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All Tags » Baseball » Deaths (Obituaries)
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Ms. Collins was a star pitcher in women’s professional baseball in the 1940s and later played a major role in preserving the history of the women’s game.
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Mr. Caray’s nasal tone and sometimes playful, sometimes sardonic commentary on radio and television made him familiar to baseball fans.
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Mr. Maxwell was a chronicler of Negro league baseball and, some believe, the first black sports broadcaster.
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Foley was an official scorer in major league baseball for almost four decades, working in more World Series, 10, than any other scorer in modern history.
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Murcer, who played 17 seasons in the majors, was a fan favorite in New York and a longtime Yankees broadcaster.
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Mr. Murcer, who played 17 seasons in the majors, was a fan favorite in New York and a longtime Yankees broadcaster.
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Mr. Murcer, who played 17 seasons in the majors, was a fan favorite in New York and longtime Yankees broadcaster.
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Mr. Tygiel was a historian and self-confessed baseball nut whose Brooklyn upbringing inspired his highly regarded scholarship on Jackie Robinson.
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Mr. Shepard was a World War II fighter pilot who lost his right leg but went on to pitch for the 1945 Washington Senators.
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Mr. Asinof’s journalistic re-creation of the 1919 Black Sox scandal, “Eight Men Out,” became a classic of both baseball literature and narrative nonfiction.
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