Clete Boyer, a glove man extraordinaire who was an integral member of the 1960-64 pennant-winning Yankee teams, died yesterday in an Atlanta-area hospital from complications of a brain hemorrhage, his ...
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. ...
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 in an Atlanta hospital from ...
Clete Boyer, who was born in Jasper County and grew up to become the third baseman for the champion New York Yankees teams of the 1960s, died Monday. He was 70. Boyer was born Feb. 9, 1937, in the ...
CHICAGO – Moose Skowron, saddened by the news of the death of Clete Boyer, took the opportunity to remember Boyer as a friend and a teammate before last night’s Yankees game. “He was a hell of a third ...
If Webb City is the “City of Flags,” Neosho the “Flower Box City” and Joplin the “City that Jack (zinc) Built,” then Alba would have to be the “City of Diamonds.” Baseball diamonds. And the Boyer ...
Clete Boyer grew up with six brothers and five sisters in a baseball-crazy family that would produce seven professional players, himself included. But his idol was always his big-brother Ken, who was ...
NEW YORK (UPI) --You probably saw the photo. Everybody in the country did it seems. Here was Clete Boyer at home plate minding his own business with a bat in his hands and a look on his kisser that ...
As New York Yankees third-base coach, Clete Boyer made a living in recent years by transmitting someone else’s instructions. But by being named manager of the Fort Lauderdale Yankees, Boyer will have ...
His pitching career was cut short, but at one time he and his brothers Ken and Clete were all on the major league stage together. He ended up outliving them. By Richard Goldstein Cloyd Boyer pitched ...
NEW YORK -- 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 ...
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