Roger Craig, a well-traveled major league baseball player and coach who became a pitching guru in the 1980s teaching the merits of the split-fingered fastball, has died. The San Francisco Giants ...
Major League Baseball lifer Roger Craig, who threw the first pitch in New York Mets history and went on to a lengthy managerial career in the big leagues, has died. The Durham, N.C., native was 93.
After winning three World Series as a player, Craig became a coach and spread the gospel of the split-fingered fastball, what one player of the time called “the pitch of the ’80s.” By Richard ...
At a memorial service for Roger Craig, a writer recalls time spent with a player, coach and manager who connected generations of baseball history. By Scott Miller Reporting from Ramona, Calif. On the ...
NEW YORK (AP) — Roger Craig, who pitched for three championship teams during his major league career and then managed the San Francisco Giants to the 1989 World Series that was interrupted by a ...
To most in baseball, Roger Craig is remembered as a manager of the San Francisco Giants, the pitching coach of the 1984 World Series champion Detroit Tigers and a 20-game loser as an original member ...
Former SF Giants manager Roger Craig has passed away at the age of 93, per a press release from the team. Craig was the Giants manager from 1985-1992, leading the team to a 586-566 record, a pair of ...
Roger Craig, who was a pitcher for the first Los Angeles Dodgers World Series championship team and manager of the San Diego Padres, has died. He was 93. He died Sunday in San Diego following a short ...
Roger Craig had a long, successful career in baseball, winning three World Series as a player and another as a coach, plus a National League pennant as a manager. But for New York-area fans, he was, ...
Longtime pitcher and former San Francisco Giants manager Roger Craig died Sunday, the Giants announced. He was 93. We are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of former #SFGiants Manager Roger ...
If ever there was a roller-coaster career in baseball, it belonged to Roger Craig. He went from a world championship with the 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers to an 18-game losing streak as a pitcher for the ...