There’s a reason the number 9 is displayed on the banner honoring former Jazz owner Larry H. Miller in the rafters of EnergySolutions Arena. The same number adorns his locker in a corner of the room where the players dress.
It has nothing — or everything — to do with basketball. Long before the Jazz came into his life, Miller was obsessed with softball. And to understand Miller’s competitiveness and how that translates in a meaningful way to this upcoming Jazz season, you have to know his softball background.
After an 11-year absence, the revival of a formerly world-class event will celebrate Miller’s passion for the game. The 2013 Larry H. Miller Memorial Pioneer Days Men’s Fastpitch Tournament will be staged Friday through Sunday at the softball complex on 13th East that now bears his name.
Ken Hackmeister, a longtime softball administrator and former Miller Toyota player, brought back the tournament he directed for 28 years. The event is a tribute to Miller, who pitched successfully and sponsored elite-level teams for much of his life.
“He championed fastpitch softball, to the max,” said Marc Amicone, a former teammate who’s now the general manager of the Salt Lake Bees pro baseball team that Miller owned.
An entire chapter of Miller’s autobiography is devoted to softball. The players from California, Idaho and Colorado competing against three Salt Lake City teams this weekend can relate to the stories of how Miller would pile his family into the car and drive to tournaments, and how he once pitched nine games in less than 24 hours, winning seven of them and being named the tournament MVP in Pueblo, Colo.
“My arm was a limp rag hanging at my side at the end of that last night,” Miller wrote in “Driven.” And then he went back to work Monday at the auto dealership that employed him in Denver.
Softball was “a great outlet for my emotional and competitive nature,” Miller wrote. “I was intense, as I was everything in did.”
Oh, yeah. “Extremely competitive,” Amicone said. “He had your back no matter what, if he was your teammate. He once told me that whatever he was involved in, he wanted to compete at the highest possible level, in sports or business or whatever it was.”
Miller played aggressively, no surprise there. “If he needed to knock you down as a pitcher, he would knock you down — that was never a problem,” said Amicone, who played with him on the Engh Floral team when Miller moved back to Salt Lake City in 1979. He later sponsored the Miller Toyota club that would compete favorably in national and world tournaments.
At a glance
Men’s Fastpitch Tournament
Pool A » California A’s, Bakersfield; Boise River Dogs; Lacey (Wash.) A’s; Granite Bakery, Salt Lake City
Pool B » Cal State Builders, San Mateo; Pueblo (Colo.) Bandits; Page Brake, Salt Lake City; Wasatch Properties, Salt Lake City.
Schedule » Round-robin play Friday night and Saturday; championship game 1 p.m. Sunday.
Utah Softball Hall of Fame inductees
The Utah Softball Hall of Fame will induct 14 new members at 4 p.m. Friday: Tommy Bahan, Park City; Mark Baldwin, Wellsville; Debbie Butler, Erda; Arnold “AJ” Christensen, Wellsville; Ivan Christensen, Providence; Lynn Christensen, Washington; Terry Jordan, Price; Leonard “Odell” Kirk, Layton; Mel Moon, Salt Lake City; Ron Nelson, Willard; Lisa Parker, Murray; Jim Peacock, St. George; Carma Pedersen, Salt Lake City; Sharon Seppi, Taylorsville.
Some of my favorite memories are the Pioneer Days tournament. I was fortunate to play for and against Mr. Miller’s teams, always top notch competition and the tournament was run with great class. Glad to see Ken has brought it back in Larry’s memory, an honor long deserved. Good luck and play hard, boys!
Case in point, full tournament stats, courtesy of Kelly Grover: http://www.fastpitchwest.com/?p=21515
Russ,
You are right. Ken was a big part of our being involved in the tournament this year. Always well organized events. My first visit was when you and Cary were pitching for our Vista Bombers team in 1992. Invitation only, and we felt lucky to be there. No internet coverage in those days, but when the games ended you could hear the old dot-matrix printers whirring under the bleachers with the results from the games just completed. Players gathered around as Ken came out of the scorers room, and posted game by game results. Always extra attention to the details. The teams seemed to enjoy this year’s event and were already talking about returning in 2014. Great to see it back on the map.
-Jim/FPW
Have lots of great memories of pioneer days.Went to 4 pioneer days and 1 world turny in Salt Lake.The best players and teams of the 90s all played in cottonwood complex.They had great people running it starting with the Hackman all the way down.I was lucky to meet Larry there I was with Chubb and the Santa Rosa boys he told us a few stories of Malone and Stockton.I hope one day to go back.The 1992 worlds there were unreal a great 10 days of fastpitch.The likes of Meredith Zack, Tangaroa White Peaches Underwood all in there prime also a whole bunch more unreal pitchers .Those are my thoughts and I love this great game with a passion.
Vancouver Gaints number 1 fan
Sincerely Doug Roberts