• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

White Democrat Women Dance Across America For Juneteenth

June 23, 2026

Non-Woke Box Office Rebounds (Except for ‘Star Wars’ — LOL)

June 23, 2026

Golf Channel Analyst Calls Long Island Fans a ‘Stain’ on the Game

June 23, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Tuesday, June 23
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    White Democrat Women Dance Across America For Juneteenth

    June 23, 2026

    Joy Reid Claims Black People Aren’t Excited For July 4th, Juneteenth Is The ‘Real Thing’

    June 23, 2026

    Democrats Are Turning Out In Droves — Even In MAGA Country

    June 23, 2026

    Trump’s Midterm Election Rigging Scheme Handed Big Loss

    June 23, 2026

    Senate Passes Major Housing Bill As Citizens Continue To Miss Out On Key Pillar Of American Dream

    June 22, 2026
  • Health

    7 Signs You Need Physical Therapy (And How To Find the Right Provider)

    June 23, 2026

    Kidney transplant, livestock disease, Texas: Morning Rounds

    June 22, 2026

    The Hidden Hormone Controlling Your Energy, Mood, And Recovery

    June 22, 2026

    A New Way To Hit Pancreatic Cancer’s Hardest Target

    June 22, 2026

    Ebola Congo: 1,000 cases, 254 deaths, still a search for patient zero

    June 22, 2026
  • World

    One Dead, 1700 Evacuated as Inferno Races Through Popular Caribbean Resort

    June 23, 2026

    Former Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan Dies

    June 23, 2026

    Polish President to Strip Zelensky of Top Honor over WW2 Dispute

    June 23, 2026

    Supreme Court Reinstates Murder Conviction In Case Of Etan Patz, Missing NYC Boy

    June 23, 2026

    51 Dead or Missing After Migrant Boat Capsized Off Libya Coast

    June 23, 2026
  • Business

    Influential Economic Policy Center Bankrolled By Shady Dating App Founder

    June 19, 2026

    Dem Senator‘s 22-Year-Old Son Raises Eyeballs After Raking In $30 Million Investment

    June 19, 2026

    Jeff Bezos Claims AI Boom Will Actually Lead To Labor Shortages

    June 17, 2026

    Are You Gay Enough To Get A California Utilities Contract? Here’s The Test

    June 17, 2026

    Jersey Mike’s Overtakes Chick-Fil-A As Highest Rated Fast Food Chain

    June 17, 2026
  • Finance

    Intel CEO gives investors a reality check

    June 23, 2026

    China’s 618 shopping festival growth slows sharply as consumer spending malaise persists

    June 23, 2026

    Borrowing need will dictate your interest rate

    June 23, 2026

    52-year-old Outback Steakhouse rival chain closes 24 locations

    June 22, 2026

    Ex-Trump advisor makes bold case for Bitcoin

    June 22, 2026
  • Tech

    Elon Musk’s SpaceX IPO Spurs Momentum for Orbital AI Data Centers

    June 23, 2026

    Netflix’s Mega Podcast Venture Failing to Earn Fans

    June 23, 2026

    Texas Grandma Killed by Tesla Crashing into Home, Driver Claims ‘Autopilot’ Active

    June 22, 2026

    Asbestos Discovered in 1,000 UK Wind Turbines Imported from China

    June 22, 2026

    ‘F**k These Weird Ass Vultures’

    June 22, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Sports»Vida Blue Was a Baseball Comet
Sports

Vida Blue Was a Baseball Comet

May 9, 2023No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Vida Blue Was a Baseball Comet
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The bright lights would come soon enough. On that May night in 1970, at the old ballpark at the confluence of the Des Moines and the Raccoon Rivers, they were dimmer than the lights in the big leagues. Tony La Russa knew that much, because he’d been there.

La Russa was destined for a storied career as a major league manager, but on the field he was a bonus baby who couldn’t really hit. Playing for the Iowa Oaks, after a few trials in the majors, matched his talent level. The Iowa pitcher that night was far beyond it. He struck out 14 Evansville batters in nine innings and even had two hits at the plate.

“There are minor leaguers, there are big leaguers, and then there’s that higher league of All-Stars and Hall of Famers,” La Russa, 78, said by phone on Monday. “And that was Vida, and he was 20 years old.”

By the end of that 1970 season, in the majors for good with the Oakland Athletics, Vida Blue would throw a no-hitter. His next season would be a baseball comet, a wonder in both majesty and brevity, the kind of year people talk about forever, especially in moments of loss.

Blue died at age 73 on Saturday, another pillar gone from the only franchise besides the Yankees to win three consecutive titles. Last month he visited the site of his former glory — the doomed and decaying Coliseum in Oakland, Calif. — for a celebration of the 1973 champs, the middle of three A’s teams that won the World Series. Blue shuffled slowly to the diamond, his left hand clutching the elbow of an aide, his right holding a long, wooden cane.

“He looked really, really frail, walking around with a big pole,” Mike Norris, a former Oakland teammate, said by phone on Monday. “It was sad to see. He told me he was worn out from chemo, he was weak, it was pretty painful and all that. We’re both Christians, so we just kept praying for one another. And yesterday was it.”

See also  Leftists Spat On, Attacked Pro-Women's Activists at Texas Bill Signing

The news of Blue’s death reached his former catcher, Dave Duncan, late Sunday afternoon in Tucson, Ariz. Duncan, 77, was tending to his grandchildren but paused for a moment to share what he saw from behind the plate in 1971.

The left-handed Blue went 24-8 with a 1.82 E.R.A. that season, spinning 24 complete games and eight shutouts and working 312 innings, the most in nearly 60 years by a pitcher in his first full season. He won the American League’s Most Valuable Player Award and the Cy Young, and there was nothing subtle about it.

“If he threw 120 pitches, 115 of them were fastballs,” said Duncan, a longtime pitching coach after his playing career. “He hardly ever threw a curveball and didn’t have a changeup. He had great control of it — he’d put it right on the hands of right-handers and right on the hands of left-handers — and he didn’t miss. He was amazing.”

The 1971 season was staggering then, incomprehensible now. Blue lost his first start and then won eight in a row, all complete games. From June 1 through July 21, he averaged more than nine innings in a stretch of 11 starts (twice he went 11 innings).

In his next start, on three days’ rest, Blue got a break: With fans jamming every corner of Tiger Stadium in Detroit, where he’d won the All-Star Game earlier that month, Blue worked only six innings. He gave up one hit and no earned runs, improving to 19-3 with a 1.37 E.R.A.

“He was magnetic,” said La Russa, who watched from the bench that day. “His fame spread so quickly, and he was so dynamic, that people started coming just to watch him — and he delivered. It was a circus. It was like Mark McGwire, as a hitter, in ’98 and ’99.”

Buck Martinez, a former catcher, struck out all three times he faced Blue in 1971, and 15 times overall, his most against any pitcher in a 17-year career. Martinez does remember an occasional curve amid the furious fastballs — “You could hear it spin, it was so tight,” he said — and the whirl of excitement that followed Blue everywhere.

See also  As Blue Bird Becomes 'X', A Look At How Twitter Changed Under Elon Musk

“He was much better than Mark Fidrych, but he drew the same attention as the Bird did in ’76,” Martinez said, using Fidrych’s nickname. “Everybody wanted to see Vida pitch, even if he was gonna stick it to you.”

Blue was a national sensation. On the road, his starts were the highest-attended non-opening day games for six A.L. teams: Baltimore, Boston, Detroit, Kansas City, the Washington Senators and the Angels. At the Coliseum, his 20 starts accounted for 40 percent of the season attendance.

It was a happening, and Blue, just 22 years old, had all the markings of crossover stardom: a Time magazine cover, a name-drop on “The Brady Bunch,” a spot on Bob Hope’s goodwill tour to military bases in South Vietnam; Okinawa, Japan; Thailand; and beyond. His contract talks with Charlie O. Finley, the A’s penurious owner, made for comedy fodder.

Blue: “Mr. Finley is a very persuasive man. He pointed out that I used only one arm last season.”

Hope: “So you’ll sign the same contract for next year? You’ll pitch for the same money?”

Blue: “Sure. Right-handed.”

Blue actually was a switch-hitter, and remains the answer to one of the great trivia questions: who was the last switch-hitter to win American League M.V.P.? He was not much of a hitter (.104 for his career) but carried himself with uncommon athletic grace.

“It was like watching Bo Jackson walk onto the baseball field, or Mike Trout,” said Martinez, a longtime broadcaster. “I was 10 years old when Willie Mays walked onto Seals Stadium for the first time and I was like, ‘Wow, that’s Willie Mays.’ You could tell. You didn’t have to see him do anything, and you didn’t have to see his number. But you knew that was Willie Mays. Same with Vida Blue.”

See also  US Teenager Gets Life In Jail For Beating Teacher To Death With Baseball Bat

Growing up in Louisiana, Blue’s passion was football: He wore No. 32 for Jim Brown, idolized Johnny Unitas and reveled in doing it all — quarterback, cornerback, punts, kick returns. He turned down a football scholarship to the University of Houston after the death of his father, Vida Sr., a steelworker.

Blue, the oldest of six children, became the family provider. He got a $25,000 bonus from the A’s, but he struggled to extract much more from Finley. He later turned down $2,000 from Finley to change his first name to “True,” as in True Blue — the name he shared with his father mattered so much to Blue that eventually he wore VIDA on his back.

It was all part of Blue’s style, an appealing package of talent and flair that inspired future ace left-handers: a gangly kid from Livermore High in California named Randy Johnson, and a man from Vallejo, Calif., named Carsten Charles Sabathia Sr., whose son, C.C., became a member of the Black Aces.

The longtime pitcher Jim “Mudcat” Grant used that term as the title of his 2006 book celebrating all the Black pitchers with 20 wins in a season. There are 15 such pitchers, with Sabathia (in 2010) and another left-hander, David Price (2012), as the most recent members.

Black participation in the majors has dwindled since Blue’s era, with rising costs for amateurs, limited availability of college scholarships and the tremendous depth in international talent. Norris, 68, who joined the club in 1980, said Blue’s death was a reminder of what the sport is missing.

“The Black pitchers had more swag than everybody else,” Norris said. “I took pride in that. It’s an attitude, man, walk out there like you’re the greatest. The opposing team is like animals — they smell fear, and you combat that with your own ego.

“That’s all it is, it’s ego. And that’s one thing Vida can take to the grave: He was one of the greatest.”

baseball blue Comet Vida
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Golf Channel Analyst Calls Long Island Fans a ‘Stain’ on the Game

June 23, 2026

Giants Pitchers Who Wrote Bible Verses On Pride Night Hats Won’t Be Disciplined, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred Says

June 23, 2026

Lionel Messi Breaks World Cup Scoring Record with His 17th Goal for Argentina

June 23, 2026

Cops Investigate Assault Claims Against Jets QB Geno Smith

June 23, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Hong Kong removes requirement to flag China risk in listing applications

August 1, 2023

Fintech firm Mercury hits $5.2 billion valuation after funding round

May 20, 2026

Beijing police launch investigation into troubled wealth manager Zhongzhi

November 26, 2023

Labor Protests Rock Chinese Manufacturing Hub as Economy Tanks

August 28, 2023
Don't Miss

White Democrat Women Dance Across America For Juneteenth

Politics June 23, 2026

Top Democrat lawmakers made ridiculous attempts at performing African dances over the weekend as part…

Non-Woke Box Office Rebounds (Except for ‘Star Wars’ — LOL)

June 23, 2026

Golf Channel Analyst Calls Long Island Fans a ‘Stain’ on the Game

June 23, 2026

One Dead, 1700 Evacuated as Inferno Races Through Popular Caribbean Resort

June 23, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,386)
  • Entertainment (5,259)
  • Finance (3,886)
  • Health (2,327)
  • Lifestyle (1,893)
  • Politics (3,654)
  • Sports (4,618)
  • Tech (2,296)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (5,166)
Our Picks

Ron DeSantis Earmarks $1 Million for Lawsuit Against College Football Playoff

December 6, 2023

Poll Suggests Limits To What Most Are Willing To Spend On Obesity Meds

July 2, 2023

Tom MacDonald, John Rich Anti-Establishment Single ‘End of the World’ Beats Taylor Swift and Miley Cyrus to No. 1 iTunes Spot

March 28, 2023
Popular Posts

White Democrat Women Dance Across America For Juneteenth

June 23, 2026

Non-Woke Box Office Rebounds (Except for ‘Star Wars’ — LOL)

June 23, 2026

Golf Channel Analyst Calls Long Island Fans a ‘Stain’ on the Game

June 23, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.