlines had a co-share with VA in those days).

I checked into the Park Lane Hilton across from Hyde Park late the following morning, and the first couple of days I visited the Tower of London, Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, Madame Tussauds, Harrods and a lot of pubs. I also went on jogs at Hyde Park and Regent Park and found myself wildly amused by the salacious London tabloids.

On my third day in the city, I noted an item in one of the sports sections that a former Long Beach State receiver, Sean Foster, was a member of the London Monarchs. The Monarchs were in the World League of American Football, which now is extinct but then had teams in several major European cities and was being subsidized by the National Football League.

I already had become slightly bored and figured I'd mix in some work — Foster would make for a nice Long Beach story — on a day I had nothing planned until the evening. I reached a person in the Monarchs' public relations office, found out the team trained at the Crystal Palace Athletic Fitness Center and had the fellow set up an interview for me with Foster at 1:00 p.m. I had no idea how to get to Crystal Palace, but the PR guy told me what train to take, and I made it there without any trouble.

After the session with Sean Foster had ended, I trudged back to the railway station to return to the hotel. I was set to be picked up at 6:00 p.m. by the prominent boxing and track writer of the London Sun, Colin Hart, who was going to drive me to his home for dinner.

And now I was seated next to this young lady who had just asked me the reason for my being at this south London location at three o'clock on a Friday afternoon.

"I just got finished interviewing an American football player who went to college in the city where I work," I finally responded.

She nodded, and we continued to talk about various trivial matters until our train arrived, whereupon we both got on the same carriage and sat in seats across the aisle from each other.

We resumed our conversation as the train made a couple of stops, and then, as it slowed for Streatham Hill, she said, "Well, it was nice talking to you, but I'll be getting off here."

"Oh yes, nice talking to you also," I said.

We both looked at each other warmly, and then she started to rise.

And strangely, I felt like rising also and accompanying her off the train. But that was absurd because I didn't even know her name, and anyway, she couldn't have been more than twenty-two or twenty-three (I'd find out later she was twenty-five); and anyway, I was too old at forty-eight; and anyway, I'd be back in LA in a couple days; and anyway, for a pleasant change, I hadn't been seeking any female companionship on this trip and had been determined to keep it that way.

But my instincts took over, and suddenly, I found myself saying, "Gosh, I don't even know your name."

"Gillian," she answered.

"I'm Doug," I said.

The train was braking to a stop, but I didn't want to stop my interaction with Gillian, and I simply said, "Listen, I'm going to be here in London until Tuesday. Maybe we can get together for lunch or dinner."

"Sure."

"Can I have your phone number?"

"Sure."

The train came to a stop, and I hurriedly pulled out my pen and notepad as she gave me the number.

"I'll call you tomorrow."

"OK."

We shook hands softly, she disembarked and I figured it would be the final time I'd see Gillian.

I was wrong.

CHAPTER 2

I had an enjoyable time that evening with Colin Hart and his wife, Cindy. She cooked a superb dinner that featured boiled beef, and Hart, a Fleet Street veteran I had come across many times in Las Vegas at major title fights, proved to be a superb raconteur.

But what made that evening even more pleasurable was the unexpected experience I had earlier in the day at the Crystal Palace train station. I told Colin and his wife about it, and I remember Colin saying to me, "Looks like you met your future wife." We all laughed at such a ridiculous statement.

I knew nothing about Gillian except that she had flawlessly textured fingers and worked for the NHS and resided in Streatham Hill and came from some place called Hartlepool. Yet I found myself that night thinking about our unlikely meeting and wondering, even hoping, we'd meet again over the weekend.

I called Gillian late the next morning and asked her to have dinner with me that evening.

"Oh, I can't because I'm going to a friend's birthday party tonight," she said.

I figured such a response was her gentle way of letting me know she wasn't interested in getting together and that she had simply been courteous the previous day when she had given me her phone number without hesitation.

But just as I was set to quickly end the conversation to spare her, as well as myself, any further discomfort, I heard her say, "But I'm free on Sunday."

I was startled. Maybe she really did have a birthday party to attend. Maybe she wasn't brushing me off.

"Sure, anytime would do," I responded quickly.

"I'll meet you in front of the National Gallery at Trafalgar Square. Would 10:00 a.m. be all right?"

"Certainly."

After going on a lengthy run at Hyde Park, traipsing around Piccadilly Circus, visiting a couple of pubs and taking a leisurely afternoon nap, I had an early dinner that Saturday evening at a Chinese restaurant and went to sleep by 11:00 p.m. so I'd be well rested for whatever was on the agenda Sunday.

Not that I was even certain Gillian would actually show up to meet me at the National Gallery. I had been single long enough to know the vexing capriciousness of these types of first-time dates and that being stood up was always a distinct possibility.

So when the phone rang in my hotel room at eight o'clock that Sunday morning and I heard Gillian's voice at the other end when I answered it, I figured she was calling to tell me she was canceling for one illegitimate reason or another.

"I'm sorry, Douglas," she began, and I knew what was coming next. "But I can't be there at 10:00 a.m. I didn't get home from the birthday party until three o'clock in the morning ..."

My heart sank. The gleeful anticipation I had felt since meeting Gillian had instantly disappeared and been replaced by disappointment.

But then, to my surprise, I could hear her saying, "I just woke up. Do you mind if we push it back to twelve o'clock?"

"No problem at all," I said coolly in an attempt to disguise my relief. "I'll be there at noon in front of the National Gallery. Looking forward to it."

I hung up, sighed deeply and shrieked in ecstasy, "Yeah, baby!'"

Unbelievable!

This young lady I didn't even know calls to apologize for coming late when I figured she was calling to tell me she wasn't even coming.

I arrived at Trafalgar Square at 11:15 a.m., and naturally, it was drizzling. I walked slowly around the crowded area gazing vacantly at the Nelson Column and statues of other dead English war heroes and began thinking about the absurdity of the situation.

Here I was, on an impulsive whim, in a foreign country thousands of miles away from home waiting for a young woman I had known for barely an hour. What would we do for the remainder of the day? Why did I arrive forty-five minutes early? Would she still even show up?

Noon came, and there was no Gillian. Ten minutes passed and still no sign of her. I began to get slightly agitated. Remember, those were the pre- cellphone days when plausible explanations for tardiness could not easily be communicated.

But then, at around 12:15 p.m., I spotted her walking briskly across the square toward the National Gallery and hurriedly went over to meet her.

"Oh, I'm so sorry I'm late ... the train was delayed," she said.

"No problem whatsoever ... We already know about train delays," I said, as I clasped her right hand gently and looked into her expressive brown eyes that I found unusually captivating.

I noticed once again that her face was unmarred by makeup and also noticed that her lips were full and that she had a perfectly formed chin below teeth that were in need of braces, which she would be fitted with shortly after we got married.

There was no flash allure about Gillian, but I realized as I surveyed her for the first time in a more discerning manner that she was one of those women whose lack of name-brand apparel and upscale accoutrements and garish cosmetic enhancements belied a natural beauty oftentimes not easily detected by casual observance.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Between the Bylines"
by .
Copyright © 2013 Doug Krikorian.
Excerpted by permission of The History Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Foreword, by Jerry West,
Special Acknowledgement,
Prologue,
April 1998 (A Dark Omen),
September 1999 (The Revelation),
April 2000 (The Diagnosis),
May 2000 (The Metastasis),
June 2000 (The Treatment),
July 2000 (The Sexual Attempt),
December 2000 (Family Illnesses),
March 2001 (Brain Surgery),
July 2001 (The Spiritual Supporter),
August 2001 (The City of Hope),
September 2001 (Hospice Care),
The Final Day,
The Aftermath,
Epilogue,
About the Author,

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