
Rise And Shine
Tuesday Morning Quarterback reviews the draft, celebrating Eric Fisher's rise from inconsequential recruit to the No. 1 pick, a reminder that anyone can prove the experts wrong. Easterbrook: TMQ »
Kurt Snibbe/ESPN.com
Sunday afternoon, 84-year-old Jim Whittaker climbed to the top of the 10½-inch mound at Seattle’s Safeco Field to throw out the ceremonial first pitch in front of 20,000-some fans at the Mariners game. Anyone who has ever been in that position can tell you how daunting it is -- remember Carl Lewis? -- but Whittaker has placed his feet atop far higher peaks.
The highest peak, in fact.
Fifty years ago Wednesday, Whittaker became the first American to reach the 29,029-foot summit of Mount Everest when he and Sherpa Nawang Gombu climbed the final demanding steps up the mountain’s South Col in excruciating conditions.
"We had 50 mph winds, and it was 35 below zero," Whittaker said. “We were out of oxygen, and we were in the death zone. There is one thought that enters your mind when you place that first step on the summit, and that’s how to get down.
The perks of living in the city where the LA Kings practice. #goodtalk vine.co/v/bxuuilT9XI2
— Jonathan Vigil (@JonathanVigil) April 26, 2013
