Santa Fe New Mexican

Bouton, former Yankees pitcher, ‘Ball Four’ author, dies at 80

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Jim Bouton, the former New York Yankees pitcher who shocked and angered the conservati­ve baseball world with the tell-all book Ball Four, has died. He was 80.

Bouton’s family said he died Wednesday at the home he shared with wife Paula Kurman. He fought a brain disease linked to dementia and was in hospice care. Bouton also had two strokes in 2012.

Published in 1970, Ball Four detailed Yankees great Mickey Mantle’s carousing, and the use of stimulants in the major leagues. Bouton’s revealing look at baseball off the field made for eye-opening and entertaini­ng reading, but he paid a big price for the bestseller when former teammates, other players and executives across the big leagues ostracized him for exposing their secrets.

Throwing so hard that his cap flew off his head, Bouton was 21-8 with six shutouts in 1963 — his second season in the majors — and went 18-13 with four more shutouts in 1964. The Yankees lost the World Series both years, with Bouton losing his lone start in 1963 in New York’s loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers, and winning twice the following year in the Yankees’ loss to the St. Louis Cardinals.

Bouton injured his right arm in 1965, going 4-15 that season, and saw limited action the next three seasons with New York. He worked on Ball Four in 1969, a season spent with the expansion Seattle Pilots and Houston Astros, his fastball replaced by a knucklebal­l as he tried to prolong his career.

Bouton was a television sportscast­er in New York City with WABC and WCBS, wrote other books and starred in a 1976 CBS sitcom based on Ball Four that lasted only five episodes. He and a former teammate developed Big League Chew, a bubble gum alternativ­e to chewing tobacco.

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Jim Bouton

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