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Post by alum on May 20, 2022 20:51:46 GMT -5
At 101. There are several wonderful remembrances online including the NYT and from David Remnick in the New Yorker.
He saw Ruth and Ohtani!!
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Post by WorcesterGray on May 20, 2022 21:24:56 GMT -5
A thoughtful, witty and graceful writer in the manner of E.B. White (who happened to be his step-father).
The Summer Game deserves a prominent place on the bookshelf of anybody who loves baseball.
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Post by hchoops on May 20, 2022 21:46:10 GMT -5
He was the best baseball writer. His decades of New Yorker pieces chronicled the greats, Gibson, Koufax, and some not so great.
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Post by hchoops on May 21, 2022 13:21:49 GMT -5
For those who have not read Angell
In 1980, Angell wrote of pitcher Bob Gibson:
“(W)ith Gibson pitching you were always a little distracted from the plate and the batter, because his delivery continued so extravagantly after the ball was released that you almost felt that the pitch was incidental to the whole affair. The follow-through sometimes suggested a far-out basketball move — a fast downcourt feint. His right leg, which was up and twisted to the right in the air as the ball was let go (all normal enough for a right-handed pitcher), now continued forward in a sudden sidewise rush, crossing his planted left leg, actually stepping over it, and he finished with a full running step toward the right-field foul line, which wrenched his body in the same direction, so that he now had to follow the flight of the ball by peering over his right shoulder. Both his arms whirled in the air to help him keep his balance during this acrobatic maneuver, but the key to his overpowering speed and stuff was not the strength of his pitching arm — it was the powerful, driving thrust of his legs, culminating in that final extra step, which brought his right foot clomping down on the sloping left-hand side of the mound, with the full weight of his body slamming and twisting behind it
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Post by lou on May 28, 2022 8:16:28 GMT -5
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Post by hchoops on May 28, 2022 8:40:59 GMT -5
Typically wonderful Thanks, Lou
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