Medicine Hat News

Halladay remembered

- FRED GOODALL

CLEARWATER, Fla. Toronto Blue Jays pitching great Roy Halladay was remembered Tuesday as an amazing husband, father, friend and teammate who was one of the best pitchers of his generation but an even better man.

A 91-minute “Celebratio­n of Life for Roy Halladay” attracted more than 1,000 people to Spectrum Field, the spring training home of the Philadelph­ia Phillies, one of two franchises the two-time Cy Young Award winner played for during a stellar 16-year career.

“The man made the ballplayer,” Phillies owner John Middleton said, “not the other way around,”

Halladay died Nov. 7 at age 40 when the private plane he was piloting crashed into the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Florida.

The eight-time All-Star who pitched a perfect game and a playoff no-hitter, Halladay played for the Blue Jays from 1998-2009 and for the Phillies from 2009-13, going 203-105 with a 3.38 ERA.

The public memorial began with a video tribute and ended with Halladay’s wife, Brandy, and sons, Braden and Ryan, standing on the mound and releasing butterflie­s from a container in a final “goodbye.”

“All eyes are on me,” the pitcher’s wife, the last of nine speakers, said from a rostrum perched behind the mound, flanked by pictures of Halladay with the Phillies and Blue Jays, along with floral arrangemen­ts bearing the 34 and 32 jersey numbers he wore.

“I’m really fortunate that I’ve gotten used to that feeling. I’ve literally been standing next to a man for 21 years that people could not take their eyes off of,” she said. “He was awe-striking. He was beautiful inside and out.”

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