JSngry Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 http://texas.rangers.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20101104&content_id=15996288&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlb Quote
Matthew Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 Man, that is sad. A ton of memories of Sparky from the Big Red Machine days. Quote
GA Russell Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 RIP. I had his bubble gum card in 1960, when he was known as George Anderson, outfielder for the Phillies. Not only did he enjoy success as a manager, but he was more well-spoken than most managers are. He was good for a quote. Quote
MarkWeissEarwopa Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 So if Sparky Anderson had a jazz avatar, who would it be? Red Rodney? Quote
Dan Gould Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 This is sad news for my Mom, she really loved Sparky and those Big Red teams. Amazing that it had just been announced he had been moved into hospice and just like that, he's gone. Anyone remember his appearance on WKRP in Cincinnati? Very fine performance for a non-actor. I think I'll dig out my DVD set and watch this weekend. RIP. Quote
paul secor Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 A manager I respected - RIP, Mr. Anderson. This may not be the place for this, but I'm reminded of a piece that Bill James wrote years ago about what various baseball managers would be doing if there were no baseball. The two I remember were - Billy Martin would be doing five to ten for manslaughter, and Sparky Anderson would be a house painter. When I read it, I thought, yeah, I could imagine both of those being true. I can also remember seeing an television interview where he was humorously complaining that people thought that he was much older than Mickey Mantle, when in fact he was three years younger. Quote
Hardbopjazz Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 A great person for baseball. RIP Sparky. Quote
Big Al Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 The game has lost one of the greats. RIP Quote
Quincy Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 (edited) This is sad news for my Mom, she really loved Sparky and those Big Red teams. Amazing that it had just been announced he had been moved into hospice and just like that, he's gone. Yeah, I thought the announcement of his death was an error at first given the timing. It was also a bit of a jolt when the hospice story came up as the headline I read said "former Tiger manager." And then I remembered he spent double the amount of years managing the Tigers as he did the Big Red Machine. Not that my hair has gotten that white, but I think Steve Martin & Sparky Anderson had a profound effect on me that going grey (or silver or white) at a young age is a perfectly fine to do and thus I've never had the urge to dye my hair, no matter what Keith Hernandez or Walt Frazier say otherwise. Sparky's white hair did a better of showing off his red face when he was angry with umpires too. Edited November 4, 2010 by Quincy Quote
Ted O'Reilly Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 I worked as the morning show DJ at a radio station in a small city just north-west of Toronto (Brampton, ON), in the summer of 1964. It was the first year Sparky Anderson ever managed a ball team -- the triple A Toronto Maple Leafs. Yup, same name as the hockey team, but unrelated. (In fact, the ball team had the name before the puck boys: 1911 Eastern League, 1912-1967 International League). Anyway, my station got the rights to do the recreated away games of the Leafs. (To be honest, I don't think anyone else wanted them, the ball interest was so slight in those days). As a promotion one time, before the game the club mounted a three-inning tilt between Media and some of the coaches -- coulda been 5 per team. I was drafted for Media, squibbed a puny grounder and was tagged out between home plate and first by Sparky, who was playing sorta first AND second base, but still way up on the grass. One of my great sports moments... Quote
JSngry Posted November 4, 2010 Author Report Posted November 4, 2010 Sparky indeed! :tup:tup:tup:tup Sparky Rips The Press (NSFW Bad Language!) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgJ2jFVp1bc Quote
Randy Twizzle Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 Roger Kahn writing about Sparky in 1977 Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 He did his job well and seemed to be a nice man. Not an easy task. Quote
Tim McG Posted November 4, 2010 Report Posted November 4, 2010 I loved the guy's style....sad to see him go. RIP Sparky. Quote
PHILLYQ Posted November 5, 2010 Report Posted November 5, 2010 He did his job well and seemed to be a nice man. Not an easy task. I think that's exactly it, he had a tough job but he was also a decent guy, not always so easy to accomplish. Quote
papsrus Posted November 5, 2010 Report Posted November 5, 2010 RIP Mr. Anderson. One of the greats. Quote
Van Basten II Posted November 5, 2010 Report Posted November 5, 2010 Most of us remember him as the Reds Manager, but I enjoyed his run with the Tigers especially with the great team of 1984, RIP Mr Anderson. Quote
alocispepraluger102 Posted November 5, 2010 Report Posted November 5, 2010 Most of us remember him as the Reds Manager, but I enjoyed his run with the Tigers especially with the great team of 1984, RIP Mr Anderson. i'm wearing my reds tee today. one still remembers the reds lineup from the 70s, and perhaps even the batting order, and joe and marty. while with the tigers, the unflappable sparky did daily call-ins with wjr legend jaye p. mccarthy(just the best radio host that ever was). mixing that with ernie doing the tiger games with the classy voice of paul caray--wow. i've a cassette or two in the attic somewhere. Quote
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