Quick: Who's the most accomplished?
Playing the name-a-great athlete game while thinking ahead to an otherwise unpromising Seattle sports weekend.
This weekend Seattle TV viewers will have a chance to observe the most accomplished athlete in the history of Minnesota. I’m tempted to put an asterisk here but that’s too much of a challenge for my limited online content-producing skills. If there were an asterisk it would be followed by: “Note that I wrote ‘most accomplished,’ not necessarily the same thing as ‘greatest.’”
Stumped? So was I when a similar scenario was presented to me a few years ago. The riddler was one Hugh Millen, former University of Washington quarterback, eight-season National Football League vet, and now peerless gridiron authority for several broadcast outlets. I made Millen’s acquaintance when he was taking some summer courses at the UW.
One afternoon, with no warning, he asked me to name “the most well-accomplished athlete in the history of Washington state sports.”
Facetiously I answered: “I’m tempted to say ‘Hugh Millen,’ if only for your gutty performance in the ’85 Orange Bowl. I was there that night.”
This obviously was wrong, if only for the fact that Jacques Robinson won the Orange Bowl most-valuable player award, making Robinson the probable only player in history who ever will have claimed the MVP plaudit in both the Orange and Rose Bowl (1982).
“Jacques Robinson?” I asked. Nope, Millen said, suggesting that I think about it a little longer. Clearly he already had an answer in mind.
Well, let’s talk basketball, I proposed. Elgin Baylor? Gary Payton? Football: Steve Largent? Maybe Steve Emtman would have qualified except that injuries prevented him from ever having much of a pro career. Hugh McIlhenny? The other sports: Fred Couples? Gerry Lindgren?
“Think baseball,” Millen suggested.
“Well,” I said, “Griffey, maybe. A-Rod or Ichiro someday. Randy Johnson?”
I was getting warmer in Millen’s estimation but I quickly started to cool.
“This is a trick question, right?” I finally said.
Sort of. Moreover, it’s eminently subjective especially when trying to compare career feats in different endeavors. Pound for pound, inch for inch, sport for sport, Seattle University’s Johnny O’Brien may have been the greatest jock ever to walk the local pavement.
Millen, who went to Seattle’s Roosevelt High School and knows a little about the city’s sports history, said O’Brien also was the wrong answer.
“Think baseball,” he said.
Well, I thought, clearly Mario Mendoza isn’t it.
“It’s a she, right? Lauren Jackson?”
Nope. So I gave up.
With apparent satisfaction, Millen then paused before opining that the most accomplished athlete in the history of Washington sports was (note that this was five years ago, before Griffey, Ich, A-Rod and R.J. had amassed all of their Hall of Fame stats) ...
It had been a trick question. Obviously I was tricked.
“Rickey played for the M’s,” I conceded, “but only for — what? — half an hour or so? It was his — what? — 20th team?”
Actually, Henderson only played for nine big-league teams, some of them several times. And, when you looked at his major-league career stats and accomplishments, it was hard to argue with Millen’s opinion.
That, here again, is the deal with sports: It’s subjective. Someone with whom I watched the Husky-Notre Dame game a few weeks ago supposed afterward that, had the UW “won the @#$%! thing,” it would’ve amounted to the greatest Dawg road victory in history. I disagreed, harking back to several Rose Bowls and, of course, the ’85 Orange Bowl, which I’d call the second-best Husky away win.
The greatest was about nine years later at the same stadium, when those of us on hand in Miami wondered at halftime how the Huskies, trailing 14-3, could possibly prevail against the vaunted Miami Hurricanes, especially given un-Seattle-like humidity of, seemingly, about 120 percent. Miami had won 58 straight but lost, the Dawgs putting up 22 points in five minutes, winning the suddenly dubbed Whammy in Miami 38-20.
Oh, yeah, and the most accomplished athlete in Minnesota history, on display this weekend? Obviously it isn’t George Mikan, Kirby Puckett, Bronko Nagurski, Patty Berg, or Chief Bender because they’re all dead.
The winner, even though he’s played just nine games for a Minnesota team, answers another trick question but it's a no-brainer:
It’s Packers, er, Jets, ahem, Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre. He and the Vikings host the Seahawks at 10 a.m. Sunday, on Channel 13 locally.
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Comments:
Posted Sat, Nov 21, 10:36 a.m. inappropriate
For the best player in Minnesota history, I'd argue for Willie Mays, who played AAA ball for the Minneapolis Millers in early 1951 before the Giants brought him up to the majors.
Sure, Favre is great, but there have been a lot of great quarterbacks in NFL history. There are only a handful of players that could be spoken of in the same breath as Mays.
Elgin Baylor, by the way, is another great athlete who had a brief stay in Minnesota, back when the Lakers were in the land of ten thousand lakes.