Post by Jesse Jackson on Feb 27, 2011 18:02:12 GMT -6
sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=AmWTXxImG5TQMcjPXv.JKZE5nYcB?slug=ap-obit-snider
Duke Snider, the Hall of Fame center fielder for the charmed “Boys of Summer” who helped the Dodgers bring their elusive and only World Series crown to Brooklyn, died Sunday. He was 84.
Snider died at the Valle Vista Convalescent Hospital in Escondido, Calif., said the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, which announced the death on behalf of the family. Snider had been ill for months. His family said he died of natural causes.
“The Duke of Flatbush” hit .295 with 407 career home runs, played in the World Series six times and won two titles. But the eight-time All-Star was defined by much more than his stats—he was, after all, part of the love affair between the borough of Brooklyn and “Dem Bums” who lived in the local neighborhoods.
Gallery Ebbets Field was filled with stars such as Pee Wee Reese, Roy Campanella and Gil Hodges during that 1955 championship season. Yet it is Snider’s name that refrains in the ballpark favorite “Talkin’ Baseball.”
“Willie, Mickey, and the Duke,” the popular song goes.
Snider wore No. 4 in Dodger blue and was often regarded as the third-best center fielder in New York—behind Willie Mays of the Giants and Mickey Mantle of the Yankees—during what many fans considered the city’s golden era of baseball.
“The newspapers compared Willie, Mickey and I, and that was their thing,” Snider said several years ago. “As a team, we competed with the Giants, and we faced the Yankees in the World Series. So we had a rivalry as a team, that was it. It was an honor to be compared to them, they were both great players.”
Mantle died in 1995 at age 63. Mays, now 79, threw out a ceremonial ball last fall before a playoff game in San Francisco.
“Willie, Duke and Mickey—they were great players in one city, one town,” said former teammate Don Zimmer, who played with Snider for five years. “Duke never got the credit of being the outfielder that Mays and Mantle were. First of all, it was a small ballpark, Ebbetts Field. But Duke was a great outfielder. He was a great player.”
Snider hit at least 40 home runs in five straight seasons and led the NL in total bases three times. He never won an MVP award, although a voting error may have cost him the prize in 1955. He lost to Campanella by a very narrow margin— it later turned out an ill voter left Snider off the ballot, supposedly by mistake.
Carl Erskine was Snider’s roommate for 10 years and the two shared a house at spring training in Vero Beach, Fla., with their families
“Duke played so great when I pitched,” he recalled. “He just made so many plays in the World Series for me and he seemed to play his best when I pitched.”
Snider hit .309 with 42 homers and a career-high 136 RBIs in 1955. That October, he hit four homers, drove in seven runs and hit .320 as the Dodgers beat the Yankees in a seven-game Series.
For a team that kept preaching “Wait till next year” after World Series losses to the Yankees in 1953, ’52, ’49, ’47 and ’41, it was indeed next year. A generation later, long after they’d all grown old, those Dodgers were lauded as the “Boys of Summer” in Roger Kahn’s book.
Hall of Famer Willie McCovey called Snider one of his favorite players growing up. The two were teammates briefly when Snider joined the San Francisco Giants in 1964, his last season.
“He’s just a first-class guy, that’s all,” McCovey said. “A great power hitter and center fielder.”
Orlando Cepeda, also a Hall of Famer with the Giants, said Snider provided one of his biggest thrills when he broke into the majors in 1958.
“When I came to first base, the opening game, he said to me, ‘Orlando, good luck, good luck,”’ Cepeda said. “He was one of my idols. I almost fainted.”
Born Edwin Donald Snider, he got his nickname at an early age. Noticing his son return home from a game with somewhat of a strut, Snider’s dad said, “Here comes the Duke.”
The name stuck. So did Snider, once he played his first game in the majors in 1947, two days after Jackie Robinson’s historic debut.
A durable slugger with a strong arm, good instincts on the bases and a regal style, Snider hit the last home run at Ebbets Field in 1957.
Snider’s swing gave the Dodgers a lefty presence on a team of mostly righties. He often launched shots over the short right-field wall at the Brooklyn bandbox, rewarding a waiting throng that gathered on Bedford Avenue. “The Duke’s up,” fans in the upper deck would shout to those on the street.
Snider had a wild swing that was harnessed by Branch Rickey, who made him practice standing at home plate with a bat on his shoulder calling balls and strikes but forbidden to swing.
Snider stayed with the Dodgers when they moved to Los Angeles in 1958 and won another World Series ring the next year. Prematurely gray, “The Silver Fox” returned to New York with the bumbling Mets in 1963 and finished his career in 1964 with the Giants.
“There was no one classier or more easy going than Duke Snider,” Hall of Fame President Jeff Idelson said. “Above it all, he was a fan favorite for his style of play, personality, accessibility, and fondness for playing stickball with kids in the street of Brooklyn.”
Snider was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1980 on his 11th try. He was a broadcaster for the Montreal Expos for several seasons—he played in the city as a minor leaguer in the Brooklyn farm system—and later was an announcer with the Dodgers.
“One of baseball’s iconic figures—a Hall of Fame player, a Hall of Fame person and a wonderful broadcaster with great recall abilities, and one of the best storytellers I ever worked with,” said Dave Van Horne, the Marlins’ play-by-play man and Snider’s broadcast partner for 15 years with the Expos. “He was a wonderful partner and taught me a lot about the game.”
Hall of Fame broadcaster Marty Brennaman added: “If you met him, you would never had any idea that he carved out the kind of career for himself that he did.”
In 1995, Snider pleaded guilty to federal tax charges and was sentenced to two years’ probation and fined $5,000. He admitted not reporting more than $97,000 in cash from autograph signings, card shows and memorabilia sales.
Snider was sentenced at the Brooklyn federal courthouse, a few miles from where he had starred. The judge said Snider had been “publicly disgraced and humiliated … here in Brooklyn, where you were idolized by a generation … of which I was one.”
Snider apologized. He said he began making autograph appearances because he had little in savings and had made several bad business decisions. The judge said Snider paid nearly $30,000 in back taxes and noted he had diabetes, hypertension and other illnesses.
A native Californian, Snider became part of Brooklyn’s fabric during his playing days.
“I was born in Los Angeles,” he once said. “Baseballwise, I was born in Brooklyn. We lived with Brooklyn. We died with Brooklyn.”
The Duke, however, had some early problems with the boisterous Brooklyn fans.
Once, in the early 1950s, he was quoted as calling them the worst in the game. He came to the park after the quote was published and was greeted with a chorus of boos. But he enjoyed one of his better nights, and silenced the fans for good.
“The fans were something.” Snider said. “They were so close to you. You got to know them, some of them by name.”
During his playing career, Snider became an avocado farmer and lived many years in Fallbrook, Calif.
He is survived by his wife, Beverly, whom he married in 1947.
Zimmer lamented another Dodger gone.
“They’re all passing away,” he said. “There’s not many left.”
Contributing to this report were AP Sports Writers Janie McCauley in San Francisco; Tom Withers in Goodyear, Ariz.; Michael Marot in Indianapolis; Fred Goodall in Tampa, Fla.; Steven Wine in Jupiter, Fla., and Dave Skretta in New York.
Duke Snider, the Hall of Fame center fielder for the charmed “Boys of Summer” who helped the Dodgers bring their elusive and only World Series crown to Brooklyn, died Sunday. He was 84.
Snider died at the Valle Vista Convalescent Hospital in Escondido, Calif., said the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, which announced the death on behalf of the family. Snider had been ill for months. His family said he died of natural causes.
“The Duke of Flatbush” hit .295 with 407 career home runs, played in the World Series six times and won two titles. But the eight-time All-Star was defined by much more than his stats—he was, after all, part of the love affair between the borough of Brooklyn and “Dem Bums” who lived in the local neighborhoods.
Gallery Ebbets Field was filled with stars such as Pee Wee Reese, Roy Campanella and Gil Hodges during that 1955 championship season. Yet it is Snider’s name that refrains in the ballpark favorite “Talkin’ Baseball.”
“Willie, Mickey, and the Duke,” the popular song goes.
Snider wore No. 4 in Dodger blue and was often regarded as the third-best center fielder in New York—behind Willie Mays of the Giants and Mickey Mantle of the Yankees—during what many fans considered the city’s golden era of baseball.
“The newspapers compared Willie, Mickey and I, and that was their thing,” Snider said several years ago. “As a team, we competed with the Giants, and we faced the Yankees in the World Series. So we had a rivalry as a team, that was it. It was an honor to be compared to them, they were both great players.”
Mantle died in 1995 at age 63. Mays, now 79, threw out a ceremonial ball last fall before a playoff game in San Francisco.
“Willie, Duke and Mickey—they were great players in one city, one town,” said former teammate Don Zimmer, who played with Snider for five years. “Duke never got the credit of being the outfielder that Mays and Mantle were. First of all, it was a small ballpark, Ebbetts Field. But Duke was a great outfielder. He was a great player.”
Snider hit at least 40 home runs in five straight seasons and led the NL in total bases three times. He never won an MVP award, although a voting error may have cost him the prize in 1955. He lost to Campanella by a very narrow margin— it later turned out an ill voter left Snider off the ballot, supposedly by mistake.
Carl Erskine was Snider’s roommate for 10 years and the two shared a house at spring training in Vero Beach, Fla., with their families
“Duke played so great when I pitched,” he recalled. “He just made so many plays in the World Series for me and he seemed to play his best when I pitched.”
Snider hit .309 with 42 homers and a career-high 136 RBIs in 1955. That October, he hit four homers, drove in seven runs and hit .320 as the Dodgers beat the Yankees in a seven-game Series.
For a team that kept preaching “Wait till next year” after World Series losses to the Yankees in 1953, ’52, ’49, ’47 and ’41, it was indeed next year. A generation later, long after they’d all grown old, those Dodgers were lauded as the “Boys of Summer” in Roger Kahn’s book.
Hall of Famer Willie McCovey called Snider one of his favorite players growing up. The two were teammates briefly when Snider joined the San Francisco Giants in 1964, his last season.
“He’s just a first-class guy, that’s all,” McCovey said. “A great power hitter and center fielder.”
Orlando Cepeda, also a Hall of Famer with the Giants, said Snider provided one of his biggest thrills when he broke into the majors in 1958.
“When I came to first base, the opening game, he said to me, ‘Orlando, good luck, good luck,”’ Cepeda said. “He was one of my idols. I almost fainted.”
Born Edwin Donald Snider, he got his nickname at an early age. Noticing his son return home from a game with somewhat of a strut, Snider’s dad said, “Here comes the Duke.”
The name stuck. So did Snider, once he played his first game in the majors in 1947, two days after Jackie Robinson’s historic debut.
A durable slugger with a strong arm, good instincts on the bases and a regal style, Snider hit the last home run at Ebbets Field in 1957.
Snider’s swing gave the Dodgers a lefty presence on a team of mostly righties. He often launched shots over the short right-field wall at the Brooklyn bandbox, rewarding a waiting throng that gathered on Bedford Avenue. “The Duke’s up,” fans in the upper deck would shout to those on the street.
Snider had a wild swing that was harnessed by Branch Rickey, who made him practice standing at home plate with a bat on his shoulder calling balls and strikes but forbidden to swing.
Snider stayed with the Dodgers when they moved to Los Angeles in 1958 and won another World Series ring the next year. Prematurely gray, “The Silver Fox” returned to New York with the bumbling Mets in 1963 and finished his career in 1964 with the Giants.
“There was no one classier or more easy going than Duke Snider,” Hall of Fame President Jeff Idelson said. “Above it all, he was a fan favorite for his style of play, personality, accessibility, and fondness for playing stickball with kids in the street of Brooklyn.”
Snider was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1980 on his 11th try. He was a broadcaster for the Montreal Expos for several seasons—he played in the city as a minor leaguer in the Brooklyn farm system—and later was an announcer with the Dodgers.
“One of baseball’s iconic figures—a Hall of Fame player, a Hall of Fame person and a wonderful broadcaster with great recall abilities, and one of the best storytellers I ever worked with,” said Dave Van Horne, the Marlins’ play-by-play man and Snider’s broadcast partner for 15 years with the Expos. “He was a wonderful partner and taught me a lot about the game.”
Hall of Fame broadcaster Marty Brennaman added: “If you met him, you would never had any idea that he carved out the kind of career for himself that he did.”
In 1995, Snider pleaded guilty to federal tax charges and was sentenced to two years’ probation and fined $5,000. He admitted not reporting more than $97,000 in cash from autograph signings, card shows and memorabilia sales.
Snider was sentenced at the Brooklyn federal courthouse, a few miles from where he had starred. The judge said Snider had been “publicly disgraced and humiliated … here in Brooklyn, where you were idolized by a generation … of which I was one.”
Snider apologized. He said he began making autograph appearances because he had little in savings and had made several bad business decisions. The judge said Snider paid nearly $30,000 in back taxes and noted he had diabetes, hypertension and other illnesses.
A native Californian, Snider became part of Brooklyn’s fabric during his playing days.
“I was born in Los Angeles,” he once said. “Baseballwise, I was born in Brooklyn. We lived with Brooklyn. We died with Brooklyn.”
The Duke, however, had some early problems with the boisterous Brooklyn fans.
Once, in the early 1950s, he was quoted as calling them the worst in the game. He came to the park after the quote was published and was greeted with a chorus of boos. But he enjoyed one of his better nights, and silenced the fans for good.
“The fans were something.” Snider said. “They were so close to you. You got to know them, some of them by name.”
During his playing career, Snider became an avocado farmer and lived many years in Fallbrook, Calif.
He is survived by his wife, Beverly, whom he married in 1947.
Zimmer lamented another Dodger gone.
“They’re all passing away,” he said. “There’s not many left.”
Contributing to this report were AP Sports Writers Janie McCauley in San Francisco; Tom Withers in Goodyear, Ariz.; Michael Marot in Indianapolis; Fred Goodall in Tampa, Fla.; Steven Wine in Jupiter, Fla., and Dave Skretta in New York.