Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson has been put into hospice care at his home in Southern California because of complications from dementia. His family released a statement (via MLB.com:) "The ...
As part of former Tigers radio broadcaster Paul Carey's pregame duties, he was to co-host a radio show and interview then-Tigers manager Sparky Anderson. For more than 12 years, Carey and Anderson lit ...
Sparky Anderson, the first major league manager to win a World Series in both the American and National Leagues died today of complications from dementia, according to a statement released Thursday ...
Sad but, in light of what we learned yesterday, not unexpected news: Sparky Anderson has died. Anderson won three world titles, five pennants and seven division titles. He won 2194 games with the Reds ...
The word has just come that legendary MLB manager Sparky Anderson is reportedly very ill, and has been placed in hospice care at his home in Thousand Oaks, CA. Coming less than two days after the end ...
CINCINNATI, OH (FOX19) - Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson, who directed Cincinnati's Big Red Machine to back-to-back World Series championships, died Thursday. He was 76. Anderson was placed into ...
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Sparky Anderson, the white-haired Hall of Fame manager who directed Cincinnati's Big Red Machine to back-to-back World Series championships and won another one in Detroit, died ...
Sparky Anderson was best digested with a side order of salt, at least to those who had him figured out. To try him otherwise was usually a cause for consternation. I tried Sparky, the old Tigers ...
Cincinnati Reds manager Sparky Anderson looks on during baseball spring training in 1974. Anderson, the Hall of Fame manager, died Thursday, Nov. 4, 2010 in Thousand Oaks, Calif., at 76. George Lee ...
Sparky Anderson (center) speaks with station manager Arthur Carlson (Gordon Jump, right) while program director Andy Travis looks on. This week 41 years ago: Beloved Cincinnati Reds manager Sparky ...
Former Reds play-by-play broadcaster Al Michaels talked about his time in Cincinnati in the early 1970s - and how much he was influenced by National Baseball Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson, ...
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. -- Reds fans were taken aback when Sparky Anderson showed up in Cincinnati for his first day as a big league manager, an unknown taking over baseball's first professional team.
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