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Chicago Tribune’s Jauss remembered as ‘complete sportswriter’

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“I liked this best about Bill: He was the most unpretentious sportswriter I knew,” Conklin said. “He would cover anything. A high school football game or a DePaul women’s basketball game were as important to him, and got his full attention, just as much as the Bears or the Cubs.”

Retired Tribune Hall of Fame Bears writer Don Pierson also admired Jauss’ versatility.

“Bill was the most complete sportswriter I knew because of his interest in and knowledge of so many sports, and his natural curiosity as a journalist,” Pierson said. “He always asked great questions without being confrontational. (He was) one of the few sportswriters even Bobby Knight respected. My fondest recollection is how Bill wrote exactly how Houston would upset UCLA in that famous basketball game (in 1968) — the day before the game.”

“The Sportswriters on TV” show, which evolved from the Sportswriters Show on WGN Radio with a rotating panel, was the predecessor to so many sports-talk shows today on radio and television.

“I think that Gleason was the guy ... we were in Billy Goat’s (tavern) one night,” Jauss recalled in May. “We had covered the same event—a hockey game or a basketball game. We had written our stories at our offices and met at Billy Goat’s. We were having a drink and there were some printers in there that we knew. They were seated at a table and we were at the bar. First thing you know, closing time came and we got up and started to walk down to Andy’s, which had a 4 a.m. closing.

“These printers were following along behind us. So Gleason turned around and said: ‘Where are you guys going?’ And they said: ‘Your argument is interesting. We want to hear how it ends.’

“So Gleason is walking along and thinking to himself, ‘Maybe this thing is sell-able.’ And that’s where he got the idea of putting on this argument, first on radio on WGN, and then on TV. I think that is what started all of these (sports) discussion shows that are so prevalent now. It was a pioneering thing at the time, although we didn’t realize it.”

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