A return to baseball finds Orioles fans blessed with a team looking for a third straight postseason appearance, and a new biography of Baltimore’s beloved former manager, Earl Weaver. Aptly titled ...
The ones who like stories like Earl Weaver, the cartoon character—the one whose mic’d up tête-à-tête with umpire Bill Haller ended with the famous “you’re a liar, Earl / no, you are” back and forth; ...
Orioles executive vice president Dan Duquette shared his thoughts on Hall of Fame manager Earl Weaver, who passed away last night at 82. "I have to be grateful that Earl was with us for the legends ...
Earl Weaver argues with an umpire, a common sight in the 1970s at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore. “The Last Manager,” John Miller’s new biography of baseball Hall of Famer Earl Weaver, has two key ...
When Earl Weaver died in January 2013, John W. Miller was covering the steel industry for the Wall Street Journal. But someone on the sports desk knew Miller was a baseball nut — a former college ...
The tirades will live forever. They may have been delivered long ago in an analog age, but they will be preserved for all eternity in digital form. Plenty of fans found their way to those epic videos ...
The nation of baseball lost two members of its royalty last weekend — the Earl of Baltimore and Stan the Man. Earl Weaver and Stan Musial both passed away Saturday. They were beloved not just by fans ...
Earl Weaver spiraled into madness in the middle of an American League pennant race. The year was 1975, long before the age of the wild card. With the Baltimore Orioles needing to win the division, ...
BALTIMORE (AP) - Earl Weaver always was up for an argument, especially with an umpire. At the slightest provocation, the Earl of Baltimore would spin his hat back, point his finger squarely at an ...
When the Black Sox Scandal erupted after eight members of the Chicago White Sox were banned for throwing the 1919 World ...
BALTIMORE (WBFF) — When Earl Weaver died in January 2013, John W. Miller was covering the steel industry for the Wall Street Journal. But someone on the sports desk knew Miller was a baseball nut — a ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results