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Published: November 6, 2008
With a blessing from basketball royalty and backing from hometown voters, Kevin Johnson swept into office as mayor of Sacramento, Calif., while more than a dozen other sports figures played politics by running in elections across the country.
Johnson, a former All-Star point guard for the Phoenix Suns, became the city's first black mayor and during his victory speech echoed Barack Obama's landmark presidential triumph.
"Sacramento also made history today in electing its first black mayor," Johnson said Tuesday night. "Both Obama and myself, we ran on a promise and the theme of change. No more business as usual."
Ex-quarterback Heath Shuler and former Bucs coach Sam Wyche scored victories that had little to do with football, while heavyweight boxer Joe Mesi had a rough time in the political ring, losing a bid for a legislative seat in New York.
Craig Robinson wasn't on a ballot, but the Oregon State basketball coach soon could be a frequent White House visitor. Robinson watched election results in Chicago with his family, which includes his brother-in-law, the president-elect.
Johnson, a 42-year-old Democrat with conservative social views, defeated two-term incumbent Heather Fargo in a run-off election. He put some pizazz into his campaign with support from basketball icons Shaquille O'Neal, Magic Johnson and Charles Barkley.
Johnson wants to raise the profile of his hometown and bemoans his city's image beside that of Los Angeles and San Francisco. He pledged to end a "tired, bureaucratic, uninspired, unresponsive" city hall.
Shuler, a Heisman Trophy runner-up at Tennessee who played quarterback for the Washington Redskins and New Orleans Saints, won his first bid for re-election to Congress.
Shuler is a North Carolina Democrat whose district is in the state's western mountains. He defeated Carl Mumpower, who had irritated local Republican officials by saying he would support efforts to impeach President Bush.
"I did what I said I would do, and I think the people saw that," Shuler said.
Wyche coached in the NFL with Cincinnati and Tampa Bay and made it to the Super Bowl with the Bengals after the 1988 season. He ran as a Republican and commandingly won a seat on the Pickens County Council in South Carolina, an area that includes Clemson University. A former quarterback at nearby Furman, Wyche is an assistant football coach at Pickens High School and a broadcaster.
Mesi had a 36-0 record as a fighter and once had to stop fighting for two years because of bleeding in his brain. The Democrat had the support of Buffalo Sabres owner B. Thomas Golisano in his attempt to win a state Senate seat but lost to Republican Michael Ranzenhofer.
Joining Shuler in re-election to the House was Rep. Baron Hill of Indiana, a former Furman basketball player. He defeated former Rep. Mike Sodrel, a Republican and trucking company owner. The two have faced off in four consecutive elections.
In a state legislative race, Peter Boulware, a former star linebacker at Florida State who went on to the Baltimore Ravens, was vying for a seat in Florida and trailing by 403 votes. Boulware, a Republican, appeared headed for a recount.
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