The lefty ace for the Philadelphia Phillies “Whiz Kids” in 1950 passed away yesterday at the age of 93. He had been the last surviving member of that team following the death of fellow hurler Bob Miller, 94, in 2020. Here’s his obit by Richard Goldstein in The New York Times and Frank Fitzpatrick in […]
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Curt Simmons
The young man who caught Roger Maris’ iconic 61st home run in 1961 died as an old man of 81 in 2022. He passed away last Thursday. From today’s New York Times obituary by Richard Sandomir On that fall afternoon, Maris was tied with Babe Ruth for the single-season major league record of 60 home […]
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Roger Maris,
Sal Durante
The Hall of Famer died yesterday at the age of 84. Perry pitched for eight teams during his 22-year career in which he pitched 5,350 innings, winning 314 wins while striking out 3,534. But, as The New York Times‘ Richard Goldstein writes in the obituary, “he’s remembered as much for his acknowledged spitball, with saliva […]
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Gaylord Perry
A reminder: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes. In addition, occasionally the powers-that-be over there try to pull a fast […]
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Gaylord Perry
Yes, the legendary baseball writer for The New Yorker died last May, but Nicholas Dawidoff (The Catcher Was a Spy, The Crowd Sounds Happy, Baseball: A Literary Anthology) pays tribute in this recent posting on The Atlantic. deeming Angell to be “the finest writer ever to turn his consistent attention to baseball.” Why this piece […]
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Nicholas Dawidoff,
Roger Angell
An original member of the Florida Marlins, with whom he led the NL in stolen base leader in 1993, Chuck Carr recently passed away at the age of 55. He had been battling health problems according to family members. Carr made his major league debut with the New York Mets in 1990. In additional to […]
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Chuck Carr
The pioneering journalist broke barriers when it came to women entering the locker room. Gross passed away Nov. 9 at the age of 75. In the obituary from The New York Times, Richard Sandomir wrote,” In 2018, when she received an award from the Association for Women in Sports Media, Ms. Gross recalled the indignities she […]
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Jane Gross
I was reading Ira Berkow’s new book, Baseball’s Best Ever: A Half Century of Covering Hall of Famers, in preparation for a Bookshelf Conversation and came across an article about Bruce Sutter, who died last Thursday at the age of 69. Many of the ballplayers featured in the book are no longer with us, but it […]
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Bruce Sutter
Wow, has it really been that long since my last entry? Recently underwent another surgery, so that’s kept me on the bench for a while. But in the days and weeks ahead, look for a bunch of Bookshelf Conversations and other news as I try to make up for lost time. We begin with the […]
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Maury Wills
There is little that I can offer that would be as eloquent as what others have said and written about the legendary broadcaster who passed away Tuesday at the age of 94. From what I know, Scully was a modest person and a real mensch. He declined to tell his own story and was almost […]
The venerable actor who often played on both sides of the law passed away yesterday at the age of 83. Not mentioned among his many credits in The New York Times‘ obituary were his two baseball roles: Milwaukee Brewers a fictional manager Gus Panas in the 2004 feature film Mr. 3000 starring the late Bernie […]
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Joe Torre,
Paul Sorvino
Dead at 94. His portrait of Joe DiMaggio has appeared in numerous books about baseball art, including the cover of From The New York Times obituary by Richard Sandomir …Mr. Dinnerstein largely depicted the life around him: on the subway, in parks, outside brownstones like his own in Brooklyn. In a rare foray into portraying […]
Meant to post this a while back. The actor famed for, among other roles, his rendition of Shoeless Joe Jackson in Field of Dreams died last week at the age of 67. There have been complaints about the casting of and portrayal by Liotta as the shamed Black Sox outfielder. For one thing, there was […]
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Field of Dreams,
Ray Liotta
The softball legend who once struck out Ted Williams in an exhibition appearance, died March 26 at the age of 81. Unfortunately, no video exists for that event. Today it would be all over the internet. According to the obituary in today’s New York Times, For 10 to 15 minutes, Williams, a left-handed hitter, swung […]
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Joan Joyce,
Ted Williams
AKA, the original Mr. Met. Reilly passed away last Dec. 30 at the age of 83. According to the obituary in Jan. 7 issue of The New York Times by Richard Sandomir Mr. Reilly was working in the Mets’ ticket office when two team executives asked him to breathe corporeal life into Mr. Met, who […]
The character actor who played Chick Gandil in the classic baseball flick Field of Dreams died Nov. 17 at the age of 78 after a long battle with Parkinson’s. Gandil — a notorious member of the Black Sox — was not the only baseball figure LaFleur portrayed: he also appeared as Babe Ruth in The Sandlot. […]
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Art LaFleur,
Field of Dreams
The long-time Red Sox favorite passed away Saturday after a long battle with cancer. He was 68. Remy, a native Bay Stater, was drafted by the California Angels in 1971. He played for the Halos from 1975-77 and was traded to Boston in the off-season. The diminutive second-baseman made the All-Star team for the first […]
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Boston Red Sox,
broadcaster,
Jerry Remy
The long-time sportswriter and the first author to focus on a single-game analysis passed away Sunday at the ripe old age of 99. I had interviewed Arnold Hano back in 2012 to discuss A Day in the Bleachers, a classic about the 1954 World Series between the New York Giants and Cleveland Indians. It would […]
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Arnold Hano,
Jon Leonoudakis,
New York Giants,
Willie Mays,
World Series
The backstop for the “Dynastic, Fantastic, Bombastic…Swingin’ A’s” (to borrow from author Jason Turbow) passed away yesterday at the age of 74 after a long battle with cancer. Here’s the obituary which appeared in East Bay Times. Fosse seems to be the poster boy when discussing “what might have been.” He was a promising catcher […]
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Ray Fosse
We lost another baseball lifer with the passing of Eddie Robinson on Monday at the age of 100. Here’s the New York Times obituary by Richard Goldstein. He enjoyed a 13 year career, spent entirely in the American League where he played on every team except the Boston Red Sox. Robinson, the oldest former big […]
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Eddie Robinson