Murray Olderman
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Murray Olderman is an artist who specialized in cartoons related to sports[1]. He received the National Cartoonist Society Sports Cartoon Award for 1974 and 1978. His artwork often accompanied the sports stories he authored. His art also has been used by the Pro Football Hall of Fame and hung above the Hall of Fame busts. Recently, the Hall of Fame made all the artwork digital so is has to be accessed by visitors to the hall though electronic kiosks.
His work appeared in 750 daily newspapers for the greater part of 35 years. His columns and cartoons were distributed by the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), a Scripps- Howard syndicate.
His employment with the NEA began in 1952, he became its sports editor in 1964, and its executive editor in 1968, a contributing editor in 1971. Although he "retired" in 1987, he was active until the newsservice was overtaken by a larger corporation.
He is the founder of the Jim Thorpe Trophy, for the National Football League’s Most Valuable Player and distributed by the NEA [2].
He received the Pro Football Writers Association Dick McCann Award in 1979, which is considered to be the writer's wing of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Olderman was inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Hall of Fame in 1993. In 1997 was inducted to the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame
[edit] Books
Starr: My Life in Football with Bart Starr[3]
A three-book Prentice-Hall series, The Pro Quarterback, The Running Backs, and The Defenders.
Just Win, Baby, about Raider owner Al Davis.
Minging With Lions, about his career as a sportswriter and the people he has met along the way. This book is full of sketches.