Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Former Yankees Third Baseman Boyer Dies

Jun 4, 9:48 PM EDT

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer



NEW YORK (AP) -- Clete Boyer, the third baseman for the champion New York Yankees teams of the 1960s who made an art form of diving stops and throws from his knees, died Monday. He was 70. Boyer died in an Atlanta hospital from complications of a brain hemorrhage, son-in-law Todd Gladden said.

"He wanted to be cremated and he wanted his ashes to go in a Yankee urn," Gladden said.

Boyer played from 1955-71 with the Yankees, Kansas City Athletics and Atlanta. He helped the Yankees reach the World Series in five straight years from 1960-64, when they won two titles.

Boyer's death came on the 50th anniversary of the day he joined the Yankees, completing a dozen-player trade between New York and the A's.

"He was a great Yankee and a tough guy. He never talked too much but he was extremely hardworking. A wonderful third baseman, and had fire in his belly," Yankees owner George Steinbrenner said through a spokesman.

In 1964, Boyer and his brother, Ken, became the first brothers to homer in the same World Series game. They did it in Game 7, and nodded to each other as they rounded the bases.

The St. Louis Cardinals won the Series and Ken was the NL MVP that season. An All-Star third baseman, he died in 1982 at age 51.

Another brother, Cloyd, pitched in the majors from 1949-55. There were 14 children in the Boyer family.

Cletis Leroy Boyer was a career .242 hitter with 162 home runs and 654 RBIs. Decent stats, but it was fielding that became his signature.

Boyer added an air of flamboyance to a Yankees team that otherwise played with a conservative precision.



(From left to right) Roger Maris, Mickey Mantle and Clete Boyer celebrate in the clubhouse following a 6-2 victory in Game 1 of the 1962 World Series against the San Francisco Giants at Candlestick Park. Boyer hit a seventh-inning home run in the game to put the Yanks ahead for good.


"In all my years of playing with him, he only made one bad throw to me," former Yankees second baseman Bobby Richardson said by telephone from his home in South Carolina.

"When I made the double play, I could just about close my eyes, put my glove up and the ball would be there," he said. "I would consider him one of the best players defensively. And when we got in the World Series and the lights came up, he made those great, great plays."

Boyer's lone Gold Glove came in 1969 in Atlanta; he might've earned more had it not been for the peerless Brooks Robinson.

"He was in the Brooksie era. He didn't get as much attention as Brooksie," said Yankees manager Joe Torre, a former Boyer teammate with the Braves.

"Plus, he was a little goofy," he said. "Certainly, it helps you play the game."

After finishing with Atlanta, Boyer played in Japan. He later coached under Billy Martin with Oakland and the Yankees.

Boyer was part of an exceptional Yankees infield in the 1960s that included Richardson, shortstop Tony Kubek and first basemen Moose Skowron.

Richardson said he was with Boyer last month in New York for a reunion of the 1961 Yankees infield. "We had three or four, we looked forward to them," Richardson said.

The Yankees beat Cincinnati in the 1961 World Series. Boyer's best Series performance came in 1962, when he hit .318 with a home run and four RBIs in the seven-game victory over San Francisco.



"I got a lot of rings by him playing third base," said Skowron, who works in community relations for the Chicago White Sox.

"When we played Cincinnati, he made those great plays. He threw a couple balls to me, he was on his knees. He was a hell of a glove man."

Boyer made his major league debut at 18 with Kansas City. With Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford and Roger Maris, the Yankees started out every season in the early 1960s as the team to beat.

"He always said, 'I wish you could have played on the team that we had in the '60s. We'd have won 150 games,'" Yankees pitching coach Ron Guidry said.

"You'd talk to Moose and he would always tell you how good a third baseman he was," he said. "You talked to Whitey Ford and he'd tell you, 'I didn't have to worry about ground balls. I could pitch inside, throw breaking balls. If they hit it down the third-base line, he was going to catch it.'"

Richardson praised Boyer's other attributes.

"I would give him a lot of credit for being a good No. 8 hitter. It wasn't easy in those days, with the pitcher hitting being you," Richardson said. "He was a team player and a great teacher.

"He was a hard liver, I don't think that's any secret," he said. "He lived life to the fullest."

AP Sports Writer Andrew Seligman in Chicago contributed to this report.

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