in The Battalion SPORTS 7 Tuesday, July 18,1989 lull delai which wajj outline fgj 'corpora een circuit u days, d detail r. i plan mat' ain why I,: 'gainst ur; ' foresee! I ProteJ ■i respon?; 'logy AiJ not takeefl t ration' id local leirowm suppled proposed linmisir. ong enfon provision ivitiesarti annon turns love of sports into career &M Sports Information Director began as baseball walk-on By Jeff Osborne ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR Alan Cannon has turned a life long love of sports into a career. Be ginning with childhood dreams of Becoming a baseball star to his ap pointment as Sports News Director at Texas A&M, athletics have played ■ big role in his life. Cannon started as a walk-on base- lall player for the Aggies in 1980. de served as a student assistant in [he sports news department for hree years, and as a graduate assis- [ant for one year. In 1985, Cannon Profile: Alan Cannon as promoted to sports news assis tant. In February, he was named di- ectorof the department. I Cannon was named sports news £lW ire(:t()I ,(> re pl ace J°hn Keith when VI i. John David Crow and R.C. Slocum eplaced Jackie Sherrill in the capac- , . ities of athletic director and head tH football coach. Keith left A&M for a J I position with the Houston Oilers when A&M did not renew his con- t in the) Jract, As a result of Keith’s departure, Cannon said, “we more or less lost a person in the department, and I don’t belive we will get a replace ment.” Keith specialized in football ion of HI ollowed ention at nd repot s neithtn strike edto lems in if r econo® her w conditio® itry. ere noi t ess i autonof a runs 11* any soca nkowfi adov; Sf All-Utnit y Fret® ; Com® )ly, v/tik publicity, and now this responsibility belongs to Cannon. “I look forward to coming in to the office each day,” Cannon said. “It’s not your average nine to five job. I have friends I went to school with who work in banks and they dread going to work each morning. It’s not that way for me. Sometimes I put in a 16 or 20 hour day with the baseball regional,” he said. Although the work Cannon does is time consuming, he said he enjoys it. “We’re on call,” he said, mention ing a time when a newspaper editor form San Angelo called him at home one evening at eight o’clock to con firm a story. “It’s part of my job,” he said. “I may be sitting at home but for five to 10 minutes be at my job.” He got his first experience in sports information when he was a se nior in high school at Dallas Skyline. During this time, he worked for the sports information office at South ern Methodist University. Bob Con- dron, now the director of the United States Olympic Committee, was di rector of the department. Condron, along with his assistant Maxie Parrish, now director of sports information at Baylor Univer sity, helped influence Cannon to stay with sports information as a career. Cannon said that Robert Car penter of Texas A&M, who “is a member of the Sports Information Directors’ Hall of Fame and one of the most respected guys in the busi ness,” along with Bill Little, who publicized baseball and serves as sports information director for the University of Texas at Austin, also had a influence on him. “Sports information has gotten into my blood, and that’s the area I want to pursue,” Cannon said. The highlight of his job, he said, are the close relationships that de velop between he and the players and coaches. “It’s hard for me to de scribe the feeling I have for mem bers of the baseball team, from coaches and players right on down the line to the Diamond Darlings,” he said, adding that there is a family atmosphere. He described the role of the sports news department as the liai son between the athletic department and the media. “We publish individ ual statsitics in a positive manner. We also have a hisorian role,” he said, mentioning that the depart ment was publicizing the 50th anni versary of Texas A&M’s 1939 Na tional Championship in football. “Now, we’re working on the foot ball press guide,” Cannon said, “which is pretty in depth. We put out guides and programs for all the sports at A&M.” He said that one of the worst as pects of his job is not being able to show emotion to the media. “Being in our position, you’re not allowed the highs and lows. Like the media, you have to be objective. I may be hurting very much inside after a tough loss, but cannot show that out wardly. I still have to do my job.” Cannon attended the College Sports Information Directors of America conference workshop in WashingtonJuly 1-6. He said one of his objectives was to seek out people who have publi cized information on Heisman Tro phy contenders, like the sports in formation director for Notre Dame. “I want to see how they handled the media pressure revolving around a Heisman Trophy candi date. We have a legtimate candidate in Darren Lewis. I will be making sure that everyone on a national scale who votes (for the Heisman winner) is on the mailing list and is informed of Lewis’ accomplish ments. We will be putting out fliers and brochures, and Lewis will be dis played prominently in the media guide. On Sunday morning, I will put information about him in the mail and schedule interviews for maximum exposure. I’m just there to help, but Darren has to put up the numbers on the field.” Members of the sports news de- partment develop a close relationship with coaches and other members of the athletic department, See Cannon/Page 8 Staubach not seeking commissioner’s job DALLAS (AP) — Former Dallas Cowboys’ quarterback Roger Stau bach said on Monday he didn’t wish to be nominated to fill the NFL’s soon-to-be vacant commissioner’s post and Tex Schramm repeated that he didn’t think he would be a “viable candidate.” The Los Angeles Times reported that Schramm, who headed the Cowboys for 29 years, and Staubach, a 1970s Dallas quarterback named to the Hall of Fame, will be nominated this week to the post being vacated by Pete Rozelle. I have a great deal of gratitude and respect tor the NFL and it’s an attractive thought to be considered for commissioner,” Staubach said. “However, at this time my life is consumed with building my real es tate company on a national basis and I am committed to this goal. I like the challenge of the real estate busi ness and I am enjoying it. I will have to say ‘no’ to the nomination for commissioner.” Schramm said, “I still feel that over the long haul my age (69) wouldn’t make it practical to name me. It’s also hard to put stock in ru mors the principle has no knowledge of what’s going on. ” Schramm did say that if the NFL came to an impasse he might bail them out for a year or so. “I’ve been in the NFL 39 years and it’s been the better part of my life and if I could help I would, al though presently I’m very interested in bringing professional football to the rest of the world,” Schramm said. “However, nobody has talked to me.” Schramm heads the NFL’s pro posed international league, called the Worldwide League of American Football. New Orleans Saints executive Jim Finks was nominated by the league’s search committee to fill the post be ing vacated by Pete Rozelle, but Finks’ appointment was blocked by a dissident minority of 11 team own ers, a faction now numbering 12. “I wish you wouldn’t call us mi nority owners,” said Mike Lynn, president of the Minnesota Vikings and one of the dozen. “It’s the six- man (search committee) that’s in the minority. They didn’t give the 22 (other owners) any information.” Staubach appeals to several own ers because of his success as a busi nessman, according to anonymous league sources cited by the newspa per. Oregon becomes 1 st state to approve lottery contest for NFL point spreads SALEM, Ore. (AP) — The Or egon Lottery Commission ap proved rules for a new game Monday that makes Oregon the only state with a lottery contest based on NFL point spreads. The commission on a 5-0 vote endorsed the game despite the objections of an NFL attorney, who said the action would harm the integrity of professional foot ball. No further approval is needed for the lottery, and ticket sales are to begin Sept. 6 for the NFL’s first week of games on Sept. 10. Proceeds from the game, called “Sports Action,” are to go to Ore gon college and university inter collegiate sports programs, which now receive no state funding. In the football lottery, a $1 in vestment will allow players to pre dict the outcome of some or all of the 14 weekly NFL games against the point spreads set by Nevada oddsmakers. Under rules of the game, play ers will try to predict the outcome of four to 14 games against the point spreads. The more games they bet, the more money they could win, from about $8 for a perfect four-game card to about $>8,000 for a perfect 14-game card. NFL attorney Jim Noel told the commission the game would cre ate a situation in which fans are more interested in point spreads than how their favorite teams fare. Noel said the league is con cerned that Oregon “is on the brink of triggering a nationwide trend.” “The entire nation is watch ing,” he said. “Lottery officials in other states have stated publicly that if Oregon does this success fully, they will try it, too.” Noel also said the NFL would consider legal action to block the contest. “We didn’t come out here to threaten anyone,” he said. But, he added, “There are some very viable legal issues here that we’re going to evaluate.” The NFL. took Delaware to court when that state tried a foot ball betting game, but the lawsuit became moot after Delaware gave up its game after one season in 1974 because it lost money. In approving the new game, Lottery Commission members noted that betting on professional sports already is widespread in Oregon and around the country. They said many people take part in office football pools or bet on games through bookmakers, either illegally or through opera tions in Nevada, the only state that allows gambling on team sports. Commission member Mike Schwartz of Eugene said he thinks the NFL should embrace the idea as an opportunity to market professional football to new audiences. “It will make people more ex cited about NFL football,” Schwartz said. Noel rejected that argument, and said the NFL does not want to see an expansion of gambling on professional sports. “The net effect of the Oregon Lottery game will be to increase the overall volume of betting on NFL football,” the league attor ney said. The 1989 Oregon Legislature approved a bill calling on the Lot tery Commission to create a sports-oriented game to generate money for college sports. Davey and the lottery staff put together the specifics of the NFL contest. Davey estimates the game will generate between $4 million and $>9 million each year for Oregon intercollegiate sports. 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