File – Sports Writer and author John Fan Stein posted on Washington, February 28, 2006. (AP Photo Colleb Jones, File)
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WASHINGTON – John Fan Stein, one of the country’s most important sports authors, and author of multiple seller books, including college basketball coach Bob Knight, died on Thursday on Thursday. Fan Einstein was 69 years old.
According to Robert Fan Einstein, he died in his brother’s house in the city of McLean for natural reasons, who said he had discovered John’s body.
John Fan Einstein was a full -time reporter of the Washington Post from 1977 to 1991, who was an observer for shops like ESPN. Sports reporters – And AP -Top 25 Men’s College Basketball Survey for more than 20 years of golf channel, and a voter. He served as a partner columnist, and also hosted satellite radio programs on Series XM.
“He was very fond of things,” Robert Fan Stein said in a telephone interview. “People either loved or hated it – and so firmly.”
John Fan Einstein – always a storyteller, whether through a written word or when talking to other journalists in a field media room or press box – was working until the time of his death. He was in the Washington area this week to cover the Atlantic 10 tournaments before the March madness, and he Filed a column for post About Michigan State Coach Tom Ezo, which was published online on Thursday.
“He was strong with his opinion,” said Ezu on Thursday, “but it is very interesting to talk.”
Fan Einstein was comfortable in writing fiction and non -fiction, and he pushed a row of sports, including golf and tennis, but he was most known to belong to college basketball because he was from college basketball. A season on the edge. In 1985, he took a post of absence from the post to embedded the Indiana team.
Knight’s reputation for warm temperament was well established by that time, and Fantein presented evidence behind the scenes that was unusual in sports writing. Fan Einstein also effectively presented the personal relationships with his players in Knight, which changed between hot and abuse.
“I can’t potentially benefit more from how important Knight was in my life,” Fantein said in the post after the coach’s death in 2023.
Fantein wrote, “Knight did not even get away from access to his team even during some difficult moments.” Although he did not talk to me for eight years after publishing the book – worried about everything, with a strange look in the book – he finally decided to ‘forgive’ me, and his whole life was far away.
Praise for Fan Stein’s work – and such access and skilled reporting that was a symbol – was on social media on Thursday, which included other people in the college basketball writing or talking business.
And, of course. , The news revolves around college basketball when its season is approaching its Christmando. Fan Einstein knew every coach of the game – and it seemed that they all knew it.
After the Golden Eagles defeated Zavar in the Big East Tournament, Market Coach Smart found out about the death of Fan Stein from a reporter at Madison Square Garden.
“Oh, wow,” Smart said. “I know him for a long time. He is one of the best sports writers. I knew him as a writer, before I know him as a person, when I was in high school, he read some of his belongings.
Fantein wrote more than 40 books about Army Navy Football Games, including professional golf “One Good Walk Bad” (1995), and “One Civil War” (1996). After the publication of this book, he worked as a radio observer of Navy Football.
About the Ivy League football “ancient eight,” was published last year. Fan Einstein also wrote sports novels, aimed at underage readers.
Fan Einstein graduated from Duke University and later taught there. During this academic year, he started his education at Longwood University in Virginia-and a writer residing.
Berry Soureloga, a Washington Post columnist, said he took the course of Fan Stein’s sports journalism as a senior in Duke, recalled the experience on Thursday.
“Whatever class he can get to talk to, Gary Williams called a game day when Maryland was in the city of Maryland, Billy Packer, Bud Collins – Bob Woodord called.” “And you can only tell that part of his reporting ability – how he entered the range and the front office and the PGA tour events and in the club houses – because he could actually build a relationship relationship, and people like to talk to him.
Another post colleague, Editor of Fan Stein, in recent years, said: “He will tell me, ‘Oh, yes, I’m going to the city today to meet Steve Kerr for lunch,’ or ‘oh, yes, Jim Lararaga called me a few months ago and we asked us how we were basketball. He loved sports, watching them permanently, even when he was not writing about them, had an opinion about everything and everyone … he was robbed by Wimbledon, swimming, college basketball, naval academy, Westpoint, Mattis and those whose calls were robbed.
In addition to Robert, John Fan Einstein has his wife, Christine, daughters Brigade and Jane, and son Danny, as well as a sister, Margaret.