Heralded sportswriter Sid Hartman dies at age 100
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[October 22, 2020]
Sid Hartman, the longtime columnist for the Star Tribune of
Minneapolis and a noted booster for sports in the region, died
Sunday. He was 100 years old.
Hartman played a big role in drawing professional sport teams to
Minnesota, going back to 1947, when he paid $15,000 to the owner of
the Detroit Gems of the NBA to bring the team to town.
While still a newspaperman, he also served as the de facto general
manager of the renamed Minneapolis Lakers, who, led by the 6-foot-10
George Mikan, won the NBA title in 1949 and five in total before the
franchise moved to Los Angeles in 1960. Hartman left the
organization three years before the move.
The prolific Hartman hardly slowed with age. He produced 21,235
bylined stories in his career, according to a Star Tribune staffer's
count. Those stories began in 1944, and the last one came in
Sunday's sports section. It was his 119th this year, according to
the newspaper.
"I have followed the advice that if you love what you do, you never
work a day in your life. Even at 100, I can say I still love what I
do,'' Hartman wrote in a column that ran on his 100th birthday on
March 15.
In a statement Sunday night, Major League Baseball commissioner Rob
Manfred called Hartman "a singular figure of the Minnesota sports
scene throughout the entire history of the Twins franchise, and a
friend to so many throughout our National Pastime. Appropriately, he
was member number one for the Baseball Writers' Association of
America at the time of his passing, as well as the organization's
longest tenured member."
The Minnesota Vikings said in a statement, "Our hearts are broken
with the news of Sid Hartman's passing. It is nearly impossible to
put into words what Sid meant to the sports world and to Minnesota."
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"He was an iconic sports figure, a tenacious reporter and a tireless
advocate for his beloved state," the Vikings' statement continued.
"His doggedness and work ethic were unmatched, but it was Sid's
ability to nurture relationships that truly set him apart. He was a
confidant and a loyal friend to countless athletes and coaches
across the country."
Adam Thielen, a wide receiver for the Vikings, said he "just heard a
story from (Hartman) the other day, and he was obviously a big part
of this organization and was always around the facility, so we are
grieving during this time."
Hartman was born in Minneapolis on March 15, 1920, and he worked for
newspapers in his hometown for most of his life, according to the
Star Tribune. At the time of his death he still was writing three or
four columns a week.
--Field Level Media
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