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The Steamer - by  Andy Furillo (Paperback) - 1 of 1

The Steamer - by Andy Furillo (Paperback)

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Highlights

  • For nearly sixty years, Bud Furillo wrote and talked about sports in Southern California.
  • About the Author: Andy Furillo has been in the newspaper business since 1972 when he began working as a copy boy at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner.
  • 514 Pages
  • Sports + Recreation, History

Description



Book Synopsis



For nearly sixty years, Bud Furillo wrote and talked about sports in Southern California. For fifteen of those years, he authored a popular column for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner called The Steam Room, which gave him the nickname that lasted him for the rest of his life: "the Steamer."

As a reporter, columnist, editor, and pioneer of sports talk radio, the Steamer dished out insight and understanding to Southern California sports fans while Los Angeles grew into a sports empire. On his watch, L.A. acquired the Rams from Cleveland, the Dodgers from Brooklyn, and the Lakers from Minneapolis. He covered them all while they won championships for the city.

In The Steamer: Bud Furillo and the Golden Age of L.A. Sports, Furillo's son, Andy, himself a longtime newspaperman, uses his father's lens to give focus to the city's rise as a sports empire. The Steamer is a history of a great sports town at its most dynamic, told from the point of view of a legendary reporter who used his phenomenal access to reveal the inside story of the greatest athletes and teams to ever play in Los Angeles.



From the Back Cover




For nearly sixty years, Bud Furillo wrote and talked about sports in Southern California. For fifteen of those years, he authored a popular column for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner called The Steam Room, which gave him the nickname that lasted him for the rest of his life: "the Steamer."

As a reporter, columnist, editor, and pioneer of sports talk radio, the Steamer dished out insight and understanding to Southern California sports fans while Los Angeles grew into a sports empire. On his watch, L.A. acquired the Rams from Cleveland, the Dodgers from Brooklyn, and the Lakers from Minneapolis. He covered them all while they won championships for the city.

The Steamer reported on the golden age of L.A. sports, writing about events and athletes that have long since seared themselves into the memories of Southern California sports fans, from the greatest generation to its baby-booming offspring. They were the years of Sandy Koufax no-hitters, Elgin Baylor yo-yoing on the dribble, and Sam Cunningham going over the top four times for touchdowns against Ohio State in the Rose Bowl.

It was the roar of the Olympic Auditorium on Thursday nights, Bill Walton dropping a high lob pass into the hoop for UCLA against Memphis State, and Native Diver winning another stakes race at Hollywood Park. Vin Scully's voice wafted from foul pole to foul pole on cool and comfortable summer nights, when transistor radios lifted his words into the Chavez Ravine sky --"Russell to Lopes to Garvey: Double play!" On winter evenings, the transistor carried the more rapid-fire style of Chick Hearn as he described Jerry West driving left to right across the radio dial, stopping on a dime, losing his defender, and rising up and swishing a jump shot to win yet another game at the buzzer.

It was the same with USC football, UCLA basketball, the horse races, and boxing matches--champions flourished, and the Steamer chronicled it all. He helped shape the Los Angeles sports scene as it achieved world-class status. Furillo brokered trades, saved coaches' jobs, helped show others to the door, tweaked the owners, encouraged and promoted franchise moves, and even worked as a cut man for an L.A. fighter who defended his title in Madrid!

In The Steamer: Bud Furillo and the Golden Age of L.A. Sports, Furillo's son, Andy, himself a longtime newspaperman, uses his father's lens to give focus to the city's rise as a sports empire. The Steamer is a history of a great sports town at its most dynamic, told from the point of view of a legendary reporter who used his phenomenal access to reveal the inside story of the greatest athletes and teams to ever play in Los Angeles.



Review Quotes





"In 1972, I trusted Bud Furillo to tell my story. Over the years, he got it BETTER THAN PERFECT!"
--Bill Walton, UCLA basketball player, member of the Pro Basketball Hall of Fame

"The Steamer was definitely an 'Only'-- a hard-hitting but fair and humorous columnist and a dedicated sports editor who gave a lot of young writers their first break. I'm proud we were best friends for a lifetime. We always talked about writing a book together about all our travels and travails and calling it Big, because that told it perfectly. We never quite got to it. Now, Andy has done it for us."
--John Hall, former columnist for the Los Angeles Times and Orange County Register

"Furillo's improbable climb from the edges of the crime world in Youngstown, Ohio, to the press boxes of L.A. and the rest of the nation, is told in this fascinating biography by his journalist son, Andy. Bud Furillo used to say he would one day write an autobiography titled The Bases Were Loaded and So Was I. He never did. But Andy has taken the mound on Bud's behalf and, for that, readers can be grateful."
--Steve Harvey, Only in L.A. columnist, creator of Steve Harvey's Bottom Ten

"When I came down from Oregon in 1972 to join John McKay's staff at USC, he used to hold court with this gang of writers every week in a booth at a restaurant across the street from campus called Julie's. It was Bud Furillo and John Hall, Bud Tucker, Allan Malamud, and Loel Schrader. These were guys who loved football, loved sports, loved the players, and loved the coaches, and they loved drinking vodka and talking about all of it. They weren't house guys -- they'd get on your ass if you played bad or something. But they weren't like critics. They were just great writers, and you had to read every newspaper, every day. You didn't just turn on ESPN. You had to read Bud Furillo and John Hall to find things out. Of course, the sports in L.A. were fabulous, and these guys were your connection to it."
--John Robinson, USC Football head coach, member of the College Football Hall of Fame

"During Bud Furillo's heyday, the vaunted L.A. Times sports section had nothing on the Herald Examiner, a fixture in my house to the very end. A lively writer himself, Bud presided over a top-notch group and forever left his mark on the Southern California sports scene."
--Bruce Jenkins, San Francisco Chronicle columnist

"Bud Furillo was a great writer and an even better sports editor. The Steamer was charismatic, creative, and more colorful than most of the people he wrote about. Working under Bud at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner wasn't just a job, it was a privilege. He was definitely one of a kind."
--Steve Bisheff, ESPN L.A. columnist

"It always did seem implausible that Bud Furillo, so vivid and uncommonly alive, could have passed away. Here's a rich reminder that, in a way, he never will."
--Chuck Culpepper, Washington Post

"Bud Furillo mattered."
--Jerry Izenberg, winner of the 2000 Red Smith Award

"The only thing more riveting than the L.A. sports scene Bud Furillo wrote about was Bud Furillo himself. A fascinating look at a one-of-a-kind man."
--Norman Chad, ESPN poker analyst, Washington Post Couch Slouch columnist

"With one ear to the ground and his fingers on the pulse of L.A.'s boxing heartbeat, sportswriter Bud Furillo was born ready to deliver his 'next scoop' for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner. By looking through his father's eyes, author Andy Furillo lovingly relives The Steam Room column era of the '60s and '70s. Entertaining, yet with exquisite smoke-filled backroom detail, Andy Furillo transports



About the Author



Andy Furillo has been in the newspaper business since 1972 when he began working as a copy boy at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner. He went on to work as a sportswriter in 1974 for the Downey Southeast News and spent the following six years with the Goleta Valley Today and the Santa Barbara News-Press. In 1980, he shifted to news reporting and for the next thirty-five years focused on criminal justice issues with the Santa Maria Times, the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Examiner and, since 1991, the Sacramento Bee. Furillo won the 2002 Broun Award for his reporting on a Sacramento neighborhood's descent into one of the most crime-ridden areas of town. He won other national journalism awards for his coverage of L.A. street gangs, California's prison crisis, and the implementation of the state's "three-strikes" sentencing law. In 2015, the Sacramento Bee made him a sports columnist. He lives in Davis, CA.

Tommy Lasorda was the legendary manager for the Los Angeles Dodgers from 1976 to 1996. A two-time World Series champion (1981, 1988) and a two-time NL Manager of the Year (1983, 1988), Lasorda was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1997. He lives in Los Angeles.

Dimensions (Overall): 9.0 Inches (H) x 6.0 Inches (W) x 1.03 Inches (D)
Weight: 1.5 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 514
Genre: Sports + Recreation
Sub-Genre: History
Publisher: Santa Monica Press
Format: Paperback
Author: Andy Furillo
Language: English
Street Date: March 4, 2025
TCIN: 94580185
UPC: 9781595801517
Item Number (DPCI): 247-38-7173
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Estimated ship dimensions: 1.03 inches length x 6 inches width x 9 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 1.5 pounds
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