No, you can’t go that quietly
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It came as no surprise. It was characteristic of a Roger Carlson move
if you knew him well. He isn’t into farewell tours, so when he packed
up and left -- retiring from the Daily Pilot after 35 years -- it was
really the perfect exit.
“You’ve got to quit some time,” he said in the comfort of his
living room, seemingly trying to decide, among the hundreds, which
DVD to watch that night.
His children told him he’s lucky. How many people can retire
completely and totally on their terms? He has now inherited countless
more hours with his grandchildren and lovely wife, Dorothea, who
shares every moment and every ache and every thrill that he has
endured in his adult life. They’re a beautiful couple.
But here in the trenches it will be different. Despite what Roger
or anybody else has said, the world, in fact, will never be the same.
While he chose to go out quietly, there’s no way our sports
department or anyone else at this newspaper can let it happen without
a proper send-off, because he was more than a sportswriter or sports
editor, but a Daily Pilot institution. They should name fields or
stadiums after him, his impact was so great. Today is a mere tribute.
Basking in retirement these days, Carlson, 66, decided enough was
enough, ending one of the most remarkable sportswriting careers ever
fashioned in the history of the business, not just because of his
length of time at one location -- a rarity in our line of work -- but
the integrity, dedication and downright magic that he exhibited
throughout his career.
Roger Carlson, you see, is more than a sports editor to me. He’s a
friend. A mentor. A father figure. My 2-year-old son’s name, Richard
Nolan Dunn, was arranged by him (it was going to be Nolan Richard).
When I first arrived at the Daily Pilot as a wide-eyed 19-year-old
stringer in the fall of 1981, Roger Carlson was the guy who took me
under his wing, sat down with me and taught me how to cover a
football game -- the stats we kept then, and now, for a high school
football game are far more involved than virtually any newspaper in
the country and, chances are, that will continue, largely because of
the traditions he established in his career, which started in 1964 as
a stringer, leading to a full-time position in January, 1968. By
1988, he was in charge and hired me as a full-time sports reporter.
He will be sorely missed around here. His ideas were endless.
There was the time in August, 1992 when our staff shaved our heads in
support of high school football players and what was happening in the
school district at the time (something about a lack of funds). There
was our Big Push weight-loss program in 1996 to help raise funds for
the district. The laughs will be missed in Roger’s office, but a
legend will live on. Thanks for the memories.
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