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Official Scorer Bill Shannon

G-Fafif
Oct 26 2010 12:07 PM

Rough news regarding a familiar name.

Bill Shannon, sports writer, dies in NJ house fire

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY OCTOBER 26, 2010, 2:00 PM

THE RECORD

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WEST CALDWELL
— Bill Shannon, a baseball historian, author and an official scorer at New York Yankees and Mets games for decades, died in an early morning house fire Tuesday.

West Caldwell fire chief Charlie Holden said the three-alarm fire was called in just before 9 a.m. and brought under control within an hour. Holden identified Shannon, 69, as the only fatality.

Neighbors told News 12-New Jersey they were able to rescue Shannon's mother through the front door. One neighbor placed a ladder up to the second floor to reach Shannon, but Shannon told the neighbor he was unable to break the window and disappeared into the thick smoke.

Shannon became an official scorer for the American League in 1979 and the National League one year later, and in recent seasons was the senior official scorer for games of the New York Yankees and Mets. He also contributed stories to The Associated Press.

After attending Columbia University and serving in the Army, he was the head of public relations for Madison Square Garden from 1965-73 as it moved into its new building. He was longtime assistant on the press staff for the U.S. Tennis Association.

He authored the book, "The Ballparks," a history of major league baseball stadiums and edited "The Official Encyclopedia of Tennis of the United States Tennis Association.

metirish
Oct 26 2010 12:20 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

Well that's sad , R.I.P.

Edgy DC
Oct 26 2010 01:49 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

When you go up a ladder to rescue your neighbor, bring a hammer.

Poor Bill Shannon.

themetfairy
Oct 26 2010 02:19 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

R.I.P.

G-Fafif
Oct 28 2010 11:38 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

Marty Noble noted Bill Shannon was a stickler for making sure sports figures who weren't in the spotlight got a proper obituary when they passed...and then wrote a terrific one for Shannon.

Excerpt:

He did as much to keep newspapers in business as anyone who didn't advertise. He purchased and carried papers -- the Daily News, Newsday, the New York Times, The Post, The Record and any other he could put his hands on. The Times, he said, did more with obituaries. But he had scolded "the paper of record" at times.

Shannon was a character, different from most of the denizens of the press box. He stuck with sideburns longer than most, and had no use for computers, cellullar phones or other electronic gadgets of the day. When he scored, all that was in front of him on the press box desktop was his pens, scoring sheets, cups and cups of Pepsi and a deli sandwich he had purchased near his mother's home. His Pepsi consumption cost him his teeth, but he could get through a thick sandwich without trouble.

The book of scoring rules remained in his satchel, no need to reference it. Shannon might not have known the numbers and letters and paragraphs of the scoring rules, but he knew the rules and spirit of the rules. Jordan Sprechman is an attorney. He was one of Shannon's friends and business associates. They co-authored one book "This Date in New York Sports" and were collaborating on "Who's Who in New York Sports." Sprechman also is one of New York's official scorers.

"Bill didn't need to have the rulebook out. He knew what rule applied," he said. "Sure enough, you'd look it up and Bill had it right."

Shannon was considered a press box authority. He kept track of pitches before pitching coaches did and timed innings so when a particularly long one occured -- see Steve Trachsel, Jim McAndrew and all Yankees-Red Sox games -- he knew precisely how much time had passed. He delivered the pitching lines in unique fashion that prompted plebes to wonder.

He would speak the line -- say: seven innings, six hits, three runs, two earned, three walks, two strikeouts, one home run and one hit batsman. Then he'd repeat it at a quicker pace, pausing with one entry remaining. Then with great emphasis on the number, he would say "and one hit batsman." It became a ritual

Shannon made it his business to know all who had been credentialed to cover.

"Our business can be a little cliquish," Tony DiComo, the beat reporter for Mets.com, said. "But Bill knew my name right after I started, and he always treated me well. He made me feel like I belonged."

metirish
Oct 29 2010 06:27 AM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

That was great from Noble.

John Cougar Lunchbucket
Oct 29 2010 08:45 AM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

Turns out, Bill possessed one of the finest collections of artyfacts around Mets history and was a heretofore unknown (to me) creator/keeper of the All-Time Numerical Roster.

[url]http://mbtn.net/remembering-bill-shannon

G-Fafif
Oct 29 2010 01:25 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:
Turns out, Bill possessed one of the finest collections of artyfacts around Mets history and was a heretofore unknown (to me) creator/keeper of the All-Time Numerical Roster.

[url]http://mbtn.net/remembering-bill-shannon


Great note from DD. Thanks for posting.

metirish
Oct 29 2010 05:16 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

Excellent

G-Fafif
Oct 30 2010 03:36 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

One more, typically fascinating, from Keith Olbermann:

No matter what the game was, how long it dragged on or how quickly it passed, how unpleasant the weather or how perfect the setting, it was always better if I got to say hi to Bill Shannon.

He was already a veteran of the press boxes at Shea Stadium and Yankee Stadium and Madison Square Garden long before I got into this business in 1979. He knew virtually everything that had ever happened in baseball and probably just a little bit more about everything that had happened in New York sports reporting.

The topics occupied him, mystified him, energized him, endlessly. Off-and-on for several years, we individually dabbled in trying to unearth such mysteries as who had preceded the legendary Public Address Announcer Bob Sheppard at Yankee Stadium before Sheppard got the job in 1951. Off the top of his head Bill went through the identities, resumes, and secret lives of Sheppard's counterparts at Ebbets Field and The Polo Grounds, and details of the days when the Yankees refused to install a PA and stuck to having men walk around the field with megaphones, and then after rolling out all this information he said, with no sense of irony, "but let me look a few places."

We were still engaged in what had become a near-decade-long search for the etymology of the official scoring system by which the shortstop is numbered "6" and the third baseman "5" (as in "6 to 3 if you're scoring at home"). I had found an 1890's Giants program with "how to score" instructions that indicated it had been the other way round. "Ah, yes," Bill bellowed, in an accent I knew from my childhood to be authentic New York City, "At some point it was. What we need to do is find out when it changed." He then launched into a story he'd been told by a veteran writer with whom he had worked in the '60s, that was from itself from a veteran writer from the teens, who had heard it from one of the combatants, of a near fist-fight between the two official scorers at an early World Series, one of whom adhered to the Midwest preference of "5" for the shortstop, while the other one came from the Northeast, where he had always been "6."

These tales, these miniature trips through time, were at Bill's fingertips. They were instantaneous and generously offered and if they could help you, they were so much more joyful for him.

Bill could do this about any topic. And any crumb of research that might enlighten him on something he didn't know - or better yet, something he mistakenly thought he knew everything about - was like a gift of a gold nugget to him. He was publishing a brief (and impeccable) guide to official scoring (and he was the senior in the field at both New York ballparks, and I never heard anyone complain about one of his decisions) and asked me if I could help him with identifying the ones at some of the early World Series. I dug up the information fairly easily. He treated it as if I had written half the book for him.

It is impossible, it is personally physically painful, to write here that Bill Shannon died in a fire at his New Jersey home this morning, a fire from which his mother was rescued. He was 69 years old. He had worked for everybody: UPI, AP, the local papers, his own stringing service, Madison Square Garden, at least two soccer leagues, Who's Who In Baseball.

Loss is a part of everything and everywhere, and I'm confident I did not see Bill once in 31 years outside of one of the Stadiums. But as I write this I literally cannot imagine walking into either of the New York press boxes next year knowing I will not see this lovely man again.

MFS62
Oct 31 2010 12:21 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

In each Sunday's Raissman column in the NY Daily News, he names his "Dude of the Week.
This week, it's Selig:

Bud Selig
For paying for the funeral and burial of Bill Shannon, the veteran official scorer who died Tuesday in a fire in his West Caldwell, N.J. home. When the commissioner found out about this tragedy, and the need for funds, he didn't hesitate to say his office would pickup the check. Seligula wasn't the only one who wanted to make sure Shannon, a respected member of the NY baseball fraternity, was given a proper send-off. The Yankees also reached out. Selig told pinstripe execs that since they are the games' biggest revenue donor they are "essentially" helping pay for Shannon's funeral.

Nice "Thanks, but no thanks", Bud.
Later

Edgy DC
Dec 14 2010 08:46 PM
Re: Official Scorer Bill Shannon

Bill Shannon memorialized.