Author's Note: Life brings each of us unexpected turns and, if we're paying attention, we can use those turns for good purpose. Circumstances pave for the way for us to advocate, protect, raise awareness, advance humanity and, hopefully, make a better way for future generations. May the contents of what follows inspire you to discover and employ your personal influence for a happier world, too. - Maura Sweeney
After
years of obscurity, Jim Sweeney joins directors and more on Boston Film
Festival’s Red Carpet for the premiere of ESPN’s 30 for 30 Playing for
the Mob - Photo by Nikilette Walker
When my husband and I approached the Revere Theater in Boston for a preview of ESPN’s Playing for the Mob, we wondered if we’d stepped into a vacuum. Was this real life . . . or just a fantasy?
The question, borrowed from Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody, proved fitting. We were about to experience Playing for the Mob on the big screen, but as real characters in a real story. My role was minor, but my husband figured prominently.
Playing for the Mob captures an overdue coming out party between Goodfellas and Division I athletics on the pristine campus of a top Jesuit university.
For audiences, Playing for the Mob is
entertainment. For my husband Jim Sweeney and me, the film returns
memories of a chilling story, one that formed an unwitting backdrop to
our lives.
For
nearly 36 years, Jimmy’s quietude – initially mandated by the FBI and
later self-imposed by his wariness of overzealous reporters – fueled
speculation: Did he or didn’t he play architect in the Boston College points-for-dollars scheme?
Not many can claim to be a basketball star with a magna cum laude
degree from BC. Fewer still have been enmeshed in a national point
shaving scandal; testified against the mob without federal protection;
or had their character tarnished by a famous wise guy in a Sports Illustrated cover story.
But Jim Sweeney lived through it, all by the age of 23.
Jimmy’s
story predates the 1978 Boston College basketball fix around which the
film centers. His was real life behind a fantasy.
Jim
Sweeney was a freshman starter at BC. But by the time we met at the
beginning of our sophomore year, he disclosed a chink: The newly
installed coach was pressuring him to give up his scholarship.
I’d
occasionally meet Jimmy following his afternoon practices and observed
the hostile environment. But I was appalled one day as I witnessed the
coach publicly belittle a player till he finally broke down in tears.
“Why do you put up with this?” I asked Jimmy later. “You should quit.”
“I
am on an athletic scholarship,” he informed me. “If I don’t play, I
can’t go to school. I want to play for BC and have no intention of
playing anywhere else.”
Jimmy
dismissed my idea of bringing his concerns to BC’s President Father
Monan as “tattling”. He would deal with the looming loss of his
scholarship by hard work and strength of will.
Over
time, Jimmy proved himself on the court. He gained in skill and
prominence, but the sour undercurrent lingered between a coach who never
wanted a player and an athlete who refused to go away.
Though
publicly complimentary, the coach was notably absent when Jim Sweeney
was awarded the enviable honor as the nation’s top NCAA player under 6'
at the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Dining out with family during graduation week - a calm before storm
Jimmy and I graduated in 1980, married in the midst of the BC scandal and happily relocated to Florida in the Spring of 1983.
A
cryptic phone call that first Florida winter, delivered from the coat
closet of a NJ restaurant, warned me of a car heading South. An
admonition to “make sure Jimmy doesn’t come home tonight” was a tangible
reminder of a dangerous past.
Our
lives progressed like many others, but interests returned us to Boston
years later. We were developing a sports entertainment property named MIKE
and had a daughter attending Boston University. The city drew old
worlds together and would ultimately expose an uneasy veneer that Boston
College had held in place for years.
I remember thinking it odd that BC remained mute when the 1981 Sports Illustrated cover
article described Jim Sweeney as a “bird of a feather” (like its story
narrator, mobster Henry Hill). I chalked up the silence to BC’s
discomfort with an unintended scandal.
A
much later visit to BC’s Conte Forum, however, disturbed my
sensibilities. Why would a Wall of Fame exclude mention of its
three-time basketball captain? I reasoned the answer stemmed from an
unfortunate, but defensible, decision: Jimmy failed to notify his coach
about mob threats and was probably censured by NCAA rules.
Oddly,
Teddy Kennedy proved my ultimate flashpoint. He catalyzed me to inquire
into Boston College’s assessment of its former student athlete Jim
Sweeney and helped me uncover further displeasing revelations.
It
was late August of 2009 when Ted Kennedy, last of an American political
dynasty, passed away. I was in Boston helping our daughter get settled
for the semester and took a walk to watch the late senator’s historic
funeral procession. Returning to Kenmore Square, my cell phone rang with
news from a BC alum.
Father
Monan presided over the Kennedy funeral. On-air banners advised TV
viewers of the close and lengthy relationship between the late U.S.
senator and the Boston College community.
Really? The imagery transported me into a personal Twilight Zone.
How did a this US Senator with such a controversial past qualify for public endorsement from BC?
Did
the late senator’s ties to Harvard, family wealth and the White House
grant him privilege over a student athlete like Jim Sweeney whose
working class dad drove a truck?
Was BC turning elitist at the expense of its more vulnerable students?
As a BC alum and wife of Jim Sweeney, I was purposed to seek some answers.
I
began with a phone call to Father Monan who didn’t remember me but
quickly recalled Jimmy. I advised him that news of Ted Kennedy’s funeral
left me tossing in bed for weeks. Would he promise to read my letter if
I took the time to write?
“You need to unburden yourself?” he offered kindly.
“Yes, I do.”
Father Monan gave me his address and said he’d look forward to receiving the letter.
The
idea of unburdening myself may have translated differently from what
Father Monan anticipated. Rather than delivering a painful confession
about Jim Sweeney, I instead questioned BC’s values, ethics and social
conscience.
Further, I asked what the university was doing to protect its current athletes from predatory gambling threats.
I
never heard back from Father Monan but asked to meet him the following
Spring when visiting Boston for a sports summit at MIT. He obliged me,
with an understanding that he was no longer BC’s President and,
presumably, no longer in authority.
Our
near one hour meeting began and ended pleasantly, but disclosed the
facts that Boston College believed Jim Sweeney actively pursued the mob
in a point-fixing scheme (“They didn’t come to him, he went to see them.“).
Additionally, Jim Sweeney harbored a drug dependency or, at the very
least, was of a socially deficient nature (“I’m glad he made it” and
“I’m glad he had you to help him keep it together.”).
The
motives and inferences describing Jim Sweeney proved as confounding as
they were phantasmagorical. Was Father Monan describing the same man I’d
been living with all these years?
I
asked Father Monan if he wished to phone Jimmy now and ask him
personally about events of that 1978-79 basketball season. He physically
recoiled at the suggestion.
I
also asked if Boston College ever contacted any of the other players
involved in the scandal. Did the University want to know if they missed
something that could be of value for the future? And had the University
installed any new oversights to protect current athletes from being
ensnared by gambling forces?
The response to every question was no.
As
to justifying his close relationship with the controversial Ted
Kennedy, Father Monan informed me that the late senator had been a
“daily communicant”. Presumably, the regular ingestion of the communion
wafer maintained the senator in good Catholic standing.
I
was incredulous when we concluded our meeting: stupefied by Father
Monan’s desire to remain ignorant and remorseful of students who could
easily become BC’s future damaged goods.
Space
does not allow for the additional and escalating pieces of registered
correspondence I forwarded to BC’s current President William Leahy who
has continued along his predecessor’s path.
Instead
of seeking exoneration, I challenged BC to publicly acknowledge its
unofficial position that the former student athlete Jim Sweeney played
mastermind to the 1978-79 basketball fix.
A response never arrived.
This
past February, I got to introduce myself personally to BC’s current
President following an alumni mass and brunch in Naples, Florida.
Father William Leahy had just delivered an inspiring homily about building bridges and I happily took his message to heart.
I sought him out after he shared a second message about BC’s current endowment plans.
“Hello,
Father Leahy,” I said, extending my hand and business card to greet
him. “I’m Jim Sweeney’s wife Maura and I’m coming to you as a bridge.”
Father Leahy mumbled, awkwardly returned my card and then quickly scooted away.
The next day, I mailed him another letter.