The Reporter (Vacaville)

Fosse dies at age 74

Broadcaste­r, former A’s player loses cancer battle

- By Shayna Rubin

Longtime Oakland A’s broadcaste­r and catcher Ray Fosse died on Wednesday after a 16-year battle with cancer. He was 74.

“It is with a heavy heart that Carol Fosse, Ray Fosse’s wife of 51 years, shares the sad news that Ray Fosse lost his battle to cancer on October 13, 2021 after silently fighting it for the past 16 years,” read a statement on RayFosse.com. “Carol and daughters, Nikki and Lindsey, send their love out to family, friends and fans that mourn his loss with them.”

Fosse spent three of his 12 major-league seasons in Oakland, winning two World Series titles with Oakland’s Swingin’ A’s in 1973 and 1974. In that time, the tough catcher made an imprint on the A’s franchise that lasted more than five decades.

“He got traded to the A’s in ‘73, but that’s a long time to be so associated with a franchise,” A’s radio play-by-play announcer Ken Korach said. “He took that responsibi­lity very seriously.

“He cared deeply about the franchise. He loved this organizati­on and he cared so much. I think the fans know that. For all the right reasons he was a beloved figure.”

Korach and Fosse worked together in A’s booths for 26 years, and Korach saw how Fosse’s strong work ethic shaped work behind the microphone as a color commentato­r that transcende­d baseball eras.

Fosse spent time with the A’s, Seattle, Milwaukee and Cleveland and caught two no-hitters, Dennis Eckersley in Cleveland in 1977, and the first combined no-hitter with more than two pitchers in MLB history in 1975 when Vida Blue, Glenn Abbott, Paul Lindblad and Rollie Fingers teamed up to no-hit the Angels. He was twice named an AllStar, famously part of a home-plate collision in which Reds’ Pete Rose bowled over him in the 1970 game.

Fosse joined the A’s broadcast team under Hall of Fame voice Bill King and, like him, became a fountain of baseball knowledge. While some former players may take the broadcasti­ng opportunit­y for granted, Fosse transforme­d himself into a walking baseball encycloped­ia. He carried

a briefcase of notes he’d taken over his 35 seasons broadcasti­ng, chroniclin­g every moment with an impressive recall of any pitch or play.

Like King, who died abruptly in 2005, Fosse kept his health battles private. Most of his colleagues didn’t know of his cancer battle until this year.

“Ray is a private person,” Korach said. “I respect the fact this is the way he wanted it to be in

the end and I have total respect for that.”

Fans hung banners over the Coliseum bleacher fences rooting for Fosse’s recovery. Fans on social media expressed their gratitude for Fosse. Broadcaste­rs can become close to the fans they talk to, Korach says.

“He was in peoples’ homes for 36 years,” he said. “He was part of the family, and I don’t think that’s overstatin­g it, that people felt

that way about him.”

A close friend to the A’s fan base, Fosse was close to those in the organizati­on, too. Radio commentato­r Vince Cotroneo tweeted:

“Ray made me feel welcome on day one and I am forever grateful. Nothing but great memories. Lots of stories and laughter and baseball. It is an enormous hole in the A’s family and in the booth. Prayers to Carol, Lindsey, Nikki and the grandkids. Love you Ray.”

 ?? ?? Fosse
Fosse

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States