By Al Doyle If pitching is 70 percent or more of baseball success, then the 1952 Miami Sun Sox of the Class B Florida International League had what it took to win. The 104-48 Sun Sox needed ev…| RIP Baseball
Like the first birdsong, the start of Major League Baseball is a sign of spring. Baseball fans celebrate the start of the season every year, but there are two other “baseball holidays” circled on t…| New York State Parks and Historic Sites Blog
Here is the fourth and final part of our In Memoriam Series. You can find links to the other three parts below. The numbers after each name indicate their age and date of death. Part 1 | Part 2 | P…| RIP Baseball
In the lost geography of Toronto’s sports history, there are notable sites that have disappeared from the city’s streets. On the east side of the Don River in particular, a group of sites representing three sports — baseball, cricket, and shooting — tell an intriguing tale of late 19th-century and 20th-century sporting in the city. … Continue reading ‘Sports of All Sorts’: A Quick History of Sporting East of The Don River→| Scenes From Toronto