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Pistol: A Biography of Pete Maravich
Pistol: A Biography of Pete Maravich
Pistol: A Biography of Pete Maravich
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Pistol: A Biography of Pete Maravich

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The New York Times bestselling Pistol is more than the biography of a ballplayer. It's the stuff of classic novels: the story of a boy transformed by his father's dream—and the cost of that dream. Even as Pete Maravich became Pistol Pete—a basketball icon for baby boomers—all the Maraviches paid a price. Now acclaimed author Mark Kriegel has brilliantly captured the saga of an American family: its rise, its apparent ruin, and, finally, its redemption.

Almost four decades have passed since Maravich entered the national consciousness as basketball's boy wizard. No one had ever played the game like the kid with the floppy socks and shaggy hair. And all these years later, no one else ever has. The idea of Pistol Pete continues to resonate with young people today just as powerfully as it did with their fathers.

In averaging 44.2 points a game at Louisiana State University, he established records that will never be broken. But even more enduring than the numbers was the sense of ecstasy and artistry with which he played. With the ball in his hands, Maravich had a singular power to inspire awe, inflict embarrassment, or even tell a joke.

But he wasn't merely a mesmerizing showman. He was basketball's answer to Elvis, a white Southerner who sold Middle America on a black man's game. Like Elvis, he paid a terrible price, becoming a prisoner of his own fame.

Set largely in the South, Kriegel's Pistol, a tale of obsession and basketball, fathers and sons, merges several archetypal characters. Maravich was a child prodigy, a prodigal son, his father's ransom in a Faustian bargain, and a Great White Hope. But he was also a creature of contradictions: always the outsider but a virtuoso in a team sport, an exuberant showman who wouldn't look you in the eye, a vegetarian boozer, an athlete who lived like a rock star, a suicidal genius saved by Jesus Christ.

A renowned biographer—People magazine called him “a master”—Kriegel renders his subject with a style that is, by turns, heartbreaking, lyrical, and electric.

The narrative begins in 1929, the year a missionary gave Pete's father a basketball. Press Maravich had been a neglected child trapped in a hellish industrial town, but the game enabled him to blossom. It also caused him to confuse basketball with salvation. The intensity of Press's obsession initiates a journey across three generations of Maraviches. Pistol Pete, a ballplayer unlike any other, was a product of his father's vanity and vision. But that dream continues to exact a price on Pete's own sons. Now in their twenties—and fatherless for most of their lives—they have waged their own struggles with the game and its ghosts.

Pistol is an unforgettable biography. By telling one family's history, Kriegel has traced the history of the game and a large slice of the American narrative.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherFree Press
Release dateFeb 6, 2007
ISBN9781416538615
Pistol: A Biography of Pete Maravich
Author

Mark Kriegel

Mark Kriegel is the author of two critically acclaimed bestsellers, Namath: A Biography and Pistol: The Life of Pete Maravich. He is a veteran columnist and a commentator for the NFL Network. He lives with his daughter, Holiday, in Santa Monica, California.

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    Pistol - Mark Kriegel

    ACCLAIM FOR

    PISTOL: The Life of Pete Maravich

    A wonderfully crafted biography . . . Kriegel captures both Maravich’s on-court brilliance and complicated off-court life.

    —The New York Times

    Mark Kriegel has written the sports-bio equivalent of Maravich on a fast break: dazzling and smart, and, even at 381 pages, over before you knew it.

    —The Wall Street Journal

    A stunning literary journey . . . not only required reading for basketball fans, but required re-reading once you’re done.

    —New York Post

    It’s a compelling read, with the careful character development and page-turning urgency of a good novel . . . the complex relationship between Petar ‘Press’ Maravich and his gifted son makes their shared story so captivating and gives the book its dramatic wallop.

    —Dan McGrath, Chicago Tribune

    This is the best sports book I’ve read in years. The research, the writing, the pace—it’s All-Pro material.

    —Terry Pluto, The Akron Beacon Journal

    Transcendent . . . Kriegel has elevated himself into the most elegant voice on epic American sporting lives.

    —Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports

    "Pistol skillfully pulls off the balancing act required of good sports biography. It plays large historical forces (segregation, the rise of televised sports) against the individual magic of its subject."

    —New York magazine

    A remarkable book that is the best researched biography yet of this revolutionary basketball player.

    —The Raleigh News and Observer

    Like the best journalists, Kriegel has the ability to get out of the way and let a good story tell itself.

    —The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Inside front cover

    An essential read . . . Kriegel not only provides a wonderful evocation of the basketball life of Maravich, but he also gives readers a delightfully written biography.

    —Library Journal

    The most irresistible sports portrait I have read in years. Kriegel has written a book that explains the greatness of Pistol Pete as well as his great mysteries.

    —Rick Bozich, Louisville Courier-Journal

    "Pistol is a beautifully written book that captures the soul and inner turmoil of this son and father."

    —The Tennessean

    Brilliant . . . it is a wonderful tale reading like a page-turner that couldn’t be true.

    —ESPN.com

    The best of the couple of dozen sports books reviewed . . . artfully captures a figure ideally suited to the genre.

    —Neil Best, Newsday

    Kriegel does a great job making it more than just a basketball story . . . it might bring you to tears.

    —Alan Hahn, Newsday

    Fascinating look at the magic and tragic existence of one of basketball’s most compelling and confounding figures.

    —Frank Fitzpatrick, The Philadelphia Inquirer

    Highly readable . . . succeeds in making Pistol appealing to both the hard-core sports fan and the student of human nature.

    —The Dallas Morning News

    Kriegel has delivered the definitive Maravich biography, like a perfect pass in traffic, a riveting and exhaustively researched work that is a must-read for hoop fans.

    —The Buffalo News

    An enthralling biography about a sports icon who was a magician on the court and a basket case off it.

    —The Birmingham News

    Mark Kriegel . . . has given Maravich’s many fans the book they’ve been waiting for.

    —The Oregonian (Portland, Oregon)

    A fascinating look at one of the most entertaining but tortured performers in sports.

    —Marc Narducci, The Philadelphia Inquirer

    "The cream of the hoops crop . . . Kriegel is a master at research and finding people who will talk to him . . . superb, up there on a short list with such greats as David Halberstam’s Breaks of the Game."

    —The Orlando Sentinel

    Beautifully detailed.

    —Jonathan Last, The Philadelphia Inquirer

    Mark Kriegel makes this wizard of a bygone era come to life.

    —Albuquerque Journal

    "Pistol amounts to a trip down memory lane even for those of us who don’t have the memories . . . deserves a place on any sports fan’s shelf."

    —Arkansas Democrat Gazette

    Kriegel . . . writes with a New York swagger and swizzle.

    —Stan Hochman, Philadelphia Daily News

    Kriegel delivers a lyrical look at Pistol’s life that is well written and weighty.

    —Bill Simmons, ESPN The Magazine

    A rounded, insightful look at one of basketball’s enigmatic icons . . . Kriegel is more than up to the task.

    —Publishers Weekly

    "Running hard along the parallel tracks of history, psychology, sociology and pop culture, Mark Kriegel’s book about Pete Maravich might long be remembered as the definitive Pistol  . . . Pistol is so much more than the when and how . . . far more compelling."

    —Gene Collier, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

    Must reading.

    —Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

    "It’s all here in Pistol, a wonderful biography . . . In many ways it’s the most American of stories . . . if you read it I promise you won’t forget it."

    —Bill Reynolds, The Providence Journal

    Fascinating.

    —Chicago Sun-Times

    A cautionary tale . . . Kriegel’s honest portrayal . . . is a compelling story for any fan of hoops history, father or son.

    —The Hartford Courant

    Great book.

    —Henry Abbott, TrueHoop.com

    Super.

    The Biloxi Sun Herald

    What Pistol Pete was to the no-look, 50-foot bounce pass Kriegel may be to the sports biography: transcendent.

    Booklist, starred review

    Terrifically well researched.

    Deseret Morning News (Salt Lake City)

    Kriegel gives voice to those moments of flight and daring, the high personal cost of devotion to a sport . . . energetic, fast-moving.

    The Times Picayune (New Orleans)

    Haunting.

    Evansville Courier & Press

    Kriegel captures the essence of Maravich . . . It’s a tragic story, to be sure, but a compelling one that Kriegel tells so very well.

    —John Perrotto, The Times (Beaver County, Pennsylvania)

    "A touching, incredibly sad portrait of Pete and his father, Press, and how attached they were at the heart . . . immaculate research.

    —Jim Huber, HOFMAG.com

    Terrific . . . Just as Maravich’s electrifying moves captivated millions on the basketball court, Kriegel’s narrative will captivate readers.

    The Vindicator (Ohio)

    "Kriegel’s book will . . . lead you to places you would not otherwise find. It tells a story—some of it recorded and some of it forgotten, some of it exhilarating and some of it devastatingly sad. It is a story about a father and a son, about vanity, about commitment, about vision, about obsession.

    American Srbobran

    "Kriegel’s Pistol is different than the slew of other biographies aimed at the Pistol because all the stories in the perfectly chronological book are firsthand accounts from those who knew Pete Maravich best."

    Tiger Weekly

    "Pistol is a classic American tale wonderfully told. With deep research and a vivid narrative style, Mark Kriegel brings us the joy and sorrow of Pete Maravich, an inimitable basketball player who was both timeless and before his time, an original talent haunted by demons—his father’s and his own."

    —David Maraniss, author of Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball’s Last Hero

    "Pistol is not just a biography of a transcendent, doomed athlete; it is a mesmerizing tale of a striving, grasping American family as dramatic as myth, of a father and son as intertwined as Daedalus and Icarus. Kriegel has written the rarest of sports books: a fast-paced, through-the-night page-turner. This isn’t a slam dunk, it’s a tomahawk glass-shatterer. Pistol is nothing but sensational."

    —Rick Telander, author of Heaven Is a Playground and senior sports columnist, Chicago Sun-Times

    Pistol Pete’s moves on the basketball court defied the laws of physics. He did things you can’t even film. He deserves a biographer with magic powers of his own, and he’s found one in Mark Kriegel.

    —Will Blythe, author of To Hate Like This Is to Be Happy Forever

    CONTENTS

    Epigraph

    Prologue

    One: Special Opportunity

    Two: Mr. Basketball

    Three: Pro Ball

    Four: The Cult of Press

    Five: Country Gentlemen

    Six: The Basketball Gene

    Seven: The Devil in Ronnie Montini

    Eight: Pistol Pete

    Nine: Changing the Game

    Ten: The Deep End

    Eleven: King of the Cow Palace

    Twelve: Showtime

    Thirteen: One of Us

    Fourteen: Marked Man

    Fifteen: The Blackhawks

    Sixteen: The Unbearable Whiteness of Being Pete

    Seventeen: Take Me

    Eighteen: Smothered

    Nineteen: All That Jazz

    Twenty: The Loser

    Twenty-One: Take Me, Part 2

    Twenty-Two: Amazing Grace

    Twenty-Three: Patrimony

    Pete Maravich: The Numbers

    Photographs

    Acknowledgments

    About the Author

    Notes

    Index

    Amid all this talk of fathers and sons, it was a daughter who saved me: This book is for Holiday Mia Kriegel

    Listen to me, eyes of mine, guard that which is thine.

    Father to son, in a Serbian folk song

    The radio was playing and the morning news was on. I was startled to hear that Pete Maravich, the basketball player, had collapsed on a basketball court in Pasadena, just fell over and never got up. I’d seen Maravich play in New Orleans, when the Utah Jazz were the New Orleans Jazz. He was something to see—mop of brown hair, floppy socks—the holy terror of the basketball world—high flyin’—magician of the court . . . He could have played blind.

    Bob Dylan, from the first volume of his autobiography, Chronicles

    January 31, 1970: Pete Maravich moments after becoming college basketball’s all-time leading scorer. At left, with the crewcut, is his father, Press. AP Wirephoto

    PROLOGUE

    January 5, 1988.

    They cannot see him, this slouched, ashen-faced man in their midst. To their oblivious eyes, he remains what he had been, unblemished by the years, much as he appeared on his first bubblegum card: a Beatlesque halo of hair, the fresh-faced, sad-eyed wizard cradling a grainy, leather orb.

    One of the regulars, a certified public accountant, had retrieved this very artifact the night before. He found it in a shoebox, tucked away with an old train set and a wooden fort in a crawlspace in his parents’ basement. He brought it to the gym this morning to have it signed, or perhaps, in some way, sanctified. The 1970 rookie card of Pete Maravich, to whom the Atlanta Hawks had just awarded the richest contract in professional sport, notes the outstanding facts: that Maravich had been coached by his father, under whose tutelage he became the most prolific scorer in the history of college basketball.

    Other salient statistics are provided in agate type: an average of 44.2 points a game, a total of 3,667 (this when nobody had scored 3,000). The records will never be broken. Still, they are woefully inadequate in measuring the contours of the Maravich myth.

    Even the CPA, for whom arithmetic is a vocation, understands the limitation in mere numbers. There is no integer denoting magic or memory. He was important to us, the accountant would say.

    Maravich wasn’t an archetype; he was several: child prodigy, prodigal son, his father’s ransom in a Faustian bargain. He was a creature of contradictions, ever alone: the white hope of a black sport, a virtuoso stuck in an ensemble, an exuberant showman who couldn’t look you in the eye, a vegetarian boozer, the athlete who lived like a rock star, a profligate, suicidal genius saved by Jesus Christ.

    Still, it’s his caricature that evokes unqualified affection in men of a certain age. Pistol Pete, they called him. The Pistol is another relic of the seventies, not unlike bongs or Bruce Lee flicks: the skinny kid who mesmerized the basketball world with Globetrotter moves, floppy socks, and great hair.

    Pistol Pete was, in fact, his father’s vision, built to the old man’s exacting specifications. Press Maravich was a Serb. Ideas and language occurred to him in the mother tongue, and so one imagines him speaking to Pistol (yes, that’s what he called him, too) as a father addressing his son in an old Serbian song: Cuj me sine oci moje, Cuvaj ono sto je tvoje . . . Listen to me, eyes of mine, guard that which is thine . . .

    •  •  •

    The game in progress is a dance in deference to this patrimony. The Pistol is an inheritance, not just for the Maraviches, but for all the American sons who play this American game. The squeak of sneakers against the floor produces an oddly chirping melody. Then there’s another rhythm, the respiration of men well past their prime, an assortment of white guys: the accountant, insurance salesmen, financial planners, even a preacher or two. Just a bunch of duffers, recalls one. Fat old men, smirks another.

    But they play as if Pistol Pete, or what’s left of him, could summon the boys they once were. They acknowledge him with a superfluous flourish, vestigial teenage vanity—an extra behind-the-back pass or an unnecessary between-the-legs dribble. The preacher, a gentle-voiced man of great renown in evangelical circles, reveals a feverishly competitive nature. After hitting a shot, he is heard to bellow, You get that on camera?

    The Parker Gymnasium at Pasadena’s First Church of the Nazarene could pass for a good high school gym—a clean, cavernous space with arching wooden rafters and large windows. At dawn, fully energized halogen lamps give off a glow to the outside world, a beacon to spirits searching for a game. As a boy, Maravich would have considered this a kind of heaven. Now, it’s a way station of sorts.

    Pete begins wearily. He hasn’t played in a long time and moves at one-quarter speed, if that. He does not jump; he shuffles. The ball seems like a shotput in his hands, his second attempt at the basket barely touching the front of the rim.

    But gradually, as the pace of his breath melds with the others’ and he starts to sweat, Pete Maravich recovers something in himself. The glimpse of greatness was in his ballhandling, recalls the accountant. Every once in a while the hands would flicker. There would just be some kind of dribble or something. You could see a little of it in his hands, the greatness. Just the quickness of the beat.

    There was genius in that odd beat, the unexpected cadence, a measure of music. The Pistol’s talent, now as then, was musical. He was as fluent as Mozart—his game rising to the level of language—but he was sold like Elvis, the white guy performing in a black idiom. And for a time, he was mad like Elvis, too.

    Once, in an attempt to establish contact with extraterrestrial life, he painted a message on his roof: Take me.

    Deliver me, he meant.

    Now the accountant tries to blow past Pete with a nifty spin move. Pete tells him not to believe his own hype.

    The Pistol wears an easy grin. The men in this game are avid readers of the Bible. But perhaps the truth of this morning is to be found in the Koran: Remember that the life of this world is but a sport and a pastime.

    Pete banks one in.

    That smile again. What a goof.

    The game ends. Guys trudge off to the water fountain. Pete continues to shoot around.

    And now, you wonder what he sees. Was it as he used to imagine? The space will open up, he once said. Beyond that will be heaven and when you go inside, then the space closes again and you are there . . . definitely a wonderful place . . . everyone you ever knew will be there.

    Back on earth, the preacher asks Pete Maravich how he feels.

    I feel great, he says.

    •  •  •

    Soon the phone will ring in Covington, Louisiana. A five-year-old boy hears the maid let out a sharp piercing howl. Then big old Irma quickly ushers the boy and his brother into another room. The boy closes the door behind him and considers himself in the mirror. He has his father’s eyes. That’s what everyone says. Eyes of mine, guard that which is thine. Guard that which fathers give to their sons to give to their sons.

    The boy looks through himself, and he knows:

    My daddy’s dead.

    1. SPECIAL OPPORTUNITY

    Press Maravich, then fourteen years old, can be seen in the 1929 Condor, yearbook of the Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, school district. He appears on page 48, on the far right, in a photograph of Mrs. Thompson’s Special Opportunity Group. One needs a mere glance to know that such opportunity was a euphemistic term as applied to the thirty-nine children in Catherine Thompson’s custody. Most conspicuous is the large girl extending her arms downward, her hands in front of her dress, as if she were waiting to be handcuffed. Then there’s the girl in the front row, her head tilted at an unnatural angle. And what of the odd sway through the torso of that boy in his ill-fitting suit? The faces are bewildered, quizzical, disconnected. There is, however, a notable exception.

    His windbreaker is unbuttoned, his collar open, hands resting casually in his pockets. Chances are, the Maravich boy is hiding a wad of chew in his mouth. But his expression is striking—the unmistakable smirk of the luckless, as if he alone understands the inexorable course of what lies ahead, the Special Opportunity Group’s manifest destiny.

    The look is defiantly grim. The eyes announce what the mouth does not:

    I’m fucked.

    •  •  •

    He was the youngest child born to Sara and Vajo Maravich, of Pittsburgh’s South Side by way of Dreznica, a fallow, rocky Serbian town in the Croatian province of Lika. The oldest, Milan, was seven months when he died on February 28, 1909. Twin girls, Marija and Marta, each died in April 1910. They were six months old. Velamir was only five days when he passed away, September 5, 1913. A year and a day later, Petar, the boy who’d be known as Press, was baptized at St. George, the Serbian Orthodox church on 25th Street.

    Pittsburgh’s industrial boroughs like the South Side were dominated by steel mills. It would be argued that the soundest material measure of our potency as a nation . . . is our capacity to produce steel ingots. But the making of steel could also unmake a man’s spirit. James Parton, writing for the Atlantic, famously described Pittsburgh as hell with the lid taken off. Six months residence here would justify suicide, Britain’s eminent philosopher Herbert Spencer once told his host, Andrew Carnegie.

    The production of steel consumed flesh and blood with the same regularity as it did iron ore and limestone. Typical was the night of March 11, 1918, when the driver of a Dinkey engine was killed in a collision with a railroad car near the No. 1 Open Hearth Mill at Jones & Laughlin’s Southside Works. F. L. Thigpen, M.D., attending physician at South Side Hospital, listed the cause of death as shock and hemorrhage as a result of partial amputation of Rt. Lower extremity and internal abdominal injury. The deceased was identified by his next-door neighbor, Theodore Tatalovich, his seljac, a friend for twenty years going back to their days in Dreznica. On March 28, a six-man coroner’s jury ruled the death accidental. The coroner’s report refers to the dead man by his Anglicized given name: Alex. He was thirty-nine, married, and father of a three-and-a-half-year-old son, Press Maravich.

    There is no way to gauge the boy’s emotional trauma, or if it had any bearing on his eventual designation as a member of Mrs. Thompson’s Special Opportunity Group. Sara Maravich soon remarried, to a man named Djuro Kosanovich. He had arrived in the United States on December 4, 1913. Like Vajo Maravich, he, too, hailed from Dreznica and worked for Jones & Laughlin. Djuro went five-nine, 250 pounds, with a big jowly face and a flattop haircut. He was a gruff man, known to be an enthusiastic consumer of beer and whiskey following his mill shift. After drinking too much, he would make a whinnying noise, like a horse.

    Sara Kosanovich, as she was now known, bore him two sons, Sam in 1919 and Marko two years later. In 1925, they moved to Aliquippa, about eighteen miles north of Pittsburgh on the west bank of the Ohio River. Named after a fabled Seneca Indian queen, Aliquippa was supposed to be a model for American industry, an answer for all that ailed Pittsburgh.

    We want to make it the best possible place for a steelworker to raise a family, William Larimer Jones, J&L’s vice president and general manager, said on his company town’s inception.

    Little distinction, however, was drawn between the interests of these families and The Family, as the firm’s ruling scions were called. Aliquippa was more than another company town; it was a massive social experiment, testing the limits of paternalism and conformity. As a condition of employment, J&L workers were expected to register and vote Republican. Unionization was forbidden. In our town, they had a system of spying that made the KGB look like schoolchildren, recalled Joseph Perriello, who would help organize workers in the thirties. Informants were plentiful—on every block, in the churches and the bars and the social clubs. Unflattering reports could result in a visit from a local constable, typically skilled in the use of a billy club. The Aliquippa Police Department was, in effect, a subsidiary of J&L—not much different from wholly owned subsidiaries like the Woodlawn Water Company or the Woodlawn Land Company.

    Woodlawn Land was The Family’s agent in developing Aliquippa. The town was laid out per a series of twelve Plans. The north end of town, Plans 1 and 2, included an area long known as Logstown, where Queen Aliquippa once waited impatiently for George Washington. Now it was for different settlers: Serbs, Croatians, and some Italians. Plan 3, for example, housed Germans, Irish, and English. Senior management, known as cake eaters, lived in Plan 6. Plan 7 was Slovaks, Ukrainians, and Poles. Plan 8 had skilled workers from northern Europe. Plan 10 was midlevel supervisors. Plan 11 was home to Poles and blacks, known as colored. The company was beneficent enough to build a separate pool for the colored families.

    The boss of the town was the company superintendent, Tom Girdler. When I recall how well we realized the vision of The Family, he wrote, I am proud to have had a part in the making of Aliquippa.

    Girdler’s pride in what he himself termed a benevolent dictatorship apparently blinded him to the town’s less benevolent side; the thriving assortment of speakeasies, whorehouses, and gambling dens. In 1918, four years into Girdler’s reign, a state supreme court justice wrote of Aliquippa, It is said that the region is largely peopled by uneducated foreigners who invariably carry concealed weapons; that murders are common; and that when a quarrel ensues, the question as to who shall be the murderer and who is murdered is largely, if not wholly, determined by the ability to draw such a weapon quickly.

    What’s more, Aliquippa was a cruelty to behold. Leaving Pittsburgh by rail to the east, H. L. Mencken once declared the surrounding areas the most loathsome towns and villages ever seen by mortal eye. And though Aliquippa was west of the big city, it would not have disappointed Mencken, as his assessment was based on unbroken and agonizing ugliness.

    J&L’s Aliquippa Works stretched for seven and a half relentless miles, bordered on one side by the Ohio River and on the other by the Pennsylvania and Lake Erie Railroad. Deposits of raw materials by the rail yards formed mountain ranges of limestone, iron ore, and coal to go with the towering gray heaps of by-product called slag. As the engine picked up steam again, dishes and windows would rattle in nearby homes, such as the one on 117 Iron Street.

    That’s where the Kosanovich family, along with the Maravich boy, had settled. Their home, at the bottom of a hill overlooking the steel works, sat at the eastern edge of Plan 2, as close as one could live to the source of the agonizing ugliness. From Iron Street, the assortment of furnaces—blast furnaces, open hearths, and Bessemers—looked close enough to touch.

    Plan 2 was the least desirable, recalls Milo Kosanovich, a nephew of Djuro. It was closest to the railroads and the mill. The homes were just thrown in there, all duplexes and boarding houses. Everybody just stacked as close to the mill as possible.

    Porches had to be swept, usually twice a day, to clear them of the black sugar, a granular soot that blew in from the blast furnaces. To stroll down Iron Street was to feel the black sugar crunch under your feet. To look toward the heavens was to see a flaming orange sky. The Bessemer furnaces, pear-shaped vessels resembling squat cannons, would tilt and blow, a colossal bonfire.

    People would come from all over to bear witness to this illumination. In neighboring villages, native Aliquippans would hear, Hey, look, your town’s on fire. The constant glow made it difficult to tell day from night.

    Down on Hopewell Avenue, near the Logstown Elementary School, boys like Press would play past dusk bathed in the Bessemer light. The kids from Logstown were considered the most aggressive and competitive in all of Aliquippa. I’ve often wondered, says former Aliquippan Sharon Danovich, what that did to men like Press and my father. What was it like to grow up under an orange sky?

    I will always remember the phrase: As the Bessemer glows, so will Aliquippa go, says Lazo Maravich, Press’s close friend and next-door neighbor. As long as the Bessemer was spouting flame and ash, you knew there would be jobs. It was a beacon. The course of life for most people was pretty well predetermined.

    The furnace lit a route toward the inevitable, a destination for fathers and their sons and their sons’ sons. Boys would ask each other, Where you going after high school? But it wasn’t a question, as the answer was almost always the same: Through the tunnel.

    The tunnel was in fact a viaduct, an echo chamber separating Franklin Avenue and the mill. A young man trudging through for the first time could hear what the rest of his life would sound like.

    In the meantime, boys like Lazo and Press amused themselves as best they could. They were the same age, of the same clan, their fathers being Maraviches of Dreznica. To the English speakers and cake eaters they described themselves as cousins. But in fact, Lazo was closer to a brother. Certainly, he was closer to Press than his stepbrothers.

    Mary Cribbs, formerly Mary Yovich of Iron Street, recalls Press as the only one on the block who didn’t have any brothers or sisters. When asked about the Kosanovich boys, Marko and Sam, she says, "No real brothers or sisters."

    There was always a distance between Press and the Kosanoviches. Sara, mother to all the boys, was a fine cook. She could make beans and sauerkraut taste like manna. She could transform cabbage, potatoes, and just a little meat into big, hearty pots of soup. But she was not an assertive woman, and she could not bridge the gap between her past and present families.

    Djuro Kosanovich had taken in her son, but did not embrace him. I don’t think the relationship was a very good one, says Helen Kosanovich, who would marry Marko.

    There was no relationship, according to a neighbor, Sarah Kostal. Asked if Press—the only one in that house with a different surname—ever thought of himself as a Kosanovich, she emphatically declared, Never.

    Apparently, the feeling was mutual. When he filed his petition for U.S. citizenship, Djuro Kosanovich declared two children, Marko and Sam, but made no mention of Press.

    •  •  •

    As first-generation Americans, Press and Lazo were caught between old customs and new ways. In search of Old World respectability, they were given music lessons: banjo for Press, the violin for Lazo. But the boys were ashamed of the instruments. They wanted to play games, a form of endeavor that men of the old country could never understand. They played football and mushball (like softball but with a bigger, spongier ball) and Buck Buck (also known as Johnny on a Pony). They played a makeshift version of basketball, nailing a bushel basket to a tree and wrapping rags around a rubber ball.

    No one had a real football or basketball, Lazo recalls. No one ever bought a toy. Everything was homespun.

    In winter, they’d warm themselves over a sewer. Or maybe they’d build a fire and loaf by the railroad tracks until the cops came to roust them. We spent a lot of time on those damn tracks, says Lazo.

    They’d sneak back from their music lessons along the tracks, lest any of their Logstown cronies see them carrying those sissified instruments. At night, they’d climb the rungs on the side of the railcars, throw down a ration of coal, and sprint home with it. It wasn’t like we were trying to beat the company out of a little coal, says Lazo. It wasn’t mischief. It was for our families. Men were making 33 cents an hour. When it came to the family’s survival, everybody had a piece of the action.

    They were chewing tobacco before they had passed through puberty. Most kids chewed Copenhagen snuff. Not Press, though. He chewed Mail Pouch, incessantly. Press had his own ideas—quite a lot of them, in fact. Nor was he shy about expressing them. It was alleged, facetiously, that the boy baptized Petar had more news than the Pittsburgh Press. That’s how he got the name Press.

    Unfortunately, the wisdom of his many passionately held opinions was lost on his teachers. He was designated a slow learner, slow in reading, says Lazo, who, looking back, wonders if Press might have been dyslexic. Or, perhaps, a victim of neglect? All these years later, the recollection makes Lazo Maravich burn: He was stigmatized. He was discarded. They threw him in the junk heap.

    So much for the Special Opportunity he had been granted as a member of Catherine Thompson’s class. Even his highest aspirations left nothing to the imagination. He was seen as a fatherless dimwit who passed the time under an orange sky. It would be his great good fortune to one day go through the tunnel and dodge beads of splashing molten metal. Of course, this wasn’t news to Press. He knew that much by Picture Day 1929.

    •  •  •

    That same year Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Anderton came to run the Logstown Mission, a white-frame former Lutheran church at the corner of Iron and Phillips Streets. Mr. Anderton, an insurance agent from Beaver Falls by way of Great Britain, was a lay worker for the Presbytery of Beaver County.

    Anderton got to the youth, says Mary Cribbs. He wanted them to know the Lord and keep off the streets.

    He was a lean guy with a good mop of hair and a gimpy arm—a good human being in every sense, says Lazo Maravich, a lifelong Aliquippan. He didn’t want us getting mixed up with the gambling or the drinking or any of that.

    Logstown might have been poor, but it was rich with young souls to be saved. And Anderton’s Mission, a beneficiary of the J&L Family’s largesse, offered a range of inducements to bring young people closer to that end. With the Depression under way, there was a soup line for adults and graham crackers with milk for the kids. Sometimes, there was even ice cream.

    I was embarrassed, recalls Lazo, who was nevertheless too hungry to refuse.

    Mrs. Anderton taught the girls how to sew. Boys would gather in the game room for Tiddly Winks and Ping-Pong, about which Mr. Anderton was a great enthusiast. Wednesday night was Christian Endeavor Night, with a slide show depicting biblical scenes.

    But the single most powerful enticement was a basketball court in the Mission’s main room. It was of modest dimension, perhaps 50 feet long and half as wide. The boys played where they prayed. The podium, the pews, and chairs were moved aside (in stark contrast to St. Elijah, the Serbian church, there were no icons or ornate gold Orthodox crosses). The floor underneath had been marked with foul lines and boundaries. It was a plane of good, level wood, not dirt or pocked pavement. You didn’t have to worry about crashing into the metal rungs of a lightpole. The ball was made of leather, a proper basketball, not a bundle of rags. No need for a bushel basket, either.

    Real baskets with a net, rims, a wooden backboard, the whole thing, Press would recall. And when we saw those baskets in the church it was like a professional hall to us. It was so exciting, a real thrill.

    If the devil could barter for souls, then so could Ernest Anderton. Here was the deal: The boys could play all they wanted as long as they attended Sunday school.

    And so did Press become suddenly devout. He sang psalms and read his Bible and went to Sunday school. He’d do anything to get a basketball in his hands, anything for another couple of hours playing ball in that Mission, says Lazo. That drove him. Basketball became his life.

    Why or how the game touched Press Maravich is another mystery of faith. But the effects were plain to see. The game—something about its rhythms and geometry—unleashed his body and unlocked his brain, his talent, his charisma. His devotion was obsessive, curative, and, finally, emancipating.

    The beat of the game was a hymn in his ears, Press’s Ode to Joy.

    Unlike some of the other kids at the Mission, Press Maravich was never moved to utter a Confession of Faith, accepting Jesus Christ as his Lord and savior.

    A savior he had found. But it wasn’t Jesus Christ.

    2. MR. BASKETBALL

    Basket ball was invented in 1891 by James A. Naismith. Recently graduated from Montreal’s Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Naismith was a physical education instructor at the International YMCA Training School in Springfield, Massachusetts, when he received a directive from the head of the department, Dr. Luther Gulick. It seemed that a class of eighteen, most of them football and rugby players, was bored to the point of distraction. Those boys simply would not play drop the handkerchief, Naismith recalled.

    He was given fourteen days to conceive of a diversion that could be played indoors, under artificial light, a game that required physical vigor but prohibited actual violence. On December 21, Naismith posted the thirteen original rules on two typewritten sheets before presiding over the game’s inaugural scrimmage, an affair that witnessed a single score on a 25-foot toss.

    The game grew astonishingly quickly thereafter, thanks largely to the far-flung travels of Training School graduates and Naismith’s genial willingness to share his rules with anyone showing interest, wrote Alexander Wolff, in a celebration of the game’s first 100 years. In addition, despite all Naismith’s precautions, many Y’s considered the sport to be too rough, and incipient teams banned from Y’s found new homes in Masonic temples, dance halls and gymnasiums bounded by chicken wire that came to be known as cages. [Hence the term ‘cagers.’] This introduced the game to even more people. Most fundamentally, however, basketball grew because there was a need for a simple, indoor wintertime game.

    Naismith brought the new sport west when he accepted a faculty position at the University of Kansas. In the Midwest, companies devoted to the manufacture of rubber or ball bearings sponsored teams and leagues. Suddenly, gyms sprang up in barns in rural Indiana. Teeming urban slums, lacking anything resembling playing fields, proved to be especially fertile ground for the do-gooders who doubled as basketball’s first messengers.

    Still, by the time Ernest Anderton put a ball in Press’s hands, the game remained in its infancy—a slow, almost static affair. The fixed plays did not allow for much improvisation. The ball moved from station to station. Then again, basketball was not so different from other facets of American life in that players knew their places. Guards remained in the backcourt, forwards on the wings, and the center in the middle. Every basket was followed by a tip-off back at center court.

    Lazo and Press played their first organized ball for a Mission team, the Daniel Boys, so named for the biblical tamer of lions. And though the court was cramped, Mary Cribbs recalls that the place was just jammed when they had the games.

    That would have been the first time Press heard a chorus of praise. Such adoration made the game even more intoxicating. Press was unique in his dedication and love for basketball, says Lazo. "He would eat, drink, speak, and sing basketball. He felt, innately, that this was the thing he could do well. It was his game and he played it with all his heart and soul. Oh, how he worked at it. He was always bouncing the ball, practicing his set shot. Once he got set and he got his eyes on the basket, you could start ringing them up."

    The Daniel Boys played other church teams, winning more often than not. They were, after all, from Logstown. Press would call plays and bark orders in Serbian, leaving the cake eaters and others dumbfounded. He was then what he would always be. Even as a kid, Press could detect the physical tendency in an opponent. Was his weight on his heels? Was he leaning left or right?

    He wasn’t much for reading or writing, but he had an intuitive understanding of the game’s geometry—lines charted against time—for the path that brought him closest and quickest to the basket. As the boys assembled for the tip-off, Press might notice that his man was ready to lunge. Napira, he would whisper at the center. Forward, tip the ball forward. As his man pounced, Press would take the tip and break toward the basket for an easy score. In tempo and vision, Press was ahead of the game. Basketball was still about fixed positions, but Press’s instinct was to run.

    There was, however, a downside to playing with him. He always wanted something more, recalls Lazo. If he felt you had any more to give, he wouldn’t hesitate about telling you where to get off.

    As they became teenagers, it became clear that Lazo didn’t have Press’s gift for the game. But that didn’t ease the ferocity of Press’s expectation. He already thought that the greatest component of talent was desire. The greedy bastard always wanted more. How many times had Lazo turned to him with a kind of exasperation that bordered on surrender?

    I can’t give you anymore than I have, he would say.

    •  •  •

    Neither Djuro nor Sara Kosanovich shared Press’s passion or aspirations. Then, again, why should they have? This bouncing ball didn’t pay the bills. It wasn’t a job, merely an indulgence the Kosanoviches could ill afford. For a time, Press would leave for games in just his street clothes. His stepbrother Sam would then toss his uniform and gym bag out the window, where Press could retrieve it, his secret intact.

    There was, however, an adult who understood basketball in the way Press thought of it: as a calling. Nate Lippe was born in Cleveland in 1901 and played at Geneva College in Beaver Falls, where he was an all-star quarterback. Football wasn’t even his best sport, though. In 1924–25, as a senior on the basketball team, Lippe—a quick, crafty guard—averaged an astronomical figure, better than 16 points on a team that scored fewer than 30 a game. Upon graduation, Lippe had hoped to enroll at the University of Pittsburgh Medical School. But that institution had already filled its quota of Jews. Instead, he began playing basketball for money. He played for the Enoch Rauh and A. P. Moore clubs in the Allegheny County League, setting a record with 14 baskets against Jones Motors. In Ohio, he served the East Liverpool Elks as a player-coach. The pro and semipro leagues were regional confederations. But the great teams were barnstormers, and Lippe saw action against many of them: the Cleveland Rosenblums, the Washington Palisades, the Carlisle Indians (featuring Jim Thorpe), and the SPHAs (an acronym for South Philadelphia Hebrew Association). Word was, he even turned down a gig with the best of all barnstorming outfits, the Original Celtics.

    In 1928, he became a full-time coach at Aliquippa High School. In his first full season, Lippe inherited a 4–8 team with only one returning letterman. Nevertheless, aided by what the Condor yearbook called a world of basketball science as his background, his inaugural season—beginning with a 15–14 win over Freedom—proved triumphal. The only blemish on Lippe’s record, a 17–14 defeat, came against Moe Rubenstein’s Ambridge club. Lippe and Rubinstein had been teammates at Geneva, with Moe succeeding him as the team captain. Rubenstein had even played for Lippe with the East Liverpool Elks. But now, as coaches, they would embark on a fierce rivalry.

    In Aliquippa, there circulated a story—never proven—that Lippe had married Rubenstein’s girl. The Ambridge version, just as unproven, had Rubenstein stealing Lippe’s girlfriend. The only sure bet was that these men detested each other, and that their sentiments had been passed

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