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R.I.P, Crazy Ray

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 4:01 pm
by Headhunter
Sorry to see the old guy go. His presence on the sidelines at Cowboys games always seemed like a given. Good dude, hell of a fan, and an icon of Dallas Cowboys football. Hope Jerry sees his way to put him in the Ring of Honor. 44 years as a mascot. Damn, can't think of anyone else who gave as much to the team.


R.I.P. Crazy Ray, and thanks for the memories.


http://dallascowboys.com/news.cfm?id=62 ... 7F901094FE

IRVING, Texas - A Dallas Cowboys sideline icon for nearly 44 years, Crazy Ray, the team's unofficial mascot since the third season back at the Cotton Bowl who endeared himself to millions of fans with his support of the Cowboys, died at his home Saturday morning.

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 5:38 pm
by Raydah James
Image


Nobody.

Fucking.

Cares.

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 5:41 pm
by Headhunter
Yes you do. Don't lie.

You sobbed like a little girl when the news broke.


Now, get busy finding 30 different ways to describe some dudes balls being somewhere around my mouth!

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 5:52 pm
by Dinsdale
Shut the fuck up, Rayduh James.


The death of anyone associated with the Cowboy organization should be celebrated.

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 5:58 pm
by Tom In VA
Fucking A man. You know, I'm getting to be an old fucking fart.

He was an establishment of his own and the "rivalry" wouldn't have been the same without him and Chief Zee Williams (also in poor health apparently) and their pretend fights.

RIP Crazy Ray.

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 6:18 pm
by Raydah James
Dinsdale wrote:Shut the fuck up, Rayduh James.


The death of anyone associated with the Cowboy organization should be celebrated.

:lol: :lol:


My Bad.


RACK the Heart attack that hit paydirt.

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 7:07 pm
by BSmack
I guess they won't be needing to save him any more.

Image

http://www.savecrazyray.com/default.asp

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 7:54 pm
by Tom In VA
Might have bought him more time or at least not left his remaining family in as much of a financial bind.


Saw that link on a Redskin blog.


WAR Sportsmanship

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 8:05 pm
by BSmack
Tom In VA wrote:Might have bought him more time or at least not left his remaining family in as much of a financial bind.
Maybe not blowing his money on season tickets could have helped. Maybe spending Sundays with the kids?
Mattie, Ray’s beloved wife of over 50 years, worked and eventually retired from DART as a bus driver. She said “someone had to hold a steady job while he was entertaining”. Between the football games and in off season, Ray always tried to work at conferences, parties and he performed at many charity events.
http://www.savecrazyray.com/articles.asp?id=297

I'm all for being a fan. But if you don't have the money, don't go to the fucking games. I don't care if you are "Crazy Ray".

Posted: Mon Mar 19, 2007 8:15 pm
by Headhunter
The biggest hit on their income and finances came when their only child began using them to support a drug habit. She would purchase things in their name – then hock them to buy drugs. Despite their pleas for her to get help, she took Ray and Mattie down with her. She convinced Ray and Mattie to file bankruptcy telling them that “everything would turn out fine”. Matters couldn’t have gotten any worse when their daughter was found dead from an overdose.


Sounds like that had more of an impact than tickets. And my understanding was that he didn't buy tickets, he had all access to the stadium. He just didn't pull a check.

Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2007 2:30 pm
by Tom In VA
BSmack wrote:
Tom In VA wrote:Might have bought him more time or at least not left his remaining family in as much of a financial bind.
Maybe not blowing his money on season tickets could have helped. Maybe spending Sundays with the kids?
Mattie, Ray’s beloved wife of over 50 years, worked and eventually retired from DART as a bus driver. She said “someone had to hold a steady job while he was entertaining”. Between the football games and in off season, Ray always tried to work at conferences, parties and he performed at many charity events.
http://www.savecrazyray.com/articles.asp?id=297

I'm all for being a fan. But if you don't have the money, don't go to the fucking games. I don't care if you are "Crazy Ray".

Then you would be on the mvscal side of the issue.

Tell me, are you a Christian?

Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2007 4:20 pm
by BSmack
Tom In VA wrote:
BSmack wrote:I'm all for being a fan. But if you don't have the money, don't go to the fucking games. I don't care if you are "Crazy Ray".
Then you would be on the mvscal side of the issue.

Tell me, are you a Christian?
I am. And I'm trying real hard to be the shepherd.

Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 5:58 pm
by Headhunter
Tom In VA wrote:Fucking A man. You know, I'm getting to be an old fucking fart.

He was an establishment of his own and the "rivalry" wouldn't have been the same without him and Chief Zee Williams (also in poor health apparently) and their pretend fights.

RIP Crazy Ray.
From http://dallascowboys.com/news.cfm?id=85 ... 3D4BF5002D which is the news story of his public memorial service.




The morning was punctuated by the appearance of Zema Williams. You might not know him as Zema Williams, but you would recognize his unmistakable Indian head dress and red outfit as the man who became sort of Ray's counterpart, the Washington Redskins mascot.

Few probably knew because of their theatrical sideline tussles during those Cowboys-Redskins games they were fast friends, Crazy Ray and Chief Zee. But they were, the Chief telling of his first trip back in the old days to a Cowboys-Redskins game at the invitation of Ray that he initially declined.

"No Ray," Zema first said, "I ain't coming down to Texas with those people riding around with shotguns."

But he came, and told the story of how Ray arranged for an airport roundup, men dressed up carrying toy guns to apprehend Chief Zee in the terminal and take him directly to Texas Stadium. Zema never checked into a hotel, he said, because at the insistence of Ray and Mattie he spent the weekend at the Jones house.

"Ray always told me, 'Look out for the children because that's the people of tomorrow,'" Zema recalled.

And at that, Chief Zee removed his coveted headdress, and as was their custom he said for the losing mascot after games, he put on a Cowboys cap in tribute to his buddy and screamed in the best rendition of Crazy Ray, "Cowboys!"

He received a standing ovation. Only in the name of Crazy Ray could a Redskin be truly cheered at Texas Stadium.

Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 6:02 pm
by Dinsdale
What a coincedence -- our mascot is called Crazy Ray, too.

Sin,
Chargerfan

Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 7:59 pm
by Headhunter
I understand their guy is the 12th man.

Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2007 11:15 pm
by DallasFanatic
Dinsdale wrote:What a coincedence -- our mascot is called Crazy Ray, too.

Sin,
Chargerfan
This is no coincidence.

Sincerely,

Ravens MLB

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 3:51 pm
by Sirfindafold
mascots are for fags.

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 3:56 pm
by Headhunter
Really? So which mascot do you have?

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 4:06 pm
by Dinsdale
SEATTLE (AP) - Bill Scott, who entertained Seattle sports crowds as "Bill the Beerman" and later worked as a professional cheerleader and superfan across the country, has died of cancer, his wife said Tuesday.

Scott, 58, died Sunday after battling colon cancer for more than five years, wife Katherine Olason said.

"He had the most incredible enthusiasm I've ever seen in a human being," Olason said. "He did not give up."

Scott became a Seattle sports fixture in the days when the drab, departed Kingdome hosted the deafening crowds of fans supporting the NFL's Seahawks.

As a beer vendor, Scott's booming voice would both coax customers and encourage fans to cheer. "Freeze your teeth, and give your tongue a sleigh ride," was among his memorable sales pitches.

"He had conditioned his voice to take that pounding," friend Ken Wilson told The Seattle Times. "He could scream through a whole game and then sound just normal."

In the 1980s, Scott dropped the beer tray and took up cheerleading for a living, although he had a different name for the job: "synergy facilitation."

Whatever you called it, Scott's raucous personality made him a fixture at sporting events and something of a local celebrity.

"There were (thousands of) people who went to football games who felt like they knew Bill personally," friend Chuck Meyer told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. "He talked to everyone, made them feel very important. Kids would go, 'Wow! My dad knows Bill the Beerman!"'

Scott was later imported to work the crowd for the NBA's Portland Trailblazers, and the Boise Hawks, a minor-league baseball franchise.

He eventually branched out, working across the country for the NFL's Indianapolis Colts, the Continental Basketball Association and other minor-league baseball parks.

"He led a life nobody could say was dull," Meyer said.

Scott was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2001. At the time, doctors gave Scott two months to a year to live, Olason said.

But he lived long enough to rally Seahawks fans one last time, raising a team flag at Qwest Field on Dec. 14.

"It kind of put him at peace with that era of his life," said a son, Jason Scott.



Rumor has it that the Seahawks are trying to copyright the word "beer."

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 7:08 pm
by Headhunter
e wrote:
KCHeadhunter?

Ouch.

Ok, so i took a cheap shot, but I don't think it warranted a low blow like this as a response.

IVO?


But it's still funny to hear from RaiderFan about mascots being gay, what with their halloween freak fans.

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2007 7:59 pm
by Tom In VA
Nice link HH. Truly the end of an era.

RIP Crazy Ray.