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-   -   OT: RIP Tony Gwynn (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=189528)

Orioles1954 06-16-2014 09:22 AM

OT: RIP Tony Gwynn
 
Just passed away from cancer. A true throwback.

HOF Auto Rookies 06-16-2014 09:26 AM

Very sad, had no idea he was this bad. Lost a great player and better person


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yanks12025 06-16-2014 09:28 AM

Rip

chris6net 06-16-2014 09:28 AM

Shocking. I didn't even know he was sick
RIP Tony!

vintagetoppsguy 06-16-2014 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chris6net (Post 1288110)
Shocking. I didn't even know he was sick
RIP Tony!

Wow! I didn't know that either. So sad.

the 'stache 06-16-2014 09:43 AM

Friggin' cancer.

RIP Tony. Great hitter, and an even better man.

packs 06-16-2014 09:53 AM

Truly sad. Great hitter and always enjoyed his commentary and personality. Seemed like such a likeable guy and helped a lot of kids at SDSU.

clydepepper 06-16-2014 10:10 AM

What a Shock!
 
I will remember his laugh! He truly loved the game.

Exhibitman 06-16-2014 10:13 AM

The death of an all time great is never, ever OT.

I am so saddened by this one. He was not just a great player but a great role model: integrity, loyalty, hard work. He and Ripken were the bright lights of the PED-infected, mercenary era...RIP

Kenny Cole 06-16-2014 10:15 AM

What a hitter and what a person. RIP Tony. You will be greatly missed by many.

bn2cardz 06-16-2014 10:15 AM

My dad's favorite player growing up my dad would buy anything Gwynn related. Whenever birthday's or father's day would come I would attempt to find a Gwynn at a card shop and sell or trade cards from my collection to get it for him.

I have so many childhood memories focused around Gwynn, including meeting him at a local grocery store signing in Omaha NE. Also learning how to hit and field by watching his instructional videos constantly.

nebboy 06-16-2014 10:15 AM

1 Attachment(s)
There is a tread for worst HOF, well Tony can easy be said BEST HOF you can't ask for a nicer guy.

Short story - I walked into my local food store in 91 and I saw Tony sitting at a card table by front door. With no signs or anything saying who he was or what he was doing there. I walked over and started talking, we talked for 1/2 hr. No one even stopped but me. I went home got some cards to be sign and came back, still no one had stopped to talk but me. Store didn't do right with their promotion but for me I got a one on one Q&A with a further HOF.
Truly priceless.

He will be missed!!

auggiedoggy 06-16-2014 10:18 AM

Definitely one of the good guys. A true professional and a great role model. I wasn't even aware of his health situation so this came as quite a shock!

RIP Tony.

bn2cardz 06-16-2014 10:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nebboy (Post 1288129)
There is a tread for worst HOF, well Tony can easy be said BEST HOF you can't ask for a nicer guy.

Short story - I walked into my local food store in 91 and I saw Tony sitting at a card table by front door. With no signs or anything saying who he was or what he was doing there. I walked over and started talking, we talked for 1/2 hr. No one even stopped but me. I went home got some cards to be sign and came back, still no one had stopped to talk but me. Store didn't do right with their promotion but for me I got a one on one Q&A with a further HOF.
Truly priceless.

He will be missed!!

Interesting. I see you are from Nebraska, so I wonder if that was the same time I got to meet him.

donmuth 06-16-2014 10:22 AM

I remember
 
going to a card show in Memphis where Tony was signing (at Christian Brothers University I think). One of my high school friends was helping some other high school and college baseball players set up the show. They all sat right up by Tony during the entire autograph session chatting with him - he with a big smile on his face the whole time. He was one of my favorite players and one of the best-of-the-best from the time when I was collecting as a kid back in the mid-80's to early 90's.

RIP Mr. Gwynn

ethicsprof 06-16-2014 10:23 AM

tony gwynn
 
I loved watching this great one play.
my condolences and deepest sympathy to all,

barry

joeadcock 06-16-2014 10:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ethicsprof (Post 1288139)
I loved watching this great one play.
my condolences and deepest sympathy to all,

barry

I agree Barry. Great hitter and always seemed a gentleman.

DeanH3 06-16-2014 10:24 AM

Agree that Gwynn was a great person. Met him once to get his autograph and he was awesome. RIP Mr. Gwynn.

http://i101.photobucket.com/albums/m...ps824b649b.jpg

Luke 06-16-2014 10:25 AM

Wow, I just read a few days back that SDSU had extended his contract for another year. I thought he was getting better :(

He is one of my favorite players, and was extremely nice to me the few times I came in contact with him. Really sad news. RIP.

rhettyeakley 06-16-2014 10:31 AM

RIP Tony.

Probably the best pure contact hitter I ever had the pleasure to watch on a regular basis, baseball lost a great one today.

gregr2 06-16-2014 10:32 AM

Never met him but he was one of the greatest hitters of all time, loved watching him play.

Sean 06-16-2014 10:35 AM

I didn't know he was sick. This is really a shame. He was still so young. :(

tcdyess 06-16-2014 10:45 AM

Used to love getting the paper in the morning and going to the box scores when I was a kid.... Had to check out Gywnn every day, he was a hitting machine and possibly had the best hand/eye coordination ever!!! RIP!!!!

Tim

Jlighter 06-16-2014 10:48 AM

I didn't even know he had an illness, and I see on here many others didn't know either.

May he rest in peace.

packs 06-16-2014 10:56 AM

I didn't realize speed was a part of his game early on. He stole 50 bags one year.

I always get jealous when I hear older guys talk about Mantle and Mays because I didn't get to see them play. But I feel very fortunate that I did get to see Tony.

barrysloate 06-16-2014 11:20 AM

Wow, this is the first I heard about Gwynn's passing. One of the greatest hitters in baseball history. Much too young.

Jason 06-16-2014 11:23 AM

Best wishes went out to his family and friends. He was one of the best hitters of my time watching baseball.

barrysloate 06-16-2014 11:26 AM

In a strike shortened season he hit .394. Think about that!

z28jd 06-16-2014 12:51 PM

I just saw something crazy about his career and the timing of his passing. The only time Tony Gwynn ever struck out three times in a game was on April 14, 1986 and the pitcher was Bob Welch, who also just passed away. Got him all three times.

Peter_Spaeth 06-16-2014 12:52 PM

I remember an epic confrontation in a game 7 playoff when Maddux came on in relief and retired Gwynn to clinch it. Great hitter, no drugs, just relentless hard work.

Joem36 06-16-2014 12:57 PM

Tony and I share the same birthday May 9. I was proud to share a birthday with him. What a great guy. He will be missed.

btkpath 06-16-2014 01:02 PM

How tragic!!

One of the players that I admired most growing up. A sad day for all!

DerekMichael 06-16-2014 01:11 PM

Man. I just saw this. This is seriously depressing.

He always seemed like such a kind person, and he was by far one of the absolute best hitters of my lifetime. He is kind of larger than life down where I live, and I am sure to all baseball fans.

I remember when I was a kid, he was hitting something like .394 before the strike, isn't that right? Absolutely amazing.

RIP Mr. Gwynn. One of the all time greats, no question.

Sean 06-16-2014 01:23 PM

Yeah, that strike took away his chance to achieve something that would be remembered for ages. But he never showed any bitterness over his lost opportunity.

brianp-beme 06-16-2014 01:36 PM

Tony the King
 
I was a lifetime Dodgers fan even after having moved to San Diego for years. Tony was a big part of me gradually switching my allegience to the Padres--I loved the way he hit and played the game.

Even before I made the switch I was appluading whenever he got a hit when the Dodger came to town. And I love the fact the way he decided to become the manager for SDSU. I know the baseball community will miss him, but so will San Diego--he was practically royalty there.

Brian

bnorth 06-16-2014 01:45 PM

I have always hated Tony for totally shellfish reasons. Even though I think my all time favorite player Wade Boggs was a better hitter in their primes Tony ended his career with better numbers. With that said RIP Tony you are a legend.

the 'stache 06-16-2014 01:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Exhibitman (Post 1288124)
The death of an all time great is never, ever OT.

I am so saddened by this one. He was not just a great player but a great role model: integrity, loyalty, hard work. He and Ripken were the bright lights of the PED-infected, mercenary era...RIP

I'd include Yount in there, too. Three Hall of Famers that stayed with their original team even when they were offered more money to leave.

deadballfreaK 06-16-2014 01:53 PM

I just heard the news and it makes me feel like throwing up. I knew he had cancer, but had the idea that he caught it in time and was in recovery. I am actually crying as I try to type. He was one of the truly great. Like Stan Musial you can't find anyone with a bad word to say about him. Wasn't he the one who practically invented watching video tape?

the 'stache 06-16-2014 02:04 PM

I was just watching HBO's documentary on Ted Williams a few nights ago. They interviewed Tony about the 1999 All Star Game in Boston, and how all the players, past and present, all circled around Williams. Tony said Williams asked Mark McGwire if he ever smelled burnt wood when he was hitting, and Gwynn was laughing his butt off. He had the kind of personality that you just gravitated towards.

He was more than just a great hitter. He stole 300 bases, and won five Gold Glove Awards. And as was previously mentioned, he almost hit .400. If just three of those outs had made it through for hits, he'd have done it.

bbsports 06-16-2014 02:06 PM

All the net 54 members are right about Tony. He was one of the best natural hitters in the game & a great ambassadors to the game of baseball. According to reports, Gwynn had cancer in his right cheek, possibly caused by chewing tobacco. Chewing tobacco is as bad as smoking tobacco. Some of baseball fans out there remember a player in the 1960's name Bill Tuttle, who was big tobacco chewer in his playing days & he passed away from mouth cancer.

deadballfreaK 06-16-2014 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bbsports (Post 1288241)
All the net 54 members are right about Tony. He was one of the best natural hitters in the game & a great ambassadors to the game of baseball. According to reports, Gwynn had cancer in his right cheek, possibly caused by chewing tobacco. Chewing tobacco is as bad as smoking tobacco. Some of baseball fans out there remember a player in the 1960's name Bill Tuttle, who was big tobacco chewer in his playing days & he passed away from mouth cancer.

I did not know he was a chewer. I was a coal miner for 31 years. Also a smoker. You can't smoke underground so I took up the disgusting chewing habit. It was pleasurable, but after doing it about 15 years I developed several bad sores in my mouth. Luckily at a routine 6 month checkup at my dentist, he was alarmed. He made me go see a doctor and it was the beginning of cancer. I gave up tobacco completely both smoking and chewing and I recovered pretty quickly. I'm sure that dentist saved my life.

itjclarke 06-16-2014 03:45 PM

Totally shocked and saddened, Gwynn was as classy a super star as their was. Not sure how long it will be until the next person retires with a lifetime BA of .330+.. but guessing a while. RIP Mr. Gwynn.

Separately, with regards to chew and cancer in his mouth, I had not idea he was dealing with this. I do definitely remember Gwynn regularly playing with a big wad in his mouth though. Glad this has been finding its way out of the game... at least compared with 20 or more years ago.

deadballfreaK 06-16-2014 04:39 PM

Watching The tony tribute on the MLB network.What a great!

I Only Smoke 4 the Cards 06-16-2014 07:36 PM

From Bleacher Report: He finished his MLB tenure with 3,141 hits, a .338 batting average and an incredible 790-434 walk-to-strikeout total in 9,288 at-bats.

clydepepper 06-16-2014 07:56 PM

Gwynn's success vs. the best:
 
He did not do as well against aging HOFs (Niekro, Carlton, Seaver, Sutton ), but once he adjusted (i.e. saw enough video) he began to feast on them:

Ryan - .302
Glavine - .303
Pedro - .314
Schilling - .390
Maddux- .415
Smoltz- .444

Doug Glanville said earlier today, 'He was indefensible ' and none of today's 'shifts' would have worked on him.

I seem to recall Maddux or Glavine saying that you could never have a game plan for him.

RTK 06-16-2014 07:57 PM

I spent better than half of his career watching him from the right field bleachers at Wrigley. He worked pitchers, pitchers didn't work him. It was almost a script; take the first pitch, maybe the second, foul off a few then rip a line drive stand up double in the gap. It's really sad to see him go. I was aware of his cancer but thought it was under control. Gone far too soon.

gregr2 06-16-2014 07:58 PM

Did I read it hear somewhere that he was one of the very first players to study tape of pitchers prior to each game?

itjclarke 06-17-2014 12:08 AM

Stay classy ESPN.. I just watched intro to the 11pm (PST) SportsCenter and they made no mention of Gwynn in the intro. World Cup, Tim Duncan's Legacy (I get both of those), but then teased with an opposite field HR by Giancarlo Stanton and a start by Verlander. Yeah, that HR was pretty nuts, but I think the passing of one of the greatest hitters of the past 40 years is probably worth mention in the intro.:confused:

RedlegsFan 06-17-2014 12:47 AM

Tony. What a wonderful human being. I know he was always one of the greats, but his character and beliefs always outshined his celebrity in my opinion. I guess God needed him back. Tony. The human.

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the 'stache 06-17-2014 06:07 AM

Just saw this. How good was Gwynn?

He faced Greg Maddux 107 times, more than any other pitcher. Gwynn hit .415 off of him, and never struck out.

That's incredible.

Man, I am sad. Loved Gwynn. :(


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