Leigh Montville

Leigh Montville (born July 20, 1943 in New Haven, Connecticut) is a former newspaper columnist for The Boston Globe and writer for Sports Illustrated, a sports reporter and author. He is a graduate of the University of Connecticut.

Montville is divorced and has two children. He lives in Medfield Massachusetts with his longtime partner Linda Finkle and their dog Wendy.

Career

Montville was a longtime print journalist as a columnist for The Boston Globe as a senior writer with Sports Illustrated. He spent 21 years at the Globe, many of them with other legendary Globe sports writers Peter Gammons, Bob Ryan, and Will McDonough.

He has authored many books, including best-sellers such as The Big Bam, a biography of New York Yankees baseball legend Babe Ruth, and Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero, about the Hall of Fame left fielder for the Red Sox, which won the 2004 CASEY Award for best baseball book of the year.[1] He also wrote At the Altar of Speed: The Fast Life and Tragic Death of Dale Earnhardt, and Manute: The Center of Two Worlds, about former 7'7" NBA center Manute Bol.

He wrote the book Why Not Us? following the 2004 World Series won by the Red Sox after 86 years of fan suffering. Montville recounts the stories of long-suffering fans, including himself, and includes a large section from the Red Sox web site Sons of Sam Horn where fans posted their own stories.

Montville co-authored the book Dare to Dream: Connecticut Basketball's Remarkable March to the National Championship with UConn head coach Jim Calhoun. Calhoun, along with Montville, a UConn graduate, recounts his humble beginnings at Northeastern University through his move to the University of Connecticut and finally the men's program's first title in 1999.

In the 1990s, Montville provided commentary for the short-lived cable network CNN-Sports Illustrated.

His 2008 book The Mysterious Montague: A True Tale of Hollywood, Golf and Armed Robbery told the true story of John Montague, a 1930s California-based amateur called "the greatest golfer in the world" by sportswriting legend Grantland Rice, who later turned out to be a fugitive wanted for armed robbery in New York State.

Most recently, Montville wrote Sting Like a Bee: Muhammed Ali vs. the United States of America, 1966-1971 which focuses on the cultural and political implications of Ali's refusal of service in the military.

gollark: And teach sanely.
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gollark: Oh, one of the extremely complex quantum thingies, of course.
gollark: What's a TQFT and shut up gnobody.
gollark: Hmm, maybe SPUDNET should do pings every 2500ms instead of 10000ms.

References

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