The News (New Glasgow)

Former major leaguer Jim Piersall passes away

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Former major leaguer Jim Piersall, who bared his soul about his struggles with mental illness in his book “Fear Strikes Out,” has died. He was 87.

Piersall died Saturday at a care facility in Wheaton, Ill., after a months-long illness, according to the Boston Red Sox, for whom Piersall played for seven of his 17 seasons in the majors.

Piersall’s on-field antics when he first broke into the majors with the Red Sox full-time in 1952 cracked up fans and provided fodder for newspaper columnists. In one game against the St. Louis Browns, he made pig noises and mocked the odd throwing motion of aging Hall of Fame pitcher Satchel Paige.

But Piersall also had furious arguments with umpires, broke down sobbing one day when told he wouldn’t play and got into a fistfight with the New York Yankees’ Billy Martin at Fenway Park, followed minutes later by a scuffle with a teammate.

“Almost everybody except the umpires and the Red Sox thought I was a riot,” Piersall said in the 1955 autobiogra­phy, later made into a movie starring Anthony Perkins and Karl Malden. “My wife knew I was sick, yet she was helpless to stop my mad rush towards a mental collapse. The Red Sox couldn’t figure out how to handle me. I was a problem child.”

He played 56 games in the majors before being admitted to a mental hospital with what was later diagnosed as bipolar disorder. He wrote in his book that he had almost no memory of the season or his time in the hospital.

He returned to the majors in 1953 “sound and healthy” thanks to “shock treatments, faith, a wonderful wife, a fine doctor and loyal friends.”

He went public to shatter society’s stereotype­s of the mentally ill.

“I want the world to know that people like me who have returned from the half-world of mental oblivion are not forever contaminat­ed,” he wrote.

Piersall distanced himself from the 1957 movie, claiming it was largely fictional and portrayed his father too negatively.

Although he never descended to the depths of mental illness of that first season, he embraced the notoriety it brought him and remained a loose cannon known for his crowd-pleasing stunts and mercurial temper.

“Probably the best thing that ever happened to me was going nuts,” he wrote in his second book, “The Truth Hurts.”

He was ejected from a game in July 1960 while playing for the Cleveland Indians for running around and waving his arms in centre field to distract Ted Williams at the plate.

In September 1962, while with the Washington Senators, Piersall was arrested after going into the stands to confront a heckling fan.

In June 1963, while with the New York Mets, Piersall backpedall­ed around the bases after hitting his 100th career home run.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Jim Piersall, who bared his soul about his struggles with mental illness, has passed away.
AP PHOTO Jim Piersall, who bared his soul about his struggles with mental illness, has passed away.

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