Holy Cow! Rizzuto Dies at 89

Rizutto at Old Timers Day in 2001.Photo: AFP/Getty Images
Rizzuto certainly belongs in the Hall, partly for his presence as a player but even more for his years as a broadcaster. The fact is that he was one of two instantly recognizable on-the-air baseball voices for decades (the other being the Dodgers' Vin Scully). No, Rizzuto was not an intellectual broadcaster, given as he was to malapropisms and weird on-the-air riffs about Italian restaurants he liked. He was a color man rather than a pure analyst, and for every smooth Scully or Jon Miller, there's room for a goofball who can loosen up the broadcast. A more entertaining press-booth gadfly you will never find — especially on the Yankees, always the most businesslike and least soulful of baseball teams — and that did the game a huge service. You're supposed to enjoy watching a baseball game on TV, and it was simply impossible not to do that when Rizzuto was going on about cannoli. —Christopher Bonanos
Phil Rizzuto, Yankees Shortstop, Dies at 89 [NYT]
Accomplished Poet Phil Rizzuto Dies at 89 [Vulture]

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