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BWAA Past President Dick Evans Dies at Age 78 |
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -
Dick Evans, Past President and Life Member of the Bowling Writers Association of
America, died Sunday, July 4 at the age of 78.
Evans had the distinction of being the
first daily newspaper reporter inducted into the PBA Hall of Fame (1986) and the
He was named the official bowling writer for the Knight-Ridder News Wire in the
early 1980s and in 1972 was sent to St. Louis to receive the bowling industry's
media award on behalf of the Knight-Ridder chain at the Salute Dinner. His
weekly bowling stories were sent out over the Knight-Ridder news wire and went
to 144 daily newspapers with a daily circulation of over 10 million.
At time of death, Evans was the leading award winner in the Bowling Magazine
Writing Contest for stories that appeared in both The Miami Herald and Daytona
Beach News-Journal. He was the top winner in the Professional Bowlers'
Association's writing contest, which was discontinued in 2001. Evans was named
the top tennis writer in Florida in 2002 and at the USA Tennis Florida
Convention in Daytona Beach.
Evans, born on September 20, 1931, began his 60 year journalism career at the
age of 12, delivering the Miami News. The youngest of three Evans brothers to
write for The Miami Herald, at age 14 he was hired to take greyhound racing
results and write headlines for short stories. At age 17, he officially joined
the Miami Herald staff when he was hired as a copy-boy. At age 20, he was added
to the Miami Herald's sports department staff.
For the Miami Herald, Evans wrote about all high school sports, college
football, boxing, bowling, golf, tennis, water skiing, wrestling, horse/dog/harness
races, jai-alai and also spent 14 months serving as interim religious editor.
He once organized and ran a Dade County High school baseball tournament that
featured North Miami High's Steve Carlton (a Hall of Famer) and Fred Norman, a
future star with the Chicago Cubs, in a taut pitchers duel at Miami Stadium
before 3,000 spectators. During the Baltimore Orioles spring training season in
Miami he organized a practice session with the O's for all of Dade County's high
school baseball prospects.
His most successful promotion came when he teamed with Joe Tanenbaum of
Gulfstream Race Track, drawing 56,000 entries from South Floridians to pick the
best horse ever to run at Gulfstream. But his forte was bowling, a sport that he
started covering for The Miami Herald in 1957.
Evans
retired from The Miami Herald Dec. 31, 1989. However, the native Miamian
continued to cover the bowling beat for The Herald until he decided to end his
Miami Herald career 20 years later.
Two of his brothers, the late Luther Evans and Lee Evans, founder of the
Tournament of the Americas, also wrote sports stories for The Miami Herald. Thus
stories under the byline of an Evans brother appeared in The Miami Herald from
1937 until 2009 except for two years during World War II (1943-44).
Evans was hired by the Professional Bowlers Association in 1990 as its media
director for the PBA Senior tour. He worked 77 tournaments over the next
seven years before stepping down.
In 1999, The Daytona Beach News-Journal asked Evans to write local bowling
stories - one of these stories won the feature story division in The Bowling
Magazine's national writing contest.
He continued to write tennis and bowling articles and stories for the Daytona
Beach News-Journal until his death. His bowling stories have appeared in every
national bowling magazine published plus many local bowling publications. His
stories have appeared on www.Bowlingdigitial.com
for more than a decade which resulted in email comments from readers in Europe,
Israel, Canada and Asia.
Dick Evans is survived by his wife Joan Gano Evans, son, Richard V. Evans, an
attorney in Louisville, Ky. and three grandchildren - Peyton, Carter and Walker.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be sent to the University
of Miami, where Dick Evans attended on a scholarship while working full time at
The Miami Herald. Funeral arrangements are pending.
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