Equipment

Joe Morgan’s Death Adds to Baseball’s Stretch of Grief

Not again.

Yes, sadly: Another baseball legend is gone. Joe Morgan, the Hall of Fame fireplug for Cincinnati’s championship “Big Red Machine” teams of the 1970s—and one of the greatest second basemen ever—passed away on Sunday, at 77, in his Bay Area home. He was suffering from a nerve condition.

Morgan’s death follows the recent passing of four other Hall of Famers: Whitey Ford, the winningest pitcher in New York Yankees history, on Oct. 8 at 91; pitcher Bob Gibson, of the St. Louis Cardinals, on Oct. 2 at 84; Gibson’s ex-teammate Lou Brock, the former stolen base king who spent the bulk of his career in St. Louis, on September 6 at 81; and Tom Seaver, the three-time Cy Young award winner of the New York Mets who died on August 31. Seaver was 75.

This string of bad baseball news counts as nothing more than a sad coincidence. But for fans of these memorable players, these last few weeks have hit hard. Morgan was the back-to-back National League MVP for a Cincinnati team that won consecutive World Series championships, in 1975 and 1976. A generation of Little Leaguers imitated his batting stance, in which he’d flap his left elbow back a few times before the pitch, like a chicken, in order to keep it straight. As the lead ESPN baseball game commentator from 1990-2010, and a postseason broadcaster for NBC in the mid-to-late 1990s, Morgan also spoke to legions of baseball fans who never saw him play.

They didn’t always like what they heard. Morgan stubbornly downplayed the baseball analytics that increasingly influenced decisions in the game; to many, he was an old-school relic who simply refused to adapt to more data-driven times. A group of TV writers including Michael Schur—creator of beloved comedies like Parks and Recreation and The Good Place—started the sports blog “Fire Joe Morgan” in 2005; it was dedicated to lampooning the fuddy-duddy views of Morgan and other media members. The irony of Morgan’s reluctance to embrace analytics was that he was a sabermetric dream: viewed through the numbers, Morgan’s career was even more impressive. As a 5’7″, 160-pound second baseman, he led the NL in OPS—on-base plus slugging percentages — in both of his MVP seasons. He led the NL in walks in four seasons, hit for power and stole bases, all while saving runs with his five straight Gold Gloves, from 1973-1977.

“Joe Morgan was quite simply the best baseball player I played against or saw,” Johnny Bench, the Hall of Fame Reds catcher, writes in an email to TIME. That’s telling praise, especially since Pete Rose, baseball’s all-time hits leader, was another Bench teammate on those Big Red Machine squads. Morgan could just do it all, especially in big moments. In Game 7 of the 1975 World Series against Boston, for example, Morgan drove in the decisive run with a two-out, ninth-inning single: the Reds won 4-3.

Morgan was born in Texas but grew up in Oakland. The Houston Colt .45s—now the Astros—signed him in 1962. As a minor league player in North Carolina, he experienced segregation firsthand: he heard racial slurs from the stands and saw Black fans separated from whites out in right field. He considered quitting. “It would be nice to say that I changed my mind because of the example of earlier black players who had it tougher, like Jackie Robinson,” Morgan wrote in his 1993 book. “But my decision came from my own sense of shame and embarrassment. When I thought of facing my father and telling him that I had quit — I simply could not go ahead.”

Morgan made his big league debut in Houston in 1963, and soon became the team’s regular second baseman, making two All-Star teams: he was traded to Cincinnati after the 1971 season, and made eight straight All-Star appearances with the Reds. He returned to Houston in 1980, helping the franchise win its first division title. After two years in San Francisco, he played for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1983, joining former Reds stars Rose, then 42, and Perez, 41, in Philly—they were known as the “Wheeze Kids.” Those Phillies won the NL pennant. Though the Baltimore Orioles beat Philadelphia in five games, Morgan hit two home runs in the ’83 World Series, as a 40-year-old. Morgan played his final season, in 1984, with his hometown A’s.

Morgan has never shied away from speaking his mind. In 2017, Morgan wrote a letter to Hall of Fame voters, urging them to keep steroid users out of Cooperstown. Some read his missive as sanctimonious. Others agreed with his stance. Morgan’s words spoke to his influence in baseball, a game he served with passion and flair, a game now suffering too much loss.

Related Posts

Caesars Sportsbook Launches New Mobile Sports Betting App in Harrah’s Gulf Coast in Mississippi

The industry giant Caesars Entertainment, Inc. is expanding its operations to Harrah’s Gulf Coast, Biloxi, Mississippi, where the company’s sportsbook went live on April 20, 2024. All the players who want to place their bets can do it on the Caesars Sportsbook Mississippi mobile application while visiting Harrah’s. 

New mobile app and extended partnership:

In order to place the bets, the players must be at least 21. They can register and deposit across the whole state, so only betting itself requires visiting the casino.

Caesars has been present in Harrah’s since 2018 when its sportsbook location was launched. 

The companies celebrate the app launch through various giveaways and promotions

Crow Country's Deliciously Haunted Nostalgia Is A Weapon

At first glance, Crow Country is a nostalgia piece. It pulls on the horrific sprawl of Resident Evil, populating its theme-park setting with brain twisters and monsters contorting into human shapes. It borrows from the toy aesthetic of Final Fantasy VII, its characters rendered in blocky, plastic proportions like Playmobil. Yet, it’s more than just a throwback, it lays bear the haunted roots of nostalgia culture.

Protagonist Mara Forest visited the titular theme park as a child, but it was not a happy experience. There, a strange man bit her and she gained some terminal illness, which is slowly killing her. She has returned to make things right, find out what happened, and stop it from happening again. She returns to what was, only fleetingly, a site of childhood joy. Sh…

Department Of Justice Opens Investigation Into Vince McMahon And WWE

In January, former WWE employee Janel Grant came forward with an explosive lawsuit against ex-WWE owner Vince McMahon and former WWE Head of Talent Relations John Laurinaitis that accused them of sexually assaulting and trafficking her. Shortly thereafter, McMahon resigned from WWE’s parent company TKO. And while the two sides have yet to meet in a court of law, the Department of Justice is now opening its own investigation into Grant’s claims.

Via Deadline, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District Of New York revealed to the federal court that McMahon, Laurinaitis, and WWE are the subjects of an official DOJ investigation. As a result, Grant’s lawsuit will now be on the backburner while the government pursues its own case.

“Ms. Grant has consented to a request b…

Princess Leia's Bikini From Star Wars- Return Of The Jedi Is Available For Over $30,000

You can turn heads at the pool or beach this summer by sporting Princess Leia’s bikini from Star Wars: Return of the Jedi. The only catch is putting up at least $31,000 to purchase the seven-piece costume at Heritage’s July Entertainment Auction.

Variety reports the bathing suit isn’t the only iconic film piece to buy, either. For example, Din Djarin’s helmet from The Mandalorian on Disney+ starts at roughly $20,000, while Mjolnir from Thor: The Dark World has a current bid of $17,500.

Heritage notes that Leia’s bikini costume, which has actual “production wear,” isn’t the most expensive Star Wars item available at auction Come from online casino bangladesh . A Y-Wing miniature from A New Hope…

Fallout’s Ella Purnell Doesn’t Want To Be Known As "The Cannibalism Chick"

Between Yellowjackets, Army of the Dead, Sports betting site B Sports and now Fallout, Ella Purnell has already built up a small list of projects involving either cannibalism or flesh-eating zombies. It’s something the actress can joke about, especially because Yellowjackets and Fallout have gone a long way towards establishing her as a star. Even so, Purnell doesn’t want to be known for only taking those kind of roles.

“What’s so funny is that I didn’t put two and two together with Yellowjackets and Fallout,” said Purnell during an interview with The Hollywood Reporter. “I never ever was like, ‘Oh God, what are people going to say about my cannibalism trend?’ It never occurred to me until I started doing press, and I was like, ‘Oh yeah, I guess…

Fortnite Season 7- Start Time And Date, Skins, Theme

Fortnite Season 7 is almost upon us. Sports betting site B Sports Season 7 officially starts on June 8, and we already have some ideas of what to expect–it’s clear that aliens and UFOs will be the big theme, although we don’t yet know exactly what that will entail. [Update: Fortnite Season 7 is live, adding Rick Sanchez of Rick & Morty fame, Superman, and more.]

The wait isn’t much longer now, as Epic will be revealing the Fortnite story and battle pass trailers for Season 7 today, June 7, at 11 PM PT (2 AM ET / 7 AM BST on June 8), according to listings on YouTube. That should fill in the gaps on what we know will happen in the new season; you can find out all the information we have about Season 7 below.

In the meantim…