• Welcome to SportsJournalists.com, a friendly forum for discussing all things sports and journalism.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register for a free account to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Access to private conversations with other members.
    • Fewer ads.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

RIP Rocky Colavito

I'd guess Dale Murphy might be a somewhat more recent comparison: on a solid course toward the HOF for a decade, but a sputtering run to the finish line dropped him out of the running.
 
Tigers GM Bill DeWitt got Rocky Colavito and Norm Cash in the same week. You'd think a team with Jim Bunning, Colavito, Cash and Al Kaline would have been a lock to make a World Series but those Damned Yankees were still pretty good.

After being excited at the prospect of a Colavito-Kaline outfield, Detroit fans turned against Colavito because he was making more money than Kaline, and Joe Falls made it worse by needling Rocky over his lack of RBI production.

He wound up traded to Kansas City -- had a tremendous year for a last-place team -- and then bounced around the big leagues until retiring.

He may be the last living player from my 1964 Cadeco All-Star Baseball disc set.
 
I saw Joe Falls only in The Sporting News way back then, and I guess maybe he was some kimd of big shot in Detroit, but, man, he was just an awful columnist in The Sporting News. To the point of unreadable.
 
Last surviving participant in "Home Run Derby."
My god, you're right. I didn't think it was possible, but I cross-checked.

That's a marking point in our existence ...

I saw Joe Falls only in The Sporting News way back then, and I guess maybe he was some kimd of big shot in Detroit, but, man, he was just an awful columnist in The Sporting News. To the point of unreadable.

I remember him a bit more fondly from his Sporting News columns.

And I still think his white-space lede was one of the best ever. First graf, "This is what the Detroit Tigers accomplished yesterday." And then five lines of white space.
 
And I still think his white-space lede was one of the best ever. First graf, "This is what the Detroit Tigers accomplished yesterday." And then five lines of white space.

Gimmick writing. ... Hey, if that's all he can come up with ... :cool:

And hounding Colavito with his Run Not Batted In stat was bush league all the way.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top