Everything about Dan Shaughnessy totally explained
Dan Shaughnessy is a sports columnist and reporter for
The Boston Globe as well as a best-selling author and television and radio sports personality. Shaughnessy grew up in
Groton, Massachusetts and is a graduate of the
College of the Holy Cross in
Worcester,
Massachusetts.
Family
Shaughnessy lives in
Newton with his wife and three children. His son Sam plays baseball for
Boston College and is the subject of his latest book, Senior Year: A Father, A Son, and High School Baseball. His daughter Sarah is a 2007 graduate of
Harvard University as well as a four year player on the Harvard softball team, and his younger daughter Kate is also a softball player and 2007 graduate of
Boston University. His wife Marilou holds a doctorate in psychology. The Shaughnessy family has also "adopted" a student from the
METCO program, inviting him into their home and essentially making him a family member.
Career
Shaughnessy began his career as a beat reporter covering the
Baltimore Orioles for the
Baltimore Sun in 1977. He has been a sports writer for the Boston Globe for 20 years serving as the beat writer for the
Boston Celtics and the
Boston Red Sox.
Shaughnessy has authored or contributed to several sports-related books. His best selling book,
Curse of the Bambino, details the travails of the
Boston Red Sox and their search for a
World Series championship after selling
Babe Ruth to the
New York Yankees. He subsequently wrote "Reversing the Curse" after the Red Sox won the World Series in 2004.
He is a contributor to
ESPN The Magazine, and a regular guest on a Sunday night sports show, "Sports Xtra". Shaughnessy discusses sports and current events on radio shows airing on
WTKK; on
ESPN's Rome Is Burning; and on
NESN's SportsPlus and Globe 10.0.
Theo Epstein Column
In an October 2005 column he revealed information detailing nuances of the relationship between
Theo Epstein and Red Sox CEO
Larry Lucchino, which may have contributed to Epstein's resignation as Red Sox General Manager. Shaughnessy and his fellow Globe writers have been accused by writers at the
Boston Herald of routinely reporting information leaked from the Red Sox front office (the Red Sox are 17 percent-owned by
The New York Times Company, the Globe's parent company). Just days prior to the Shaughnessy column, Herald columnist
Tony Massarotti in his column accused Red Sox management of smearing Epstein and suggested the Globe's coverage of the negotiations may be conflicted because of the Times ownership in the team. In the weeks leading up to Epstein's decision, Sox owner
John Henry himself said the leaks "had to stop".
Awards and Recognition
- In 2002, Dan Shaughnessy, along with Sean McDonough, was awarded the Jimmy Award. The award honors 'individuals who have, over the years, committed themselves to the mission of Dana-Farber and the Jimmy Fund'. Shaughnessy himself has a daughter who successfully battled cancer.
7 time Massachusetts Sportswriter of the Year
5 Times selected as one of Americas top-ten sports columnists by Associated Press Sports Editors.
Trivia
On July 16, 2003, Shaughnessy served as witness for the prosecution in ESPN’s mock trial of Pete Rose.
Shaughnessy is referred to by many Red Sox fans as "CHB", from a phrase turned by Sox outfielder Carl Everett. While complaining about reporters who criticized him, he referred to "Gordon Edes and his curly-haired boyfriend." ESPN columnist Bill Simmons claims that shortly after the event, he shortened this to create the nickname "CHB". The abbreviation is now frequently used by Red Sox diehards at the websites RedSoxNation and Sons of Sam Horn, and has become the popular way to refer to Shaughnessy on the Internet. He has also been referenced by this nickname by Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling on the Sons of Sam Horn forum and on his own blog page. Shaughnessy himself indirectly acknowledged the nickname in a column mocking Schilling's blog page, posing a question from a fictional internet blogger called "CHB38". He has also been referred online and in print by the nicknames 'shank' and 'Shaughnasty'.
A blog page called Dan Shaughnessy Watch has been established to critique his columns.
Credited with popularizing the phrase "Red Sox Nation". The phrase was first coined by Boston Globe feature writer Nathan Cobb in an October 20, 1986 article about split allegiances among fans in Connecticut during the 1986 World Series between Red Sox and the New York Mets. Shaughnessy popularized it by using it in his 1996 book, At Fenway: Dispatches From Red Sox Nation.
In June 2007 in conjunction with a story about Shaughnessy, the Boston Phoenix conducted an online poll asking whether Dan Shaughnessy was the most hated man in Boston.
Bibliography
Senior Year: A Father, A Son, and High School Baseball - ISBN 0-618-72905-4
Reversing the Curse - ISBN 0-618-51748-0 (Hardcover), ISBN 0-618-71191-0 (Paperback)
The Legend of the Curse of the Bambino - ISBN 0-689-87235-6
The Curse of the Bambino – ISBN 0-14-200476-6
Fenway, Expanded and Updated: A Biography in Words and Pictures - with Stan Grossfeld -ISBN 0-618-73736-7 (Hardcover), ISBN 0-618-05709-9 (Paperback)
Spring Training: Baseball's Early Season - ISBN 0-618-21399-6
At Fenway: Dispatches from Red Sox Nation – ISBN 0-609-80091-4
Seeing Red: The Red Auerbach Story – ISBN 0-517-17217-8 (Hardcover), ISBN 1-55850-548-2 (Paperback)
Ever Green The Boston Celtics: A History in the Words of Their Players, Coaches, Fans and Foes, from 1946 to the Present – ISBN 0-312-06348-2
One strike away: The story of the 1986 Red Sox - ISBN 0-8253-0426-1
Further Information
Get more info on 'Dan Shaughnessy'.
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