Legends Scully, Wooden share the stage for public chat
By BETH HARRIS
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES — Vin Scully and John Wooden, a couple of national treasures in the autumn of their lives, swapped stories and insights in a first-time joint public conversation punctuated by laughter and applause.
Scully, the Los Angeles Dodgers' longtime Hall of Fame broadcaster, and Wooden, a basketball Hall of Fame player and coach who guided UCLA to a record 10 national championships before retiring in 1975, have known each other for 50 years.
Back then, each came to Los Angeles to begin jobs that would define their lives and those of the city's sports fans. The two men first met by chance while living in the same Brentwood apartment building, when one of them held the gate open for the other who was carrying groceries inside.
Scully and Wooden kicked off Father's Day weekend with a 1½-hour chat Friday night moderated by Los Angeles Times sports columnist T.J. Simers. A sold-out crowd of 7,100 paid rapt attention at Nokia Theatre, while a live television audience listened in.
Scully and Wooden received prolonged standing ovations when they arrived and left the stage. Despite looming large over the Los Angeles sportsscape for decades, the 80-year-old Scully and 97-year-old Wooden had never sat down together publicly to share their memories.
In agreeing to participate, the men requested that all money raised benefit children's charities.
Ticket prices ranged from $25 to $200, with proceeds split between UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital and ThinkCure, the Los Angeles Dodgers' charity that focuses on cancer research. Scully and Wooden appeared beforehand at a dinner, where tables went for $25,000 each.
Wooden came onstage in a wheelchair pushed by UCLA athletic trainer Tony Spino, who helped the former coach settle into a leather chair. Wooden made a passing reference to having broken his left wrist and collarbone in a fall at home in February.
His body may be frail, but Wooden proved his mind is as sharp as ever as he recalled snippets of his life from decades ago in between making the audience laugh with his retorts to Simers.
Wooden tenderly admitted he still writes his late wife Nell — the only girl he ever dated — a letter on the 21st of each month. "She's still there to me," he said. "I talk to her every day."
Scully's famously soothing voice has defined summer in the city to generations of Angelenos. But he is fiercely private away from the announcer's booth, rarely giving interviews or discussing his life.
He explained that he grew up in New York being taught not to show his emotions.
"I'm less of a man because of it," he said.
Scully said he's not a fan of the Dodgers because "if I did that every flyball would be a home run."
Despite his proximity to the players, Scully said he doesn't hang out with them.
"I didn't know that Steve Howe had a (drug) problem, I didn't know that Bob Welch had a drinking problem. Years ago, I didn't know that Don Newcombe had a problem with alcohol," he said. "All I will remember is what they did and I will cherish those moments and let it go at that."
Scully remembered a game that Jackie Robinson, who broke baseball's color barrier, and the Dodgers played in Philadelphia on a hot day. A man outside offered slices of watermelon to each of the players as they got on the bus.
"When Jackie came out he was not aware of anything, and all of a sudden, the man hands him a piece of watermelon," Scully said. "He was ready to go pyrotechnic until we were able to say, 'No, no, Jack. Everybody is having watermelon, me, a redhead Irishman.' So it was fine, but there was always that underlying feeling."
Scully said the worst thing anyone could do was make Robinson angry.
"Most of us, if not all of us, lose something when we get angry," he said. "When Jackie got angry, somehow he took his game to a higher level. One game, he knew they were trying to hit him. So he got to first base on ball four and proceeded to steal second, third and home. The word around the league was, I remember hearing Leo Durocher say this to the Giants: 'Don't wake him up.'"
At one point, Scully, a former barbershop quartet singer, launched into his favorite song, "Take Me Out to the Ballgame," with the audience joining in.
Asked the secret to his long life, Wooden replied, "Not being afraid of death and having peace within yourself. All of life is peaks and valleys. Don't let the peaks get too high and the valleys too low."
Scully was asked when he plans to retire.
"I still get the goose bumps every day when the crowd roars for whatever reason," he said. "I'm looking forward to at least next year. But I remember the old thing about talk about next year and make the devil laugh, so I'd rather just go day to day like we all are anyway."
In a takeoff of "Inside the Actor's Studio," Simers asked Scully and Wooden a series of questions requiring mostly one-word answers.
Their favorite words? Both men replied love. Their least favorite? Both said hate.
The noise they hate? "Booing," Wooden said. "Chalk on a blackboard," Scully said.
Their favorite curse word? "Goodness gracious snakes alive," the clean-living Wooden said, drawing laughter. "Darn it," Scully replied.
The profession they would like to try? Civil engineer for Wooden, and song-and-dance man for Scully.
If heaven exists, what would they like God to say when they arrive at the pearly gates?
"Well done," Wooden said as the audience applauded in agreement.
"Can't really top that," Scully said. "Welcome my son, well done."
At that, the two legends reached toward each other, grasped hands and smiled.