G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 Wayne Hagin reports the great Duke Snider -- Dodger legend and 1963 Met All-Star -- has passed away at age 84.
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 Another boy of summer.Somewhere in my garage I have a Duke Snider model Rawlings glove. Last time I saw it, it was next to my Jim Hickman home run ball.Later
Theoldmole Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 My boyhood. The part that mattered.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 The second-oldest living Met, and the first one to die from the Top Twenty since I inaugurated this page. (Joe Hicks moves into the Top Twenty, and Joe Ginsburg advances to the number 2 slot.)I shook his hand once at a baseball card show in Atlantic City. It was somewhere around 1990. I told him my mom was a big fan of his when he played for the Dodgers, and he said, "Say hello to your mom for me." When I passed along the message, she got a big kick out of it. My sister later reported that she heard my mother muttering, "Duke Snider said hello to me!"I only chatted with him for a few minutes, but he seemed like a really nice guy.
Guest themetfairy Guests Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 When I was a kid, my mom told me that when she went to summer camp she packed pictures of Gil Hodges and Duke Snider. They seemed like such old men to me at the time that it sounded strange, but that factoid always stayed with me.RIP Duke!
Frayed Knot Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 Actually 84 years old, not yet 85.
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Author Posted February 27, 2011 Wayne and I stand corrected.
metirish Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 Benjamin Grimm wrote:The second-oldest living Met, and the first one to die from the Top Twenty since I inaugurated this page. (Joe Hicks moves into the Top Twenty, and Joe Ginsburg advances to the number 2 slot.)I shook his hand once at a baseball card show in Atlantic City. It was somewhere around 1990. I told him my mom was a big fan of his when he played for the Dodgers, and he said, "Say hello to your mom for me." When I passed along the message, she got a big kick out of it. My sister later reported that she heard my mother muttering, "Duke Snider said hello to me!"I only chatted with him for a few minutes, but he seemed like a really nice guy.That's why these old players still matter, nice story.Rest in peace.
HahnSolo Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 One of my dad's favorites. So long, Duke.
Guest metsguyinmichigan Guests Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 A gentleman.My wife and I met him at a card show, and you can tell that we were newlyweds because she actually came with me to a card show.Duke signed my Hall of Fame ball and my Mets book, and I noticed the huge ring he was wearing -- his Hall of Fame ring. After showing it to us and talking about it a little, he, much to my wife's delight, he asked to see her new wedding ring and made the appropriate approving sounds.A very nice man.Here's the full story:http://metsguyinmichigan.blogspot.com/2011/02/every-signature-tells-story-duke-snider.html
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 The Boys of Summer chapter in which Kahn visits Duke and his wife and takes them out to see Eartha Kitt is good good stuff.The frankness of that Frank Springer portrait still blows my mind.
Frayed Knot Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 HahnSolo wrote:One of my dad's favorites. So long, Duke.Mine too.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 So, Willie, Mickey and the Duke is now... Willlie.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 He certainly doesn't count on the all-time roster of Met managers, but Snider told tales of Casey turning the team over to him during cat-naps.
Valadius Old-Timey Member Posted February 27, 2011 Posted February 27, 2011 I have a feeling that for many people, Snider's passing closes the book on the living history of the Brooklyn Dodgers.
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted February 28, 2011 Posted February 28, 2011 Valadius wrote:I have a feeling that for many people, Snider's passing closes the book on the living history of the Brooklyn Dodgers.
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted February 28, 2011 Author Posted February 28, 2011 Ralph Branca just on FAN remembering the Duke...so he's still going, too.He's also still bitter, but it's only been 60 years. Give him another 60 and he'll probably mellow.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted February 28, 2011 Posted February 28, 2011 "I'm not sorta alive, you liitle prick, I'm Lasordaalive!"
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted February 28, 2011 Posted February 28, 2011 I thought about Lasorda, but I really don't think of him as a Brooklyn Dodger. He's all LA to me.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted February 28, 2011 Posted February 28, 2011 Nobody's saying that Duke Snider was the last living Brooklyn Dodger, but he was the biggest of their remaining stars.Bob Aspromonte yet lives!
Chad ochoseis Old-Timey Member Posted February 28, 2011 Posted February 28, 2011 The twenty-ninth best Cub of all time, also a living, breathing 1952 Brooklyn Dodger.
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted March 1, 2011 Author Posted March 1, 2011 Let us not forget Joe Pignatano.No doubt Duke epitomized those Dodgers as few others did, but I don't believe the book is ever closed on something you care about. Brooklyn Dodgers fans have kept the book open 54 years after the library closed (so to speak) and it will remain open as long as those who loved them remember them. The stories will outlast those scripted their endings.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted March 1, 2011 Posted March 1, 2011 Here's Duke Snider's '64 Topps baseball card; his last Topps card and his only card in a Mets uniform as an active player.Topps chose from among these other images when deciding what Snider's '64 card would ultimately look like:
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted March 1, 2011 Posted March 1, 2011 A good look at the Polo Grounds there.
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted March 1, 2011 Posted March 1, 2011 2009 Topps Update, probably from the same photo session that produced the alternate Topps' images, above.
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted March 3, 2011 Author Posted March 3, 2011 If you'll excuse the expression, great article by Dick Young, here.
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