Sid Hartman often said that when it came to sports, Gophers football always was his first love.
It was an unwavering childhood passion that stretched past his 100th birthday. Even with a coronavirus pandemic confining him mostly to his home, he arranged a ride to coach P.J. Fleck's house in mid-May, for a driveway interview.
"You could tell he cared so much about Gopher football and wanted to see it become successful more than anyone," Fleck said last Sunday after learning of Hartman's death.
The Gophers have several tributes planned for Hartman during Saturday night's season opener against Michigan, including a helmet decal featuring his column sig.
Hartman's Gophers fervor started in the 1930s, when the team was reeling off national championships under Coach Bernie Bierman. An adolescent Hartman sensed there was money to be made amid the weekly hoopla at Memorial Stadium, so he started parking cars and hawking newspapers.
His first hunts for scoops as a professional newspaperman began in 1944 for the Minneapolis Times. When that paper folded in 1948, the Minneapolis Tribune hired him to cover the Gophers football beat.
"The war had just ended, and a lot of guys were coming back after two to four years in the service," said Bud Grant, who played for the Gophers from 1946-49. "He wasn't much older than we were. He could mingle with us. He was privy to what young guys were doing. He had inside access to the locker room, but he never put any of us in a bad light."
Hartman canvassed the athletics department daily for scoops and continued the practice long after he first started his "Hartman's Roundup" column in 1946.