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- <text id=91TT0688>
- <title>
- Apr. 01, 1991: Bo Knows Pain -- And Dismissal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 01, 1991 Law And Disorder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 80
- Bo Knows Pain--and Dismissal
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The best-known two-sport athlete in the U.S. is out for a year,
- and perhaps forever, because of a football injury
- </p>
- <p>By David E. Thigpen--With reporting by Staci D. Kramer/ St.
- Louis and Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> He always said he would make his choice when the time was
- right. But his prodigious athletic gifts and the rewards they
- brought made choosing between pro football and pro baseball
- difficult for Bo Jackson, 28. For four remarkable seasons he
- didn't have to: in winter he was a devastating running back for
- the Los Angeles Raiders, and in summer a power-hitting
- outfielder for the Kansas City Royals. Last season he became
- the first player ever selected for both the All-Star game and
- the Pro Bowl. But last week, when the Royals suddenly dropped
- him because of a serious injury to his hip in a football game
- two months earlier, the incredible career of the two-sport
- superstar seemed in grave jeopardy, and quite possibly at a
- premature end.
- </p>
- <p> "Don't count me out," Jackson said at a press conference
- last week in Haines City, Fla., where the Royals were in spring
- training. But also don't count on him for at least a year.
- While physicians disagreed on whether he could ever recover
- from his injury, most agreed that he would be out of baseball
- and football for that long, if not longer, and that if he
- returned, he most probably would not regain peak form. In
- general, Jackson stayed mum about his plans. "I don't talk about
- football in the baseball season, and I don't talk about
- baseball in the football season," he said.
- </p>
- <p> It will be an expensive hiatus. By letting Jackson go before
- March 20, the Royals were obligated to pay only $395,000 of his
- one-year, $2.3 million contract. His $1.6 million salary for
- the Raiders this year is not immediately at risk, but it will
- be if the effects of the injury persist. And a foreshortened
- sports career may truncate his higher-paying second job as the
- endorser of Diet Pepsi, AT&T and various sports medicines--plus his starring role in Nike's "Bo Knows..." commercials.
- All that off-the-field effort brings in about $5 million a
- year.
- </p>
- <p> Jackson's injury occurred during the A.F.C. semifinal
- play-off game between Los Angeles and Cincinnati when he
- twisted his leg trying to escape the tackle of a linebacker.
- After he was helped from the field, the injury was diagnosed
- as a left-hip fracture-dislocation. When another exam two weeks
- ago showed that Jackson's hip cartilage had deteriorated
- further, the Royals' team doctor pronounced the prognosis for
- Jackson's return "uncertain."
- </p>
- <p> As shocking as Jackson's release was, it made sense--and
- dollars--for the Royals. Because Jackson's injury occurred
- on the gridiron, the Royals have a contractual right to release
- him. If the damage had occurred on a baseball diamond, the
- Royals would have had to pay his full salary. Royals general
- manager Herk Robinson said the team considered keeping Jackson
- on the disabled list, but that would have tied up more than $2
- million with very little hope of a positive return on the
- investment this season.
- </p>
- <p> Royals management had made no secret of its displeasure with
- the physical risks Jackson took moonlighting as a backfield
- star. Says Royals owner Ewing Kauffman: "It definitely was not
- best in the long run for Bo to play football. It destroyed
- potentially the best talent ever to put on a baseball uniform."
- Several major-league managers said they would never take a
- two-sport athlete, even one of Jackson's caliber, because of
- the risks of injury. New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner
- last week loudly announced that he wanted Jackson on his squad,
- but Steinbrenner is no longer allowed to speak for the team,
- and Yankees general manager Gene Michael said the "risk is just
- too great" to hire Jackson. At week's end, when no team had
- claimed him, Jackson became a free agent.
- </p>
- <p> Bo's departure is the spectators' loss. In an era when less
- talented ballplayers pull down equally towering salaries and
- occasionally indulge in public temper tantrums, Jackson's grace
- and zeal on the playing field brought fans out in admiring
- droves. "When I'm playing, I'm relaxed," Jackson once said.
- "I'm like a fish in water." Fellow Royals star George Brett
- noted that fans fell out of the hot dog lines and hurried back
- to their seats when Jackson stepped to the plate. They were
- frequently gratified. In July 1988, he hit a blast off Boston's
- Oil Can Boyd that many said was the longest home run ever hit
- in Fenway Park. Last year Jackson hit a middling .272 and,
- despite missing 51 games, still led the Royals with 28 homers
- and 78 runs batted in.
- </p>
- <p> One veteran American League team physician remarked that
- Jackson's stocky, heavily muscled physique was the only one
- that had made him gawk. But other players are bigger, stronger
- or faster, making the two-sport athlete a rare and endangered
- species. The only other active two-sport pro, Atlanta Falcons
- defensive back Deion Sanders, was dropped by the Yankees last
- season after several trips to the minors, but he has since been
- picked up by the Braves as an outfielder. There is an old
- sports dictum that Jackson should perhaps have studied with
- greater care: baseball pays more, and you get hit less.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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