New York Post

Bunning, pitcher and politician, dead at 85

- By BRUCE SCHREINER — AP

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Former U.S. Sen. Jim Bunning, a Hall of Fame pitcher who parlayed his sports fame into a political career as an uncompromi­sing advocate for conservati­ve causes, has died. He was 85.

Bunning’s family said the ex-senator and baseball great died late Friday of complicati­ons from a stroke suffered last October. Bunning was the patriarch of a large family that included his wife, Mary, and their nine children, 35 grandchild­ren and 21 great-grandchild­ren.

“The family is deeply grateful for the love and prayers of Jim’s friends and supporters,” his family said in a statement. “While he was a public servant with a Hall of Fame career, his legacy to us is that of a beloved husband, caring father and supportive grandfathe­r.”

Bunning won 224 games in a workman-like 17-year major league career, mostly with the Tigers and the Phillies. The big right-hander, known for his intimidati­ng mound presence, pitched the first perfect game in modern National League history and became the first pitcher after 1900 to throw no-hitters in both the American and National Leagues.

Bunning’s success in baseball carried over into politics, as the Kentucky Republican served stints on a city council and in the state Senate before a nearly quarter-century career in Congress.

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, his longtime colleague from Kentucky, remembered Bunning for his “long and storied life.”

“From his days in the major leagues to his years as my colleague in the Senate — and the many points in between, from the City Council to the House of Representa­tives — Jim rarely shied away from a new adventure,” McConnell said in a statement.

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 ??  ?? JIM BUNNING Hall of Famer served in House and Senate.
JIM BUNNING Hall of Famer served in House and Senate.

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