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・ William N. Rhodes
・ William N. Richardson
・ William N. Roach
・ William N. Robinson
・ William N. Robson
・ William N. Rowe
・ William N. Schoenfeld
・ William N. Small
・ William N. Stape
・ William N. Still, Jr.
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William Nack
・ William Nagle
・ William Nagle (American football)
・ William Nagle (author)
・ William Nagle (figure skater)
・ William Nairn
・ William Nairn (army)
・ William Nairne, Lord Dunsinane
・ William Namack
・ William Nanson
・ William Nanson Lettsom
・ William Napier
・ William Napier (astronomer)
・ William Napier (lawyer)
・ William Napier (Royal Navy officer)


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William Nack : ウィキペディア英語版
William Nack

William Louis Nack (born February 4, 1941) is an American journalist and author. He wrote about sports, politics and the environment at ''Newsday'' for 11 years before joining the staff of ''Sports Illustrated'' in 1978 as an investigative reporter and general feature writer. Since leaving ''S.I.'' in 2001, Nack has freelanced for numerous publications, including ''GQ'' and ''ESPN.com''. He also served as an adviser on the made-for-TV-movie ''Ruffian'' (2007) and the Disney feature ''Secretariat'' (2010).
==Early life==
William Nack was born in Chicago, Illinois. His family moved to the village of Skokie, in 1951. As children, William and his sister, Dee, mucked the stables and groomed the neighbors' horses in nearby Morton Grove. In 1955, they got their own charger, a parade horse with a masking black head atop a pure white body, named The Bandit by Dee. William began riding in horse shows and spent his teenage years with gaited saddle horses, including Wing Commander and Bo Jangles. He kept their photos on opposite walls of his bedroom, in memory of their showdown in the International Amphitheatre in December of that year. In his book ''Ruffian'', Nack wrote that they "went at each other in that hot arena minute by mounting minute and whip over spur, chillingly through the slow gait and the trot, until finally the crowds came bolting to their feet as the mane-flying Commander racked furiously past, his muscular legs pumping him right into history as the greatest five-gaited saddle horse of all time. The howls still sing in my ears." 〔Nack, William (2007-05-08). ''Ruffian: A Racetrack Romance''. ESPN Books. ISBN 1-933060-30-1〕
Nack revered the 1955 Kentucky Derby winner, Swaps, more than any human athlete. He encountered Swaps while hanging over the rail at Washington Park, three months after the Derby victory. "The horse I see in memory now looks tall and radiant," he later observed. "Swaps had a large, luminous brown eye, an exquisitely Aegean head and face that looked chiseled in cameo, and a warm, friendly breath that he held for a moment as your offered hand, cupped downward, rose and drew near him." A week later, Nack saw Swaps again at Washington Park, "lunging through the homestretch like a panther in the gloaming, three in front, his powerful shoulders glinting in the light as he reached his forelegs far in front of him and galloped home in hand." Swaps beat Traffic Judge and set a new course record of 1:54 3/5. "The clarity of that performance, the decisive finality that I had yearned for and missed in the world of horse shows ruled by fallible and sometimes idiotic judges, had won me to racing as a sport and to the memory of that horse forever." Eleven days after the American Derby, Swaps lost a Washington Park match race to Nashua. Fourteen-year-old William, watching the race on a fifteen-inch Admiral television set, bolted from his house, ran to his neighbor's yard, and vomited on a tree. A week later, he cut a photo of Swaps out of a magazine and stuck it in his wallet. He kept the photo—which he had laminated in 1965—in a multitude of wallets until 1983, when "the last swatch of genuine leather" got pick-pocketed at Madison Square Garden while Nack was covering a prizefight between Roberto Duran and Davey Moore.〔
In high school, Nack was a groom at Arlington Park. There he worked for trainer Bill Molter, and the star of the stable was Round Table, the Horse of the Year in 1958. In the tack room behind Round Table's stall, Nack practiced his jockey's crouch on a wooden horse. One day he had a friend strike a stirrup with a screwdriver to simulate the bell signaling the opening of a starting gate. "The next thing I know, Round Table's front hooves are on top of the stall," Nack said. "He heard the clang and he was snorting and rearing, ready to go. I thought I was going to be fired for getting him upset. It was very embarrassing."〔 〕
Among Nack's most vivid memories of his college days at the University of Illinois was the Saturday morning in May 1963 when former Syracuse University running back Ernie Davis died of leukemia. Nack, an assistant sports editor with the ''Daily Illini'', was alone in the paper's office when the news came across the AP wire. "I remember how the sadness struck me all of a sudden," said Nack, who later wrote about Davis in ''S.I.''〔 〕 "One day Davis had been this robust, powerful athlete who had so much to give, and then he was gone." While attending Illinois, Nack would descend to the underground stacks of the library to read obscure 19th-century accounts of horse breeds. During his senior year, he was sports editor of the ''Daily Illini'' under editor-in-chief Roger Ebert. As a grad student, he became the ''DIs editor-in-chief.
After graduating in 1966, Nack enlisted in the Army, where he was assistant editor of ''Infantry Magazine'' at Fort Benning in Columbus, GA. before becoming a flack for Gen. William C. Westmoreland. His two-year hitch included a tour in Vietnam during the Tet offensive of 1968. While stationed at Tan Son Nhut Air Base, outside Saigon, he often drowned out the cacophony of exploding mortars and machine gun fire with tapes his mother sent him of the calls of important races. He recalled, “I had left my recorder and tapes under my bed at the Prince Hotel on Tran Hung Dao, and it pleasured me now to imagine some VC colonel lying on his back on my mattress... listening in curious wonder to the call of Damascus winning the Travers by 22.”〔

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