Chris Serb (MSJ95)
“Eckie: Walter Eckersall and the Rise of Chicago Sports” is part biography, part social history about Walter Eckersall, a three-sport champion in the early years of formal high school competition in Chicago and the best football player to ever compete at University of Chicago. Eckersall went on to become the Chicago Tribune’s lead sportswriter, creating the role of sports-star-turned-sports-journalist. His primary focus was football, but he also advocated the re-establishment of boxing in Chicago and the growing Olympic movement. He was also a champion of equal opportunity for Black athletes when they desperately needed allies.
But Eckie was no saint! A terrible student who never graduated high school and rarely went to class in college, Eckie got expelled a month after his eligibility expired. He was arrested for theft, got a woman pregnant out of wedlock, hastily married her in a shotgun wedding, then quickly abandoned his young family. He also struggled with a drinking problem, exposed during divorce proceedings but quickly buried by complicit media peers. A cautionary tale, and one that echoes with the college athletic experience today.
“Eckie” brings this long-forgotten figure back into the spotlight he deserves, in the larger context of the growth of Chicago sports, and sports journalism in general.