Friday, June 30, 2017

Max Runager obit

 

Former Eagles punter Max Runager dies at age 61

He was not on the list.


ORANGEBURG, South Carolina -- Max Runager, the former NFL punter who helped the San Francisco 49ers win the Super Bowl following the 1984 season, has died. He was 61.

The 49ers announced Runager's death Sunday, and The Times and Democrat of Orangeburg reported he was found dead Friday in his car in a parking lot in South Carolina. No foul play is suspected.

Runager played 11 seasons in the NFL after being drafted out of South Carolina by the Eagles in the eighth round in 1979. He spent his first five years with the Eagles, losing the Super Bowl following the 1980 season before joining San Francisco in 1984.

Runager punted 332 times in an Eagles uniform, fifth-most in franchise history, behind Adrian Burk (393), Sean Landeta (376), Tommy Hutton (349) and John Teltschik (345).

After spending the 1979 through 1983 seasons with the Eagles, he spent 1984 through 1987 and part of 1988 with the 49ers and finished 1988 with the Browns. But he returned to Philly in 1989 and finished his career with the Eagles, playing four more games late in the season after Teltschik went on injured reserve with a knee injury.

The Niners went 15-1 Runager's first season and beat Miami for the Super Bowl. Runager played four seasons for San Francisco and came back for one game in 1988.

Runager finished his career with 661 career punts and a 40.2 yards-per-punt average.

 

Career information

College:            South Carolina

NFL Draft:            1979 / Round: 8 / Pick: 211

Career history

Philadelphia Eagles (1979–1983)

San Francisco 49ers (1984–1988)

Cleveland Browns (1988)

Philadelphia Eagles (1989)

Career highlights and awards

2× Super Bowl champion (XIX, XXIII)

Career NFL statistics

Punting yards:            26,581

Punt returns:            661

Games played:            144

Punt blocks:            9

Thursday, June 29, 2017

Miriam Marx obit

Miriam Marx Allen, Daughter of Groucho Marx, Dies at 90

Letters that she received from her dad became a 1992 book that showed a different side of the fabled comedian.

 

She was not on the list.


Miriam Marx Allen, the eldest daughter of Groucho Marx who worked on his quiz show You Bet Your Life and turned letters that she received from her famous father into a revealing book, has died. She was 90.

Allen died June 29 in Capistrano Beach, Calif., according to friend Frank Ferrante, an actor who has made a career out of expertly portraying her dad on stage in such productions as the 1980s smash Groucho: A Life in Revue and the current An Evening With Groucho.

Miriam Ruth Marx was born in Manhattan on May 19, 1927, to actor Julius “Groucho” Marx and dancer Ruth Johnson as the Marx Brothers were doing a quick revival of their fabulously successful musical comedy The Cocoanuts on Broadway.

In 1930, she, her older brother, Arthur, and her parents moved to Hollywood when the Marx Brothers left New York to make their third feature, Paramount’s Monkey Business (1931).

Groucho “was a wonderful father, a very caring father, and very interested in both myself and my brother,” Allen said in a 1992 interview with the Los Angeles Times. “He chose our company over anybody else’s whenever possible. And he was a homebody. His idea of a perfect evening was to stay home and listen to music and read a book and be with his kids.”

After attending Bennington College in Vermont, Allen in the 1950s wrote for Mademoiselle magazine and was an editor alongside director Robert Dwan on You Bet Your Life, then airing on NBC television and hosted by her ad-libbing, stogie-smoking father.

In 1992, Allen published Love Groucho: Letters From Groucho Marx to His Daughter Miriam, a collection of her father’s letters sent from 1938 through 1967. She had saved more than 200 of them in a laundry bag.

One was from 1947, when Miriam was dating a man whom she had met on an elevator. “Was the elevator going up at the time, or down?” Groucho wrote. “This is very important, for going down in an elevator one always has that sinking feeling, and for all I know you may have this confused with love. If you were going up, it is clearly a case of love at first sight, and it also proves that he is a rising young man.”

Another was from 1953, when Allen was being treated for alcoholism at the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kansas.

Dave Semenko obit

Dave Semenko, two-time Stanley Cup winner, dies at 59



He was not on the list.


Dave Semenko, a two-time Stanley Cup winner and linemate of Wayne Gretzky with the Edmonton Oilers, died Thursday of pancreatic cancer. He was 59.

"It is with great sadness we announce the passing of Oilers legend Dave Semenko after a short, but courageous battle with cancer," the Oilers said in a statement. "Dave will be remembered as a fierce competitor, loyal teammate, fan favorite and dear friend to so many. His legendary toughness on the ice is surpassed only by his kindness and caring for others, and his equally legendary wit and sense of humor. Our hearts go out to Dave's family and many friends."

Kevin Lowe, vice chairman of Oilers Entertainment Group, said the banners hanging in Rogers Place honoring Edmonton's all-time greats were indicative of Semenko's influence and guidance.

"I think it's safe to say without overstating anything that the greatest of all time who [have banners] up in the building at Rogers, as [Paul Coffey] alluded to, those greats couldn't have done without the support and aid of Dave Semenko."

Semenko, a Winnipeg native, joined the Oilers for the 1977-78 World Hockey Association season. He scored the last goal in the history of the WHA, in a 7-3 loss to the Winnipeg Jets in Game 6 of the Avco Cup Final, and then moved with the Oilers to the NHL for 1979-80, playing with Edmonton until he was traded to the Hartford Whalers on Dec. 12, 1986.

He played 51 games for the Whalers in 1986-87 and 70 for the Toronto Maple Leafs the next season.

"One of the first Oilers I met in 1978, I didn't know at the time the impact he would have in my life and my career," Gretzky said in a statement. "He was the toughest player I knew and yet the biggest teddy bear you would ever know. A beloved Oiler that will be missed dearly because of his kind heart and funny sense of humor. He made us all better people."

"The news of Dave passing this morning literally took my breath away," Hockey Hall of Famer Mark Messier said in a statement. "I loved [Semenko] like we all did. He was a great teammate, a loyal friend, a loving father and a worthy champion."

Semenko finished his career with 153 points (65 goals, 88 assists) and 1,175 penalty minutes in 575 NHL games.

His former teammates detailed his considerable contributions to the Oilers. His on-ice presence and authority was especially vital for a young team on the verge of greatness.


Would the Oilers have won their first two Stanley Cups (1984, 1985) without Dave Semenko?" Marty McSorley said in a phone interview with NHL.com. "It would have been a much harder task. There were these 21-year-old kids that were flying around the ice and a little cocky -- in a good way.

"In beating the Philadelphia Flyers and the New York Islanders, these were tough teams. His presence was huge. He had a tremendous sense of humor. You had to listen to him because he would say things and it would float by."

Coffey echoed those sentiments at a news conference in Edmonton with Lowe and Charlie Huddy.

"Dave was the guy that made it fun," Coffey said. "He made it safe to go out and play with the big guys, going to Philadelphia, going to the Islanders, playing against the tough teams, and allowed myself and all the skilled players on that team to do what they did best. He was great at it."

The Oilers said Semenko was first diagnosed with cancer three to four weeks ago, after he called former Oilers head medical trainer Kenny Lowe, the brother of Kevin.

"I guess he had not been well for a couple of weeks," Kevin Lowe said. "There was no record of any of his recent health, because he hadn't been to a doctor in 15 years because I guess he had been the picture of health.

"The prognosis had been not great, but it felt treatable at the time, and it was just a rapid descent."

Coffey said that Semenko's wit and candor were with him until the end.

"It was a tough day for us all," Coffey said. "We all found out about a month ago, and I had the pleasure of being with Dave and playing with Dave and there wasn't a fight he didn't win. Unfortunately, this wasn't his fight to win. It's a terrible disease and he's the biggest guy I've seen taken down that fast, and that was sad. He did it with dignity. He was surrounded by his daughter and his friends."

Huddy, an assistant coach with the Jets, had been working this week at Winnipeg's development camp and made his way to Edmonton to try to see Semenko.

"The guys called me last night and told me [Semenko] wasn't doing good, and unfortunately I didn't get here in time," Huddy said. "… The stories go on and on about [Semenko] and how good of a teammate he was and made all of us safer on the ice. I don't think I saw him lose any fights. There was some tough guys back then, and he wasn't backing down."

After retiring in 1988, Semenko joined Oilers radio broadcasts as color commentator, and then was an assistant with Edmonton during the 1996-97 season. He was a pro scout for the Oilers from 1997-2015.

Lowe said there will be a memorial service for Semenko next week.

"I'm devastated," Lowe said. "He loved what he did, this was the first year he wasn't scouting but was an ambassador. He was the first-ever Oilers ambassador. We had so many comments from our customers and our employees of how fortunate they were to be able to work with him.

"And he was so happy, so happy of not traveling and he was really happy with the new building, the team and what he was doing, and he was really looking forward to the coming years. I'm shocked that this all went down so quick, and I'm going to really miss him."