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 ...
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 ...
BALTIMORE -- 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 ump's ...
In the spring of 1952, a baby-faced 21-year-old prospect named Earl Weaver arrived at training camp for the St. Louis Cardinals in St. Petersburg, Fla. A line-drive hitter who brought crowds to their ...
On the day that the Orioles are holding their annual FanFest, news has spread through the Baltimore Convention Center that Hall of Fame manager Earl Weaver passed away last night. He was 82. Weaver ...
One of the great joys of watching baseball has nothing to do with watching baseball. In fact, it’s an intentional disruption designed to stop the game in its tracks. I’m speaking, of course, of the ...
BALTIMORE (AP) — Loved in Baltimore long after he ended his Hall of Fame career, Earl Weaver remained an Oriole to the end. The notoriously peppery Hall of Fame manager died at age 82 on a Caribbean ...
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 ump’s chest and then ...
BALTIMORE — Earl Weaver, the fiery Hall of Fame manager who won 1,480 games with the Baltimore Orioles, has died. He was 82. The Duke of Earl, as he was affectionately known in Baltimore, took the ...
Earl Weaver's jersey hangs above the main stage at the Baltimore Convention Center, where Orioles FanFest is taking place today. (Photo by WBAL's Casey Willet) Before his statue was unveiled in June, ...
(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 ump’s chest and ...