Former White Sox broadcaster Jimmy Piersall dies at 87
He was not on the list.
Jimmy Piersall, who shared his struggle with mental illness
in his autobiography ‘‘Fear Strikes Out’’ and always spoke his mind as Harry
Caray’s fiery sidekick on White Sox broadcasts, died Saturday at a care
facility in Wheaton after a long illness. He was 87.
Piersall was a two-time All-Star and two-time Gold Glove
outfielder during his 17-year major-league career with the Red Sox, Indians,
Senators, Mets and Angels during the 1950s and 1960s. His .99022 career
fielding percentage was better than those of Hall of Fame center fielders
Willie Mays and Joe DiMaggio.
‘‘Ted Williams told me he was the best center fielder he
ever saw,’’ Sox broadcaster Ken Harrelson said.
But Piersall was best-known in Chicago for his free-wheeling
criticism of managers, coaches, ownership and even players’ wives. Caray was
often right there with him, but it was Piersall who was fired in 1983 for being
too critical of the players and then-manager Tony La Russa on the air.
In the mid- and late 1980s, the Cubs employed Piersall as a
roving outfield instructor. They eventually would let him go, and Piersall said
it was for his open criticism of the team.
Piersall, who also served as the first baseball analyst on
radio station WSCR-AM, was a meticulous instructor who knew his craft, Sox
broadcaster and former Cubs outfielder Darrin Jackson said.
‘‘He knew what he was talking about as an instructor and
coach,’’ Jackson s aid. ‘‘He was very good and very passionate about what he
was trying to teach us. Some of the young guys were like, ‘Come on, man, this
guy is crazy,’ and I would turn around and say, ‘Shut up, this guy knows what
he’s talking about.’ He would keep you out there all day if you didn’t do it
right.’’
After work, Jackson said Piersall and his wife ‘‘would take
guys like Davey Martinez and his wife, me and my wife and Gary Varsho out to
dinner. We’d have a good time. He was very passionate about everything he
did.’’
From the time he broke into baseball with the Red Sox, Piersall
became famous for amusing fans and media. He made pig noises on the field,
stepped up to bat wearing a Beatles wig and playing air guitar on his bat and
backpedaled around the bases after hitting his 100th career home run.
He argued vehemently with umpires, got into a fistfight with
the Yankees’ Billy Martin at Fenway Park, was ejected from a game while playing
for the Indians for running around and waving his arms in center field to
distract Williams at the plate and was arrested after going into the stands to
confront a heckling fan.
‘‘Almost everybody except the umpires and the Red Sox
thought I was a riot,’’ Piersall said in his 1955 autobiography, which later
was made into a movie starring Anthony Perkins. ‘‘My wife knew I was sick, yet
she was helpless to stop my mad rush toward a mental collapse. The Red Sox
couldn’t figure out how to handle me. I was a problem child.’’
Piersall played 56 games in the majors in 1952 before being
admitted to a mental hospital with what later was diagnosed as bipolar
disorder. He wrote in his book that he had almost no memory of the season or of
his time in the hospital.
Piersall is survived by his wife, Jan; nine children; and
many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
Piersall appeared as a mystery guest on the television show
What's My Line? that aired on April 28, 1957. Guest panelist U.S. Senator
George Smathers of Florida correctly guessed Piersall's identity.
Piersall briefly appeared as himself on The Lucy Show with
Lucille Ball and Gale Gordon. The first episode of the show's fourth season, it
originally was broadcast on September 13, 1965. The plot has Lucy, Mr. Mooney
and Lucy's son, Jerry meeting Jimmy who is making a public appearance at
Marineland on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.
On September 17, 2010, Piersall was inducted into the Boston
Red Sox Hall of Fame. Piersall was inducted into the Baseball Reliquary's
Shrine of the Eternals in 2001.
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