Hall of Fame baseball pitcher Sandy Koufax has severed ties with the Los Angeles Dodgers because of a gossip-column item in a newspaper owned by the team's parent company. Born on December 30, , in Brooklyn, New York, Sandy Koufax signed by the hometown Brooklyn Dodgers, the hard-throwing left-hander was the most dominant pitcher in baseball until elbow arthritis forced an early retirement at age Koufax became the youngest player inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in , and has since served as a pitching instructor for his former team. The future baseball great took on his more familiar surname at age 9 when his mother, Evelyn, remarried attorney Irving Koufax.
Koufax ended his year association with the Bums after a blind gossip item in the New York Post -- owned, like the Dodgers, by News Corp. -- said that the famously private Koufax, 67, is. Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen. Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers. Welcome to SportsJournalists.
In , the New York Post published a false story about Koufax in connection to a biography on him by sportswriter Jane Leavy, titled Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy, insinuating that he only agreed to cooperate because Leavy threatened to out him as gay if he did not. []. Great post my friend At some point, the average sports viewing public needs to realize that the athletes they are watching, are simply a product of their own society. In that, there are gay athletes.
Maybe Koufax is secretly gay — plenty of gay men have been married, many twice — or bisexual, or who knows what. But at its heart, this isn’t a gay story, or even a sex story — it is a baseball story. The Los Angeles Times reported Friday that Koufax told the Dodgers he would no longer attend spring training at Dodgertown in Florida, visit Dodger Stadium or participate in any activities while they are owned by News Corp. The Times said Koufax, through friend Derrick Hall, a Dodgers senior vice president, declined comment Thursday night, but that officials familiar with the situation said the former pitcher broke off ties after 48 years in response to a two-sentence item than ran in the New York tabloid on Dec. The Post said a "Hall of Fame baseball hero'' had "cooperated with a best-selling biography only because the author promised to keep it secret that he is gay.
Koufax ended his year association with the Bums after a blind gossip item in the New York Post -- owned, like the Dodgers, by News Corp. -- said that the famously private Koufax, 67, is. A long litany of statistics attests to his brilliance during this period, but perhaps the most salient points are these. Koufax became the first man to win three Cy Young Awards, and was the only pitcher to do so when the prize was given to just one major leaguer. He also won the Triple Crown of pitching in each of those seasons , , and
Hall of Fame baseball pitcher Sandy Koufax has severed ties with the Los Angeles Dodgers because of a gossip-column item in a newspaper owned by the team's parent company. .
In , the New York Post published a false story about Koufax in connection to a biography on him by sportswriter Jane Leavy, titled Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy, insinuating that he only agreed to cooperate because Leavy threatened to out him as gay if he did not. []. .
Maybe Koufax is secretly gay — plenty of gay men have been married, many twice — or bisexual, or who knows what. But at its heart, this isn’t a gay story, or even a sex story — it is a baseball story. .