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ificandream

(10,878 posts)
Tue Oct 22, 2024, 10:43 PM Oct 22

Dodgers legendary pitcher Fernando Valenzuela dies at 63

Source: ESPN

Fernando Valenzuela, the impetus behind "Fernandomania" while winning National League Cy Young Award and Rookie of the Year honors in 1981 as the Los Angeles Dodgers captured the world championship, has died at the age of 63, the Dodgers announced Tuesday night.

After pitching in the majors for 17 seasons, Valenzuela served as a Spanish-language broadcaster for the Dodgers since 2003. The team retired his No. 34 jersey in August 2023.

Called up late in the 1980 season as a reliever, Valenzuela, who was born in Navojoa, Mexico, took the baseball world by storm in the strike-shortened 1981 season. After Jerry Reuss was injured on the day before Opening Day, Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda gave the ball to the 20-year-old Valenzuela, who had never started a major league game in his career.

He responded with a 2-0 victory over the Houston Astros, beginning the season with an 8-0 record, including five shutouts, and an 0.50 ERA.

Read more: https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/41952316/dodgers-legendary-pitcher-fernando-valenzuela-dies-63



I'm a Giants fan, but he was fun to watch. RIP.
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Dodgers legendary pitcher Fernando Valenzuela dies at 63 (Original Post) ificandream Oct 22 OP
Too young. RIP, Fernando. brush Oct 22 #1
............. Upthevibe Oct 22 #2
I only saw him from afar BeyondGeography Oct 22 #3
One of the best I ever saw many times at Shea when the Dodgers visited. ZonkerHarris Oct 22 #4
. regnaD kciN Oct 22 #5
Fernando Valenzuela, pitching ace of 'Fernandomania' fervor, dies at 63 mahatmakanejeeves Oct 23 #6
No cause, no details? maxsolomon Oct 23 #7
I was a huge Dodger fan back then. BlueKota Oct 23 #8

BeyondGeography

(40,105 posts)
3. I only saw him from afar
Tue Oct 22, 2024, 10:58 PM
Oct 22

But he pitched some of the most memorable games I ever watched. You could smack him around, score a few runs on him, run his pitch count up and he’d still be out there for the full nine innings sometimes with 140-150 or more pitches in the bank. There will never be another one like him. He was a pitching genius and a great competitor.

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,966 posts)
6. Fernando Valenzuela, pitching ace of 'Fernandomania' fervor, dies at 63
Wed Oct 23, 2024, 09:40 AM
Oct 23
Fernando Valenzuela, pitching ace of ‘Fernandomania’ fervor, dies at 63
The Mexican left-hander roared into the 1981 season with a nearly unhittable screwball and had Los Angeles Dodgers fans rocking to “Fernandomania.”


Fernando Valenzuela, the Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher. (David Fields/AP)

By Brian Murphy
Updated October 23, 2024 at 12:25 a.m. EDT|Published October 23, 2024 at 12:06 a.m. EDT

Fernando Valenzuela, a barrel-chested Mexican pitcher whose look-to-the-heavens windup and wicked screwball baffled hitters, dazzled fans and helped the Los Angeles Dodgers to the 1981 World Series title, died Oct. 22 at a Los Angeles hospital. He was 63.

The Dodgers confirmed his death but did not provide further details. He was hospitalized this month for undisclosed health issues after suspending his work as a Spanish-language radio broadcaster covering the team.

In a sport that often celebrates eccentricities, Mr. Valenzuela possessed all the makings of a great baseball saga over his 17 seasons. His rookie year generated so much buzz that it was dubbed “Fernandomania.” Among Southern California’s vast Mexican communities, Mr. Valenzuela was treated like a saint — complete with sidewalk shrines and mariachi ballads. Fans dubbed him “El Toro,” or the bull.


Mr. Valenzuela was nicknamed “El Toro,” or the bull, as the acclaimed left-hander took major league baseball — and Southern California — by storm as a rookie in 1981. (Rusty Kennedy/AP)

The Dodgers played the Abba hit “Fernando” as his stadium theme song. Legions of baseball nerds analyzed every millisecond of his screwball, debated his age (he was listed as 20 but no one was quite sure) and relished Mr. Valenzuela’s double-threat legitimacy as a pitcher who could hit — a bonus that furthered his mystique.

{snip}


Mr. Valenzuela is doused with champagne by teammate Tom Niedenfuer after the Dodgers beat the Montreal Expos in five games to win the National League pennant in October 1981. (Ian MacAlpine/AP)

{snip}


Mr. Valenzuela and fellow Dodgers pitcher Bobby Castillo prepare for a workout in Philadelphia in May 1981. (Rusty Kennedy/AP)

{snip}

By Brian Murphy
Brian Murphy joined The Washington Post after more than 20 years as a foreign correspondent and bureau chief for the Associated Press in Europe and the Middle East. Murphy has reported from more than 50 countries and has written four books.follow on X @BrianFMurphy

BlueKota

(3,786 posts)
8. I was a huge Dodger fan back then.
Wed Oct 23, 2024, 08:08 PM
Oct 23

I remember everytime Valenzuela took the field they would play Abba's Fernando. He was a great pitcher. RIP Fernando!

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