Ray Ratto

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[edit] Career

Ray Ratto, 52, has been a Bay Area sportswriter for approximately 30 years and a sports columnist for approximately 20. Beginning his column-writing career for two now-defunct newspapers, The National (newspaper) and the Peninsula Times Tribune, Ratto then became a columnist for the San Francisco Examiner, and now opines for the San Francisco Chronicle. (He had started out his career as a staff reporter for these two SF papers.) He also has written national columns for espn.comand currently does same at CBS' sportsline.com.

[edit] Persona

As a comedian, Ratto the column-writer celebrates (sort of) the absurdities of sports. In an August 14, 2006 column for CBS Sportsline (Seventh-inning stretch or seventh sign of the apocalypse?), he argues that with all the turmoil in today's sports world, people will eventually "move to more reputable forms of entertainment, like celebrities eating bees for charity, or Little League cleaver-juggling." He is also teasingly dismissive of both himself and his readers, whom he envisions parked either on couches in front of televisions or at stools at the local tavern, all of them collectively using sports-fandom to avoid life's more-serious responsibilities.

[edit] Controversial Views

Ratto's criticism of public figures tends to be more blunt, serious, and controversial. Sports-team owners and executives are most-likely to come under attack, while Ratto is usually the last to criticize on-the-field managers. Ratto's criticisms of Oakland Athletics GM Billy Beane have made him a persona non grata at Athletics Nation, an A's-fan website where Beane is a regular and celebrated guest.

[edit] Outside the Column

Ratto is an alum of Saint Joseph's High in Alameda, CA and San Francisco State University. Outside of journalism, he formerly was a high school basketball referee. (Source: Glenn Schwarz, Chronicle Sports Editor)

[edit] External links