Mickey Furfari marks 90 years

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — A legendary sportswriter in West Virginia is celebrating his 90th birthday.

Mickey Furfari started his writing career when he was a student at West Virginia University.

“I’ve been so blessed by friends, by family and friends,” said Mickey Furfari.  “And I feel I am happiest when I’m writing.”

Furfari, a Morgantown native, is well known throughout West Virginia for his more than 65 years of writing about sports.

His career started in college at West Virginia University when he shared sports editor duties at The Daily Athenaeum with Jack Fleming from 1946-1947 and worked for the Associated Press in Huntington.

Furfari served in the U.S. Army in World War II from 1943-1946 and was the sports editor, during part of that time, for the Pacific Stars and Stripes.

Following his graduation from WVU’s School of Journalism in 1948, he worked for the Charleston Gazette before returning to Morgantown in 1949 to fill a number of roles with Morgantown newspapers, mainly covering the Mountaineers, up until 1989.

Since then, he has worked as a special syndicated writer and columnist for newspapers throughout West Virginia.  He produces four columns each week for five newspapers, even though he is hard of hearing and legally blind.

He said he still loves writing. “I have three (columns) for this week already,” he said.

MetroNews affiliate WAJR-AM in Morgantown helped mark Furfari’s 90th birthday with a special edition of “Morgantown AM” on Monday.

He was also a guest on Monday’s MetroNews “Talkline.”

On the show, Furfari said he wants to keep writing about Mountaineers sports. “I have no plans to retire as long as the good Lord continues to give me good health,” he said.

He said what motivated him at the beginning of his career is still the same. “I love people and the more I wrote, the more I just loved it,” said Furfari.





More News

News
Killer gave investigators a death bed confession in death of woman and her young daughter
Larry Webb told investigators he shot and killed Susan Carter and her 10-year old daughter Alex in 2000, then buried their bodies behind his Beckley home. Nearing death, he decided it was time to get it off his chest.
April 23, 2024 - 2:56 pm
News
Attorney General plans 'a major update' about federal case involving transgender athlete
The majority on a three-judge panel with the Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled against the State of West Virginia's position last week on how state law would affect the eligibility of middle school athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson.
April 23, 2024 - 2:24 pm
News
Cleveland-Cliffs CEO hinting of possible new use for idled Weirton plant
Union leader confirms discussions are underway to turn plant into operation that makes steel for electric grid transformers.
April 23, 2024 - 1:21 pm
News
Justice says Greenbrier sales tax debt is being paid. Records show one lien forgiven and a new one on pile
April 23, 2024 - 12:57 pm


Your Comments