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Darkhalf...
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51 years old
REVERE, MA
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Tony Cs Comeback !!
August 6, 2008

 

                     Tony Cs highlights  links provided courtesy of wikipedia

Outfielder
 
Born: January 7, 1945(1945-01-07)
Revere, Massachusetts
 
Died: February 24, 1990 (aged 45)
Salem, Massachusetts
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 16, 1964
for the Boston Red Sox
Final game
June 12, 1975
for the Boston Red Sox
Career statistics
Batting average     .264
Home runs     166
Runs batted in     516
Teams
Career highlights and awards
  • All-Star selection (1967)
  • Led AL in home runs in 1965 with 32

Conigs comback from april 11th 1969 Time magazine

His first pitch came in tight. I jumped back and my helmet flew off. There was this tremendous ringing noise. I couldn't stand it. Just a loud shriek all over me. I was trying to find some place in my mouth where I could get air through, but I couldn't breathe. I kept saying to myself, "Oh, God, let me breathe." I didn't think about my future in baseball. I just wanted to stay alive.

Thus did Boston Red Sox Outfielder Tony Conigliaro describe that terrible night of Aug. 18, 1967, when a ball thrown by California Angels Pitcher Jack Hamilton smashed into his left temple. He was injured so severely that doctors predicted he would never play professional baseball again. But Conigliaro fought an extraordinary battle to prove the doctors wrong. Last week, as the Grapefruit Circuit closed, the 24-year-old Conigliaro was not only back in uniform but whacking the ball with the gusto and effectiveness of old.

Hopelessly Blurred. The League's pitchers have not forgotten Conigliaro. In 1965, his second season with the Red Sox, the 6-ft. 3-in. slugger from Swampscott, Mass., hit 32 home runs to lead the American League. The following year, he cracked 28 home runs. When he was cut down in Fenway Park, he was batting .287, had belted 20 home runs and had played a major role in the campaign that eventually landed Boston its first pennant in 21 years.

But there was no World Series for Tony that year. The pitched ball had fractured his cheekbone in three places and dislocated his jaw; it also left him completely blind for 48 hours after the accident. When he was released from the hospital eight days later, the imprint of the baseball's stitches was still visible on his brow, and the vision of his left eye was hopelessly blurred.

Neither Tony nor his family would quit. His mother said novenas to St. Jude (patron saint of hopeless cases). His father offered his eyes for transplants. The experts sadly shook their heads. Tony was through, they said. The force of the blow had punched a tiny hole in his retina, thus causing a loss of depth perception, a hitter's most valuable asset. Tony still insisted on going to spring training last year, but his performance only confirmed the medical diagnosis. In batting practice he missed pitches by a full foot. In exhibition games he struck out constantly. Finally, after fanning three times against the Washington Senators, he stormed into the clubhouse and, as one observer recalled, "nearly tore the place apart."

Said Red Sox Trainer Buddy LeRoux: "How can you blame a 23-year-old kid who finds out he can't see?"The handsome slugger then took a halfhearted swing at entertainment. At St. Mary's High School in Lynn, Mass., he had proved as accomplished onstage as on the diamond, so he traded on his name to land bookings on Cape Cod and around Boston. He sang once on the Johnny Carson Show and cut several records, but it was clear that he was not destined to be the next Sinatra. Conigliaro could not have cared less. "I would rather have played baseball for nothing," he recalls.

Swinging Ever Since. Tony made another comeback try in November—this time as a pitcher in the Florida Instructional League. "I got bombed in my second start," he admits. In that same game, however, he lined two clean hits. Inexplicably, Tony's vision had improved from 20/300 to 20/20, and his eyesight was pronounced normal by puzzled doctors at Boston's Retina Foundation. "When I heard the news," he says, "I ordered a supply of bats."

He has been swinging them ever since. After rejoining the Red Sox this spring, Boston Manager Dick Williams says, "Tony regained his touch and started stinging the ball. He's looked like the old Conig." Conigliaro himself says he can now "get his eye on the spin of the ball," recently proved it by whacking a single and a home run to lead the Red Sox to a 4-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. "Tony never doubted that he could do it," says Williams, "and he made believers out of all of us." Tony has made such a believer of Williams, in fact, that the Red Sox manager will start him in right field position this week in the season's opener against Baltimore

Darkhalf ~RSM~

Minister of the Red Sox Faith


-Darkhalf ~RSM ~™
 

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Comments

Touching tale my friend. This is an absolutely classic story.
08/06/2008 6:46 PM
GOBBLE G..
i never get tired of reading this ^5 my friend
08/06/2008 6:49 PM
Murph
gree with Murph totally, Tony C talent was so badly missed by many
08/06/2008 7:04 PM
Play Ball
Tragic tale about a guy with the heart of a Lion. Get goosebumps at the part where his father offers his eyes for transplants. I read the reprint from SI that Jester posted a while back and was equally glued to the page for this one. A story every Sox fan should know! Thanks Ron, a hat trick today!
08/06/2008 7:35 PM
~Joe Sox..
(online now)*
Actually, I realized this made 4! You drinking Red Bull or something? LMAO
08/06/2008 7:38 PM
~Joe Sox..
(online now)*
*Donny O voice* Ron's back...And he's back big!! (And I couldn't be happier about that)
08/06/2008 8:29 PM
∞MICHA..
(online now)*
Thank you Ron. I have missed you and you pen!!! Thank you from ALL Tony C fans!
08/06/2008 8:49 PM
Xcaliber..
You're batting 1.000 today there bro...GREAT ONE!!! I could be wrong on this...but I believe that Tony C. was the youngest player to reach 100 homers in his career.If this is true,that's another highlight in a career that was ended way to short...
08/06/2008 10:43 PM
MIKEYMOM..
YES SIR HE ACCOMPLISHED THE FEAT AT THE TENDER AGE OF 22
08/07/2008 12:14 AM
Darkhalf..
Well you know how I feel about my friend Tony..... I'm still determined to get the organization to retire his #. TYVM for the recap. I was there and saw the gruesome sight. he was a great guy and good friend. Thanks again,Ron... Lynda
08/07/2008 4:27 AM
~TONYCgal~
good info hun
08/07/2008 6:08 AM
Carmela ..
What could he have done.....? Its a shame we will never know!
08/07/2008 12:16 PM
CaliGrow..
Great Read.
08/07/2008 8:13 PM
Southsta..
love love love it!! love the info and the links and everything!! thank you sir!!
08/08/2008 11:51 AM
STK*x0
(online now)*
VERY COOL!! GREAT JOB, BRO!! ABSOLUTLY LOVED THIS ONE!!!!!!
08/08/2008 12:44 PM
~Cledus ..
(online now)*
RETIRE 25! CHANGE THE RULES!
08/09/2008 3:51 PM
JESTER~RSM
GREAT INFO...THANK YOU SIR!...I AGREE...RETIRE #25!!
08/10/2008 11:37 AM
Terry~RS..
AWESOME JOB AS ALWAYS BROTHAH!I AGREE AS WELL......#25 SHOULD BE UP ON THE GREEN! RLF!
08/11/2008 12:35 AM
IRISH WH..
One of the saddest days of my life was when I found out Tony had died.I was on a carrier in Virginia and listening to WRKO and they announced it,I remember having to hold back tears.
08/11/2008 6:12 PM
RIPBabe

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