In his elegy-memoir in
The American Scholar, veteran journalist and author
William Zinsser recalled achieving his "boyhood dream" after World War II service when he joined the
Herald Tribune sports department as an assistant editor. "It was in those pages, as a child baseball addict, that I found my first literary influences," Zinsser declared. "The Trib sportswriters were my Faulkner and my Hemingway, and now I was in the same room with those bylines-come-to-life: Rud Rennie, Jesse Abramson,
Al Laney….sports editor Stanley Woodward, Red Smith, Joe H. Palmer…." Rennie and his fellow Trib men on the sports beat were, according to Red Smith, "incomparably the most gifted company ever assembled in one playpen. Gifted, yes, and acerbic, trenchant, iconoclastic and also good." When, in 1928, the scrappy Yankees fielder
Bob Meusel objected to one of Rennie's columns and tried to punch him in a hotel lobby, Rennie's fellow writers of the various New York newspapers came to their colleague's rescue in person, separating them, and in print, they "put the chill" on Meusel, repeating rumors that management had plans to trade Meusel out of New York. Meusel's contract was sold to the Cincinnati Reds after the 1929 season. Often in his books such as
The Boys of Summer (1972),
Memories of Summer (1993),
The Era, 1947-1957 (1993), and
Into My Own (2006), the prolific and long-lived ex-Trib sportswriter Roger Kahn—an ambitious junior writer in Rennie's latter years—paused to mention (and quote from) Rennie, "a trim, handsome Canadian" who had "lady friends in several National League towns." One such example, quoted often by others, followed the 20-year-old Oklahoman
Mickey Mantle's stunning World Series win for the Yankees (their fourth in a row) against the Brooklyn Dodgers, a truly Olympian battle in 1952. The dutiful, modest young Oklahoman seemed to have no idea of what his home runs and headlines portended for him. Kahn quoted from the interview between Rud Rennie and Mickey Mantle: "Nice Series, young man," said Rud Rennie, who covered the Yankees for the Herald Tribune. "What are you up to now?" "Headin' back to Oklahoma. I got me a job working with the pump crew down in the lead mine." "Work in the mines?" Rennie said. "You're the star of the World Series. You don't have to do that any more." "Yes, I do," Mantle said. "My dad died, you know." "Yes. Sorry, son." "I got seven dependents counting on me." Mantle named three younger brothers, a sister, his mother and his wife, Merlyn. "That's six," Rennie said. "The baby is due in March," Mantle said. Rennie looked grim. "I can handle it," said 20-year-old Mickey Mantle. Then, brightening, "Anyways my father-in-law, Giles Johnson, says he's gonna name the baby ‘Homer.’" After the
National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum was founded in 1939, celebrating the centennial of baseball, in Cooperstown, New York,
Westbrook Pegler, columnist of the
Chicago Tribune and the
Scripps-Howard and the
Hearst syndicates, complained that Cooperstown was studiously ignoring the corps of sports journalists. "Baseball has lived as much by publicity as by prowess," he scolded, "for the glamorizing prose of the working press has kept the business in the public mind in season and out for more than 40 years and clothed it in the appeal of a national institution." If "Babe Ruth's bat and the pants of
John McGraw be relics worth treasuring under glass in the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown …then
Bill McGeehan's portable typewriter which made McGraw the mastermind is not less sacred." Legendary sports writers worthy of honors at Cooperstown, he said, should include
Ring Lardner,
Grantland Rice,
Damon Runyon, and 12 other writers, including Rud Rennie. "For in baseball," wrote Pegler, "the historians help create the history they write and are of the game itself." None would look "out of place" in the Hall of Fame.
Bob Considine, another longtime nationally syndicated columnist and one-time sportswriter for the
New York Daily Mirror, bemoaned in a 1969 column the closure of so many of New York City's great newspapers, and the passing of generations of reporters, columnists, editors, and publishers. He especially cited the vanished
Herald Tribune and its bullpen of sportswriters, with Rennie as one of the singled out. ==Photography, health, and the later years==