White Sox great Minnie Minoso dies
Baseball has lost another iconic ambassador.
Former White Sox star outfielder Minnie Minoso was found
dead in the driver’s seat of his car early Sunday.
An autopsy performed Sunday afternoon determined Minoso died
of a tear in his pulmonary artery caused by “chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease.” The White Sox and his family said he was 90.
Just over a month after the death of Cubs legend Ernie
Banks, Chicago fans and longtime followers of baseball worldwide now mourn the
death of Minoso, known as the “Cuban Comet.”
Chicago’s first black major league player, Minoso was much
more than a consummate ballplayer.
“I didn’t know Minnie
until I bought the club in 1981, but the first time I met him I fell in love
with his infectious personality and his love for the White Sox,” White Sox
Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf said Sunday. “He was just one of the most genuine
people that you would ever want to know.”
Minoso was driving home from a friend's birthday party when
he apparently fell ill and pulled over in the Lakeview neighborhood, according
to police and family.
He was found unresponsive in the driver's seat of his car near
a gas station in the 2800 block of North Ashland Avenue around 1 a.m.,
according to police. There were no signs of trauma and Minoso was pronounced
dead at the scene at 1:09 a.m., police said.
President Barack Obama, a lifelong Sox fan, released a statement
that included the following:
“For South Siders and Sox fans all across the country,
including me, Minnie Minoso is and will always be 'Mr. White Sox.' ... Minnie
may have been passed over by the Baseball Hall of Fame during his lifetime, but
for me and for generations of black and Latino young people, Minnie’s
quintessentially American story embodies far more than a plaque ever could.”
Cubs Chairman Tom Ricketts issued a statement saying the
team was “deeply saddened by the passing of Minnie Minoso. Having recently lost
one of our all-time greats, Ernie Banks, we share the heartache with the White
Sox organization and fans everywhere who were blessed to enjoy the talent,
heart and passion of Mr. White Sox.”
Minoso’s son Charlie Rice-Minoso said: “He was an
extraordinary person. He made many contributions to baseball and to Chicago.
He'll be missed most by his family and closest friends.
“He had so many amazing relationships with people,” he
added, choking up. “It was just amazing to see that, even so many years after
he played, to see how he was respected. We're just eternally grateful.”
Billy Pierce, a former star White Sox pitcher and teammate
of Minoso, said he could tell Minoso was not feeling well recently.
“I had been with him
at SoxFest, and he had to stop two or three times when we were walking because
it was tough getting his breath,” Pierce told the Tribune. “He wasn’t real well
then, and from what I had been told, at Christmastime he had to go into the
hospital because he had the same problem.”
Minoso’s birthday was listed on baseball-reference.com as
Nov. 29, 1925, but some believed he was as old as 92. When asked about his age,
he once said, “Look what they say in the Sox record book.”
Rice-Minoso said the family is going with 90.
“That's the number we have down in Spanish documents. That's
the date,” he said. “It's kind of a running joke. That was the one topic he
didn't want to focus on, so of course that's what everyone wanted to know.”
Born in Cuba, Orestes “Minnie” Minoso came to the United
States in 1945 and played three seasons for the New York Cubans in the Negro
Leagues. Bill Veeck, then owner of the Indians, purchased his contract in
September 1948. He made his major league debut in 1949, playing nine
late-season games for the Indians.
After spending 1950 in the minors, Minoso came to the Sox in
an early season trade in 1951. He became the Sox’s and Chicago’s first black
player on May 1, 1951. Minoso wasted no time making his presence felt, getting
two hits and two RBIs in an 8-3 loss to the Yankees. He quickly electrified
Comiskey Park, hitting .326 to finish second in AL Rookie of the Year voting.
It was just the start for Minoso. In 1954, he had his second
straight fourth-place finish in AL Most Valuable Player voting, hitting .320
with 19 homers, 18 triples, 19 stolen bases, 116 RBIs and 119 runs. He played
in nine All-Star Games.
I'm proud of everything. I'm proud to be a baseball player.
- Minnie Minoso on his career
“I felt Minnie was the one player in the American League who
had that intangible quality of excitement that makes fans talk about him when
they leave the park,” Frank Lane, the general manager who brought Minoso to the
White Sox, once said.
The Sox retired his No. 9 in 1983. However, Minoso’s appeal
went beyond Chicago. He was regarded as the first Latin American superstar,
inspiring young players who dreamed of joining him in the big leagues.
Minoso spoke broken English, but his vibrant smile and
enduring love for the game translated clearly everywhere.
“He and I would talk, and I had to say, ‘Minnie, what did
you say?’ But I don’t think he ever said a nasty thing about anybody. It was
always good, always friendly,” Pierce said.
“He was a great friend. We have been friends ever since
1951. I run a cancer golf outing and he came out to it every year. He never
played golf, but he would get in the cart and go around and visit with the
people and talk to the people. He did a lot of good for us, that’s for sure.”
Minoso’s combination of speed and power led a White Sox
revival in the 1950s. He finished with a .298 batting average and .389 on-base
percentage. Bill James, the noted baseball statistics analyst, rated Minoso the
10th best left fielder of all time in 2001.
“He was one of the top guys getting hit (by pitches) because
he stood close to the plate,” Pierce said. “I remember him getting hit in the
head and playing right through it. He played through many injuries. He was a
real, 100 percent ballplayer. He’d give the ballclub 100 percent all the time,
and he gave the fans 100 percent. That’s why they all loved him.”
Minoso’s love of the game led to him famously playing in the
majors for parts of five decades. He got his last major league hit in 1976 and
came back for two more at-bats in 1980.
In his later years, the colorful Minoso, much like Banks
with the Cubs, served as one of the team’s top goodwill ambassadors.
“I'm proud of everything,” Minoso once said of his career.
“I'm proud to be a baseball player.”
The White Sox issued a statement that began, “Mr. White Sox
has died.”
The Minoso family also released a formal statement:
“Our entire family appreciates the kind expressions of
concern, sympathy and compassion from so many of our friends and fans of the
White Sox during this most difficult time. Minnie lived a full life of joy and
happiness, surrounded always by friends and family. It is during moments like
these that love matters most. Minnie enjoyed nothing more than to be at the
ballpark cheering on his White Sox. For Minnie, every day was a reason to
smile, and he would want us all to remember him that way, smiling at a
ballgame.
Minoso is survived by his wife of 30 years, Sharon, two
sons, Orestes Jr. and Charlie, and two daughters, Marilyn and Cecilia. Funeral
arrangements are pending.
His notable teammates, coaches, managers, commentators and team owners included: Bill Veeck, Lou Boudreau, Larry Doby, Bob Fellar, Early Wynn, Mickey Vernon, Joe Gordon, Bob Lemon, Satchel Paige, Dale Mitchell, Jim Hegan, Hank Greenberg, Al Rosen, Luke Easter, Ray Boone, Mike Garcia, Paul Richards, Grace Comiskey, Eddie Robinson, Billy Pierce, Nellie Fox, Joe Dobson, Marv Grissom, Virgil Trucks, Marty Marion, George Kell, Chico Carrasquel, Dick Donovan, Luis Aparicio, Sherm Lollar, Jack Harshman, Jack Brickhouse, Dorothy Comiskey Rigney, Chuck Comiskey, Al López,
Jim Landis, Bobby Bragan, Roger Maris, Billy Martin, Jimmy Piersall, Russ Nixon, Woodie Held,
Rocky Colavito, Vic Power, Tito Francona, Cal McLish, Gary Bell, Ted Kluszewski, Roy Sievers,
Gerry Staley, Bob Shaw, Al Smith, Juan Pizarro, Don Larsen, Joe Cunningham, Floyd Robinson,
Johnny Keane, August "Gussie" Busch, Harry Caray, Jack Buck, Ken Boyer, Red Schoendienst, Bob Gibson, Stan Musial, Curt Flood, Bill White, Eddie Yost, Gil Hodges, George Selkirk, Don Leppert, Gary Peters, Joel Horlen, Pete Ward, Roy Hansen, Bucky Dent, Brian Downing, Ralph Garr, Chet Lemon, Jim Spencer, Wilbur Wood, Blue Moon Odom, Pete Vuckovich, Goose Gossage, Tony La Russa, Richard Dotson, LaMarr Hoyt, Thad Bosley, Harold Baines, Lamar Johnson, Britt Burns and Claudell Washington.
Jim Landis, Bobby Bragan, Roger Maris, Billy Martin, Jimmy Piersall, Russ Nixon, Woodie Held,
Rocky Colavito, Vic Power, Tito Francona, Cal McLish, Gary Bell, Ted Kluszewski, Roy Sievers,
Gerry Staley, Bob Shaw, Al Smith, Juan Pizarro, Don Larsen, Joe Cunningham, Floyd Robinson,
Johnny Keane, August "Gussie" Busch, Harry Caray, Jack Buck, Ken Boyer, Red Schoendienst, Bob Gibson, Stan Musial, Curt Flood, Bill White, Eddie Yost, Gil Hodges, George Selkirk, Don Leppert, Gary Peters, Joel Horlen, Pete Ward, Roy Hansen, Bucky Dent, Brian Downing, Ralph Garr, Chet Lemon, Jim Spencer, Wilbur Wood, Blue Moon Odom, Pete Vuckovich, Goose Gossage, Tony La Russa, Richard Dotson, LaMarr Hoyt, Thad Bosley, Harold Baines, Lamar Johnson, Britt Burns and Claudell Washington.
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