Here are a few links to Western North Carolina organizations providing assistance to those displaced by Hurricane Helene.
Western North Carolina Red Cross
Hunger and Health Coalition, Boone, NC
North Carolina Disaster Relief Fund
This Day In Sports History is part of the Sports History Network - The Headquarters For Your Favorite Sport's Yesteryear.
EPISODE SUMMARY
In 1992, Deion Sanders played with the Atlanta Braves and Atlanta Falcons in two different cities.
In 1991, Chip Beck became the second golfer to card a 59 during a PGA tour event.
In 1954, the Boston Bruins became the first NHL team to use the Zamboni ice resurfacing machine. It made it debut around this time.
And in 1972, the Ottawa Nationals played the Alberta Oilers in the first game in WHA history.
THIS DAY IN SPORTS BACKGROUND
Relive the greatest moments in sports every day of the year. From the triumphs to the tragedies, the first to do it to the last time it happened, the unbelievable to the strange, This Day in Sports History is a 365-day journey remembering those significant events that made a lasting impact.
Takeaways:
Mentioned in this episode:
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Hey, this is Steve White, the host of this day in sports history.
Steve White:The situation in western North Carolina remains dire for so many who lost everything.
Steve White:There are many who still are without power and water.
Steve White:Some are trapped by washed out roads with incredible people using horses and mules.
Steve White:To reach those who have no way out, consider a donation to the western North Carolina Red Cross or another local charity that's doing work to help those affected by by Hurricane Helene.
Steve White:Ive put links in the show notes if you would like a few suggestions.
Steve White:Thanks.
Steve White:And now heres todays episode.
Steve White:Dion says lets play two the Zamboni machine makes its debut and the World Hockey association premieres its this day in sports history.
Steve White: and on this day in: Steve White:In fact, maybe the only correlation is in music and what Phil Collins did for Live Aid.
Steve White:Deion Sanders was playing for both the Atlanta Falcons and the Atlanta Braves at this point.
Steve White:The Braves were in the National League Championship Series against Pittsburgh, a series that we will certainly talk about in a few days.
Steve White:And the Falcons were getting ready for a game in Miami in the week leading up to any NFL game.
Steve White:There's a lot of time spent on the practice field in the film room getting treatment, but Deion was not there.
Steve White:Games one and two of the National League Championship series were in Atlanta on Tuesday and Wednesday, with the Braves winning both of those.
Steve White:Sanders did not see any action in game one and had one at bat in game two.
Steve White:Games three, four and five were in Pittsburgh.
Steve White:Game four on Saturday night saw the Braves take a three one series lead.
Steve White:Sanders came in as a defensive substitute in the 7th, and again he had only one at bat.
Steve White:The game ended just before midnight, and within a half hour deion had hopped into a limo off to the airport.
Steve White:He and an entourage boarded a plane provided by Nike and they were wheels up in a few minutes.
Steve White: landed in Fort Lauderdale at: Steve White:and he headed to the team hotel, where he got a little bit of sleep before jumping on the team bus and heading out to the stadium.
Steve White:Falcons head coach Jerry Glanville was not overly happy about Deion's double duty this particular week.
Steve White:He understood what he was trying to do, but he would have certainly liked to have had his all pro cornerback at practice, Glanville shocked the pre game locker room when he announced, Deon, you're not starting.
Steve White:You come in here without practicing all week and fly in on a helicopter.
Steve White:I'm not starting you.
Steve White:The place went silent.
Steve White:But Glanville was not an idiot.
Steve White:He knew he couldn't keep Deion on the bench long, and he didn't.
Steve White:After the first Dolphins offensive play, Glanville turned to him, told him that his punishment for missing practice was over and he could go play.
Steve White:He didn't do anything spectacular in the game, but he did return a couple of kicks and even played a little bit of offense, catching a pass for nine yards.
Steve White:Miami won 20 117, and it was time now for Deion to get moving back to the airport.
Steve White: wheels down in Pittsburgh at: Steve White:his limo to the stadium got him there 15 minutes before the first pitch.
Steve White:He wasn't in the starting lineup, but that wasn't as big a shocker as earlier in the day.
Steve White:Braves general manager John Schierholz was also not a big fan of Deion's double dip.
Steve White:With a playoff roster of only 25 players, Scherholtz said he would have left prime off the post season roster if he'd known that his plans were to play for both the Falcons and the Braves ahead of time.
Steve White:Manager Bobby Cox was okay with it but did not insert Sanders into the game, and the Braves lost seven to one.
Steve White:Deion wasn't happy about not playing, and despite the herculean effort to be in two places at once, he made a point of saying that he didn't play two games in two different sports in two different cities on the same day.
Steve White:He merely suited up for two.
Steve White: On this day in: Steve White: as Vegas Invitational, and at: Steve White: on this day in: Steve White:Well, I'll be honest with you, I am not exactly sure it was this day.
Steve White:But it was around this day that the Boston Bruins became the first team in the NHL to use a Zamboni machine to resurface the ice.
Steve White: of their home opener for the: Steve White: e for the original Zamboni by: Steve White:And while that early model was a repurposed farm tractor and would be a far cry from what you see in today's NHL rinks.
Steve White:The basic functioning of the machine is still the same, and the Bruins were the first team to see the value in it and put it into good use.
Steve White: ing of hockey, on this day in: Steve White:The Ottawa Nationals opened up the new league with a home game in the Civic center against the Alberta Oilers on this night.
Steve White:The game was televised nationally in Canada, which was good because not many other people were going to see it.
Steve White:The Oilers had only managed to sell about 400 season tickets, and there was a worry that not all of those would show up.
Steve White:It wasn't going to look very good on television.
Steve White:So the marketing team got to work and decided to offer free tickets to any kid that came with an adult, not one for one.
Steve White:It could be ten kids with one adult.
Steve White:It worked to an extent.
Steve White: About: Steve White:The Oilers beat the Nationals seven to four, and the WHA was off and running for its seven year run.
Steve White:Now, one story to tell from the WHA that I picked up from Ed Willis book, the Rebel League, is about Ottawa Nationals goalie Gilles Graton.
Steve White:He did not play in this game.
Steve White:He wasn't even with the team yet, but he did join the organization a few weeks later, and he was one of those characters that helped define the wha.
Steve White:He was, let's just say, a bit quirky.
Steve White:He earned the nickname Gratuni the loony for his eccentricities, such as his belief in past lives.
Steve White:He said he'd been reincarnated several times and could provide details of his previous earthly iterations in chronological order.
Steve White:He'd been a landowner in 17th century Spain.
Steve White:He'd been in Egypt during the times of the pharaohs and said he'd been an advisor to one of them, and he talked about being a mayan priest.
Steve White:No word on whether he performed any sacrifices in his previous life.
Steve White:His quirks also ran to the more annoying, such as pleading that he couldn't play in a game because his ribs still hurt from a spear wound that he said was from a battle 300 years in his past, or quitting the game during the second intermission because he'd faced enough shots, he said, and he was going back to the hotel.
Steve White:And sometimes when the action around the net got a little too hectic, he whispered to himself, dead fish.
Steve White:And then he collapsed to the ice, pretending he'd passed out.
Steve White:But when he wasn't letting his quirkiness interfere with his goaltending.
Steve White:He was pretty good.
Steve White:And he led the Nationals on a surge that season, making the playoffs in year one as the fourth best team in the east.
Steve White:Time now for today's nothing to do with sports.
Steve White:Did you know the first remote controls to change the channel were for radios?
Steve White: released a mystery control in: Steve White:Thats all ive got for you today.
Steve White:Thanks for stopping by and giving this episode a listen.
Steve White:And again, if you are inclined to help those in western North Carolina recover from Hurricane Helenes devastation, ive put a few links in the show notes.
Steve White:Enjoy the rest of your day.
Steve White:Ill be back tomorrow with another edition of this day in sports history.