Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Meet the Met

- By Ken Borsuk

GREENWICH — When former Greenwich resident Tom Seaver died in September, the baseball world lost a pitching legend, considered to be the best player to ever put on a New York Mets uniform.

Now, noted baseball writer Bill Madden has completed “Tom Seaver: A Terrific Life,” a biography of the Hall of Famer, based on interviews and a relationsh­ip that developed over decades as Seaver establishe­d himself as one of baseball’s best- ever pitchers and then broadcaste­r for the Yankees and Mets.

“I wanted this to be the definitive book on Tom Seaver,” said Madden, a member of the Hall of Fame’s writers wing and an institutio­n on the sports pages of the New York Daily News. “When people talk about Tom Seaver, I want them to say, ‘ You gotta read Madden’s book because it’s all in there.’ That’s the approach I took for this book. I wanted it to be definitive. I didn’t want to leave anything out. I hope I didn’t.”

The book covers Seaver’s time with the Mets, Cincinnati Reds, Chicago White Sox and his end- of- career stint with the Boston Red Sox. It scales the triumphs of 1969 and 1973 with the Mets and delves into his trade to the Reds in 1977 — an event so infamous it is known to Mets fans as the “Midnight Massacre.”

In exploring that trade, Madden reveals Seaver’s acrimoniou­s relationsh­ip with Mets Chairman of the Board M. Donald Grant. A fellow Greenwich resident, Grant once marveled how Seaver, whose father was a champion amateur golfer, ever got into the Greenwich Country Club. When Seaver became involved in the player’s labor union, Grant came up to him one day and questioned whether he was a communist.

The two often clashed over Seaver’s contract, a dispute that involved Daily News columnist Dick Young.

Grant and Young are often painted as the villains in the subsequent trade of Seaver to Cincinnati, which put Madden in an interestin­g position while writing the book, as Young was not only his boss, but his mentor, he said. That didn’t stop Madden from digging into the machinatio­ns behind the trade, however.

“You are going to find out in this book how Seaver’s relationsh­ip with the Mets went bad, and how he never reconciled with the Mets,” Madden said. “A lot of people think he did but he didn’t. To his dying day he never reconciled with the Mets and there’s a reason for that.”

Madden described Seaver as “probably the most intelligen­t player that I’ve ever covered” as he recalled seeing him doing the New York Times crossword at his locker before a game when other players were flipping through aPlayboy.

“What I wanted to do for this book was show the reader who the real Tom Seaver was, beyond this great pitcher and great athlete and this icon of New York,” Madden said. “I think it’s in there. You’re going to learn a lot about Seaver as a person as opposed to Seaver as the great baseball player.”

Madden and Seaver’s bond was sealed during one of the more embarrassi­ng episodes in Mets history. After reacquirin­g Seaver from the Reds prior to the 1983 season, thenGenera­l Manager Frank Cashen left the pitcher off a protected list of players who couldn’t be chosen as compensati­on by teams that had lost players to free agency.

Madden discovered that, not only had Seaver been left unprotecte­d, but the Chicago White Sox were going to select him, bringing a sudden and unexpected end to a popular homecoming. Madden had unearthed a major exclusive, one he said was probably the biggest story he ever broke for the Daily News.

But he chose to hold onto it until he could talk to Seaver, who hadn’t been told anything by the Mets or the commission­er’s office.

“I got the story confirmed by the Mets but before I could write it, I figured I owed it to Seaver to call him rather than blindside him with a story in the paper the next day,” Madden said. “I called him and told him what was going on and he was stunned.

“He thanked me for calling him, and the irony of all of this was if this had happened today this could have never happened,” Madden said. “We sat on that story all day and all night and didn’t put it in until the last edition of the paper, which went off the presses at 1: 30 in the morning. In the age of Twitter and Facebook and all that other stuff you can’t sit on a story for five minutes much less eight hours.”

That began a close relationsh­ip that lasted until Seaver’s death this year. Seaver was suffering from dementia and Lyme disease, and had been diagnosed with coronaviru­s before his death.

Madden’s interviews with Seaver that make up the heart of the book were done for a documentar­y that ended up being put together by director Ed Burns. But a lot of the anecdotes about his career and life ended up on the cutting room floor, leaving plenty for the book, Madden said.

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