sexta-feira, 17 de fevereiro de 2012

Gary Carter was a local (paper) boy who made good

<a href=Gary Carter, 1954 - 2012" border="0" width="580" height="384" />

Manager Gary Carter of the U.S. team looks on during the XM Satellite Radio All-Star Futures Game at Pittsburgh's PNC Park in 2006. (Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

"February made me shiver, with every paper I'd deliver. Bad news on the doorstep …"

Don McLean sang those words in his classic song, "American Pie," as he reflected on the plane-crash death of rock star Buddy Holly.

Bad news hit the step again Thursday with sad news of Gary Carter's death, from cancer, at age 57.

February, again, made us quiver.

Long ago, Carter used to deliver the news, good and bad, on his bike.

You may remember Carter as a Hall of Fame catcher for the Montreal Expos and New York Mets and a signature player in the classic 1986 World Series.

I also remember him as Gary Carter, "former Fullerton News Tribune paper boy."

I was born in Fullerton, attended college in the city and started my career, in 1980, at the old Fullerton News Tribune (later modernized to Daily News Tribune).

Local heroes were big deals to newspapers back then, and my sports editor, Bob Lenard, had a standing order with Carter, who had skyrocketed out of Sunny Hills High to major league success with the Expos.

Jackson Browne, the singer-songwriter, also attended Sunny Hills, but we let the entertainment section brag about him.

Every Associated Press story I remember coming over the wires mentioning Carter's exploits was amended for our readers with the addendum, "former News Tribune paper boy."

Carter wasn't just a catcher, he was a thrower.

He was our paper boy!

He took the route over from his older brother Gordy and approached his job the same way he did as a big league catcher.

Carter explained his thought process in a 2007 book, "Behind the Glory," which traced the upbringing of 20 famous baseball players.

"I was going to be the best paper boy ever," Carter explained in the book. "I used my Sting-Ray bike and got the papers there after school. People know I porched everything. No roofs, no lawns. I stopped the bike and nailed it. And if I ever missed, I would go pick it up and do it right."

Once a paper boy for the sister-town La Habra Star, I tried to apply the same ethic to my daily route, with half of Carter's arm strength.

Does anyone even remember there used to be paper boys? Well, there were, and if there was a Gutenberg Hall of Fame for delivery boys, Carter would be in it.

People have no idea how much technique is involved in properly folding a newspaper and making it fly straight. Your fold depended on how heavy the paper was that day. A thin paper required a double bend while a heavier one needed only one crease before banding and bag stuffing.

Manager Gary Carter, Gary Carter, Fullerton News Tribune, Montreal Expos, Fullerton, New York Mets

Latimes.com

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