Jump to content
THE BROWNS BOARD

Bob Feller has died


Richiswhere

Recommended Posts

Ingraham is reporting that Feller has passed away. I haven't read any confirmation on this elsewhere:

 

Indians great Bob Feller, 92, passes away

Thursday, December 9, 2010

By JIM INGRAHAM

jingraham@MorningJournal.com

 

Now THAT’S a life.

 

It’s a good thing Bob Feller lived it, because you couldn’t make up a life like his. He was the one and only. The greatest Cleveland Indian of them all.

 

An incomparable, unconquerable American original, Feller, who came roaring out of the Iowa cornfields nearly a 100 years ago, died quietly yesterday at the age of 92, ending a life spectacularly lived.

 

We will see baseball greatness again. We will see ultra-patriots again. We will see indefatigable nonagenarians again. But as an entire package, as a preposterously precocious, fire-balling teenager, shameless, selfless, flag-waving veteran and conscience of a generation, indestructible, self-promoting, one-man cottage memorabilia industry, civic treasure, national sports icon and, in his twilight years, an irrepressibly out-spoken molder of, contributor to, and shoot-from-the-hip commentator on The American Scene as a proudly old-school celebrity without portfolio — no. We will not see his like again. Ever.

 

Today, for the first time since Woodrow Wilson was in the White House, Bob Feller is not among us.

 

What a grand and glorious run it was.

 

He seemingly lived forever, did everything, knew everybody, went everywhere. But he was hardly Everyman.

 

He lived so long that he was a Hall of Famer for more years than he wasn’t a Hall of Famer. Cooperstown welcomed him in 1962, when he was a mere 43 years old. A pup.

 

At either end of his life he mocked convention. He made his major league debut — this is beyond outrageous — at 17. In his first major league start he set a major league record for strikeouts in a game, and then after that season went back to high school for his senior year. Think about that.

 

He lived to be 92. How many 92-year-olds do you know?

 

The year he was born, Alexander Graham Bell was still alive. So were Wyatt Earp and Orville Wright.

 

When Feller debuted in Van Meter, Iowa, Christy Mathewson was still alive. So were Honus Wagner, Napoleon Lajoie, and Cy Young.

 

Ty Cobb? Not only was he still alive, he was STILL PLAYING!

 

As a 17-year-old rookie with the Indians in 1936, Feller needed a place to live. Cy Slapnicka, the scout who signed him, found a room for him in a boarding house in Cleveland. One of Feller’s fellow-boarders in the house had fought in the war — the Civil War.

 

When Feller told me that story — “He was a nice guy. Kind of quiet, but nice” — my jaw almost hit the floor. That meant I knew a guy who knew a guy who fought in the Civil War. I still can’t believe it.

 

I still can’t believe I knew Bob Feller. That he knew me. By name. For most of the last 17 years I had the privilege of having Feller sitting in the seat directly behind me in the press box at Progressive Field. We became good friends. I tried not to bug him during games, but it was hard. I mean, come on. It’s Bob Feller. It was like having Leonardo da Vinci sitting behind you.

 

“Bob, who was harder to pitch to, Williams or DiMaggio? “

 

“Hey Bob, what was the most pitches you ever threw in a game? “

 

“Bob, how hard did Satchel Paige throw? “

 

Rain delays? I didn’t mind them. Not with Bob Feller sitting behind me.

 

He was an encyclopedia. This happened a lot: he would tell me about a game, an incident, an inning, an event, 50, 60, 70 years ago. He’d recall dates, players, scores, minute details. Later I would look it up and he was invariably right on almost every fact. His memory was stunning, and anything might set him off.

 

You could be talking about something completely different, and he’d suddenly launch into another anecdote. “That reminds me of a spring training game in Shreveport in 1940. . . ‘’

 

He was basically a celebrity his entire life. He knew celebrities, in and out of baseball. He knew famous people, personally, and lots of them.

 

You know Wilson sporting goods? Bob knew Wilson. Ever stayed or eaten at a Howard Johnson’s? Bob knew Howard Johnson.

 

On Dec. 7, 1941, Bob was driving from his home in Iowa to Cleveland to sign his contract for the 1942 season when he heard about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Forget Cleveland. Without giving it a second thought he immediately drove straight into Chicago and enlisted in the Navy — and he never looked back.

 

Although he was only 22, he was already in the prime of his career. You could argue that he got great faster than any player in major league history. He was IN the major leagues as a junior in high school. In his first three full seasons in the majors he was 24-9 at age 20, 27-11 at 21, and 25-13 at 22. At age 22 he had already won 107 games. Cy Young, at the same age, had won zero.

 

Then he went off to war, and served as chief of an anti-aircraft gun crew on the USS Alabama.

 

He basically missed four full seasons while in the Navy. In his last three major league seasons before the war and in his first three full seasons after the war, Feller averaged 24 wins per year. If there had been no war and if he had averaged 24 wins per year in the four years he missed, you could add 96 more victories to his career total, which would have put him at 362, which would rank seventh on the game’s all-time list.

 

Bob never dwelled on losing four years in the prime of his career to the war. He rarely even talked about it. In many ways he was more proud of the time he spent in the Navy than he was about the time he spent in the major leagues.

 

In his mind he was an American first, a ballplayer second.

 

And what a ballplayer. Over 18 years he pitched in 570 major league games, winning 266 — all of them for the Indians. He arrived like a comet, in 1936, at age 17 — the original chosen one. He never threw a single pitch in the minor leagues. He is arguably the most famous Cleveland professional athlete ever, and certainly the most famous Cleveland Indian ever.

 

When he was born, on Nov. 3, 1918, his parents named him Robert Andrew William Feller. To us he was Rapid Robert. A phenom as a young player, a phenomenon as an oldtimer.

 

We most definitely will not see his like again.

 

You know you’re big when they build a statue to you while you’re still alive. Outside of Progressive Field there is a statue of Feller, which has stood there since the ballpark opened in 1994.

 

If you’re in the neighborhood, or even if you’re not, today would be a good day to stop by and say hello.

 

And goodbye.

 

http://morningjournal.com/articles/2010/12...wmode=fullstory

 

Beanpot

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.whotv.com/news/who-story-bob-fe...0,4566801.story

 

Iowa native and hall of fame pitcher Bob Feller's health has taken a turn for the worse.

 

Feller was known as the "Heater from Van Meter" and has built a legacy in Iowa sports.

 

The 92-year-old was admitted into hospice care after he spent time at the Cleveland Clinic with pneumonia.

 

Feller's health has been in decline in recent months. He was diagnosed with leukemia in August and underwent chemotherapy.

 

Feller won 266 games in 18 seasons with the Cleveland Indians.

 

His baseball career was put on hold when he enlisted in the navy during World War II.

 

Feller served three years in the military before returning to the major leagues.

 

An Ohio paper prematurely ran a story stating Bob Feller passed away. Other sources picked up The Morning Journal 's story sending buzz throughout Twitter and other sites on the internet. The Morning Journal has since corrected the story.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sad news indeed.. Feller is my favorite Indian of all time.

 

Absolutely true, and I would argue that he's the greatest Cleveland sports athlete of all time as well. What a great man he is, and he'll always have a part of my family. My grandfather had a short stint with the the Indians, and his claim to fame is hitting a home run off Bob in practice one day. I've probably heard that story 50 times haha.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

What is the sad part Feller had a glorious career and is an American Hero and he is now 92........................

 

he got it all............

 

there is nothing sad about the end game for him

 

Let's celebrate one great American and the greatest Cleveland Indian ever...........and a true diplomat to the game of baseball

 

you cannot live forever..........and he did way more than most

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I guess the sad part for me is he was the oldest living HOf'er.

 

 

Bob was a true connection to the past. Kind of like what was written in the article about the War Between the States Vet....Bob connects you with Ruth, Gehrig, and all the names you associate with baseball's past.

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As a kid, & now as an "old-timer", I have been a Bob Feller Fan. Three no hitters & 11 one hitters. In addition to that, especially in this day & age of free agency, he remains a life long Cleveland Indian.

As already mentioned, he spent almost 4 years in the Navy....He enlisted on Pearl Harbor DAY..12/7/1941 at the age of 23 & did not return to baseball until late in the 1945 season, just shy of 27 years old...Almost FOUR seasons in his prime. Can we even IMAGINE what he may have accomplished in those missed seasons? Bob Feller put COUNTRY ahead of his stellar career (and didn't have to go as his Dad was dying). As a kid, my Dad & I would talk about whether Feller would have records that would NEVER be broken had he not missed playing those years. Bob Feller never regretted his decision to leave pro sports & enlist..That's what makes him so great.

He is the best (in ANY sport) who EVER wore a Cleveland uniform. That's my opinion & I'll stick to it.

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't think anyone would roast you for passing the news. I'm a die hard yankee fan, but anytime baseball loses a legend it is sad news.

 

This place seems cool, didnt think you guys would, just used to those "OTHER" forums. LOL! Although, I have been known to roast a few trolls in my day, sent em home cryin.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Obviously never had someone close to you in hospice care. Truly an ignorant statement.

 

 

Feller isn't the oldest HOFer Lee MacPhail and Bobby Doerr are both older

Feller has the longest tenture among baseball HOFers

Hey Rich, while it is true that hospice care is not a pretty thing, and this I know from close experience, I think what he meant was that Rapid Robert lived a very long life and people loved and respected him. He left this earth with dignity. Each of us owes God one death, and, given that, there are a lot worse ways to go. I wish they had accurate ways to measure pitching speed back in the day. No one can really say who was the fastest; Johnson, Feller, Koufax, Ryan, Steve Dalkowski.....? We will never know for sure, but Feller was certainly among the hardest throwers who ever lived. He only missed 300 wins because he went to war. And from what I have heard, he conducted himself as a Hall of Famer his whole life, off and on the field, something that the spoiled brat athletes of today could learn from.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ingraham is reporting that Feller has passed away. I haven't read any confirmation on this elsewhere:

 

Indians great Bob Feller, 92, passes away

Thursday, December 9, 2010

By JIM INGRAHAM

jingraham@MorningJournal.com

 

Now THAT'S a life.

 

It's a good thing Bob Feller lived it, because you couldn't make up a life like his. He was the one and only. The greatest Cleveland Indian of them all.

 

An incomparable, unconquerable American original, Feller, who came roaring out of the Iowa cornfields nearly a 100 years ago, died quietly yesterday at the age of 92, ending a life spectacularly lived.

 

We will see baseball greatness again. We will see ultra-patriots again. We will see indefatigable nonagenarians again. But as an entire package, as a preposterously precocious, fire-balling teenager, shameless, selfless, flag-waving veteran and conscience of a generation, indestructible, self-promoting, one-man cottage memorabilia industry, civic treasure, national sports icon and, in his twilight years, an irrepressibly out-spoken molder of, contributor to, and shoot-from-the-hip commentator on The American Scene as a proudly old-school celebrity without portfolio — no. We will not see his like again. Ever.

 

Today, for the first time since Woodrow Wilson was in the White House, Bob Feller is not among us.

 

What a grand and glorious run it was.

 

He seemingly lived forever, did everything, knew everybody, went everywhere. But he was hardly Everyman.

 

He lived so long that he was a Hall of Famer for more years than he wasn't a Hall of Famer. Cooperstown welcomed him in 1962, when he was a mere 43 years old. A pup.

 

At either end of his life he mocked convention. He made his major league debut — this is beyond outrageous — at 17. In his first major league start he set a major league record for strikeouts in a game, and then after that season went back to high school for his senior year. Think about that.

 

He lived to be 92. How many 92-year-olds do you know?

 

The year he was born, Alexander Graham Bell was still alive. So were Wyatt Earp and Orville Wright.

 

When Feller debuted in Van Meter, Iowa, Christy Mathewson was still alive. So were Honus Wagner, Napoleon Lajoie, and Cy Young.

 

Ty Cobb? Not only was he still alive, he was STILL PLAYING!

 

As a 17-year-old rookie with the Indians in 1936, Feller needed a place to live. Cy Slapnicka, the scout who signed him, found a room for him in a boarding house in Cleveland. One of Feller's fellow-boarders in the house had fought in the war — the Civil War.

 

When Feller told me that story — "He was a nice guy. Kind of quiet, but nice" — my jaw almost hit the floor. That meant I knew a guy who knew a guy who fought in the Civil War. I still can't believe it.

 

I still can't believe I knew Bob Feller. That he knew me. By name. For most of the last 17 years I had the privilege of having Feller sitting in the seat directly behind me in the press box at Progressive Field. We became good friends. I tried not to bug him during games, but it was hard. I mean, come on. It's Bob Feller. It was like having Leonardo da Vinci sitting behind you.

 

"Bob, who was harder to pitch to, Williams or DiMaggio? "

 

"Hey Bob, what was the most pitches you ever threw in a game? "

 

"Bob, how hard did Satchel Paige throw? "

 

Rain delays? I didn't mind them. Not with Bob Feller sitting behind me.

 

He was an encyclopedia. This happened a lot: he would tell me about a game, an incident, an inning, an event, 50, 60, 70 years ago. He'd recall dates, players, scores, minute details. Later I would look it up and he was invariably right on almost every fact. His memory was stunning, and anything might set him off.

 

You could be talking about something completely different, and he'd suddenly launch into another anecdote. "That reminds me of a spring training game in Shreveport in 1940. . . ''

 

He was basically a celebrity his entire life. He knew celebrities, in and out of baseball. He knew famous people, personally, and lots of them.

 

You know Wilson sporting goods? Bob knew Wilson. Ever stayed or eaten at a Howard Johnson's? Bob knew Howard Johnson.

 

On Dec. 7, 1941, Bob was driving from his home in Iowa to Cleveland to sign his contract for the 1942 season when he heard about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Forget Cleveland. Without giving it a second thought he immediately drove straight into Chicago and enlisted in the Navy — and he never looked back.

 

Although he was only 22, he was already in the prime of his career. You could argue that he got great faster than any player in major league history. He was IN the major leagues as a junior in high school. In his first three full seasons in the majors he was 24-9 at age 20, 27-11 at 21, and 25-13 at 22. At age 22 he had already won 107 games. Cy Young, at the same age, had won zero.

 

Then he went off to war, and served as chief of an anti-aircraft gun crew on the USS Alabama.

 

He basically missed four full seasons while in the Navy. In his last three major league seasons before the war and in his first three full seasons after the war, Feller averaged 24 wins per year. If there had been no war and if he had averaged 24 wins per year in the four years he missed, you could add 96 more victories to his career total, which would have put him at 362, which would rank seventh on the game's all-time list.

 

Bob never dwelled on losing four years in the prime of his career to the war. He rarely even talked about it. In many ways he was more proud of the time he spent in the Navy than he was about the time he spent in the major leagues.

 

In his mind he was an American first, a ballplayer second.

 

And what a ballplayer. Over 18 years he pitched in 570 major league games, winning 266 — all of them for the Indians. He arrived like a comet, in 1936, at age 17 — the original chosen one. He never threw a single pitch in the minor leagues. He is arguably the most famous Cleveland professional athlete ever, and certainly the most famous Cleveland Indian ever.

 

When he was born, on Nov. 3, 1918, his parents named him Robert Andrew William Feller. To us he was Rapid Robert. A phenom as a young player, a phenomenon as an oldtimer.

 

We most definitely will not see his like again.

 

You know you're big when they build a statue to you while you're still alive. Outside of Progressive Field there is a statue of Feller, which has stood there since the ballpark opened in 1994.

 

If you're in the neighborhood, or even if you're not, today would be a good day to stop by and say hello.

 

And goodbye.

 

http://morningjournal.com/articles/2010/12...wmode=fullstory

 

Beanpot

 

That was absolutely awesome, and fact filled, except for the part to use a motorcylce to clock him at 100mph. Bob Feller .....er Rapid Robert needs to be remembered all over Cleveland History ...........he was ONE OF A KIND........thanks shep

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ingraham is reporting that Feller has passed away. I haven't read any confirmation on this elsewhere:

 

Indians great Bob Feller, 92, passes away

Thursday, December 9, 2010

By JIM INGRAHAM

jingraham@MorningJournal.com

 

Now THAT'S a life.

 

It's a good thing Bob Feller lived it, because you couldn't make up a life like his. He was the one and only. The greatest Cleveland Indian of them all.

 

An incomparable, unconquerable American original, Feller, who came roaring out of the Iowa cornfields nearly a 100 years ago, died quietly yesterday at the age of 92, ending a life spectacularly lived.

 

We will see baseball greatness again. We will see ultra-patriots again. We will see indefatigable nonagenarians again. But as an entire package, as a preposterously precocious, fire-balling teenager, shameless, selfless, flag-waving veteran and conscience of a generation, indestructible, self-promoting, one-man cottage memorabilia industry, civic treasure, national sports icon and, in his twilight years, an irrepressibly out-spoken molder of, contributor to, and shoot-from-the-hip commentator on The American Scene as a proudly old-school celebrity without portfolio — no. We will not see his like again. Ever.

 

Today, for the first time since Woodrow Wilson was in the White House, Bob Feller is not among us.

 

What a grand and glorious run it was.

 

He seemingly lived forever, did everything, knew everybody, went everywhere. But he was hardly Everyman.

 

He lived so long that he was a Hall of Famer for more years than he wasn't a Hall of Famer. Cooperstown welcomed him in 1962, when he was a mere 43 years old. A pup.

 

At either end of his life he mocked convention. He made his major league debut — this is beyond outrageous — at 17. In his first major league start he set a major league record for strikeouts in a game, and then after that season went back to high school for his senior year. Think about that.

 

He lived to be 92. How many 92-year-olds do you know?

 

The year he was born, Alexander Graham Bell was still alive. So were Wyatt Earp and Orville Wright.

 

When Feller debuted in Van Meter, Iowa, Christy Mathewson was still alive. So were Honus Wagner, Napoleon Lajoie, and Cy Young.

 

Ty Cobb? Not only was he still alive, he was STILL PLAYING!

 

As a 17-year-old rookie with the Indians in 1936, Feller needed a place to live. Cy Slapnicka, the scout who signed him, found a room for him in a boarding house in Cleveland. One of Feller's fellow-boarders in the house had fought in the war — the Civil War.

 

When Feller told me that story — "He was a nice guy. Kind of quiet, but nice" — my jaw almost hit the floor. That meant I knew a guy who knew a guy who fought in the Civil War. I still can't believe it.

 

I still can't believe I knew Bob Feller. That he knew me. By name. For most of the last 17 years I had the privilege of having Feller sitting in the seat directly behind me in the press box at Progressive Field. We became good friends. I tried not to bug him during games, but it was hard. I mean, come on. It's Bob Feller. It was like having Leonardo da Vinci sitting behind you.

 

"Bob, who was harder to pitch to, Williams or DiMaggio? "

 

"Hey Bob, what was the most pitches you ever threw in a game? "

 

"Bob, how hard did Satchel Paige throw? "

 

Rain delays? I didn't mind them. Not with Bob Feller sitting behind me.

 

He was an encyclopedia. This happened a lot: he would tell me about a game, an incident, an inning, an event, 50, 60, 70 years ago. He'd recall dates, players, scores, minute details. Later I would look it up and he was invariably right on almost every fact. His memory was stunning, and anything might set him off.

 

You could be talking about something completely different, and he'd suddenly launch into another anecdote. "That reminds me of a spring training game in Shreveport in 1940. . . ''

 

He was basically a celebrity his entire life. He knew celebrities, in and out of baseball. He knew famous people, personally, and lots of them.

 

You know Wilson sporting goods? Bob knew Wilson. Ever stayed or eaten at a Howard Johnson's? Bob knew Howard Johnson.

 

On Dec. 7, 1941, Bob was driving from his home in Iowa to Cleveland to sign his contract for the 1942 season when he heard about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Forget Cleveland. Without giving it a second thought he immediately drove straight into Chicago and enlisted in the Navy — and he never looked back.

 

Although he was only 22, he was already in the prime of his career. You could argue that he got great faster than any player in major league history. He was IN the major leagues as a junior in high school. In his first three full seasons in the majors he was 24-9 at age 20, 27-11 at 21, and 25-13 at 22. At age 22 he had already won 107 games. Cy Young, at the same age, had won zero.

 

Then he went off to war, and served as chief of an anti-aircraft gun crew on the USS Alabama.

 

He basically missed four full seasons while in the Navy. In his last three major league seasons before the war and in his first three full seasons after the war, Feller averaged 24 wins per year. If there had been no war and if he had averaged 24 wins per year in the four years he missed, you could add 96 more victories to his career total, which would have put him at 362, which would rank seventh on the game's all-time list.

 

Bob never dwelled on losing four years in the prime of his career to the war. He rarely even talked about it. In many ways he was more proud of the time he spent in the Navy than he was about the time he spent in the major leagues.

 

In his mind he was an American first, a ballplayer second.

 

And what a ballplayer. Over 18 years he pitched in 570 major league games, winning 266 — all of them for the Indians. He arrived like a comet, in 1936, at age 17 — the original chosen one. He never threw a single pitch in the minor leagues. He is arguably the most famous Cleveland professional athlete ever, and certainly the most famous Cleveland Indian ever.

 

When he was born, on Nov. 3, 1918, his parents named him Robert Andrew William Feller. To us he was Rapid Robert. A phenom as a young player, a phenomenon as an oldtimer.

 

We most definitely will not see his like again.

 

You know you're big when they build a statue to you while you're still alive. Outside of Progressive Field there is a statue of Feller, which has stood there since the ballpark opened in 1994.

 

If you're in the neighborhood, or even if you're not, today would be a good day to stop by and say hello.

 

And goodbye.

 

http://morningjournal.com/articles/2010/12...wmode=fullstory

 

Beanpot

 

That was absolutely awesome, and fact filled, except for the part to use a motorcylce to clock him at 100mph. Bob Feller .....er Rapid Robert needs to be remembered all over Cleveland History ...........he was ONE OF A KIND........thanks shep

Link to comment
Share on other sites

this my quote from facebook today:

 

"R.I.P. Bob Feller. Not only is he the greatest Cleveland sports athlete of all time, he was a true American hero. It takes a true man to leave the game to serve his country. Not many men come along that were as influential and amazing as he was"

 

I don't think I could add anything to make how I feel better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sad news indeed but it seems a life well lived! I am sure he's in a much better place now anyhow! On a side note, I now live in Southern Missouri and we have a chain of gas stations called Rapid Robert's... I wonder if there is any connection? (I rather doubt it but who knows.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...