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In the 1970s, when female reporters were first allowed in baseball locker rooms, I was leaving Earl Weaver's office one night after his smart, sarcastic postmortem of a tough Orioles defeat. I ...
It’s Sept. 17, 1980, and Earl Weaver, the great Baltimore Orioles manager who died Friday night at 82, is shouting down umpire Bill Haller at the old Memorial Stadium. “You’re here, and your ...
Sadly, the sequel, Earl Weaver Baseball 2, was rushed to release, and the images it used were so large that computers of that time couldn’t process the graphics fast enough.
Earl Weaver flipped his lid in this 1974 argument with umpire Marty Springstead during an Orioles-White Sox game in Chicago. Before baseball fell in love with statistics, Weaver owned the numbers.
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Earl Weaver biography ‘The Last Manager’ details life of ... - MSNWhen Earl Weaver died in January 2013, John W. Miller was covering the steel industry for the Wall Street Journal. But someone on the sports desk knew Miller was a baseball nut — a former ...
In this journey through the early years of Earl Weaver’s baseball story, Miller takes his reader back to a baseball and an America that is before even my dad’s time.
Earl Weaver had it right when it comes to baseball brawls May 30, 2017 Daniel Murphy (20) tried to restrain teammate Bryce Harper (34) after Harper charged Giants reliever Hunter Strickland on Monday.
When Earl Weaver died in January 2013, John W. Miller was covering the steel industry for the Wall Street Journal. But someone on the sports desk knew Miller was a baseball nut — a former ...
FILE - In this July 13, 1974 file photo, Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver literally "flips his lid" as he protests a call by home plate umpire Marty Springstead during a baseball game against ...
A return to baseball finds Orioles fans blessed with a team looking for a third straight postseason appearance, and a new biography of Baltimore’s beloved former manager, Earl Weaver.
Earl Weaver, who died early Saturday morning at age 82, was the rarest of baseball rarities. He was a franchise-defining manager, not only helping the Orioles to become winners but making them ...
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