Saturday, February 7, 2026

Brad Arnold obit

Brad Arnold, 3 Doors Down Lead Singer, Dies at 47 After Cancer Battle

The musician revealed his stage 4 kidney cancer diagnosis in May 2025. 

He was not on the list.


Brad Arnold, a founding member and lead singer of 3 Doors Down, has died following a battle with cancer. He was 47.

The musician passed away peacefully in his sleep on Saturday (Feb. 7), surrounded by his wife, Jennifer, and loved ones, the Mississippi-based rock band wrote on its official Instagram page.

“As a founding member, vocalist, and original drummer of 3 Doors Down, Brad helped redefine mainstream rock, blending post-grunge accessibility with emotionally direct songwriting and lyrical themes that resonated with everyday listeners,” the band wrote in a statement.

3 Doors Down announced in May 2025 that Arnold had been diagnosed with stage 4 kidney cancer and that the band would cancel its summer tour. In a video posted to social media at the time, Arnold shared the news himself, noting that he was battling clear cell renal cell carcinoma, which had spread to his lungs.

“I have no fear. I really, sincerely am not scared of it at all,” the singer said, emphasizing that he had been leaning on his faith during the medical battle. He also asked fans for their prayers. “I’d love for you to lift me up in prayer any chance you get. And I think it’s time for me to go and listen to ‘It’s Not My Time’ a little bit.”

Born in Mississippi, Arnold formed 3 Doors Down in 1996 with his high school friends — guitarist Matt Roberts and bassist Todd Harrell — in their hometown of Escatawpa. At the time, Arnold served as both the band’s singer and drummer. The following year, the trio recorded a demo tape featuring “Kryptonite,” a song Arnold had written while still in high school. The track gained popularity on local radio stations and eventually attracted the attention of major record labels.

During its early-2000s heyday, 3 Doors Down scored 10 Billboard Hot 100 chart hits, including three top 10s: 2000’s “Kryptonite” (No. 3), 2003’s “When I’m Gone” (No. 4), and 2003’s “Here Without You” (No. 5). The band also had two No. 1 albums on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart: Seventeen Days (2005) and the self-titled 3 Doors Down (2008).

Arnold earned three Grammy nominations for his work with 3 Doors Down: best rock song for “Kryptonite” and “When I’m Gone,” and best rock performance by a duo or group with vocal for “When I’m Gone.”

3 Doors Down went on to release Time of My Life in 2011, which marked the last album featuring Arnold alongside original members Roberts and Harrell. Guitarist Roberts left the band due to health issues in 2012, and bassist Harrell was dismissed following a 2013 vehicular manslaughter charge. The band’s final studio album, Us and the Night, was released in 2016, though 3 Doors Down continued to tour regularly.

In its Instagram post, 3 Doors Down wrote that Arnold was a “devoted husband to Jennifer, and his kindness, humor, and generosity touched everyone fortunate enough to know him. Those closet to him will remember not only his talent, but his warmth, humility, faith, and deep love for his family and friends.”

Arnold is now the second original member of 3 Doors Down to pass away. Roberts, who co-wrote “Kryptonite,” died in 2016 from a drug overdose.

The rock community flooded 3 Doors Down’s comments section, sharing their condolences. Alter Bridge wrote, “Thank you Brad, your friendship was one we will hold close forever. Until we meet again,” Sevendust added, “Rest now brother. Thank you for all you have given us.” And Creed commented, “Sending love the Arnold family and 3DD family.”

Monte and Avery Lipman, co-founders of Republic Records, who signed 3 Doors Down to a partnership in 1999, also shared a statement with Billboard following Arnold’s passing.

“The impact Brad Arnold and 3 Doors Down had on us is immeasurable,” the Lipmans said. “Brad and the band chose to hitch their wagon to a small company in 1999, taking a chance on two brothers who have always been deeply grateful for their trust and loyalty.”

They added, “Brad’s connection to people and his rare ability to lift their spirits through words and music is that of legends; offering love, inspiration, and healing to so many. Our hearts are broken and we’ll miss him dearly, but Brad Arnold will forever be with us in spirit. We love you brother.”

Daniel Boyd obit

Prominent W.Va. filmmaker, longtime WVSU professor Danny Boyd has died 

He was not on the list.


KANAWHA COUNTY, W.Va. (WCHS) — Danny Boyd, a prominent West Virginia filmmaker, writer and longtime professor in the Kanawha Valley, has died.

Boyd, 69, spent more than three decades as a professor of media studies at West Virginia State University. In his professional career, he produced multiple award-winning films and documentaries that have since been distributed internationally.

The West Virginia International Film Festival shared news of his passing on social media Saturday morning.

Several former students, collaborators and friends shared their condolences on social media throughout the day.

"While he wore many hats over the years, storytelling was at the heart of everything Danny did," Huntington's Foundry Theater said in a social media post. "His voice was singular, his perspective fearless, and his generosity with fellow artists unmistakable."

A graduate of West Virginia University and the University of Arkansas, Boyd began his professional filmmaking career in the early 1980s. His first feature film, Chillers, was released in 1988 and was awarded a Silver Scroll for excellence from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror Films, according to his website.

His next two feature films, Strangest Dreams and Paradise Park, also saw success. The first premiered on USA Network in 1991 and remains in distribution internationally. The latter earned Gold Awards at the Houston International Film Festival and the Chicago International Film Festival.

A National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities fellow, Boyd has also won awards in documentary, horror, comedy and dramatic filmmaking, as well as screenwriting, his website said. He was named “Filmmaker of the Year” by the West Virginia Filmmakers Festival in 2003.

Boyd, who also taught around the world as a Fulbright Scholar, was known for actively involving his students in his professional projects. He retired from teaching at WVSU after 33 years in 2016.

He is credited with being an influential figure in West Virginia's filmmaking community during the 1980s and 90s.

In addition to his work in film, Boyd also made a mark elsewhere, writing and photographing as a freelance contributor for numerous publications, authoring illustrated novels and children’s books and contributing to local theater productions, according to his website.

His children’s books – The Adventures of Wandala, Miss Dirt Turtle’s Garden Club, Tavey’s First Hunt, and WrestleDreamia – have also won multiple awards.

 

Filmography

Year     Film     Director           Producer          Writer  Actor   Notes

1987    Chillers            Yes      Yes      Yes      Yes     

1990    Strangest Dreams: Invasion of the Space Preachers   Yes      Yes      Yes      Yes      

2006    Paradise Park  Yes      Yes      Yes      No      

2003    Red Salt & Reynolds  Yes      Yes      No       No       Documentary short

2003    Attrition           No       No       Yes      No      

2005    Ghosts of Green Bottom         Yes      Yes      No       No       TV documentary short

2010    Secrets of the Valley, History of Natue Americans in the Kanawha Valley   No       Yes      No       No           

Appearances

Rocket Boys Festiva


Greg Brown obit

Cake Founding Guitarist Greg Brown Has Died

 

He was not on the list.


Greg Brown, the founding guitarist for Cake, has died. The band's social media account announced the news today, saying he passed "after a brief illness."

Greg Brown co-founded the droll alt-rock band in 1991 with singer John McCrea, trumpeter Vince DiFiore, drummer Frank French, and bassist Shon Meckfessel. Brown co-wrote and played guitar and organ on Cake's first two LPs, 1994's Motorcade Of Generosity and 1996's Fashion Nugget. For the latter he was the sole writer of "The Distance," one of Cake's biggest hits. Brown and bassist Victor Damiani departed the group in 1997 and they formed Deathray with Dana Gumbiner; their Cake bandmate Todd Roper joined on drums a few years later. Brown also collaborated with Weezer members Rivers Cuomo and Matt Sharp on a couple of non-Weezer projects, and he released the solo EP the end of something new in 2023. He reunited with Cake on the track "Bound Away" from their most recent LP, 2011's Showroom Of Compassion.

"It is with heavy hearts that we share the news of Greg Brown’s passing after a brief illness," Cake posted. "Greg was an integral part of Cake’s early sound and development. His creative contributions were immense, and his presence—both musical and personal—will be deeply missed. Godspeed, Greg."

Friday, February 6, 2026

Sonny Jurgensen - # 356

Sonny Jurgensen, Hall of Fame quarterback with Washington and Philadelphia, dies at 91

 He was number 356 on the list.


Sonny Jurgensen, a 1983 Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee and one of the purest passers of the 1960s, died at at the age of 91, his family announced Friday.

"It is with profound sadness that we share the passing of our husband, father, and grandfather, Sonny Jurgensen," the Jurgensen family said in a statement released by the Washington Commanders. "We are enormously proud of his amazing life and accomplishments on the field, marked not only by a golden arm, but also a fearless spirit and intellect that earned him a place among the legends in Canton. But to those of us who knew him beyond the stadium lights, he was the steady, humorous, and deeply loving heart of our family.

"He lived with deep appreciation for the teammates, colleagues, and friends he met along the way. While he has taken his final snap, his legacy will remain an indelible part of the city he loved and the family he built.

"We are comforted by the knowledge that he brought joy to so many. This weekend as we enjoy the game that he loved so much, join us and raise a glass, share a story and a smile, as we celebrate the extraordinary life of a man who was, to us, the greatest of all time."

With an 18-year career that spanned from 1957 to 1974, Jurgensen sparkled as a thrower during an era when offenses more commonly operated in a cloud of dust. He led the league in passing yards five separate times, earning five Pro Bowl nominations and one All-Pro nod, which came in his first season as the Philadelphia Eagles' starter in 1961.

The Philadelphia and Washington quarterback was named to the NFL's All-Decade Team of the 1960s alongside Green Bay Packers QB Bart Starr and Baltimore Colts QB Johnny Unitas.

"Few players could rival Sonny Jurgensen's genuine love of the game that continued long after his playing days," Pro Football Hall of Fame president Jim Porter said in a statement. "Whether he was standing tall in the face of an opposing lineman as a quarterback for the Eagles and Redskins for 18 seasons or later as a beloved broadcaster in Washington for several more decades, Sonny captivated audiences and introduced generations of fans to the sport. Watching Sonny throw a football was like watching a master craftsman create a work of art."

Jurgensen's prolific career spawned from humble, unexpected beginnings as a college athlete at Duke University. The future record-holder for passing yards in a single season -- he set the NFL's high-water mark first in 1961 (3,723 yards), and then broke his own record again in 1967 (3,747) -- made his biggest impact for the Blue Devils as a defensive back.

He spent his sophomore season at Duke as a full-time defender before transitioning to being a two-way player for his final two years in school. By the end of his collegiate career, Jurgensen had 77 completions for 1,119 yards and six touchdowns. He bested his QB scoring tally by hauling in 10 interceptions on the other side of the ball throughout his time in Durham.

Regardless, Jurgensen passed the eye test. The Eagles selected him with the No. 43 overall pick in the 1957 NFL Draft. Jurgensen would sit behind another Hall of Famer, Norm Van Brocklin, for four years, and he did not assume the starting role until The Dutchman retired following Philly's 1960 NFL Championship.

The small snapshot Jurgensen provided in his relief appearances for Van Brocklin during the 1960 season proved a picture-perfect microcosm of his career-to-be. The starter in waiting threw for five scores and 486 yards on just 24 completions, good for 20.3 yards per connection.

Finally at the helm the following year, Jurgensen was a revelation. The pocket-passing gunslinger immediately brought the wow factor to Philly, putting on a show for better and for worse. He not only set the single-season record for passing yards, but he also led the NFL in both touchdowns (32) and interceptions (24).

Philadelphia won 10 games but missed the playoffs despite Jurgensen's exploits, then cratered in the next two seasons, introducing a theme of teamwide futility that would plague Jurgensen's individually spectacular career.

The Eagles managed just five wins combined across their 1962 and 1963 campaigns, fired head coach Nick Skorich and completed their face lift by trading Jurgensen to Washington ahead of the 1964 season.

It was in the nation's capital that Jurgensen would cement himself as the foremost pocket passer of his time. The QB compiled 19,693 passing yards, 160 TDs and 100 interceptions during a seven-year stretch as the club's unquestioned starter.

His record 3,747 passing yards in 1967, which he coupled with a league-leading 31 TD passes, stood until Dan Fouts eclipsed it with the NFL's first 4,000-yard passing season in 1979 (Joe Namath had the first 4,000-yard season in the more pass-happy American Football League during the '60s).

In the 10 years following Jurgensen's record-setting feat, the NFL witnessed a 3,000-yard passer only six other times -- one of those being Jurgensen accomplishing the mark again.

Jurgensen's only winning season as Washington's starter came in 1969 with Vince Lombardi, the QB's third head coach in six years. Following Lombardi's death from cancer in September 1970, Jurgensen spent one more year as the team's signal-caller, under interim head coach Bill Austin.

Jurgensen's fifth and final head coach in D.C., George Allen, installed Billy Kilmer as the team's new QB in 1971 to usher in a conservative, run-first offense.

Jurgensen stayed on for four more years, backing up Kilmer as the team's fortunes finally turned around to the tune of 40 wins and four consecutive playoff trips. The final snaps of Jurgensen's career came in relief of Kilmer during a Divisional Round loss to the Los Angeles Rams. He was 40 years old, and it was the only postseason action of his storied NFL journey.

Jurgensen retired with 32,224 passing yards, 255 touchdowns and 189 interceptions. He remains Washington's single-season record holder for passing TDs even today, and his career high of 32 in 1961 still ranks second on the list in Philadelphia.

Although he never attained the individual accolades and championship pedigree of his All-Decade Team counterparts, Starr and Unitas, those who saw him play recognized his brilliance.

During his one-year opportunity to work with Jurgensen, the legendary coach Lombardi put it simply: "He may be the best the league has ever seen. He is the best I have seen."

Personal information

Born    August 23, 1934

Wilmington, North Carolina, U.S.

Died    February 6, 2026 (aged 91)

Listed height   5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)

Listed weight  202 lb (92 kg)

Career information

High school     New Hanover (Wilmington)

College            Duke (1953–1956)

NFL draft        1957: 4th round, 43rd overall pick

Career history

Philadelphia Eagles (1957–1963)

Washington Redskins (1964–1974)

Awards and highlights

NFL champion (1960)

2× First-team All-Pro (1961, 1969)

2× Second-team All-Pro (1964, 1967)

5× Pro Bowl (1961, 1964, 1966, 1967, 1969)

5× NFL passing yards leader (1961, 1962, 1966, 1967, 1969)

2× NFL passing touchdowns leader (1961, 1967)

NFL passer rating leader (1967)

NFL completion percentage leader (1970)

NFL 1960s All-Decade Team

Philadelphia Eagles Hall of Fame

Washington Commanders Ring of Fame

Washington Commanders No. 9 retired

2× first-team All-ACC (1955, 1956)

NFL record

99-yard pass play (tied)

Career NFL statistics

Passing attempts          4,262

Passing completions    2,433

Completion percentage           57.1%

TD–INT          255–189

Passing yards  32,224

Passer rating    82.6


Lynn Blakey obit

Beloved Indie Rock Musician, Inspiration for the Replacements’ Alt-Rock Anthem ‘Left of the Dial,’ Dies

Lynn Blakey, who played in the bands Let’s Active, Oh-OK and Tres Chicas, has died.

 She was not on the list.


Lynn Blakely, an indie rock musician who played with Let’s Active, Oh-OK and Tres Chicas, has died. Her cause of death wasn’t immediately known. In 2025, she was fighting a recurrence of cancer. She was in her early 60s.

The news of her death was reported on social media by Bob Mehr, author of the acclaimed book Trouble Boys: The True Story of the Replacements, who noted her role in the Replacements’ college rock anthem “Left of the Dial.”

“On one level ‘Left of the Dial’ celebrated the ’80s American indie scene and paid tribute to the tiny-watt college stations at the far end of the FM dial, where the Replacements got most of their airplay. But it was also a love song, an evocation of Paul Westerberg’s infatuation with Blakey,” Mehr wrote. “They first met when the ‘Mats & Let’s Active shared a bill at San Fran’s I-Beam in late ‘83. He bummed cigarettes off her & they spent hours walking & talking in the rain. ‘I think Paul decided he had a crush on me,’ said Blakey. As Westerberg recalled: ‘I was in love with the idea of being in love with her. I used that to pine with.’”

The phrase in the song “sweet Georgia breezes” refers to Athens, Ga., Mehr added, where Blakey moved and joined the band Oh-OK, which also featured the sister of R.E.M. singer Michael Stipe, Lynda.

“The song is about that first year of Paul and I meeting and hitting it off and logistically it not working out,” said Blakey, Mehr shared in his post.

“I figured the only way I’d hear her voice was with her band on the radio on a college station and one night we did,” said Westerberg told Mehr. “We were passing through a town somewhere, and she was doing an interview on the radio. I heard her voice for the first time in six months for about a minute. Then the station faded out.”

The song’s lyrics, “If I don’t see ya in a long, long while/I’ll try to find you, left of the dial,” directly referred to that situation, Mehr noted.

In 2024, Blakey returned to the University of North Carolina, Greensboro to pursue a degree in Peace and Conflict Studies. Then 61, Blakey had attended the university three decades earlier and was pursuing a communications degree before she left school during her junior year to join Let’s Active.

Last March, Blakey’s friends in the band the dB’s posted on Instagram that Blakey’s cancer had returned and shared a link to a GoFundMe to raise money for her treatment. At the time, Blakey’s husband Ecki Heins had been diagnosed with colon cancer.

Barry Wilburn obit

Family confirms former NFL player and Super Bowl champion died in Orange Mound house fire

 He was not on the list.


MEMPHIS, Tennessee (WMC) - Family and friends are mourning the loss of former NFL player and Super Bowl champion Barry Wilburn. Family confirms he was the victim of a house fire in Orange Mound early Friday morning.

Wilburn graduated from Melrose High School before playing football for the Ole Miss Rebels. He was drafted by the Washington Redskins in 1985, where he played defensive back for 5 seasons. Wilburn led the league in interceptions in the 1987 season, where he and the team would go on to win Super Bowl XXII against the Denver Broncos.

The Memphis Fire Department responded to a reported residential structure fire on Douglass Avenue in Orange Mound at around 2am Friday morning. They found an unresponsive victim in the rear hallway. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

A representative for the family has confirmed that Wilburn is the victim of the fire. MFD have yet to confirm the victim’s identity.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

He was a cornerback in the National Football League (NFL) and Canadian Football League (CFL). He played college football for the Ole Miss Rebels and was selected by the Washington Redskins in the eighth round of the 1985 NFL draft. Wilburn played in eight NFL seasons from 1985 to 1996 (he missed two seasons due to injury) and in two CFL seasons for the Saskatchewan Roughriders and the British Columbia Lions. He played in one final season in 1999 for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers before retiring.

Wilburn was drafted in the 8th round of the 1985 draft by the Washington Redskins. Wilburn had a breakout year in the strike-shortened 1987 NFL season after leading the league in interceptions recording 9 and was named to the first-team All-Pro. Wilburn started in Super Bowl XXII that year and recorded two interceptions in their 42–10 victory against the Denver Broncos. In 1992, Wilburn signed with the Cleveland Browns but only played in 6 games. After his stint with the Browns, he then spent a few years in the Canadian Football League playing for the Saskatchewan Roughriders, and the BC Lions where he also won a Grey Cup title as a member of the 1994 BC Lions, making him one of only ten players to have won football championships on both sides of the border (Super Bowl and Grey Cup). After his CFL stint, Wilburn returned to the NFL signing with the Philadelphia Eagles but saw limited playing time. In 1999 Wilburn returned to the CFL and signed with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. Wilburn then retired after the 1999 season and he retired with 246 career tackles, 20 career interceptions, and five fumble recoveries in the NFL.

Wilburn held the Washington record for the longest interception return after scoring on a 100-yard return against the Minnesota Vikings in 1987.

Wilburn was the son of Olympic great, Margaret Matthews Wilburn and the father of Jordan and Dominique Wilburn, named for his two favorite NBA basketball players.

Career information

High school     Melrose

College            Ole Miss

NFL draft        1985: 8th round, 219th overall pick

Career history

Washington Redskins (1985–1989)

Cleveland Browns (1992)

Saskatchewan Roughriders (1993)

BC Lions (1994)

Kansas City Chiefs (1994)*

Philadelphia Eagles (1995–1996)

Winnipeg Blue Bombers (1999)

* Offseason and/or practice squad member only

Awards and highlights

Super Bowl champion (XXII)

Grey Cup champion (1994)

First-team All-Pro (1987)

NFL interceptions leader (1987)

Career NFL statistics

Tackles            246

Interceptions    20

Touchdowns    1


Thursday, February 5, 2026

Fred Smith obit

Fred Smith, Bassist for Television, Dies at 77

 

He was not on the list.


Fred Smith, bass player for the influential proto-punk band Television, died Thursday. He was 77. The band confirmed his death on its Instagram.

Smith started out playing with Angel and the Snake, which then became Blondie. In 1975 he left Blondie to replace Richard Hell in Television. After the band broke up in 1978, he played on solo albums for the Television members Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd, as well as for The Roches, Willie Nile, Blondie, Peregrins and The Revelons. Smith also played bass and toured with The Fleshtones.

He rejoined the band when Television reunited in 1992 and played on numerous tours.

Television member Jimmy Rip wrote on Instagram, “The legendary bassist for Television, Tom Verlaine and many others, Fred Smith, was not only my bandmate for 46 years — he was my true friend. He was a great running buddy and exactly the guy you wanted around when road life got wearisome. His sense of humor, much like his musical voice, was dry, subtle, to the point, hilarious and always left you wanting a more. Yesterday, he left this world, leaving so many who loved him wanting so much more…of him.

We met in 1980 playing, with Jay Dee Daugherty on drums, in The Eve Moon Band, and soon after, the three of us were the NYC version of Holly and The Italians with Holly Beth Vincent. In 1981 when Tom Verlaine was preparing to tour for his disc Dreamtime, which Fred and Jay had performed on, they recommended me as second guitar, leading to very long and rich musical, and personal friendships.

If you are a lover of melodic bass lines and counterpoint, you could go to school on what Fred created so effortlessly. He was a natural — never flashy, always essential — always serving the song in ways that only the greatest musicians can…

“He fought his illness long and hard these last few years, looking always forward to new projects… we had big plans to play Tom’s music live this year… but it just wasn’t meant to be. Thankfully, we were able to say goodbye, “love you” were our last words to each other. I will miss him more than anyone can imagine.”

Smith and his wife, Paula Cereghino. founded an artisanal winery Cereghino Smith which was based in Bloomington, New York.

Clay Iles obit

Tennis coach Clay Iles, 83, has died

 

He was not on the list.


Eastbourne based Clay Iles, one of the most successful tennis coaches in the country, has died aged 83.

Iles taught numerous British junior champions including Sussex-based Julie Salmon, Clare Wood and Sarah Gomer.

These three made up the British Federation Cup Team.

He also guided Horsham-based John Whiteford as the British-under 21 champion.

As a player, he competed at Wimbledon 12 times between 1962 and 1974.

Iles played Pancho Gonzales in the first ever "Open Era" singles match at the British Hard Court Championships at Bournemouth in 1968.

He won the North of England hard court championships in 1964, when he beat Mark Cox in the final.

And he later added the British Professional Coaches Championship six times.

He represented Surrey many times when they won the British county title.

As a coach, he  held a position as a national trainer and was responsible for the leading players under 12 in the country. For two years Tim Henman was in that group.

Rohun Beven, former Wimbledon and international tennis player and Sussex No.1 1 said: "I have known Clay for over 55 years, he was one of the most highly respected players and coaches of his generation.

"Clay had a significant impact on the lives and careers of so many Wimbledon and British International players. The tennis world will miss him".

His funeral will be held on Friday, February 13 at Langley Crematorium in Eastbourne at 2pm.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Tommy Crook obit

Tommy Crook • 1944-2026

Oklahoma Music Hall of Famer Tommy Crook dies at 81

 

He was not on the list.


Acclaimed Tulsa guitarist Tommy Crook has died. He was 81.

An entry on Crook in the book “Oklahoma Music Guide” said in-the-know musicians recognized him as one of the premier guitarists in the U.S., if not the world.

"I never heard anybody play any better than Tommy," Texas Playboy legend Eldon Shamblin once said.

The best endorsement Crook ever got came from Chet Atkins, who, during an appearance on “The Tonight Show,” was asked by host Johnny Carson if anyone, anywhere played guitar as well or better than Atkins. The reply: “Yes, Johnny. Tommy Crook in Tulsa, Oklahoma.”

"I never saw the show, and I don't know exactly what he said,'' Crook once told the Tulsa World. "But I bet I've talked to a thousand people who saw the show. It happened all the time when I was playing out at the airport, with all the people coming and going. They'd come up and say, 'Are you the guy Chet talked about?'"

Atkins had heard Crook play at an airport hotel, the Sheraton Inn, where Crook had a standing gig from 1972 through 1984.

Coincidentally, it was Atkins who sparked Crook’s desire to become a musician.

"I got my first guitar when I was 4," Crook told the Tulsa Tribune in 1989. "Dad played and performed at square dances. I was the caller. When I started playing electric guitar at age 7, he let me play music with him. But when I heard Chet Atkins, that lit the fire. He made a guitar sound the way I wanted it to. There were times I'd be in tears because I was so frustrated that I couldn't play just like him."

Crook was born Feb. 16, 1944. By age 11, he was skilled enough to be a performer on Porter Wagoner’s touring show. As a student at Central High School, Crook played in bands with David Gates, Jimmy Karstein, Carl Radle, Leon Russell, JJ Cale, Gene Crose and Jimmy Markham, according to “Oklahoma Music Guide.”

A 2001 Tulsa World story provided a chronological recap. Crook played with Gene Crose and the Rockets in 1960, David Gates and the Accents from 1961-62 and the Valentines from 1962-63. Crook performed on USO tours from 1967 to 1971. The story said Crook, who performed on USO Tours from 1967-71, also has played with Kenny Rogers, Merle Haggard, Pat Boone, Lou Rawls, Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee Lewis.

"In 1958, Jerry Lee Lewis hired Leon and us to back him up at Cain's Ballroom," Crook told the Tulsa Tribune in 1989. "That was a thrill. He liked the band so well, he took them on the road. I couldn't go because I was still in high school and my folks wouldn't have stood for it."

The story said Crook also was left behind when Gates, the driving force behind the soft rock band Bread, left for Los Angeles.

"Once again, I was too young to go," Crook said.

Crook told the stories about Lewis and Gates after saying this: "I think people naturally think 'If you're so good, why are you still here?’”

Crook turned down an offer to join the T-Bones in 1965 because his wife gave birth the day he was supposed to leave. He chose family.

The Tribune story said there were other reasons he stayed home.

"I could work solo and make as much money as I could going on the road and being a sideman," Crook said. "I really don't want to be someone's sideman, and I'm not into getting on the bus."

Among career highlights: In 1998, the Chet Atkins Appreciation Society asked Crook if he would join some of the world’s best guitarists by playing at an event honoring Atkins in Nashville. The invitation came after the head of the organization encountered a video ("The World of Finger-Style Jazz Guitar") that featured Crook and four other guitar masters.

"The thing is, I've been thinking about doing something like this, playing for Chet Atkins, since I was 10 years old,” Crook said. “All the time, I've been thinking, 'What will I play? What will I play?'”

Crook released his first album in 1968. Others followed. He was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame in 2007.

A 2004 Tulsa World story said this: Although the great guitarist Tommy Crook hasn't slowed a bit since his years as a teenage phenom, he's already written his epitaph.

"Here's what I want," Crook said. "'He was a good ol' boy, and he played in tune.'"


Mickey Lolich obit

Mickey Lolich, Detroit Tigers 1968 World Series hero, dies at 85

 

He was not on the list.




Legendary Detroit Tigers pitcher Mickey Lolich, whose three complete game victories in the 1968 World Series delivered a championship and earned him the series MVP, has died at age 85.

As one of the anchors of the Tigers’ pitching staff in the 1960s and '70s, the portly southpaw, who once called himself “a beer drinker’s idol,” developed into one of the game’s most durable and best left-handed starting pitchers ever.

Fifth on the career strikeouts list for left-handers (2,832, behind only Randy Johnson, Steve Carlton, CC Sabathia and Clayton Kershaw), Lolich struck out more batters than Hall of Famers Bob Feller, Warren Spahn, Don Drysdale, Christy Mathewson, Cy Young and his childhood idol, Whitey Ford.

Over his 16-year major league career, Lolich won 15 or more games eight times, threw 195 complete games and struck out 200 or more batters in seven seasons while missing just one start due to injury. He remains the Tigers' all-time leader in strikeouts (2,679), starts (459) and shutouts (39).

"The Tigers are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Mickey Lolich and we extend our heartfelt condolences to his family and loved ones," the team posted on social media Wednesday. "Lolich will be remembered as one of the most durable and dominant left-handed pitchers of his era and a cornerstone of Detroit’s pitching staff for more than a decade."

"Lolich was a great pitcher, teammate and champion, but he was more than that to me," longtime Tigers teammate Willie Horton said in a statement released by the team. "He was like a brother for over 60 years. I will keep the memories close to my heart and will never forget the close bond we shared. My condolences to Joyce and their family and to everyone who loved him."

Entering the 1968 World Series, the spotlight was on the pitching matchup between St. Louis Cardinals ace Bob Gibson and 31-game winner Denny McLain, the MVP and Cy Young Award winners for their respective leagues.

Although Gibson set a World Series record with his 17 strikeouts in Game 1, it was Lolich who stole the show with three complete-game victories against a powerful lineup that included Lou Brock, Curt Flood and Orlando Cepeda.

In Game 2, Lolich pitched a six-hit, complete-game victory to tie the series at a game apiece. He helped his own cause by hitting the only home run of his career in the 8-1 win.

Down three games to one in the Series, Lolich pitched another complete game, helping the Tigers in a come-from-behind 5-3 win at Tiger Stadium.

During Game 6, when the Tigers pulled away for a 13-1 victory, manager Mayo Smith had begun to seriously think about who was to pitch the deciding seventh game.

“I was at the far end of the bench when Mayo came up to me and asked if I could pitch the next day,” Lolich said. “I knew it was (loser of Game 3) Earl Wilson’s turn to start and I told him that if he needed me for a couple of innings out of the bullpen, I could do that. He said, ‘No, I want you to start, can you give me five?’ I did the math and knew I averaged about 15 pitches an inning and realized I could probably give him that.”

Smith then ordered Lolich to go back to the hotel to rest and avoid reporters.

When Lolich entered the dugout after setting down the side in the bottom of the fifth inning of a scoreless tie in Game 7 on just two days' rest, he assumed his day was done, but Smith asked him if he could give him one more inning. The man with the rubber arm agreed.   

In the bottom of the sixth, Lolich’s heroics continued when he ended a potential Cardinals rally by deftly pulling off the improbable — picking off speedsters Brock and Flood at first base.

After the Tigers took a 3-0 lead in the top of the seventh, highlighted by Jim Northrup’s two-run triple over Flood’s head, Lolich delivered a message to Smith.

“I tapped him on the shoulder and said, ‘Now I’ll finish it for you.’ Mayo said, ‘That’s exactly what I wanted to hear.’ ”

Relying largely on his sinking fastball as he had done all day, Lolich completed his trifecta when Tim McCarver popped out to Bill Freehan, who immediately lifted his batterymate off the ground in a celebratory embrace that was captured in what became one of the most famous images in Tigers history.

In his 27 innings pitched in that series, the Cardinals scored just five runs.

"The first couple of years I played with him I didn’t have that much confidence in him," teammate Mickey Stanley said in 2026. "The way he pitched in the seventh game of the World Series, on two days' rest, was unbelievable. He became a real pitcher in that Series and from then on, it was like night and day. It was great to play behind him because he threw strikes and was a great competitor."

Lolich is the only left-handed pitcher in American League history to win three complete games in a World Series and just the third of either hand, for either league, since the start of the 1921 season. (The other two: Lew Burdette for the Milwaukee Braves in 1957 and Gibson for the Cardinals in 1967.) Given the modern approach to pitcher usage, Lolich will likely be the last.

While riding a tricycle as a toddler in his Portland, Oregon, neighborhood, Michael Stephen Lolich knocked over a parked motorcycle that fell and broke his left arm.

Naturally right-handed, his parents' form of physical therapy included tying his right hand behind his back — forcing him to depend on his left arm. From then on, Lolich threw left-handed.

“I was an only child and there were no other kids on my block, so I used to entertain myself by throwing figs at city buses 150 feet from the top of my grandparents’ garage,” he said in 2015.

Lolich's entry into baseball did not come until his teens, according to his 2018 autobiography "Mickey Lolich: Joy in Tigertown" (penned with Tom Gage). The nascent lefty was introduced to baseball at age 11, when he happened upon a game at the city park maintained by his father. A local team of 14- and 15-year-olds were short one player and asked Lolich if he would play. Having never played before, he borrowed a glove from an opposing player and was relegated to right field.

“We were getting beat pretty bad and I thought, ‘I can throw as good as those guys,’ so I volunteered to pitch,” Lolich said. “To the surprise of everyone, I blew all the batters away because they couldn’t hit my fast ‘fig.’ ”

By age 14, Lolich was a star in the local Babe Ruth League and a batboy for the Pacific Coast League’s Portland Beavers; for two consecutive seasons (1955-56), he took his hometown team to the Babe Ruth World Series while winning MVP awards each year.

After signing with the Tigers in 1958, he struggled with his control in four minor-league seasons and briefly quit in 1962 after refusing an assignment to Knoxville. But on loan that year to the hometown Beavers, he found his groove, thanks to pitching coach Gerry Staley.

Lolich returned to the Tigers for spring training 1963; a month into the season, he was called up to make his major league debut. On May 12, he came out of the bullpen against Cleveland and struck out the first two batters he faced, Max Alvis and Sam McDowell. Two weeks later, he earned his first victory while scattering eight hits and going the distance against the Angels in Los Angeles.

By 1967, Lolich and Denny McLain had established themselves as one of the top starting duos in the AL while the Tigers battled in one of the most exciting pennant races ever, losing out on the AL crown on the last day of the season.

Earlier that year, Lolich found himself wearing a different uniform once civil unrest broke out in Detroit that summer.

He took the loss in the first game of a doubleheader against the Yankees at Tiger Stadium on July 23, the first day the disturbance spilled onto the streets of Detroit. The following morning, he was activated by the Air National Guard. Lolich, who, since 1963, had missed two weeks in the middle of every season for mandatory summer camp, was a sergeant in charge of 11 men and served 10 days in downtown Detroit during the disturbance.

On active duty for 12 days, Lolich was one of three Detroit athletes activated: receiver John Henderson and quarterback Tom Myers of the Lions, were both summoned from the Cranbrook training camp.

The next summer, while McLain became the talk of baseball on his way to winning 31 games, Lolich had struggled a bit. To his surprise, manager Mayo Smith assigned him to the bullpen in August 1968.

“I was mad and told him, ‘I’ll tell you one thing, before this year is over, you’re going to need me,’ and Mayo said, ‘We’ll see,’ ” said Lolich, who, after several successful relief appearances, returned to the starting rotation for the final month of the regular season.

After McLain was traded in 1970, Lolich became the Tigers’ ace and established himself as a workhorse. From 1971-74, he pitched at least 300 innings each season.

"As good as he was, though, I always thought Mickey didn’t realize himself how good he really was," 1968 teammate Jon Warden said in 2026. "[Catcher] Bill Freehan told me ‘I could catch McLain with my bare hand but Lolich killed me. I had to wear a rubber glove and a wrap around my hand because it was swollen after every time I caught him.’"

After perfecting a cut fastball in 1971's spring training, the three-time All-Star had his greatest season, leading the league in wins (25), strikeouts (308), complete games (29) and innings pitched (376). That year, he also earned the save in the 1971 All-Star Game at Tiger Stadium. Lolich was edged out of the Cy Young Award by American League MVP Vida Blue.

Reggie Jackson, who called Lolich’s 1971 season “one of the greatest of all time,” has always praised the man who gave him fits at the plate.

“Lolich was a gallon of ice cream when you only wanted a cone, simply a great pitcher, and for seven or eight years the toughest lefty in the league,” Jackson said in 2015.  “When he stepped on the mound at 1 p.m., you knew he would be there until the end and he never missed a start. Today, they talk about 200 innings being special. Hell, Mickey had 200 innings by Aug. 1. I just wish he had gone into the doughnut business 10 years earlier.”

In 1972, Lolich helped lead the Tigers to the AL East title with 22 victories.

“He was an outstanding starter who could pitch down and away all day long, get a thousand ground balls or with a two-strike count come up and in and blow you out of there,” said former slugger Frank Howard, a teammate with the '72 Tigers, in 2015.

By 1975, the Tigers were bereft of talent and even though Lolich was frustrated with the lack of run support and a poor defense, he was still disappointed when the Tiges traded him to the New York Mets for Rusty Staub.

“I had always wanted to finish my career with the Tigers and I almost didn’t agree to the trade, but looking back now I wish I hadn’t,” he said in 2015.

After signing a two-year contract with the Mets, Lolich pitched in 1976 but then retired and sat out the 1977 season before signing as a free agent with San Diego; the woeful Padres coaxed him out of retirement with a two-year deal worth more than he had ever been paid.

Following the 1979 season, Lolich retired and later owned and operated his own doughnut shop outside of Detroit for several years.

Lolich is survived by Joyce, his wife of 61 years; daughters Kimberly, Stacy, and Jody; and three grandsons.

Ed Iskenderian obit

Ed Iskenderian, beloved "Camfather" of hot rodding, passes away at 104

Ed Iskenderian, the enduring and beloved “Camfather” of hot rodding, passed away Feb. 4. He was 104. For decades beginning in the 1940s, Isky's camshafts powered winners and broke records in all forms of motorsports. 

He was not on the list.


Ed Iskenderian, the enduring and beloved “Camfather” of hot rodding, passed away Feb. 4. He was 104.

Iskenderian was born July 10, 1921, in Cutler, in Central California, and was insatiably curious about mechanics and technology. His first job was repairing vacuum tube radios. According to NHRA historian Greg Sharp, the Iskenderian family was in the wine-making business, but several severe frosts caused the family to move to Los Angeles when he was just a year old.

"As he grew into a teenager, the Great Depression was on, and times were tough, but he noticed guys having fun driving stripped-down Model Ts [they weren’t yet known as hot rods], and he would follow these ‘gow jobs’ on his bicycle just to see them up close,” Sharp wrote in a 2021 article in NHRA National Dragster celebrating Isky’s 100th birthday. He basically grew up around cars, particularly fascinated by the hot rods he and his buddies saw around town.

Like so many returning veterans from World War II – he served in the Army Air Corps and flew supply missions in the Pacific Theater – he was at ground zero for the explosion of the hot rodding sport in the late 1940s, where new innovations and technologies were created on an almost weekly basis to feed the hunger of the insatiable hot rodders looking for a little more power for their machines.

He befriended Ed Winfield, a pioneer in the world of camshaft and carburetor design. Winfield once said he could tell from Isky’s questions that he was going to be big in the camshaft business someday and showed him how to build a cam grinding machine, and Iskenderian began grinding his own hot camshafts and making valvetrain parts out of a small shop in Culver City, Calif.

He intuitively understood marketing, branding, and promotion. A small ad in the second issue of Hot Rod magazine started the inquiries, many from the so-called “bootleggers” of the south. In the heyday of the A/Gas Supercharged wars between Isky customer “Big John” Mazmanian and the Stone-Woods-Cook team, he traded blows with other camshaft manufacturers, especially Jack Engle. Isky was in the thick of it when clever ads touting his success paired with hilarious Pete Millar-drawn cartons. His ads touted everyone who ran his parts, from Don Garlits and the "5 cycle" cam to Cook & Bedwell's wild dragster.

He ran his Model-T rod at the dry lakes and became a major player in the early days of Bonneville and the NHRA. He sponsored and supplied his camshaft magic to racing icons, including Don Garlits and Mickey Thompson. In the 1950s, having Isky (or Iskenderian) Cams lettered on your race car became a status symbol.

From his early days running at El Mirage with the Southern California Timing Association (SCTA) to founding Isky Racing Cams, Iskenderian built more than just camshafts, he built a performance brand. He was one of the first to advertise directly to racers in enthusiast magazines, sponsor grassroots competitors, and turn performance parts into a lifestyle.

Iskenderian Racing Cams became a major force in the performance industry, with Iskenderian serving as SEMA’s first president and helped unite the aftermarket industry, and gave racers, builders, and manufacturers a national stage.

Even after eclipsing the century mark in 2021, Iskenderian remained a vital force and a treasured and welcomed guest at any motorsports gathering. Last June, his friends threw a wonderful 104th birthday party for him at the Lions Automobilia Foundation & Museum in Southern California.

Lloyd Monsen obit

RIP, LLOYD: Hall of Famer Monsen, two-time Olympian, passes away

Lloyd Monsen, a force in New York soccer and a two-time Olympian, has passed away. 

He was not on the list.


Lloyd Monsen, a force in New York soccer and a two-time Olympian and a member of the National Soccer Hall of Fame, has passed away.

He was 94.

Monsen played and coached and in the Long Island Soccer Football League.

Kimberly Johnson Monsen, his daughter in law, announced his death on her Facebook page late Wednesday night.

“It’s with a sad heart we announce the passing of my father-in-law Lloyd Monsen,” Monsen wrote. “To say he lived a full life is an understatement — Olympian, Hall of Famer, husband, father, grandfather, and great grandfather. Just shy of 95, he’s seen it all. He passed peacefully. We’ll miss you Pop!”

He was inducted into the NSHOF in 1994 and the Long Island Soccer Player Hall of Fame in 2025.

Monsen was barely out of Fort Hamilton High School in Brooklyn, N.Y., having begun to make a reputation first with S.C. Gjoa and then with the New York Americans of the German-American Soccer League (now Cosmopolitan Soccer League).

He represented the U.S. at the 1952 and 1956 Olympics. In 1992, he told this writer that he was one of 10 players who represented the U.S. in the Olympic soccer tournament.

After returning from the 1956 Melbourne Games, Monsen continued to play for the Americans, who had merged with N.Y. Hakoah. In 1956-57, Monsen led the American Soccer League in scoring and finished second in the goal race the next two seasons before securing the crown again in 1959-60. Hakoah won league titles in 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958-59.

His contract was sold to the German Hungarians (they eventually became the G.H. Metros), for $1,000.

A year later, an injury put an end to his playing career.

Monsen moved to Florida, where he officiated soccer games from 1965-1980. He returned to Long Island and coached the Sachem youth teams, played with an LISFL Over-30 team (and eventually with an O-40 side) before taking over the coaching reins at Patchogue. He joined Huntington, an LISFL First Division club, in 1992.

Funeral arrangements are pending.