Best wishes and farewell to Valley fans…till we meet again
January 1st, 2009, 3:11 pm by Mike TulumelloIn the next couple of days, I’ll be wrapping up 30 years covering sports and news.
I worked as the Suns’ beat writer for 16 seasons, longer than anybody, I think. I spent the past two seasons following these Cardinals, plus I spent one season covering ASU basketball.
I couldn’t have been bad luck.
Of these 19 teams, 14 teams had winning seasons, while two went .500.
Only three had losing seasons.
Of the 18 big-league teams I covered, 15 made the playoffs. So I’ve been lucky that way.
One, the 1992-93 Suns, made a dramatic run to the NBA Finals.
No team, before or since, has generated as much enthusiasm in Arizona.
I served as a backup on Diamondbacks’ coverage for five seasons, though not in 2001, when they won the World Series.
I was never much for X’s and O’s; I was always pondering what to write, what story to tell, rather than following whether the Suns were in a motion offense, whether the Cardinals were playing cover-2 defense.
I was the last person you’d want to hear from on the technical aspects of sports.
As a result, I seldom second-guessed game strategy. So, in turn, I got along well enough with most coaches.
On the other hand, I always could tell who could play.
I don’t know why. I don’t claim any credit. I just could tell, regardless of the sport.
I knew who would be the stars, who would be the role players, who would be the busts.
Whenever I disagreed with scouts and general managers, people usually making big-time salaries, I was usually right.
I knew the Suns should have drafted Tayshaun Prince, not Casey Jacobsen.
I knew Dustin Pedroia was a big-time player when he was a runt of a freshman shortstop at ASU in 2002, the year the Sun Devils played at HoKoKam Park in Mesa.
(I’m sure many fans feel the same way. And they’re right. I’m sure many knowledgeable fans, armed with a cell phone, access to the Internet, a couple scouts’ phone numbers and a few draft guidebooks probably could run a team better than, say, the Lions, Timberwolves and Royals.)
I knew the Cardinals (just before I came on the beat) should have drafted Adrian Peterson, not Levi Brown.
I even knew USC’s Reggie Bush, lionized as one of the greatest college football players ever, should have been a second-round pick.
Yes, the Cardinals should have paid me $1 million to run their 2007 draft.
I would have picked Peterson. The Cardinals would have been perennial Super Bowl contenders.
More important, I would have had $1 million.

