Growing up in Texas, and being as relatively young as I am, I admit I didn’t know much about Tulsa legend Wayman Tisdale until I moved here.
I can see that people here are hurting, having lost such a wonderful ambassador for this city at age 44. He lived here from his early years until he went to OU and became a star.
Not to forget that many argue he’s the best Oklahoma high school player of all time, having starred at Booker T. Washington.
He was athletically gifted, and no musical slouch either. Tisdale, an accomplished jazz musician, was to go on a national tour this summer. The son of a minister, he was a man of great faith who lived by example. And you can’t talk about Wayman without mentioning that incredible, joyful smile.
By all accounts, Wayman always claimed Tulsa as his home, and Tulsa gladly claimed him back.
I hope somewhere he’s looking down on his hometown paper and approving of the coverage of his death. It’s a weird thought, I know. But I think we have really done a great job so far, gathering quotes from people who knew him, collecting all his facts and stats and arranging many photos of him, all the while being respectful.
We at the paper know he is well-loved in these parts, so we readily bumped everything off the sports front page, even on high school championship weekend (those sports got a small, subtle, respectful strip at the bottom). He truly deserves every inch of coverage.
But (notice the big quote at the bottom of B1), former OU coach Billy Tubbs put it best: “You don’t have enough space in the paper for all of the great memories.”
Here are a few links to see how the World covered the passing of one of Tulsa’s favorite sons.
May 16
May 17
B8-B9: Very cool-looking vignettes from Karl Malone, Billy Tubbs and others. Designed by James Royal.
And if you click on nothing else, here is Bruce Plante’s cartoon: Wayman
More at tulsaworld.com/wayman