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[Deathwatch] Pat Dobson, baseball player, 64



More thanks to a long time reader...

Former pitcher Pat Dobson dies at 64

By JANIE McCAULEY
Fri Nov 24

Pat Dobson was part of an illustrious pitching staff in Baltimore and a
savvy scouting department with the San Francisco Giants, touching
everyone from Earl Weaver to Brian Sabean along the way. Dobson, one of
four starters to win 20 games for the Orioles in 1971, died suddenly
Wednesday night in the San Diego area, the San Francisco Giants said
Thursday. He was 64.

Throwing big curveballs and telling hearty jokes, Dobson made many
friends in baseball. This year, his ninth with the Giants, he was a
special assistant to Sabean, the team's general manager.

The club didn't immediately release details about the cause of death.
But USA Today reported on its Web site that Dobson's wife, Kathe, said
he died one day after being diagnosed with leukemia.

"He made his life baseball," Weaver said, "and enjoyed every minute of
it."

Dobson went 20-8 with a 2.90 ERA for the AL champion Orioles in 1971,
rounding out a famous rotation that also included Hall of Famer Jim
Palmer (20-9), Dave McNally (21-5) and Mike Cuellar (20-9). The 1920
Chicago White Sox are the only other team in major league history to
have four 20-game winners.

"He's one of four that everybody will remember," said Weaver, the
former Baltimore manager. "He had a great year for us."

The next season, Dobson made the AL All-Star team. Though he finished
that year 16-18, he posted a solid 2.65 ERA.

"He had a great curveball," said Hall of Famer Frank Robinson, Dobson's
teammate with the Orioles. "He was a real gamer, a real competitor. He
didn't give in to anybody."

Dobson went 122-129 with a 3.54 ERA in 11 major league seasons and won
a World Series ring with the 1968 Detroit Tigers. He was 19-15 with a
3.07 ERA for the 1974 New York Yankees. The right-hander also pitched
for San Diego, Atlanta and Cleveland.

Dobson started Game 4 of the 1971 World Series against Pittsburgh and
got a no-decision, allowing three runs and 10 hits in 5 1-3 innings.
The Pirates beat Baltimore in seven games.

"He was a free spirit and I enjoyed having him," Weaver said. "He was a
pleasure to have on the team. He caused a lot of laughs, and he kept
his teammates laughing."

Weaver, inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1996, recalled that Dobson
had a terrific curveball even when he was struggling with Detroit
mostly as a reliever ? but he rarely threw it for a strike.

So when the Orioles acquired him, Weaver spoke with pitching coach
George Bamberger about getting Dobson to cut down on the curve so he
could control it better.

"When he started throwing that curveball for a strike, it was all
over," Weaver said. "He could throw the curveball at any time in the
count."

After his playing career ended, Dobson spent eight seasons as a big
league pitching coach for Milwaukee (1982-84), San Diego (1988-90),
Kansas City (1991) and Baltimore (1996). He tutored a pair of Cy Young
Award winners: Pete Vuckovich of the Brewers in 1982 and Mark Davis of
the Padres in 1989.

Dobson joined the Giants in 1997, serving as an advance scout and a
trusted adviser to Sabean.

"Pat's untimely death is a complete shock to the whole organization and
me and it's hard for us to express our feelings right now," Sabean
said. "We've all become so close through the years and we're going to
miss him dearly. ... I can't put into words the impact Pat had on the
Giants over the years."

Dobson was the Colorado Rockies' first advance scout from 1993-95. He
also spent five years as a minor league pitching instructor and managed
the Fort Myers Sun Sox in the Senior League from 1989-90.

"I got to know Dobber well when he returned to our organization as
pitching coach in 1996 and will never forget the fun times we had,
talking baseball and telling stories, before and after games," Orioles
executive vice president for baseball operations Mike Flanagan said.
"He will be missed."

Dobson's bio in San Francisco's media guide said he was living in El
Cajon near San Diego and had six children: Pat III, Nancy, Stacy,
Chris, Shannon and Stephanie.

AP Baseball Writer Mike Fitzpatrick in New York and AP Sports Writer
Howard Fendrich in Washington contributed to this report.

Many thanks to Deathwatch Central for posting this obituary