Hall of Famer Bob Feller dies at 92
CLEVELAND, OH
Feller, who won 266 games in 18 seasons -- all with the Indians --
died at 9:15 p.m. on Wednesday night of acute leukemia at a
hospice, said Bob DiBiasio, the Indians vice president of public
relations.
Remarkably fit until late in life, Feller had suffered serious
health setbacks in recent months. He was diagnosed with a form of
leukemia in August, and while undergoing chemotherapy, he fainted
and his heart briefly stopped. Eventually, he underwent surgery to
have a pacemaker implanted.
In November, he was hospitalized with pneumonia and Feller was
recently released into hospice care.
Even as his health deteriorated, Feller continued doing what he
loved most -- attending Indians games deep into last season.
"Nobody lives forever and I've had a blessed life," Feller
said in September. "I'd like to stay on this side of the grass for
as long as I can, though. I'd really like to see the Indians win a
World Series."
Feller, in fact, was part of the rotation the last time the
Indians won it all -- in 1948.
Fiercely proud and patriotic, Feller was an American original.
Blessed with a fastball that could make any hitter look silly,
Feller began his major league career at the tender age of 17. His
win total remains a Cleveland team record, one that seems almost
untouchable in today's free-agent era.
"Bob Feller is gone. We cannot be surprised," Indians owner
Larry Dolan said in a statement. "Yet, it seems improbable. Bob
has been such an integral part of our fabric, so much more than an
ex-ballplayer, so much more than any Cleveland Indians player. He
is Cleveland, Ohio.
"To say he will be missed is such an understatement. In fact,
more to the point, he will not be missed because he will always be
with us," he said.
Feller was part of a vaunted Indians' rotation in the 1940s and
'50s with fellow Hall of Famers Bob Lemon and Early Wynn. He
finished with 2,581 career strikeouts, led the American League in
strikeouts seven times, pitched three no-hitters -- including the
only one on opening day -- and recorded a jaw-dropping 12
one-hitters.
His numbers would no doubt have been even greater had his career
not been interrupted by World War II.
The first pitcher to win 20 games before he was 21, Feller was
enshrined in Cooperstown in 1962, his first year of eligibility.
The Indians retired his No. 19 jersey in 1957 and immortalized
the greatest player in franchise history with a statue when they
opened their downtown stadium in 1994. The sculpture is vintage
Feller, captured forever in the middle of his patented windmill
windup, rearing back to fire another pitch.
"When you think Cleveland Indians, you think Bob Feller and
vice versa," Indians manager Manny Acta said. "He was a genuine
patriot and a big-time Hall of Famer. Boy, he loved the Indians and
we all loved him back."
Baseball was only a part of Feller's remarkable story.
Stirred by Japan's bombing of Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941,
Feller enlisted in the Navy the following day -- the first major
league player to do so. He served as a gun captain on the USS
Alabama, earning several battle commendations and medals.
Never afraid to offer a strong opinion on any subject, Feller
remained physically active in his later years. At the end of every
winter, he attended the Indians' fantasy camp in either Florida or
Arizona. One of the highlights of the weeklong event was always
Feller, in uniform, taking the mound and striking out campers, some
of whom were 50 years younger.
Another rite of spring for Cleveland fans was seeing Feller at
the Indians' training camp. Before home exhibition games in Winter
Haven, Fla., or more recently in Goodyear, Ariz., Feller would
throw out the ceremonial first pitch. Introduced to a rousing
ovation every time, Feller delivered the throw with the same high
leg kick he used while blazing fastballs past overmatched hitters.
"We have all lost a friend and the nation has lost an icon,"
former Indians manager Mike Hargrove said. "Bob was always there
with a word of advice or a story. The thing is that they were
always relevant and helpful. I will never forget before the first
game of the '97 World Series, Bob came up to me and patted me on
the back and told me how proud he was of me and the team, then gave
me a buckeye and said it was for luck.
"I don't think that Bob ever believed in luck, just hard work
and an honest effort. I will miss Bob very much. He was my
friend," he said.
An eight-time All-Star, Feller compiled statistics from 1936
through 1956 that guaranteed his Hall of Fame enshrinement. He led
the AL in victories six times and is still the Indians' career
leader in shutouts (46), innings pitched (3,827), walks (1,764),
complete games (279), wins and strikeouts.
Despite losing his two starts, Feller won a World Series title
with the Indians in 1948.
When he returned from military duty in 1946, Feller arguably had
his finest season, going 26-15 with a 2.18 ERA and pitching 36
complete games and 10 shutouts. For comparison's sake, the Indians'
entire pitching staff had 10 complete games and four shutouts last
season.
Born Nov. 3, 1918, near Van Meter, Iowa, Robert Andrew William
Feller was 16 when he caught the eye of Indians scout Cy Slapnicka.
Feller made his first major league start on Aug. 23, 1936, two
months shy of turning 18. He never pitched in the minors, and when
the Indians decided to use him in a relief role on July 19, 1936,
he was the youngest player ever to pitch in a major league game.
Many wondered if the kid -- who would later credit his arm strength
to milking cows, picking corn, and baling hay -- was in over his
head.
Hardly.
Using a fastball later dubbed "the Van Meter heater," Feller
struck out 15 -- two shy of the major league record in his first
game, beating the St. Louis Browns 4-1 -- a star was born. Later
that season, Feller established the AL record by striking out 17
Philadelphia Athletics.
In 1938, Feller set the major league record by striking out 18
against the Detroit Tigers. The record stood for 36 years before
being broken by Nolan Ryan in 1974. By the time he joined the
military at 23, Feller had won 109 games and was well on the way to
baseball fame.
In his day, nobody threw harder than Feller, who sometimes had
trouble with his control. Because speed devices weren't as advanced
as they are today, it's impossible to gauge precisely how fast
Feller threw in his prime. There is famous black-and-white film
footage of Feller's fastball being clocked as it races against a
motorcycle said to be traveling at 100 mph.
Feller once said he was clocked at 104 mph.
Even in his later years, Feller could recall pitch-for-pitch
duels with great hitters like Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio. He
said his biggest thrill in the game was when he returned from the
military to pitch a no-hitter against New York at Yankee Stadium.
"I had been away four years and people were saying I was washed
up," Feller said. "They had a right to say it, too, since few
come back after being away so long. But this game proved to me that
I was still able to pitch."
He always credited his father, Bill, with encouraging his
baseball ambitions.
"My father kept me busy from dawn to dusk when I was a kid,"
Feller said. "When I wasn't pitching hay, hauling corn or running
a tractor, I was heaving a baseball into his mitt behind the barn.
I couldn't repay my debt to him, but I wanted to pass along the
thought that if all the parents in the country followed his rule,
juvenile delinquency would be cut in half in a year's time."
Feller said the greatest hitter he ever faced, without question,
was Williams, although Williams had only a .270 average against
him.
"I was a little luckier against him than the others," Feller
said. "But he beat me in more games than I care to remember. Joe
DiMaggio was the only right-hander who hit me consistently. The
fellow who hit me best, though, was Tommy Henrich, the Yankees' old
reliable.
"Funny thing, I've run across a lot of former ballplayers who
said to me, 'You know, Bob, I wasn't a great hitter, but I've
always had pretty good success against you.' I must have kept a lot
of .250 hitters in the game."
After retiring from baseball, Feller worked in the insurance
business, but he never got completely away from baseball. In 1981,
he returned to work for the Indians as a spring training pitching
coach and in the team's public relations office.
As recently as last season, Feller was a fixture in the press
box at Progressive Field. Sitting in the media dining area before
games or in the same seat during them, he would offer his thoughts
on any current event and, of course, give his assessment on how the
Indians were playing.
Cleveland's chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of
American recently asked the Indians to turn Feller's press box seat
into a shrine area.
Feller didn't care for crowds and didn't particularly enjoy
interacting with fans, but he often attended memorabilia shows to
sign autographs for a nominal fee. Sometimes gruff, Feller would
sign his autograph and listen as fans asked him questions and posed
for pictures with an iconic man who meant so much to them.
Feller was critical of contemporary ballplayers. He viewed them
as spoiled and felt they didn't work as hard at their craft as he
and his peers. Feller never softened on his stance that Pete Rose,
baseball's hits leader, should remain banned for betting on
baseball and he was revolted by the idea that players who cheated
by taking steroids could one day join him as a Hall of Famer.
Feller, who lived in Gates Mills, Ohio, is survived by his wife,
Anne, and three sons, Steve, Martin and Bruce.
The Indians said details on a public memorial service will be
announced in the near future.