Monet; Giotto; Michelangelo; Picasso; Bernini; Some man or woman
named Ug wearing a bearskin in a Lascaux cave : They all brought breakthrough
creativity to the art world. In truth, in every field, one can trace lines of
innovators who pushed their professions forward. So if I may transition from
painters to punters, I’d like to note that sports has its artistes, too. In our
last blog post, I mused on creativity in sports. Today, I provide a by-no-means
comprehensive list of a few folks I see as demonstrating the vital role
creativity plays in sport.
A power forward depicted on the Fountain of the Four Rivers in Rome's Piazza Navona, sculpted by Bernini |
James Naismith
If you invent a sport from scratch, that counts as pretty
creative. If it goes on to become one of the most popular in the world, that
factor really moves you up in the rankings. Naismith applied his creative mind
to the task of creating a winter sport one could play indoors and came up with
basketball in 1891.(1) Windmill dunks, salary caps, and Dennis
Rodman in a wedding dress were to follow.
William Morgan also deserves a mention in this section for having
made up volleyball just four years later. (2)
LPGA Tour
In the 40s and 50s, the very notion of an all-female sports
circuit required a major creative leap. The actual implementation of the tour
required creativity from those founding players every day, on the business side
as well as when figuring out how to address a challenging lie. (3)
We should also mention here the ahead-of-their-time All-American
Girls Professional Baseball League (4) and the All
American Red Heads (5) basketballers.
Branch
Rickey and Jackie Robinson
Figuring out a way to overcome
institutionalized racism to break down barriers and help your team win at the
same time? Brilliant.
Bob Cousy
He led the NBA in assists eight times,(6) He won six
titles. Those accomplishments validate the way Cousy played the game : with
unprecedented flair. They changed rules in part because of how creatively he
performed the most unproductive act in sports, that of running out the clock.
Slap Shot
Bernie Geoffrion is often, though not definitively, credited with
inventing this hockey technique. It added a new dimension to the game. The
movie, invented by George Roy Hill, Nancy Dowd, Paul Newman, and some Hansons,
also added a new dimension to the game. It is funny, poignant, creative (of
course), and now indispensable.
Professional
Wrestling
Because, um, professional wrestling.
Harlem Globetrotters
They were groundbreaking as a successful African-American
barnstorming team. Then when the sports world changed, they became a show,
constantly coming up with new and fun ideas to maintain their business and
spread the gospel of basketball.
Football Formations
The single wing, run-and-shoot, shotgun, wing-T, wishbone, one,
two, and three tight end sets, trips left, trips right, west coast, spread
option, wildcat, even punt formation - creativity abounds just in the naming of
these offenses and alignments, to say nothing of finding ways to get eleven
burly men to choreograph their movements to execute them.
The ABA
The American Basketball Association provided us with the 3-point
shot, the dunk contest, Dr J, and so much other creative greatness. The ABA's
only problem is that they could only go to their right. That is, the league
seemed to be all right-brain, possessing awesome creativity and not nearly
enough bottom-line awareness. Except for those owners in St. Louis, who could
easily finance my next movie with their share of the NBA TV money for the past
3+ decades (yes, that was a hint, gentlemen - you'll love the script).
Candy
Cummings
He may have invented the curveball in the
19th century.(7) If he didn't, somebody really creative did. A ball
that moves when you throw it? That is steampunk as hell.
NFL Films
Their inspiration changed the way sports are portrayed on all
screens and helped propel their league to the top of the American sports scene.
Bill Veeck
He gets credit for Eddie Gaedel, the White Sox in shorts,(8)
and, by extension, just about every other wild promotion tried by anyone in
sports ever.
Tastes Great, Less
Filling
When I was a kid, my father and I watched a lot of sports on
television. We still do, although we now have a lot more choices than we did in
the 1970s when Miller Lite sought to counter any possible assumptions that a
low-calorie brew might sissify its imbibers. They did so by using former
athletes in its TV spots, via a campaign created by Backer and Spielvogel.(9)
In 2014, I am more likely to choose a brew based on whether I am
in the mood for something hoppy or stoutish, but back then there would have
been no doubt what beer I would have picked. It would have been the one in
whose 30-second message Bubba Smith extolled the virtues of the easy-opening
can, as his powerful grip easily sundered some defenseless aluminum. I
suggested to my fifth grade teacher that I be allowed to recreate this
particular spot using the old container from a "barrel of monkeys"
toy. The idea did not make the talent show. I was instead made MC, so my
remarks could be better scripted, I expect.
By the way, just to be clear, my parents did not encourage my
elementary-age self to consume beer. It was left to college to acquaint me with
what occupied the hollow space on the inside of the can.
Those beginnings led me to a career creating sports commercials,
so I have certainly taken notice over the years of commercial work I considered
especially exciting. These included the
Nike Bo Knows commercials (inspiring an intramural team named Diddley and
Jackson), Spike Lee's Mars Blackmon spots for Nike, Larry Johnson's Grandmama
series for Converse (I had a t-shirt), Wieden
+ Kennedy' SportsCenter campaign, and my favorite Super Bowl spot of all time,
Nothing But Net for McDonald’s with Michael Jordan and Larry Bird.
Doubleday and Company
Abner Doubleday supposedly invented baseball. William Webb Ellis
allegedly had the idea to pick up the ball at Rugby School and run with it.
Legend has it that Pheidippides created the marathon with his dash to
Athens. Al Gore invented the internet and through it, sports websites. Though
history has called into doubt the accuracy of all these narratives, a good
story remains a good story.
There are lots of inventive sports stories out there. This short
list of important contributions to sports creativity is a little
basketball-heavy, not quite as gender-neutral as I'd like, and by no means
complete. I welcome your contributions to help correct those shortcomings.
Rush Olson has spent two decades
directing creative efforts for sports teams and broadcasters. He currently
creates ad campaigns and related creative projects for sports entities through
his company, Rush Olson Creative & Sports.
RushOlson.com
Linkedin.com/company/rush-olson-creative-&-sports
Facebook.com/RushOlsonCreativeandSports
Footnotes
(1) “James
Naismith,” Kansas Historical Society. https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/james-naismith/12154
(accessed
March 27, 2014)
(2) “History
of Volleyball,” Volleyball Hall of Fame. http://www.volleyhall.org/history.html
(accessed
March 27, 2014)
(3) “The
Trailblazers : Adventures of the 50s and 60s,” LPGA. http://www.lpga.com/golf/news/archive/2010/2/the-trailblazers--adventures-of-the-50s-and-60s.aspx
(accessed
March 27, 2014)
(4) Jeneane
Lesko “League History,” All-American Girls Professional Baseball League Players
Association. http://www.aagpbl.org/index.cfm/pages/league/12/league-history (accessed March 27,
2014)
(5) John
Molina, “All American Red Heads 1936-1986,” allamericanredheads.com. http://www.allamericanredheads.com/index.html
(accessed
March 27, 2014)
(6) “Bob
Cousy,” BasketballReference.com. http://www.basketball-reference.com/players/c/cousybo01.html
(accessed
March 17, 2014)
(7) “Cummings, Candy,” National Baseball Hall of Fame. http://baseballhall.org/hof/cummings-candy
(accessed
March 27, 2014)
(8) Tim
Kurkijan, “Best ‘Extinct’ Uniforms – White Sox : The Shorts,” espn.com. ttp://espn.go.com/mlb/photos/gallery/_/id/9268895/image/1/shorts-best-extinct-uniforms
(accessed
March 27, 2014)
(9) Frank Deford, Lite Reading (Middlesex, England : Penguin
Books, 1984), p. 12.
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