Everything about Thurman Munson totally explained
Thurman Lee Munson (
June 7 1947 –
August 2 1979) was an
American catcher in
Major League Baseball who played with the
New York Yankees from
1969 to
1979. Munson was killed at age 32 while trying to land his personal airplane.
Life and career
Born in
Akron, Ohio to Darrell Vernon Munson and Ruth Myrna Smylie, Thurman grew up in nearby
Canton. He graduated from Lehman High School in Canton, where he earned scholarship offers from various colleges due to his standout performances in football, basketball, as well as baseball; Munson opted to attend nearby
Kent State University on scholarship, where he was a teammate of pitcher and broadcaster
Steve Stone. At Kent, Munson joined the
Delta Upsilon fraternity. In September 1968 he married Diane Dominick at St. Paul's Parish, Canton.
In the summer of 1967, Munson joined the prestigious Cape Cod Baseball League leading his Chatham A's to their first ever league title. In the process Munson hit an amazing .420. To recognize this achievement and his subsequent MLB career, the Thurman Munson Batting award is given each season to the CCBL's best hitter.
Munson was selected by the Yankees with the fourth pick in the first round of the 1968 amateur draft. In the minor leagues, he caught for the
Binghamton Triplets in their final (1968) season. He was named the
American League Rookie of the Year in
1970 after
batting .302 with seven
home runs and 57
RBI, and making 80 assists. In
1976, he was voted the
American League MVP after batting .302 with 17 home runs and 105 RBI, and stealing 14 bases. He is the only Yankee ever to win both the Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player awards.
An outstanding fielder, Munson made only one error while behind the plate in 1971 (he was knocked unconscious by a runner, dislodging the ball). He went on to win three straight
Gold Glove Awards starting in 1973. A seven-time
All-Star, Munson hit 113 home runs, batted in 701 runners, and had a career batting average of .292 over his 10-year career. He was also the first
captain named by the Yankees since
Lou Gehrig. Munson helped lead his team to three consecutive
World Series (1976–78), where he batted a remarkable .373 overall (.339 in the
American League Championship Series). From 1975-77, Munson hit .300 or better with 100 or more RBI each year, becoming the first catcher to accomplish the feat in three consecutive years since Yankee Hall of Famer
Bill Dickey did it four straight seasons from 1936-39. Since Munson's run,
Mike Piazza has also accomplished it (1996-98).
In the
1976 World Series, Munson batted .529 and collected six consecutive hits to tie a World Series record set by
Goose Goslin of the
Washington Senators in
1925, (also in a losing effort). After this hitting performance, which included a 4-for-4 night in the final game at Yankee Stadium, Reds manager
Sparky Anderson was asked by a reporter to compare Munson with his catcher, future
Hall of Famer Johnny Bench. Anderson's comment at the post-World Series press conference — "Don't ever embarrass nobody by comparing him to Johnny Bench" — may have been a tribute to his great player, but it angered Munson.
Munson batted .320 with a home run in the
1977 World Series, in which the Yankees defeated the
Los Angeles Dodgers four games to two. In Game 3 of the 1978
American League Championship Series, with the Yankees tied a game apiece with the
Kansas City Royals and trailing 5-4 in the bottom of the eighth inning, he hit the longest home run of his career, a 475-foot (145-meter) shot off Doug Bird over
Yankee Stadium's Monument Park in left-center field, to give the Yankees a 6-5 win. They won the pennant the next day, and in the World Series against the Dodgers, Munson caught a pop-up by
Ron Cey for the final out.
Death and legacy
Munson was frequently homesick, and took flying lessons so that he could fly home to his family in Canton on off-days. On
August 2,
1979, he was practicing takeoffs and landings in his new
Cessna Citation I/SP jet at the
Akron-Canton Regional Airport. On the third
touch-and-go, Munson failed to lower the
flaps for landing and allowed the aircraft to sink too low before increasing engine power, causing the jet to clip a tree and fall short of the runway. The plane then hit a tree stump and burst into flames, killing Munson (who was trapped inside) and injuring two other companions. It is believed that the inability to get out of the plane, and the ensuing
asphyxiation, is what killed Munson, rather than injuries sustained on impact or burns (the two passengers survived). He was 32 years old.
Munson's sudden death was major news across the nation and especially within the baseball community. Munson was survived by his wife, Diana, and their three children. The day after his death, before the start of the Yankees' four-game set with the
Baltimore Orioles in the Bronx, the Yankees paid tribute to their deceased captain in a pre-game ceremony during which the starters stood at their defensive positions, save for the catcher's box, which remained empty. At the conclusion of
Robert Merrill's musical selection, the fans (announced attendance 51,151) burst into a 10-minute standing ovation.
Four days later, on
August 6, the entire Yankee team attended his funeral in Canton, Ohio.
Lou Piniella and
Bobby Murcer, who were Munson's best friends as well as teammates, gave eulogies. That night (in front of a national viewing audience on
ABC's
Monday Night Baseball) the Yankees beat the Orioles 5-4 in New York, with Murcer driving in all five runs with a three-run home run in the seventh inning and a two-run single in the bottom of the ninth.
Immediately following Munson's death, Yankee owner
George Steinbrenner announced that his uniform number 15 was being
retired. On
September 20,
1980, a plaque was dedicated in Munson's memory and placed in
Monument Park. The plaque bears excerpts from an inscription composed by Steinbrenner and flashed on the Stadium scoreboard the day after his death:
To this day, despite a packed clubhouse, an empty locker next to Derek Jeter's, with Munson's number 15 on it, remains as a tribute to the Yankees' lost catcher. The original locker that Munson used, along with a bronzed set of his catching equipment, was donated to the
Baseball Hall of Fame (Munson himself isn't in the Hall, generally considered by most sportswriters to be a "borderline" candidate at best due to the brevity of his career). His number 15 is also displayed on the center field wall at
Thurman Munson Stadium, a minor-league ballpark in Canton. Munson is buried at Canton's
Sunset Hills Burial Park.
Thurman is one of three Yankees who died in aviation accidents, including pitchers
Jim Hardin in 1991 and
Cory Lidle in 2006.
Further Information
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