Bill 'Moose' Skowron dies at 81
He was not on the list.
Bill "Moose" Skowron, a five-time World Series
champion and one of only two players to hit three home runs in Game 7s, died
Friday of congestive heart failure at Northwest Community Hospital in Arlington
Heights, Ill. He was 81.
Skowron helped the New York Yankees win four titles in the
1950s and 1960s.
Bill "Moose" Skowron was a five-time World Series
champion and one of only two players to hit three home runs in Game 7s. Getty
Images
"There weren't many better guys than Moose," said
former teammate Yogi Berra, the only other player with three Game 7 homers in
the Series. "He was a dear friend and a great team man. A darn good
ballplayer, too."
Skowron became a star first baseman with the Yankees and
went on to appear in eight All-Star Games over six seasons.
Baseball commissioner Bud Selig called him "an integral
part of the wonderful Yankee teams of Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris."
"He was a wonderful storyteller and an important link
to a great era in baseball history," Selig said.
After Skowron's playing career he returned to Chicago, where
he was born and had worked for the White Sox since 1999 in the team's community
relations department, making appearances.
"We all have lost a dear, dear friend today,"
White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf said. "While Moose may have become a star
in New York with the Yankees, he was a Chicagoan through and through. I
certainly will miss his priceless stories about Casey Stengel, Roger Maris,
Hank Bauer and of course, his good friend, Mickey Mantle. ... My guess is that
right now Mickey, Roger, Hank and Moose are enjoying a good laugh
together."
Skowron played for the Yankees from 1954-62, then won a
fifth title with Los Angeles in the first season after he was dealt to the
Dodgers for Stan Williams. He hit .282 in 14 major league seasons with 211 home
runs and 888 RBIs, also spending time with the expansion Washington Senators
(1964), the White Sox (1964-67) and the California Angels (1967). He was an
All-Star from 1957-61, appearing in both games in 1959 and 1960, then was picked
one final time in 1965.
"He was a great man," White Sox manager Robin
Ventura said. "He was a friend to everyone and everybody loved seeing him
when he come to the park. We are going to miss him."
Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter recalled Skowron as "one
of the guys you always looked forward to seeing."
"Whether it was here, Old Timers Day, in Chicago, he
used to always come out when we played in Chicago," Jeter said before the
Yankees played the Tigers on Friday night. "I enjoyed getting to know him
throughout the years."
He was beloved by Yankees fans for his clutch performances
in three World Series Game 7s. He hit a seventh-inning grand slam off Roger
Craig in a 9-0 win over Brooklyn in 1956, and a three-run homer against Lew
Burdette in the eighth inning of a 6-2 win over Milwaukee in 1958. He also had
a leadoff drive in the fifth inning off Vernon Law in 1960, when the Yankees
overcame a four-run deficit at Pittsburgh to take a 7-4 lead only to lose 10-9.
Skowron had a .293 World Series average with eight homers
and 29 RBIs in 39 games.
"He always had positive things to say," Jeter
said. "He would always come over and comment on how you are playing or how
things will turn around. He was just always positive."
Born William Joseph Skowron on Chicago's North Side, he said
he was given the nickname Moose when he was 7 after his grandfather gave him a
haircut that caused friends to call him "Mussolini" -- after the
Italian fascist leader. The nickname was shortened to Moose.
After attending Weber High School, Skowron went to Purdue on
a football scholarship and signed with the Yankees.
He hit .304 or better in each of his first four major league
seasons and five times overall. He topped 20 homers four times but never
reached 100 RBIs, getting a high of 91 in 1960.
"Moose could really hit the baseball -- especially home
runs to right field," former roommate Bob Turley said. "I was glad
Moose was on my team because he always wanted to win."
In addition to his Game 7 feats, Skowron had an RBI single
in the 10th inning of Game 6 in 1958 that gave the Yankees a two-run lead and
they held on to beat the Braves 4-3.
"Moose will always be remembered as being one of the
key members of the Yankees' dynasties in the 50's and early 60's," Yankees
managing general partner Hal Steinbrenner said. "He was a winner in every
sense of the word, and someone the Yankees family cared deeply for."
He is survived by wife Lorraine (nicknamed Cookie), daughter
Lynnette, sons Greg and Steve, brother Edward and four grandchildtren.
Visitation will be held on Monday at Colonial-Wojciechowski
Funeral Home in Niles, Ill.
A few of hos notable teammates, managers, commentators, owners and coaches were: Casey Stengel, Red Barber, Whitey Ford, Phil Rizzuto, Yogi Berra, Enos Slaughter, Mickey Mantle, Hank Bauer, Jerry Coleman, Bob Grim, Ralph Branca, Bob Cerv, Eddie Robinson, Dan Topping, Del Webb, Billy Martin, Elston Howard, Gil McDougald, Andy Carey, Bob Turley, Tommy Byrne, Mel Allen, Bobby Richardson, Tom Sturdivant, Tony Kubek, Norm Siebern, Ralph Houk, George Weiss, Clete Boyer, Roger Maris, Ralph Terry, Luis Arroyo, Tom Tresh, Walter O'Malley, James & Dearie Mulvey, Walter Alston, Buzzie Bavasi, Frank Howard, Maury Wills, Wally Moon, Don Drysdale, Sandy Koufax, Vin Scully, Al Lopez, Arthur Allyn, Jr., John Allyn, Gary Peters, Minnie Miñoso, Joe Cunningham, Jim Landis, Hoyt Wilhelm, Juan Pizarro, Ken Berry, Frank Lary, Tommy John, Tommie Agee, Eddie Stanky, Don Buford, Jack Brickhouse, Gene Autry, Jim Fregosi, Buck Rodgers, Jay Johnstone, Jimmy Piersall, Don Mincher, Minnie Rojas, Jim McGlothlin and Bobby Knoop.
No comments:
Post a Comment