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2010년 7월 14일 수요일

[NYP] George Steinbrenner timeline

George Steinbrenner timeline

Last Updated: 8:37 PM, July 13, 2010

Posted: 11:08 AM, July 13, 2010



Highlights of George Steinbrenner’s career as owner of the Yankees:

Jan. 3, 1973 — Heads group that purchases Yankees from CBS Inc.

Sept. 30, 1973 — Manager Ralph Houk resigns, starting the first of 20 manager changes Steinbrenner would make through 1995.

Aug. 30, 1974 — Fined $15,000 by U.S. District Court in Cleveland following guilty plea to one count of conspiracy to make illegal campaign contributions. Is suspended on Nov. 27 by baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn for two years because of guilty plea.

Dec. 31, 1974 — Yankees sign free agent Catfish Hunter to five-year, $3.75 million contract.


Aug. 1, 1975 — Billy Martin hired as Yankees manager for the first of what would turn out to be five stints as manager running through 1988.

March 1, 1976 — Steinbrenner suspension lifted after 15 months because of good behavior.

Oct. 14, 1976 — Yankees win their first pennant since 1964.

Nov. 29, 1976 — Yankees sign free agent Reggie Jackson to five-year, $3 million contract.

Oct. 18, 1977 — Yankees win their first World Series since 1962.

Nov. 11, 1979 — Steinbrenner fined $5,000 by Kuhn for tampering with Brian Downing of the California Angels.

June 26, 1980 — Reprimanded by Kuhn for tampering with free-agent amateur player Billy Cannon Jr.

Dec. 15, 1980 — Yankees sign free agent Dave Winfield to a 10-year contract that would turn out to be worth just over $17 million. Frustrated by Winfield’s performance, Steinbrenner would call him “Mr. May” in September 1985.

April 21, 1981 — Orders 50,000 copies of the team yearbook taken off Yankee Stadium concession stands when he dislikes his picture in it.

Oct. 25, 1981 — Breaks hand in Los Angeles after the Yankees lose fifth game of the World Series to the Dodgers; says he was attacked by two fans in a hotel elevator.

Oct. 28, 1981 — Issues apology to Yankees fans after the Dodgers beat New York to win the World Series in six games.

July 3, 1983 — Fined $5,000 by Kuhn for remarks about Chicago White Sox co-owner Jerry Reinsdorf.

April 19, 1983 — Fined $50,000 by Kuhn for remarks during March 25 exhibition game questioning the integrity of National League umpires in general and Lee Weyer specifically.

May 31, 1983 — Suspended for one week (June 3 to 9) by American League president Lee MacPhail for statements made May 27 questioning the integrity of umpires Darryl Cousins and John Shulock.

Dec. 23, 1983 — Yankees fined $250,000 by Kuhn and ordered to pay $50,000 in legal fees because of Steinbrenner’s actions and statements regarding the “Pine Tar” game.


July 5, 1990 — Yankees fined $25,000 by commissioner Fay Vincent and order to pay $200,000 to the California Angels for tampering with the May 11 trade of outfielder Dave Winfield to California.

July 30, 1990 — Vincent announces that Steinbrenner must resign as general partner by Aug. 20 for dealings with self-described gambler Howard Spira.

July 24, 1992 — Following Steinbrenner’s request for reinstatement, Vincent said Steinbrenner can return to active control of the Yankees, effective March 1, 1993.

Oct. 26, 1996 — Yankees win their first World Series since 1978. They also would win the Series in 1998, 1999 and 2000.


Jan. 5, 1999 — Ends 14-year feud with Yogi Berra that began when 16 games into the 1985 season when he had an aide inform the Hall of Famer of his firing as manager.

March 19, 2002 — Yankees’ YES Network launches.

Dec. 27, 2003 — Steinbrenner faints at memorial service for football great Otto Graham in Sarasota, Fla., and is hospitalized until the following day. He sharply reduces his public comments afterward.

Aug. 16, 2006 — Steinbrenner helps break ground for the new Yankee Stadium on the 58th anniversary of Babe Ruth’s death.

Oct. 29, 2006 — Steinbrenner faints while watching a granddaughter perform in a play and is hospitalized in Chapel Hill, N.C., until Oct. 30. He has difficulty walking when seen in public after that.

Nov. 20, 2008 — Major League Baseball owners unanimously approve Hal Steinbrenner, the owner’s youngest son, to take over from his father as the Yankees’ controlling owner.

February, 2009 — Steinbrenner is mentioned in Joe Torre’s book as being resentful of the credit the manager received for the team’s success.

"He was resentful of the credit I got, and I addressed it with him. The thing that bothered me is I was getting this credit so he would try to find little things to tweak me with, just to get my attention."

April 16, 2009 — Steinbrenner attends Opening Day at new $1.5 billion Yankee Stadium.

Oct. 5, 2009 — Steinbrenner attends final regular-season game against Rays in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Oct. 28, 2009 — Steinbrenner attends Game 1 of the World Series against the Phillies, his first appearance at the Stadium since Opening Day.

Nov. 4, 2009 — The Yankees win their 27th World Championship, defeating the Phillies 7-3 in Game 6.

April 13, 2010 — Steinbrenner attends the home opener. It is his final appearance at a Yankee game. Before the game, Derek Jeter and manager Joe Girardi go to his suite and personally deliver his 2009 World Series ring. It was the seventh title won by a Steinbrenner-owned Yankee team.

July 13, 2010 — Steinbrenner dies of a heart attack at 80 in Tampa, Fla.


[NYP] Politicians to ex-players praise The Boss

Politicians to ex-players praise The Boss

Last Updated: 6:50 PM, July 13, 2010

Posted: 3:16 PM, July 13, 2010


 

Mayor Bloomberg:

Our hearts and prayers go out to the entire Steinbrenner family. This is a sad day not only for Yankee fans, but for our entire city, as few people have had a bigger impact on New York over the past four decades than George Steinbrenner.

George had a deep love for New York, and his steely determination to succeed combined with his deep respect and appreciation for talent and hard work made him a quintessential New Yorker.

George invested his heart and soul into the Yankees, and his competitive fire helped usher in new eras of Yankee greatness, reclaiming the teams long tradition of excellence and its position as the most successful franchise in the history of American sports.


 

He was a champion who made New York a better place, and who always gave back to the city he loved. He has left an indelible legacy on the Yankees, on baseball, and on our city, and he leaves us in the only way that would be appropriate: as a reigning world champion.

We will be lowering the flags in City Hall Plaza today in honor of his achievements. George was a larger than life New York figure whose passion and drive to succeed will forever be missed.

Former Mayor Giuliani:

Judith and I express our deepest condolences to the entire Steinbrenner family and of course to the much larger, New York Yankees family. George was a friend of mine for over 30 years. He was truly the most influential and innovative owner in all of sports.

He transformed baseball and sports broadcasting with the YES Network and brought New York seven World Series. Beyond that, he made the Yankees a source of great pride in being a New Yorker. George Steinbrenner's Yankees represent the will to overcome all odds which is precisely the will New Yorkers display when meeting every challenge they face. George will be greatly be missed but his legacy will carry on in the hearts and minds of all baseball fans.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs:

Maybe his greater lasting impact will be the organizations that he worked with and the charities that he worked with over a long and storied career that had a real impact on the lives of people all over this country, in addition to the championships he brought home to New York on the baseball diamond.

Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr.:

Today I join 1.4 million Bronxites, and Yankee fans across the world, in mourning the passing of a great man, The Boss, George Steinbrenner.

During his tenure as owner of the New York Yankees, Mr. Steinbrenner did everything in his power to create his own winning tradition in the Bronx, an effort that resulted in seven World Series championships. While other baseball fans were jealous of this success, Yankee fans, like myself, loved him for it.


 

Both the Bronx and New York City have lost a giant todayin baseball and in charityand my deepest condolences go out to the Steinbrenners and the entire New York Yankees family.

Tracy Dolgin, president and CEO of the YES Network:

We at YES are saddened by the passing of George M. Steinbrenner. He was a New York icon and a sports icon, a true visionary who will be greatly missed.

His vision of a team-owned regional sports network for the Yankees, resulting in the formation of the YES Network, revolutionized the sports business. Mr. Steinbrenner's influence on the world of sports is tremendous, and will be felt long after hes gone. Our prayers and thoughts go out to the Steinbrenner family and the Yankees organization.


 

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand:

Today my thoughts and prayers are with the Steinbrenners and the entire Yankees family. George's single-minded drive in the pursuit of excellence and his devotion to family inspired people far beyond the baseball diamond. He will be greatly missed by those in pinstripes and baseball fans in New York and throughout the world.

Rep. Anthony Weiner:

Every fan wants an owner like The Boss. He did everything he could to buy great Yankees teams. If you werent a Yankee fan, chances are you hated George. But you have to respect all that he accomplished.

Gov. Paterson:

It is with great sadness and fond memories that New York says goodbye to George Steinbrenner-a larger than life sportsman and brilliant entrepreneur who presided over baseball's last dynasty and helped revolutionize the business of baseball. Mr. Steinbrenner's passion for the game was unmatched. He committed himself and all of the Yankees' resources to one thing and one thing only: winning. And he won quite often . . . Opposing players and fans may have bristled at his outspoken leadership over the years, but it was only because they wished they had a Steinbrenner of their own.

Mr. Steinbrenner passing comes on the morning of Major League Baseball's All-Star Game, a contest dedicated to the fans and to the glory of the game. This is a fitting tribute, as Mr. Steinbrenner was one of the last owners who felt as much loyalty and kinship with his fans as they felt with his team. So as Americans gather this evening to watch baseball's best-including six of his Yankees-I hope we all take a moment to remember the life and legacy of George Steinbrenner: the owner; the businessman; the husband and father; the Boss.

White Sox Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf:

George Steinbrenner was too complex a person to adequately describe in a short statement, but he was a great friend of mine and he will be missed. His impact on the game cannot be denied."

Former Gov. Cuomo:

Everyone knows George Steinbrenner went from loser to legend by taking a second division team with a struggling franchise in 1973 and turning it into a champion again.

But he was much more than a winner and a celebrity. There was no falseness in him. He did everything with his heart: His family, his friends, his team, his nation and his community. I'm not surprised that in the end he died by wearing it out.

Attorney General Cuomo:

George Steinbrenner was a giant among New Yorkers with a personality that transcended sports. Nobody in sports set the bar higher, and nobody delivered results like him.

George worked tirelessly to embed the Yankees championship tradition into new generations of fans, and his ever-apparent love for and dedication to the team and the city made him a true American icon.

While his loss is a profound one for New York City and baseball fans everywhere, we will also remember his incredible accomplishments and contributions. My thoughts and prayers are with his family.

Al Leiter, former Yankees pitcher and current YES Yankees analyst:

You couldnt ask for a better owner than George Steinbrenner. He always provided everything you needed to win a championship. His passion, intensity and his attention to detail were legendary, and he expected nothing but the best from you.

No one outworked him, and no one wanted to win more than he. He had a unique aura, a unique presence about him. When he walked into a room, his presence was felt immediately. I thoroughly enjoyed my times with the Yankees. It was, and is, a sports franchise like no other. Mr. Steinbrenner will be terribly missed. My thoughts and prayers go out to the Steinbrenner family.

Ken Singleton, former Orioles player and current YES Yankees analyst:

George Steinbrenner was a legend, a once-in-a-lifetime figure. He had tremendous vision, and the sports landscape not just the baseball landscape will never be the same.

He had an outsized personality. While I was playing with the Orioles, and later as a Yankees analyst, I witnessed first-hand the passion for winning he exhibited, and the way New Yorkers appreciated the resources he put into producing a championship team.

We'll never see another owner like him. I will always appreciate the opportunity Mr. Steinbrenner gave me to broadcast Yankee games. I will miss him dearly.

Adam Schefter, NFL Insider for ESPN:

RIP, George Steinbrenner. Bob Sheppard already is there to announce your arrival.


 

[NYP] Fans gather at Yankee Stadium to pay respects to Steinbrenner

Fans gather at Yankee Stadium to pay respects to Steinbrenner

Last Updated: 10:53 PM, July 13, 2010

Posted: 1:15 PM, July 13, 2010


 

Even in death, The Boss commands respect.

Fans who loved longtime Yankees owner George Steinbrenner — as well as those who loved to hate him — flocked to mourn him today as news spread of his passing at 80.

At Yankee Stadium, flowers and cards were left as modest makeshift memorials by Bombers faithful who trekked to The Bronx in the middle of the workday despite the rain.


"It’s very sad, almost like a family member has passed away," said Steve Campo, 42, who took the subway from his sales job in Midtown. "Thirty-five years of great memories. What his legacy is going to leave is bringing the Yankees back to prominence."

Click to Order this Special Tribute Edition
The New York Post will be publishing a tribute edition celebrating the life of Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. Don’t miss this opportunity to order this commemorative edition filled with great photos and stories from The Boss’ dynamic life. Available at newsstands today or click here to reserve your copy now.
This Feb. 28, 1998, file photo shows George Steinbrenner flanked by manager Billy Martin, left, and vice president and general manager Lou Piniella, right, at spring training in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
This Feb. 28, 1998, file photo shows George Steinbrenner flanked by manager Billy Martin, left, and vice president and general manager Lou Piniella, right, at spring training in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Another fan who had driven from Midtown jumped out of his car to place a photo of himself at 7 at Yankee Stadium before speeding off.

Danny Taveras, 22, dressed in full Yankees garb, was there to take in memories.

"The Yankees took a major blow today," Taveras said. "Now we’ve got to win the World Series for him."

Memorabilia linked to Steinbrenner, whose iron-fist grip helped mold the Yankees into a championship-winning dynasty, was already being snatched up online and in stores.

At the Yankees store in Times Square this afternoon, a fan already phoned in to reserve a Steinbrenner-autographed baseball for $400.

Even those who were less than fans of the Bombers and the Boss paid their respects.

Seth Meyerowitz, founder of one of more than 30 "R.I.P. George Steinbrenner" Facebook groups that had popped up by midday, admitted he admired Steinbrenner despite rooting for a rival.

"I’m actually a Mets fan, but obviously, George Steinbrenner had a huge effect on New York baseball in general," said Meyerowitz, 26, of Merrick. "I hate that he’s done so well that the Yankees have continued to win, but that’s just a jealous Mets fan talking."

On Twitter, supporters of the Yankees-loathing Red Sox echoed the sentiment.

"As a Red Sox fan I spent years cursing George Steinbrenner’s spending and appetite for winning, all the while admiring him. RIP to The Boss," one person tweeted.

Many found a creative way to honor the late Steinbrenner: Eat an eggplant calzone, one like tThe Boss’ character demanded of George Costanza on "Seinfeld."

"I’m sure he is eating a calzone up in heaven while cheering on the Yankees," one woman wrote on Facebook.

Jeff McDonnell, 31, a die-hard Yankees fan from Staten Island, asked that in the end, fans remember that Steinbrenner, for all his triumphs and failures, was human.

"He was not perfect, but he was perfect for New York."

 

Additional reporting by Reuven Fenton, Amanda Melillo, Perry Chiaramonte and Doug Auer

 

[NYP] George Steinbrenner has died at 80

George Steinbrenner has died at 80

Last Updated: 6:56 PM, July 13, 2010

Posted: 9:21 AM, July 13, 2010


 

George Steinbrenner, whose tumultuous 37-year reign as owner of the Yankees resulted in 11 pennants, seven World Championships and two suspensions from baseball, died this morning from a massive heart attack in Tampa, Fla.

“It is with profound sadness that the family of George M. Steinbrenner III announces his passing. He passed away this morning in Tampa, Fla., at age 80," the Yankees said in a statement.

“He was an incredible and charitable man. First and foremost he was devoted to his entire family -- his beloved wife, Joan; his sisters, Susan Norpell and Judy Kamm; his children, Hank, Jennifer, Jessica and Hal; and all of his grandchildren.

 

Click to Order this Special Tribute Edition

The New York Post will be publishing a tribute edition celebrating the life of Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. Don’t miss this opportunity to order this commemorative edition filled with great photos and stories from The Boss’ dynamic life. Available at newsstands today or click here to reserve your copy now.
 
Bill Martin with George Steinbrenner in 1978

AP
Bill Martin with George Steinbrenner in 1978
 

“He was a visionary and a giant in the world of sports. He took a great but struggling franchise and turned it into a champion again.”

 

Steinbrenner was taken into St. Joseph’s Hospital last night between 9:30 and 10 p.m. after he said he wasn’t feeling well. He underwent a procedure, the details of which are not known. Sometime between 6:30 and 7 this morning his heart failed.

"There will never be anyone like George Steinbrenner," said team president Randy Levine, who worked under the Boss for 20 years. "He was the greatest owner in pro sports. He was an inspirational figure. There are not many people like him in the world. He was very, very extraordinary."

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a statement, “Few people have had a bigger impact on New York over the past four decades than George Steinbrenner.

”George had a deep love for New York, and his steely determination to succeed combined with his deep respect and appreciation for talent and hard work made him a quintessential New Yorker.”

Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani was a longtime Yankees fan and had a front-row seat for the run to the 2001 World Series after the Sept. 11 attacks.

"George Steinbrenner’s Yankees represent the will to overcome all odds which is precisely the will New Yorkers display when meeting every challenge they face," Giuliani said. "George will be greatly be missed but his legacy will carry on in the hearts and minds of all baseball fans."

Flags at City Hall were lowered to half-staff.

“The passing of George Steinbrenner marks the end of an era in New York City baseball history,” Mets owners Fred and Jeff Wilpon and Saul Katz said in a statement. “George was a larger than life figure and a force in the industry. The rise and success of his teams on the field and in the business marketplace under his leadership are a testament to his skill, drive, and determination.”


 

After purchasing the franchise in 1973, Steinbrenner quickly established himself as a unique firebrand, earning fame, admiration and ire for his impulsive personnel moves, pioneering business strategies, and win-at-all-costs mentality.

Both loved and loathed, Steinbrenner presided over back-to-back titles in 1977 and ’78, and the dynasty of the late ‘90s and early ‘00s, when the Yankees became the most popular and profitable team in the nation.

Joe Torre managed four of those championship teams during his 12-year run as manager, longest by far of anyone under Steinbrenner.


 

“I will always remember George Steinbrenner as a passionate man, a tough boss, a true visionary, a great humanitarian, and a dear friend," Torre, now Dodgers manager, said in a statement. "I will be forever grateful that he trusted me with his Yankees for 12 years.

"My heart goes out to his entire family. He will be deeply missed in New York, Tampa and throughout the world of baseball. It’s only fitting that he went out as a world champ.”

After a nine-year drought, the Yankees won their latest World Championship in November, which the team dedicated to him. It came in the first season of a new, $1.5 billion Yankee Stadium.

"It's a very sad day, not only for the Yankees but baseball as a whole," Derek Jeter told MLB Network in Anaheim, Calif., where he will participate in the All-Star Game.

"What he did from the ownerhsip role -- me and him have a great relationship way beyond just player and owner. He was a friend of mine and will be deeply missed."

Steinbrenner's final appearance at Yankee Stadium was at this year's home opener, when Jeter and Joe Girardi presented him with his latest World Series ring.

"I am sure he's looking down on us and is very proud of what we accomplished last year," Girardi said.

Steinbrenner headed a group of investors who bought the Yankees from CBS in 1973 for approximately $10 million. Today the franchise is worth about $1 billion.

His stint as owner was the longest in team history. When he took the reins of the club, he told the media, "I won’t be active in the day-to-day operations of the club at all," then spent the next 37 years refuting that claim.

"We all suffered a huge loss today. Mr. Steinbrenner was a great man, great owner, that did so many amazing things," Yankees pitcher Joba Chamberlain said on Twitter. "You will truly be missed."

Steinbrenner’s trademark quick axe was typified by his treatment of manager Billy Martin, whom he hired and fired five times. Steinbrenner changed skippers 17 times in his first 17 years as owner and 20 times in his first 23, in addition to going through 11 general managers during his tenure.


 

But beyond his frequently rash adjustments of his staff were more sordid incidents.

In 1974, he was indicted on 14 criminal counts after being implicated in a campaign finance scandal involving President Nixon. Steinbrenner pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and making illegal campaign contributions, leading to a two-year suspension from baseball by then commissioner Bowie Kuhn. The sentence later was reduced to nine months.

Although he was pardoned by President Reagan in 1989, Steinbrenner’s reputation worsened the following year when it was learned he had paid a known gambler for damaging information on slugger Dave Winfield, in hopes of blackmailing the former Yankees star into dropping a lawsuit against the team. For this offense, Steinbrenner was banned from baseball for life, although he gained reinstatement in 1993, in time for the Yankees’ return to glory.


 

Winfield and Steinbrenner later reconciled.

"Over the last few years we have mended our relationship," Winfield said. "I am just sorrowful for his family at this time and I am sorry to hear about his passing."

Fay Vincent was the baseball commissioner who handed down then rescinded the second suspension.

"We had our battles and he did some ugly and grim things as he fought to rebuild the Yankees," Vincent told FOXNews.com. "But he also did some wonderfully generous and thoughtful things to help those whose needs fit his areas of concern."

Steinbrenner often would feud with his staff then later bring them back.

Steinbrenner fired Yogi Berra as manager in the third week of the 1985 season. Berra vowed never to return to Yankee Stadium, then returned in 1999 for Yogi Berra Day.

"This is a very sad day for me and Carmen and all of baseball," Berra said in a statement. "My sympathies go out to the Steinbrenner family.

"George was The Boss, make no mistake. He built the Yankees into champions and that’s something nobody can ever deny. He was a very generous, caring, passionate man. George and I had our differences, but who didn’t? We became great friends over the last decade and I will miss him very much."

Don Zimmer, who also battled with Steinbrenner at times, was a Yankees coach in 1983 and again from 1996 to 2003.

"Baseball will miss him. He did a lot of great things – and some not so great – but it's a sad day for baseball, no doubt about it," Zimmer said. "He was a winner, and he made the Yankees a winner. Any Yankee fan had to love George Steinbrenner because he put the best team on the field."

In spite of the negative publicity, Steinbrenner remained passionate about his team and committed to bringing the Yankees success. He once compared owning the Yankees to owning the Mona Lisa and, of his competitive streak, noted: "Winning is the most important thing in my life, after breathing. Breathing first, winning next."


 

Observers, too, respected the Boss’ determination. Author Roger Kahn wrote: "Steinbrenner himself was 50 percent owner, 50 percent fan, and 100 percent businessman. That totals 200 percent, which is both shaky mathematics and perhaps another indication that George is larger than life."

Amid all the controversy, Steinbrenner retained the ability to lampoon himself. He was host of "Saturday Night Live" in 1990, appeared in a series of tongue-in-cheek Miller Lite Beer commercials with Billy Martin, and in Visa advertisements with Joe Torre and Derek Jeter, and enjoyed his portrayal on the popular sitcom "Seinfeld" as the employer of George Costanza.


 

Steinbrenner was at the forefront of many of the major trends in baseball in the past three decades. Initially an opponent of free agency, saying "it can ruin baseball," Steinbrenner became the leading practitioner of the costly signings, getting Catfish Hunter for five years and $3.75 million in 1975 and two years later landing Reggie Jackson for $3 million over five years.

Steinbrenner also discovered the pitfalls of free agency during the Bronx Zoo years of the 1980s, when the Yankees toted a bloated payroll of overpriced, faded veterans and did not win a World Series for the first decade since the 1910s. Steinbrenner helped launch the Yankees Entertainment and Sports (YES) network in 2002, increasing the franchise’s television revenues to unprecedented levels.

Modern owners including the Washington Redskins’ Daniel Snyder and the Dallas Mavericks’ Mark Cuban continue in Steinbrenner’s tradition of hands-on management, heavy spending, and a celebrity persona.

"What I loved the most about him was that he was completely unapologetic about his drive to win and his willingness to speak his mind," Cuban said. "I hope I can accomplish half what he did in the sports world."

As Steinbrenner’s health began to fail he kept more and more to his home in Florida and relaxed his iron grip on the Yankees. Confined to a wheelchair due to bad knees, his infamous tongue-lashings dissipated and, in a surprise move, he ceded much of the authority over the team’s roster to general manager Brian Cashman.

In 2008, control of the team was officially given to his son, Hal, who was named managing general partner.

“On behalf of baseball, I am very saddened by the passing this morning of George Steinbrenner," commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement. "George was a giant of the game and his devotion to baseball was surpassed only by his devotion to his family and his beloved New York Yankees.

"He was and always will be as much of a New York Yankee as Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford and all of the other Yankee legends."

Steinbrenner was born George Michael Steinbrenner III on July 4, 1930 near Cleveland, Ohio. A graduate of Williams College, he got his start in sports as an assistant football coach at Northwestern then Purdue University. Son to a Great Lakes shipping tycoon, he entered the family business, taking over as president of the Cleveland-based American Shipbuilding Co.

But from his early years, Steinbrenner longed to own a professional sports team. In 1960, he bought the Cleveland Pipers of the short-lived American Basketball League. He hired John McClendon as the first black coach in professional sports, but later failed in an attempted jump to the NBA.

In 1971, Steinbrenner’s $8.5 million bid to acquire his hometown Cleveland Indians was rejected by owner Vernon Stouffer, who sold to Nick Mileti at a slightly higher price. But within two years, Steinbrenner purchased the most famous sports franchise in the world.

He also was deeply involved in throughbred racing, with his Kinsman Farm sending Bellamy Road to the post in the 2005 Kentucky Derby.

In May, he had a high school named for him in the Tampa suburb of Lutz, Fla.

Steinbrenner is survived by his wife, Joan; sons, Hank and Hal; daughters Jessica and Jennifer, and several grandchildren.

 

 

Joel Sherman, Kevin Kernan, Peter Vecsey. and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



 

Longtime Yanks announcer Sheppard dies

Longtime Yanks announcer Sheppard dies

Man known affectionately as 'Voice of God' was 99 years old

 

07/11/10 2:13 PM ET

The gentle, refined and pious man whose voice afforded the Yankees' former home a dignified distinction for nearly five decades has passed away. Bob Sheppard, who introduced Joe DiMaggio, George W. Bush, Mickey Mantle, Elmer Fudd, and Derek Jee-tah and narrated the touchstone NFL playoff, died at his home in Baldwin, N.Y., on Sunday at age 99, nearly three years after his final call in the Bronx.

A rich, mellow voice and precise elocution made Sheppard a primary component of the Yankee Stadium experience. For generations, his "Good evening, ladies and gentlemen..." was the greeting that mattered most. Scooter, Yogi, Mickey, Whitey, Thurman, Reggie, Goose, Donnie, Bernie and Jee-tah were occupied, preparing for the day's event. They didn't nod or wave. It was left to Sheppard to greet the masses. "...and welcome to Yankee Stadium."

His words, deliberately delivered and echoing, served as a baseball "On your mark." Once Sheppard had spoken, the game could begin. He did for elocution what Loretta Young did for elegance, Benny Goodman did for swing, what Rogers and Astaire did for dance and what Mantle did for switch-hitting. Sheppard was from then, and he extended "then" so that it could be appreciated into the 21st century.

For that and other reasons, New York Times columnist George Vescey once identified him as a "civic treasure."

That Sheppard worked Giants football games -- "Tackled by Robustelli and Katkavage" still resonates -- and St. John's basketball games and later did introductions for the Yankees' YES Network enhanced his metropolitan-area profile.

What Yankee Stadium visitor didn't mimic his unique delivery? The backyard and schoolyard fantasy games of young boys in Yankees' vast kingdom routinely featured introductions with the cadence and tenor of Robert Leo Sheppard, the man who made every syllable count and made a visit to his workplace different from an outing to any other sports venue in the land.

"I am deeply saddened by the death today of Bob Sheppard, a good friend and fine man whose voice set the gold standard for America's sports announcers," Yankees principal owner George M. Steinbrenner said in a statement. "For over a half century, fans were thrilled to hear his unforgettable voice and players were thrilled to hear his majestic enunciation of their names. Bob Sheppard was a great member of the Yankees family and his death leaves a lasting silence. My thoughts and prayers are with his wife, Mary, and their family."

Bob Sheppard, 1910-2010

He made us listen and taught us to appreciate subtle sounds in a setting that often offered only jock-jam cacophony. Now, he is silent, and we are at loss for words -- his words.

It was no specific illness, but natural causes that took Sheppard from us. He had been ill and, as a result, too frail and weak to work in 2008. He regained weight and strength, but not enough to visit the successor to The House That Ruth Built. The new Stadium is graced, though, by a press dining area that bears his name and by his voice each time Jeter bats.

At the request of the Yankees' captain, a recording of Sheppard's "Derek Jeet-tah" is used.

Sheppard referred to Jeter's request as "one of the greatest compliments I have received in my career of announcing," and wryly added, "The fact that he wanted my voice every time he came to bat is a credit to his good judgment and my humility."

Sheppard's first game as the Yankee Stadium public address announcer came April 17, 1951. The first player he introduced was DiMaggio -- Dom, the Red Sox center fielder. His debut coincided with Mantle's big-league debut. (Coincidentally, the two also shared a birthday, Oct. 20.)

"Mickey arrived with slightly more fanfare," Sheppard liked to say.

Almost all of them did, from Mize to Mo, Raschi to Rodriguez and Stengel to Steinbrenner. But before his time came, Sheppard, too, had gained celebrity, unlike others who had similar responsibilities in other ballparks. He became, for the Yankees, what Ed McMahon became for Johnny Carson.

"I'd bat ninth just to hear him say my name," Reggie Jackson once said. "When he says "Forty-four," it's a higher number."

After hearing his name Sheppard-dized, Roy Smalley stated, "I couldn't have said it better myself."

Red Sox second base Jerry Remy decided no player was a bona fide big leaguer if he hadn't been introduced by Sheppard, and Rusty Staub identified Sheppard's voice as "the tones of dignity." More recently, Moises Alou lamented never having played in the Bronx. "I want to hear him say my name," Alou said in 2008, hoping Sheppard would work a Mets-Yankees Interleague game. Sheppard had been advised the proper pronunciation was "Ah-LOW," and was prepared to alter the public's pronunciation, as he had done with Tony PEH-rez in the 1976 World Series.

For that matter, it was Sheppard who taught the world the proper pronunciation of the Di-MAH-gio. To him, the short A was comparable to fingernails on a blackboard.

Sheppard was a tall, slender man who, like DiMaggio, preferred a blue suit and white shirt. He was distinguished before his hair turned white. In his later years, he favored solid-color LaCoste sweaters and ivy caps. His dress was as meticulous as his speech.

He was a striking figure on the dance floor. He and his second wife, Mary, occasionally attended the "Indoor Outing," a dinner and dancing event staged annually in the fall by the New York Chapter of the Baseball Writers' Association of America at one of the city's ballparks. When they danced, others did not; they watched, instead. The Sheppards moved like Champions.

The BBWAA honored Sheppard for his long and meritorious service to the game at its annual winter dinner in 1998. When he reached the lectern, he stood, arms extended, palms facing up. He had the appearance of a religious figure. The reception afforded him was long and heartfelt.

Players suggested Sheppard's announcements sounded like sermons, particularly those in which unruly fans were gently admonished. Jackson took it a step further. After Sheppard had ventured to Fenway Park and surprised all by replacing Sherm Feller and introducing Jackson, the Yankees Hall of Famer said he had been introduced by "The voice of God."

Sheppard wasn't altogether comfortable with such well-intended comparisons. He was a devout Roman Catholic who celebrated mass daily when his health allowed.

Some did consider him a kind of deity. Oscar Gamble once pointed out that National League players didn't know what they were missing.

"We got the DH over here," Gamble said. "And that man upstairs." His reference was not to George Steinbrenner or a supreme being, but to Sheppard.

Perhaps no name benefited more from Sheppard's delivery than AH-scar Gamble, unless it was Ah-to VELL-ez or Looo-EESe Ar-r-r-royo. Even Mickey Klutts sounded better. Sheppard enjoyed introducing Mantle, Rocky Colavito, Dave Righetti and most Hispanic names.

Mantle once said, "Each time Bob Sheppard introduced me at Yankee Stadium, I got shivers up my spine." And Sheppard said to him, 'So did I.'"

Salome BAR-oh-has and Shigetoshi Hasegawa were his particular favorites. Sadly, William Van Landingham never pitched in the old Stadium.

Asked for a list of his favorite names, Sheppard did more than accommodate. He wrote this verse:

     There are certain names that go over well,
     Like Pena, Ramos, Carrasquel,
     With liquid sounds so panoramic.
     And strangely, they all are Hispanic.
     Aurelio, Hipolito, Cecilio, Domingo
     Have a lovelier sound than American lingo.
     What native name could I ever tell so
     Musically, as Valdivielso?
     And no native name could ever show us
     The splendor of Salome Barojas.

"He adds elegance to the game," Tim McCarver said. "The best words to describe his introductions are 'eloquent' and 'elegant.'"

Sheppard was born Oct. 20, 1910 -- 21 years to the day before Mantle -- in Ridgewood in Queens, N.Y. He graduated from Saint John's Preparatory School in Brooklyn in 1928 and from St. John's College in 1932. He was president of his senior class and earned seven varsity letters at St. John's, four as a left-handed quarterback and three as a first baseman. Upon graduation, he played semi-pro football on Long Island on weekends.

He earned his Master's Degree in speech from Columbia University and later served two years in the United States Navy during World War II, commanding shipboard gunnery crews in the Pacific Fleet.

His announcing career began in the late '40s when he volunteered to work a charity football game in Freeport, N.Y. That job led to positions with the Brooklyn Dodgers of the All-American Conference, the New York football Yankees, baseball's Yankees and the NFL Giants. His work with the Yankees might have begun a year earlier, in 1950, but his job as the chairman of the speech department at John Adams High School in Queens conflicted with the Yankees' schedule of mostly afternoon games. His "other job" responsibilities were accommodated the following year.

It was as the Giants' PA announcer that Sheppard worked the NFL championship game between the Giants and Colts in December, 1958, widely considered the game most responsible for the explosion in popularity of the NFL.

Traffic before and after Giants home games played in the Meadowlands persuaded Sheppard to end his football duties after the Giants' final game of the 2005-2006 season. His final baseball game came Sept. 5, 2007 -- Ben Broussard of the Mariners was the last player he introduced -- though his official retirement didn't come until Nov. 27, 2009.

Sheppard's passion for football belied his gentle nature, but it was evident. He was once an on-air guest of Phil Rizzuto during a rain delay at Yankee Stadium in the early '70s. Rizzuto, wearing his pinstripes on his sleeve, as always, said, "Well, Bob, you've been present for so many great moments here at Yankee Stadium. Which one has the been the biggest for you?" Rizzuto was stunned when Sheppard cited the Colts-Giants game.

Sheppard also worked games for New York Titans of the AFL at the Polo Grounds, the New York Stars of the WFL at Randall's Island and five Army-Navy football games, all of which is not to suggest he wasn't a baseball fan. He treasured his relationships with the Yankees greats and the lesser-knowns who passed through the Bronx, and generally enjoyed the company of baseball people.

Sheppard is survived by his wife, Mary, two sons, two daughters, four grandchildren and nine great grandchilden.

Sheppard's work was recognized by the Baseball Hall of Fame, which displays his encased microphone, and by St. John's University, where he also taught and which annually awards the Sheppard Trophy to an outstanding student-athlete. His celebrity also reached the cinema -- he appeared in four movies -- and television. His voice was heard in three episodes of "Seinfeld."

Though he made his mark via his introductions of batting orders and lineup revisions, Sheppard's poetry -- eloquent tributes to players and preambles to ceremonies at the Stadium -- made him more special and admired. Among scores of poems, he wrote were ones about DiMaggio, Mantle, Roger Maris, Thurman Munson, the now-razed Yankee Stadium and the tribute to Hispanic names.

He wrote the eulogies he delivered, declining on at least one occasion to use something Steinbrenner had provided. Sheppard suggested he might leave the Stadium if ordered to use The Boss' words. Steinbrenner later praised his eulogy for Dick Howser.

Sheppard was a man of conviction who had a strong sense of what was proper. In the mid-'90s, he had been in early discussions about writing a book about his Yankees' experiences. But when the publisher suggested that anecdotes which Sheppard considered unusable would be essential, Sheppard flatly declined to work on a book and didn't revisit the possibility.

When the New York baseball writers considered roasting him a few years earlier, he had expresssed reservations. No one was quite sure how to roast such a revered figure. But when Sheppard asked, "Would my daughter feel comfortable if she attended? ... She's a nun," he was told the roast might get a tad improper. He politely but firmly declined.

So few people in the game are like Sheppard. Paul Olden has replaced him in the booth, but not in the Yankees' pantheon. More than any club in the game, the Yankees know how difficult it is to replace a legend. But they do salute their heroes: Sheppard has a plaque in Monument Park with Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio, et al. And as further tribute, there are the words Jackson spoke in 1985 after the death of long-time clubhouse manager Pete Sheehy. They're quite apropos for Sheppard as well:

"There have been a handful a great Yankees. He belongs. They shouldn't wear black arm bands. They should remove one pinstripe."

Poignant and well said, but had Sheppard said it, it would have sounded better.

In lieu of flowers, Sheppard's wife has requested that donations be made in Bob's name and memory to:

Catholic Relief Services
www.crs.org
(410) 625-2220
P.O. Box 17090
Baltimore, MD
21203-7090

 

 

Marty Noble is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

 

 

 

 

Bob Sheppard retrospective

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

YES honors Sheppard

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bob Sheppard's memorable moments

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sheppard announces Yanks' lineup

 

 

 

 

 

 

Steinbrenner dies from heart attack

Steinbrenner dies from heart attack

'Boss' rebuilt Yankees, embraced free agency, won seven titles

 

 

07/13/10 10:50 AM ET

George M. Steinbrenner, the principal owner of the New York Yankees since 1973 who returned the storied franchise to prominence both on and off the field and won seven World Series titles, died Tuesday, reportedly after suffering a massive heart attack. He was 80.

The Steinbrenner family confirmed his death in a statement issued by the Yankees.

"He was an incredible and charitable man," the family's statement read. "First and foremost he was devoted to his entire family -- his beloved wife, Joan; his sisters, Susan Norpell and Judy Kamm, his children, Hank, Jennifer Jessica and Hal; and all of his grandchildren.

"He was a visionary and a giant in the world of sports. He took a great but struggling franchise and turned it into a champion again."

Steinbrenner was the longest tenured owner in Major League Baseball. Through his purchase of the Yankees, Steinbrenner became one of the game's best-known personalities; a demanding type who earned the long-standing nickname, "The Boss."

"They're going to have to look at him as one of the top owners in the history of sports," said Hall of Famer Dave Winfield, who was signed as a free agent by Steinbrenner and played for the Yankees from 1981-90. "They will. You just look at the record, where they came from, with the championships and stuff, they'll look at him as one of the most forceful, or the guy with the most impact in professional sports.

"There will be much said in between, but they'll say he was one of the top executives or owners in all of sports."

Steinbrenner had endured a pair of public health scares in recent years, limiting his public commentary mostly to statements released through publicist Howard Rubenstein.

In October 2006, Steinbrenner fainted while attending his granddaughter's play in Chapel Hill, N.C., and was removed by paramedics; he also fainted at a memorial service for football player Otto Graham in Sarasota, Fla. in December 2003.

Born on July 4, 1930, in Rocky River, Ohio, Steinbrenner grew up in the Cleveland suburb of Bay Village and established his connections to the sports world at an early age.

Steinbrenner was a multi-sport athlete at Culver Military Academy in Indiana, where he was inducted into the school's Athletic Hall of Fame, and at Williams College, where he graduated in 1952.

Steinbrenner served two years in the Air Force before launching a coaching career, first at Aquinas High School in Columbus, Ohio, before accepting football assistant coaching positions at two Big Ten schools: Northwestern in 1955 and Purdue in 1956.

He followed those experiences by assembling championship basketball teams in both the National Industrial and American Basketball Leagues.

Preceding his purchase of the Yankees at age 42, Steinbrenner had also assumed control of his family's shipbuilding business and bought into the American Ship Building Company, amassing the fortune that would one day lead him to professional sports ownership.

He briefly owned the Cleveland Pipers of the American Basketball Association and flirted with acquiring both an NBA franchise and the Cleveland Indians baseball club before ultimately landing his treasured prize in the Bronx.

"Owning the Yankees," Steinbrenner once said, "is like owning the Mona Lisa."

On Jan. 3, 1973, a group headed by Steinbrenner purchased the Yankees from CBS for a net of $8.7 million, reinjecting funds -- and more important, hope -- into a franchise that had experienced a period of dormancy in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

At a press conference announcing the deal, Steinbrenner famously told reporters that he did not intend to be a hands-on owner, a statement that Steinbrenner himself would later laugh at.

"We plan absentee ownership as far as running the Yankees is concerned," Steinbrenner said. "We're not going to pretend we're something we aren't. I'll stick to building ships."

Instead, Steinbrenner helped the Yankees build a dynasty through heavy utilization of the free-agent market. Though once critical of free agency, saying that it could "ruin baseball," Steinbrenner soon became one of its biggest proponents. Pitcher Jim "Catfish" Hunter received a record-setting $2.85 million contract in 1974, and slugger Reggie Jackson netted a five-year, $3.5 million deal after the 1976 season.

Under aggressive leadership, it took Steinbrenner just five years to turn the Yankees into World Series champions once again.

Steinbrenner's ownership of the Yankees spanned seven championships, 11 American League pennants and two dynasties, one of which -- the team's run of two World Series victories and three appearances from 1977-1981 -- is remembered as having one of baseball's most controversial clubhouses. It was called "The Bronx Zoo" era.

In that time period, Steinbrenner became famous for his headline-grabbing and frequent changes of managers and general managers, all in relentless pursuit of a victorious Major League club.

"Winning is the most important thing in my life, after breathing," Steinbrenner once said. "Breathing first, winning next."

In his first 23 seasons, Steinbrenner switched managers 20 times -- including hiring and firing Billy Martin on five occasions -- and went through 11 general managers in 30 years.

The early payoff came in the form of back-to-back World Series titles over the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1977 and 1978, the Yankees' first consecutive titles since 1961 and 1962.

The Yankees also appeared in the 1981 World Series against Los Angeles, though the end result was unacceptable to Steinbrenner, who issued a public apology to the city of New York for the six-game defeat. The Yankees did not win a World Series championship throughout the 1980s, the first decade since the 1910s in which they failed to do so.

The Yankees' more recent dynasty of four World Series championships from 1996-2000 was constructed behind Steinbrenner's decidedly more hands-off approach. A blossoming farm system allowed the Yankees to reap the rewards of developing players like Derek Jeter, Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera and Bernie Williams to great success, while still adding free agents to round out talented rosters.

Steinbrenner's ownership of the Yankees was by far the longest of any owner in the storied franchise's history, exceeding the stewardship of Col. Jacob Ruppert, who purchased the club in 1915 and served as owner for 24 years until his death in January 1939.

Steinbrenner's reign endured its share of controversy, too. In 1974, Steinbrenner was suspended by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn for two years, 15 months after pleading guilty to a felony crime of making illegal contributions to Richard Nixon's presidential campaign. The suspension was later reduced to nine months.

In July 1990, Steinbrenner was handed a lifetime ban from baseball by Commissioner Fay Vincent for paying $40,000 to a gambler named Howie Spira in exchange for damaging information about Winfield.

Steinbrenner's ban was lifted by Vincent in March 1993, allowing Steinbrenner to resume his role as general partner of the club.

"I don't begrudge either Commissioner that suspended me," Steinbrenner told the Sporting News in 1998. "I have no ill feelings for either Bowie Kuhn or Fay Vincent. They did what they felt they had to do. I'm not saying that they were right, but they felt they had to do it and they did it. I put that behind me. I've moved on."

Continuing his interests in sports outside the Yankees, Steinbrenner had a well-documented fondness for horse racing. His ownership of the 850-acre Kinsman Stud Farm near Ocala, Fla. influenced manager Joe Torre's own passion for colts.

In 2002, Steinbrenner was honored with the Gold Medal Award from the National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame for a lifetime of "outstanding commitment, dedication and dynamic leadership in both his business and personal lives." It is the highest and most prestigious award bestowed by the College Football Foundation.

Steinbrenner was also known for his support of the U.S. Olympic Committee. Steinbrenner served on the NCAA board of trustees, was chairman of the U.S.O.C. Foundation from 1997 through 2002 as well as the Olympic Overview Commission in 1988 and 1989, which was created to evaluate the structure and efforts of the United States Olympic program.

He also served as vice president of the U.S. Olympic Committee from 1989-96 and was honored with both the Gen. Douglas MacArthur USOC Foremost Award and the Dom Miller U.S. Olympic Award.

In 1997, Steinbrenner was honored as "Outstanding New Yorker" and was named Tampa's "Citizen of the Year" for 1998. He was also named the Number One "Most Powerful Man in Sports" for 2002 by The Sporting News.

"In the end," Steinbrenner was quoted as saying, "I'll put my good acts up against anybody in this country. Anybody."

Steinbrenner was a part of mainstream pop culture, hosting Saturday Night Live in October 1990 and appearing on NBC's "Seinfeld" and HBO's "Arli$$" as himself. He also appeared in television commercials and was a regular character on "Seinfeld," though his likeness was voiced by Larry David.

Steinbrenner's final legacy was completed in 2009, when the Yankees opened a new ballpark in the Bronx.

Funeral arrangements will be private, the family said. There will be an additional public service with details to be announced at a later date.

Bryan Hoch is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

 

 

 

George Steinbrenner passes away at age 80

George Steinbrenner passes away at age 80

The 'Boss' owned the Yankees since 1973
07/13/2010 9:53 AM ET
By YESNetwork.com


Yankees principal owner George Steinbrenner passed away at 6:30 a.m. this morning at the age of 80. Mr. Steinbrenner recently celebrated his 80th birthday on July 4 and has owned the Yankees since 1973, when he and a group of investors purchased the team from CBS for $10M.

A statement released by the Steinbrenner reads: "It is with profound sadness that the family of George M. Steinbrenner III announces his passing. He passed away this morning in Tampa, Fla., at age 80.

"He was an incredible and charitable man. First and foremost he was devoted to his entire family - his beloved wife, Joan; his sisters, Susan Norpell and Judy Kamm, his children, Hank, Jennifer Jessica and Hal; and all of his grandchildren.

He was a visionary and a giant in the world of sports. He took a great but struggling franchise and turned it into a champion again."

Funeral arrangements will be private. There will be an additional public service with details to be announced at a later date.

 

 

The Boss through the years