Sports
in Connecticut
also
see The Hartford
Dark Blues.
By
Janice L. and Jerrold B. Trecker, West Hartford, Connecticut
Connecticut
residents have long enjoyed sports and games.
Even
in colonial days, races, tests of skill, and outdoor sports were
popular. Hunting was both a pleasure and a necessity, while fishing
was an activity for both sexes and all ages. But the development
of teams, especially professional and semi-professional organizations,
had to wait until communities with fairly large populations, wealth,
and leisure existed. It was not until 1862 that the Hartford Courant
announced the formation of the Charter Oaks, a professional baseball
team.
After
the Civil War, Connecticut saw the development of a lively
sports
scene, with what then was "big time" football at Yale
and a wide range of professional as semi-professional sports—harness
racing, boxing, baseball, football, tennis, golf and roller polo.
The twenty-five years on either side of 1900 can be considered
the "golden age" of sports in Connecticut. Then, southern
New England was very much in big leagues.
Hartford
was a charter member of the National Baseball League in 1876
with
Morgan G. Bulkeley (1837-1922) as head of the new sport. Hartford
did not last long at the top level, but Eastern League baseball
was of the highest class in its "golden age." Besides
these games, the state saw lively football, particularly in
the
great 1888 season at Yale where the Blues posted thirteen wins
with a team including Amos Alonso Stagg (1862-1965) and Pudge
Heffelfinger (1867-1954).
Football
was to persist, once at the National Football League level, but
usually at the collegiate and minor professional levels, often
with Yale in the ascendancy. There were brief periods of local
interest in teams such as the Hartford Knights, which dominated
the semi-professional Atlantic Coast League in the mid 1960s.
Then
there was boxing, the sport that attracted a number of Connecticuters,
especially from the lower weight ranks. Louis (Kid) Kaplan was
featherweight champion of the world from 1925 to 1927, while Guillermo
Papaleo, who fought as Willie Pep, is regarded as one of the finest
boxers ever to grace the ring. He reigned as champion in his weight
class from 1942 to 1948 and from 1949 to 1950 and fought epic
battles against Sandy Saddler, fights which helped to make the
sport a popular television spectacle after World War II. Christopher
(Bat) Battalino (b. 1908) was also a world champion from 1929
to 1932 and attracted large crowds to his bouts in the state.
These fighters were followed avidly by fans.
Also
popular were the many harness racing tracks such as Charter Oak
(West Hartford) and Sage Park (Windsor). The 1920s and early 1930s
were the Damon Runyan years of colorful sporting personalities
and promoters.
Completing
the cast were the professional bicycle racers, who competed on
the top level. A. W. Lonnie Warren defeated then-world champ Arthur
Zimmerman at a race in Birmington, Connecticut, in 1892, and the
sport attracted crowds as late as the 1930s at the East Hartford
Velodrome. Also popular were the players of roller polo, a game
played on roller skates with hockey (outdoor field hockey) sticks,
a well-supported spectator sport at the turn of the century. Still
popular in Spain and Portugal, the game is a mere memory in Connecticut
today.
This
diverse and vigorous sporting life was hurt by the financial woes
of the Great Depression of the 1930s and the dislocations of World
War II. It was the automobile culture of the post-war era, however,
which really spelled the end of the professional era in Connecticut.
Smack between Boston and New York, the Connecticut cities found
themselves unable to compete with the well-financed urban teams
of their larger neighbors.
In
baseball, the New York Yankee fans now seem to hold the southern
half of the state, where New York City-originated telecasts
of
their games were available long before the cable revolution.
The Boston Red Sox made their mark on the northern part of
Connecticut
as early as the post-war era, with their policy of marketing
their radio and television networks as New England-wide media. It
is not insignificant that the state's most powerful AM radio
station,
the 50,000-watt WTIC signal, has been voice of the Red Sox for
the past twenty-five years. Such identification with the team
indicates how strong area interest truly is.
Similarly,
when the National Football League gained prominence in the early
1960s, the York Giants were recognized as the most popular team
in New England. Allegiance to the Giants has endured, even after
the addition of the New York Jets and the New England Patriots
as rivals for spectator attention.
In
collegiate sport, the decades since World War II have also seen
a decline in national importance of the state's schools, including
the once-dominant Yale football team. Yale once practically defined
college football, and, with its 63,000-seat Bowl, owns the largest
private stadium in New England. This facility enabled college
football to develop as a major sport during the 1920s. At that
time, Yale was led by the legendary Albie Booth, (1908-1959);
defeated teams of national stature; and produced its own All-American
players. It was Yale's Walter Camp (1859-1925) who selected the
first All-American teams, a practice continued by the Walter Camp
Foundation to this day and mimicked by countless other sports
organizations and media associations.
But
Yale's contribution to collegiate sport ranges far beyond football,
even if that is the most noticeable area of its achievement. The
New Haven school has long been a leader in the number of sports
offered and the standard of academic excellence demanded of its
athletes. Along with the other Ivy League schools, Yale has proved
that it is possible to compete at the highest levels without professionalizing
college sport or diluting the quality of student-athlete attracted
to a particular program. Ivy League teams have successfully challenged
for the NCAA basketball, ice hockey, and baseball championships
down to the present, and Yale has sent 116 alumni (accounting
for nine medals) to the Olympic Games.
It
is to the social aspects of sport, however, that Yale has contributed
even more. Incorporating the British attitudes of fair play,
which
dominated amateur sport at the turn of the past century, Yale
and its fellow Ivy institutions have successfully maintained
an
attitude of healthy competition built upon a base of strong alumni
support. Hence, the annual Yale-Harvard competitions have
significance well beyond the games themselves, serving as reunions
for college
classes.
In
the face of the Ivy League tradition, reflected as well by the
small, high-prestige, private Connecticut colleges, the development
of sport at the state universities in Connecticut has been difficult.
Although the University of Connecticut at Storrs has competed
in inter-collegiate football competition since 1896, it has often
lived in the shadow of its New Haven rival. It was not until 1982-1983,
for example, that a Connecticut football team was able to score
successive victories over Yale.
Nonetheless,
UConn has carved out an athletic tradition of its own, being particularly
successful in basketball, baseball and soccer. More recently,
with the prominence of women's athletics, UConn has quickly demonstrated
its national strength by winning a championship in field hockey
and challenging as well for the national championship title in
soccer. In women's athletics, the state institutions have proven
far more successful than either the Ivy or Little Ivy schools.
At
the state university level, Central, Eastern, Southern and Western
have competed at the Division II or III levels. Three of the schools
have achieved national prominence, but usually in only one sport
per school. Central, for example, has long excelled in basketball,
Southern in gymnastics, and Eastern in baseball.
The
sports programs at Connecticut and New England high schools have
long been regarded as first-rate, particularly in terms of student
participation and in finding a balance between athletic and scholastic
values. The secondary schools in the state fall under two sporting
umbrellas: the public and parochial schools are administered by
the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) and
the independent schools adhere to the athletic regulations set
by the Western New England Secondary Schools Association (WNESSA).
The
CIAC began its practice of tournaments in 1920 with boys basketball
and conducts championship events in a wide range of sports for
both sexes. In addition to statewide competition, the CIAC allows
some regional championship events, although the most popular of
those competitions, the New England basketball tournament, was
abandoned in the 1960s after complaints about overemphasis and
the high pressure atmosphere of the finals. Glamour high school
sporting occasions, although common in other parts of the nation
where high school tournaments attract crowds comparable to professional
events, have never proved popular in Connecticut or New England,
perhaps because of the region's strong educational values.
School
sports have grown rapidly since World War II both in numbers of
participants and in variety. But the most significant change came
in 1972 when Title IX of the National Education Act mandated equal
opportunity for women and girls in educational institutions receiving
Federal funds. At a stroke, teams for high school and college
women were either created or strengthened in softball, field hockey,
basketball, volleyball, gymnastics, swimming, and track and field.
In recent years, schools have seen the number of women athletes
nearly double. In addition, the growing interest in women's sports
has spawned summer leagues in soccer, field hockey, and softball;
opened Little League baseball to both sexes; and encouraged participation
by adult women in sport. With these developments, women's sports
have come a long way.
If
Connecticut's home-grown professional and spectator sports
have
experienced a decline in recent decades, the reverse is true
of participation in sports. While professional soccer teams
like
the Connecticut Wildcats, Connecticut Bicentennials, and Hartford
Hellions all failed financially, along with minor league professional
football teams, adult recreational and semi-professional teams
have thrived. The history of modern immigration to the state
could
well be written in the changing teams of the Connecticut Soccer
League, as Scandia has given way to Bridgeport Vasco de Gamas
and Hartford Inca, and players from Latin America and the Far
East have joined Italians, Poles, Germans, Greeks, and Americans
on the playing fields.
Similarly,
the arrival of a large Spanish-speaking population has meant thriving
adult baseball leagues, providing urban recreation. Area West
Indians compete at cricket, the game of the British Empire, now
well established from Washington, D.C. to Boston.
In
more rural areas, hunting and fishing are still immensely popular;
with the state's roughly 175,000 acres open to hunting and
fishing—attracting
in recent years over 200,000 residents per year.
When
one adds the joggers, golfers, bowlers, softball players, and
lacrosse, tennis, and karate fanciers, Connecticut is clearly
a highly sports-conscious state. In recent years, with the Hartford
Whalers and the New Haven Nighthawks hockey teams, the jai alai
players at the state's three frontons, and the opening of modern
indoor areas such as the Hartford Civic Center (1975) and New
Haven Coliseum (1972), the state has added its claim to professional
major and minor league sports.
But
it is in its athletes that Connecticut still bears its greatest
claim to fame. In baseball, Naugatuck's Frank (Spec) Shea, with
the New York Yankees from 1947 to 1951, was the major league's
first relief-pitching specialist. Boston Red Sox fans spent seasons
cheering Connecticut natives Walt Dropo and Jimmy Piersall. Lindy
Remigino was a gold medal winner in the 100-meter dash at the
1952 Helsinki Olympic Games before devoting his life to teaching
and coaching at Hartford High School. Golfing great Juluis Boros
apprenticed at Connecticut clubs and amateur standout Dick Siderowf
combined a successful business career in the state with conquests
of the United States and British Amateur championships.
We
also watched Dorothy Hammill win Olympic gold in figure skating
in 1976 and Calvin Murphy, at less than six-feet tall, prove as
a player for twelve years in the NBA that a great basketball player
need not be seven-feet tall. Charlie Sticks wrote football history
at Trinity College in the 1950s and Nick Pietrosante made it with
the professional Detroit Lions. Charlie McCully came from Scotland
to Meriden and professional soccer fame in North America, playing
fifty-nine NASL games from 1968 to 1975.
Even
now a Hartford lad, Marion Starling, is bidding for a world boxing
title, while the University of Connecticut has joined one of the
most prestigious of all collegiate basketball conferences, the
Big East. At the same time, the average fan may be as interested
in his or her local high school, softball team, or midweek soccer
contest, not to forget the ever-present lure of the outdoors.
For
Further Reading
There
are few readily available secondary sources. As part of its Bicentennial
publications, the Hartford Courant published a number of
essays in the November 1, 1964 issue of the Courant Magazine
on Hartford sports and on famous Connecticut athletes. Some printed
material is available from Yale, and other educational institutions
probably have some information about the history of their sports
teams.
Otherwise,
material on the sporting history of Connecticut must be obtained
from primary sources of the state’s newspapers; from the memories
of sports writers, athletes, team organizers and promoters;
and
from such sponsors as clubs, fraternal organizations, and ethnic
social clubs.
*
Entry under revision.
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