Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers would have been almost six years old when the Milwaukee Braves won the 1957 World Series, led in part by the eventual Cy Young Award winner that season, Warren Spahn. On the ...
BROKEN ARROW, Okla. — Warren Spahn, the Hall of Fame pitcher who won more games than any other left-hander in history, died Monday. He was 82. The Hall of Famer baffled batters with his high leg kick ...
Voters in Massachusetts approve Sunday baseball in Boston, provided that Braves Field is more than 1,000 feet from a church.
Whether Warren Spahn was on the mound or in World War II trenches, his opponents agreed that no one was tougher. Spahn’s 363 career wins are the most of any left-hander, and he dominated during the ...
FOX Sports presents "The Boys in the Hall," a series featuring interviews with legendary members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Check your local listings on April 29 for showings of "The Boys ...
Warren Spahn fought in the Battle of the Bulge. He earned a battlefield commission. He led his engineering unit to repair the last remaining bridge on the Rhine River – while the Germans were still ...
Warren Spahn, a Hall of Famer and the pitcher who allowed Willie Mays' first hit -- a home run -- died Monday at his home in Broken Arrow, Okla. He was 82 and had been in declining health in recent ...
They sat inside a concrete cottage on Anna Maria Island and listened to Muhammad Ali fight Sonny Liston on the radio. Seated at the living room table, just prior to the start of spring training, were ...
Hall of Fame pitcher Warren Spahn, who won 363 games, more than any other left-hander in major league baseball history, died Monday at his home in Broken Arrow, Okla. He was 82. The cause of death was ...
Warren Spahn tended to be disdainful of modern-day pitchers, who work in five-man rotations with pitch counts and consider 200 innings a year an arduous workload. Complete games? Almost unheard of.
Warren Spahn won more games than any pitcher since the Second World War and more games than any left-handed pitcher in baseball history. Yet the award that bears his name may be the most obscure in ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results