Porterville Recorder

Hall of Fame ump Harvey dies at 87

Later in life he lived in the Portervill­e area with his wife

- STAFF AND WIRE REPORT

Doug Harvey, Hall of Fame umpire and Portervill­e area resident whose silver-haired presence behind the plate commanded the respect of major league players for three decades, died Saturday in Visalia at 87.

Harvey was one of only 10 umpires in the Baseball Hall of Fame, and was held in such regard by major league players and managers they called him “God.”

The Hall said Sunday that Harvey had been in hospice care. He died of natural causes.

Harvey umpired in the National League from 1962 through 1992, and was a crew chief for 18 seasons. He worked five World Series, including the plate for Kirk Gibson’s extraordin­ary home run in the 1988 opener, and six All-star Games. His 4,673 games in the regular season rank fifth.

Harvey was so sure of his calls on the diamond, he ended every game the same way. Following the last out, the umpire took his wad of chewing tobacco and flung it on home plate.

“I never did have any doubt in my mind,” he once said. “The only thing in my mind was, ‘Bring it on, suckers!”’

Monte Moore, long time play-by-play announcer for the Oakland A’s and fellow Portervill­e resident, came to know Harvey well over the years.

“He was a good friend over all the years, and he was a tough old buzzard,” said Moore. “I did some playoff and World Series games where he was the umpire and he had the utmost respect of the players. They didn’t like him as a personalit­y, but they respected him as an umpire who was so wellversed in the rules of the game that they couldn’t contest that ever.”

Moore recalls the circumstan­ces that led to Harvey becoming a resident of the area. Harvey was invited to participat­e in the Golf-a-rama celebrity baseball fundraiser at River Island Country Club that Moore helped organize for 25 years. Harvey was one of the first umpires from the major leagues who came to Portervill­e to play in the event.

“We felt honored that he would come all the way up here from San Diego to attend,” said Moore. “He liked it so much he came every year and enjoyed staying here so much that he ended up buying property and a home up in the River Island area.”

Harvey remained involved with the event for many years after, and helped raise $850,000 for local schools.

Harvey was diagnosed with oral cancer in 1997 and went through radiation treatments, a seizure and a stroke while recovering. Harvey and wife Joy, married since 1960, took their message about the dangers of smokeless tobacco to players, coaches and managers at all levels.

Moore recalls Harvey’s passionate and vivid efforts to deliver that message.

“He was a dedicated soul when it came to teaching young athletes and baseball players in particular to not use smokeless tobacco,” said Moore. “He and I went to a lot of gatherings of young athletes around the area and the state, and he had the most graphic descriptio­ns of what could happen to your throat, and gave illustrati­ons of former major league players who lost their lives after a long hard battles with [oral cancer]. He was so dedicated because he was a user himself for a long time.”

Commission­er Rob Manfred praised Harvey’s “strong presence and communicat­ion skills.” He said in a statement: “A generation of umpires learned as a result of Doug’s example, his eagerness to teach the game and his excellent timing behind the plate.”

In particular, Harvey would take an extra split-second to call a play, to be sure he got it right. Remember, that was long before replay could sort things out.

A day after being elected to the Hall in 2010, Harvey was asked if he ever got it wrong.

“Oh, sure,” he said, laughing. “But I remember one year I went until Aug. 28 till I kicked a play at second base.”

Over his 31 seasons, Harvey ejected 58 people. The first person he tossed was Joe Torre, as a player in 1962; his last ejection was Torre, too, as a manager in 1992.

“You always respected him because he came out to do his job and (did it) with a lot of class,” once recalled Torre, a fellow Hall of Famer. “He prepared himself every day. He was very consistent, and that’s the highest compliment you can pay anybody.”

During his final tour of duty around the NL, Harvey was treated to crowd reactions unusual for an umpire. Instead of the constant heckling and criticism from the stands, the ump got standing ovations and gifts as he made his last trip into various cities.

“Doug Harvey set the bar for future umpires. He was revered for his calm demeanor, ability to control the game, knowledge of the strike zone and comprehens­ion of the rules,” Hall President Jeff Idelson said. “He umpired with integrity, heart and common sense.”

Harvey grew up a three-sport star in El Centro, Calif., near the Mexican border. Before making the majors at 32, Harvey held some 53 jobs, from farming, to constructi­on, to milking cows.

He umpired his first game for $3 at 16, when the regular umpire did not show for a fast-pitch softball game. He enjoyed it and soon was umpiring Little League and Pony League games.

Harvey spent four years in the minors, where he met Joy while umpiring a Class C game in Bakersfiel­d. They had three sons together.

By the time he umpired his first big league game in 1962, Harvey’s hair had turned foul-line white, suiting him for the role of baseball arbiter. Knee problems forced him to retire three decades later.

Harvey twice was a World Series crew chief and twice called balls and strikes in the Allstar Game. He worked the NL Championsh­ip Series nine times, and was the plate umpire for the one-game 1980 playoff between Houston and the Dodgers to decide the NL West winner.

Later in his career, Harvey appeared in the “You Make the Call” segments on the televised Game of the Week.

“He had a thing when players would argue with him, he would say, ‘You have 10 seconds to say what you’re going to say, and you can call me any name you want to call me, but after that, one more word and you’re out of here,’” said Moore. “He understood guys being mad, and he understood there was a possibilit­y he made a mistake, but he wasn’t going to be cursed out about it.”

Harvey said the toughest player to umpire was Bob Gibson, who wanted to expand the strike zone six inches on each side. Throughout his career, Gibson would routinely argue with Harvey. Years later when Gibson was a pitching coach for the Braves, the two combatants would joke about their past.

That was a tenet of Harvey’s life both at home and on the field: Let bygones be bygones.

“I always tell my wife, if you’re looking for something to put on my gravestone,” Harvey once said, “put down: ‘He was an honest man and he never held a grudge.”’

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MIKE GROLL ?? In this 2010, file photo, Doug Harvey gestures after his Baseball Hall of Fame induction speech at the Clark Sports Center in Cooperstow­n, N.Y. Harvey, one of 10 umpires enshrined in the baseball Hall of Fame, died Saturday. He was 87.
AP PHOTO BY MIKE GROLL In this 2010, file photo, Doug Harvey gestures after his Baseball Hall of Fame induction speech at the Clark Sports Center in Cooperstow­n, N.Y. Harvey, one of 10 umpires enshrined in the baseball Hall of Fame, died Saturday. He was 87.
 ?? AP PHOTO BY BRIAN HORTON ?? In this 1980, file photo, plate umpire Doug Harvey gestures before play resumes in the fourth inning of a baseball game between the Astros and Phillies in Houston. Harvey, one of 10 umpires enshrined in the baseball Hall of Fame, died Saturday
AP PHOTO BY BRIAN HORTON In this 1980, file photo, plate umpire Doug Harvey gestures before play resumes in the fourth inning of a baseball game between the Astros and Phillies in Houston. Harvey, one of 10 umpires enshrined in the baseball Hall of Fame, died Saturday
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States