Bill Christine, longtime horse racing reporter and | College News
Williard (Bill) Christine Jr., a a number of award-winning journalist who spent 23 years overlaying horse racing for the Los Angeles Times, died on Monday (Aug. 25) after being identified with acute myeloid leukemia three years in the past. He died at his home in Hermosa Beach, with household by his facet. He was 87.
While Christine was recognized in Southern California as the Times’ voice of horse racing, it was actually just the end of a storied profession that noticed him at seven different newspapers over 42 years that also contained a stopover in racing pubic relations.
Former Los Angeles Times reporter Bill Christine.
(Christine household)
He was the writer of three books, one on Roberto Clemente, another on jockey Bill Hartack and one on a pair of songwriters. After leaving newspapers, he favored to examine and write about true crime, particularly in his hometown of East St. Louis.
Christine received Eclipse Awards for excellent writing about horse racing, in 1984 and 2004. In 2000, he was given Walter Haight Award for profession excellence in turf writing. He received the David F. Woods Memorial Award in 1991 and 1992 for his coverage of the Preakness Stakes.
He was also president of the National Turf Writers and Broadcasters, a group that also contains public relations people, from 1990 to 1992.
“Bill was an old school journalist,” said Mike Willman the previous longtime media relations govt at Santa Anita. “He kept copious notes and was a contrarian by nature. He was fair and extremely knowledgeable.
“He really enjoyed being around the people in racing. You could take issue with something he wrote and then debate it and there was never any animus. I really respected him for that.”
Even after he retired, Christine would write emails to buddies and colleagues recounting people and occasions from his profession in racing and baseball.
Born in Illinois, he attended Southern Illinois Carbondale where he graduated in 1963 and wrote for the faculty newspaper. His first job out of school was at the East St. Louis Journal, where he coated baseball among other sports activities. After two years he moved to the Baltimore News American, adopted by the Louisville Times, Pittsburgh Press, Chicago Daily News and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, where he was briefly the sports activities editor.
It was then that he switched to public relations taking the top media job at Commodore Downs in Pennsylvania, adopted by 4 years as the assistant to the manager vice president at the National Thoroughbred Racing Assn.
The Times hardly ever hires people from the public relations facet, but then sports activities editor Bill Dwyre determined to take a probability.
“Bill Christine was my first hire as sports editor of The Times, and being the first, it was a big deal not only for me, but for people watching me and trying to figure out what I was thinking and how I would cover each sport,” said Dwyre, who later went on to cowl horse racing for The Times.
Former Los Angeles Times reporter Bill Christine receives an Eclipse Award honoring his horse racing reporting.
(Christine household)
“It was 1981. I interviewed some of the best national turf writers, including Maryjean Wall, Jennie Rees and Jack Mann, as well as Christine. I knew Bill better than the others because I had been his roommate at API (American Press Institute). … I liked that Bill was a great story-teller and that his newspaper experience went beyond just turf writing — he had covered lots of baseball on deadline and had also been the sports editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
“When he came to The Times, Santa Anita and Hollywood Park and Del Mar were booming and he worked tirelessly to give the sport the coverage it deserved.”
Bob Mieszerski, who has reported and handicapped horse racing in Southern California for many years and labored alongside Christine after Mieszerski got here to the Times and added a full web page of racing daily, echoed Dwyre’s sentiment about his talents and presence.
“He was very welcoming to me when I joined the Times and I always appreciated that,” Mieszerski said. “He was a great storyteller and I Ioved hearing him recall anecdotes about different people — both in and out of racing — that he encountered.”
Dan Smith, the retired advertising and media head at Del Mar, remembers Christine for his very distinctive snigger.
“It was like ghee, ghee, ghee,” Smith said struggling to duplicate the sound. “It was very distinctive and very unique.
“He was also a big movie buff. He and his wife went to a lot of movies. And we loved to discuss movies. He followed all of that very closely.”
Christine was recognized for his strong opinions, which sometimes put him at odds with the people he coated.
Christine’s most notable feud was with Wayne Lukas, who didn’t communicate to the reporter for a number of years after one thing Christine wrote.
“He wasn’t reluctant to discuss his opinions, which a lot of people didn’t agree with, but that was OK,” Smith said.
Dwyre, who would often change beats every yr, once supplied Christine the Dodgers job, arguably the best job in the division, because Christine had been complaining about needing one thing new. But in the end, Christine determined he would reasonably cowl racing.
“He really knew his baseball and had a Hall of Fame ballot,” Willman remembers. “You might have your own opinion and if it disagreed with Bill’s, he had all the ammunition to show you why he was right.”
Even if Christine’s daily coverage was often buried on a web page deep in the part, surrounded by handicapping and small-type outcomes, Christine would rise to the event and offer you a nicely crafted non-obvious story.
“I remember often doing critiques for my staff, especially those who had put out the previous morning’s paper,” Dwyre said. “I would hold up the sports section and ask which story that was in the section should have been on the front page and wasn’t. Invariably, it was a Christine horse racing story.”
The press box at Del Mar, named in honor of Dan Smith, has a wall where the images of deceased turf writers go.
“I guess his picture will go on the wall soon,” Smith said. “We’ve still got a few spots left and hope we don’t fill them anytime soon.”
Christine is survived by his spouse of 43 years, Pat, and two twin daughters, Laura and Leslie, his first spouse, Dianne, and stepson Chris.
Christine requested that his physique be donated to USC for medical research. After the cremains are returned, there can be a small celebration of life.
Stay up to date with the latest news in school basketball! Our web site is your go-to source for cutting-edge school basketball news, recreation highlights, participant stats, and insights into upcoming matchups. We present daily updates to guarantee you might have access to the freshest data on workforce rankings, recreation outcomes, injury stories, and major bulletins.
Explore how these trends are shaping the future of the game! Visit us usually for the most partaking and informative school basketball content by clicking right here. Our rigorously curated articles will keep you informed on match brackets, convention championships, teaching modifications, and historic moments on the court.



