The Boston Globe

Vida Blue, 73; fireballer led Oakland to three titles

- By Alex Traub

Vida Blue, who as a rookie with the Oakland Athletics in 1971 threw a nearly unhittable fastball and became baseball’s hottest player, died Saturday. He was 73.

The Athletics announced his death but did not say where Mr. Blue died or provide the cause.

Vida Blue was one of the stars of an Athletics team that won the World Series three straight years, from 1972 to 1974. But his performanc­e in those years never reproduced the adulation and hoopla of his first full season.

After losing badly on opening day to the Washington Senators in 1971, Mr. Blue, a lefty, reeled off eight wins in a row. In his first dozen games, he threw five complete-game shutouts. By the summer, he was leading baseball in not just shutouts but also wins, strikeouts, complete games and ERA.

Sports Illustrate­d and Time magazine put him on their covers. He turned 22 that July.

On the field, he was a man in a hurry. Unlike almost all other pitchers in baseball history, he ran to and from the mound. His delivery concluded with what writer Roger Angell of The New Yorker described as a “leap.”

Opposing hitters spoke mystically of how Mr. Blue’s fastballs would disappear or jump over their bats. Reporters speculated about why he carried two dimes in his pocket when he pitched, with some suggesting it was a charm to help him win 20 games.

Across the country, attendance at his outings swelled to levels that stadiums had not seen in years. Fans of an opposing team, the Detroit Tigers, chanted outside the clubhouse, “We want Vida!” At Fenway Park, in a legendary duel with Sonny Siebert in May, fans gave Mr. Blue multiple standing ovations.

The A’s appeared in the playoffs for the first time since 1931, ultimately losing to the Baltimore Orioles in the American League Championsh­ip. Mr. Blue pulled off the feat of winning, in his first full season, both the Cy Young and the MVP awards.

He earned the paltry sum of about $15,000 as salary, and he prepared for a major payday. President Nixon called him “the most underpaid player in baseball.”

Yet he had already fought with the colorful, obstrepero­us owner of the A’s, Charles O. Finley, who offered him $2,000 to legally change his name to Vida True Blue, hoping to use the moniker for advertisin­g.

Mr. Blue was named after his father, who died in his boyhood. “I honor him every time the name Vida Blue appears in the headlines,” Mr. Blue told Time. “If Mr. Finley thinks it’s such a great name, why doesn’t he call himself True O. Finley?”

After the ’71 season, Mr. Blue said he should make $115,000. Finley countered with $50,000 and made the dispute public. Blue held a news conference and declared that he would retire from sports.

Ultimately, Mr. Blue and Finley settled on $63,150.

After Mr. Blue’s run of wins in ’71 — it seemed possible at one point that he would reach the belief-defying milestone of 30 — he started the ’72 season late and went a pedestrian 6-10. He pitched well but not spectacula­rly as a reliever in the postseason, which concluded with the A’s winning the World Series.

“That man has soured me on baseball,” Mr. Blue told The New York Times about Finley in 1973. “No matter what he does for me in the future, I’ll never forget that he treated me like a damn colored boy.”

Mr. Blue would cement a reputation as a standout regular season pitcher, recording 20 or more wins in three of his first five seasons. He was a contributo­r to the A’s subsequent success in the playoffs.

Mr. Blue was traded to the San Francisco Giants in 1978 and recorded another strong year, going 18-10 with a 2.79 ERA. But he would soon be better known for his life off the field.

In 1983, as a pitcher for the Kansas City Royals, Mr. Blue and several of his teammates were questioned as part of a federal cocaine inquiry. He pleaded guilty to possession of the drug, leading to 81 days in prison and a yearlong suspension from baseball.

It was a surprising turn of events for a man whose maturity and poise had been praised when he was a 22-year-old superstar.

In his 2011 autobiogra­phy, “Vida Blue: A Life,” Mr. Blue suggested he had struggled with substance abuse for many years. “Along with all the glory that I’d achieved, there was a growing darkness reaching for me,” he wrote. “And the light began to dim as early as 1972” — the year of his fight with Finley.

Vida Rochelle Blue Jr. was born July 28, 1949, in Mansfield, a small town in northern Louisiana. His family lived on an unpaved street, and his father worked at a steel mill. Mr. Blue’s reputation as an athletic prodigy prompted his high school to form a baseball team. His overpoweri­ng speed on the mound caused outfielder­s to zone out, knowing nobody could hit him, and the hand of his catcher to hurt for days after games.

He was also a celebrated quarterbac­k, but his plans to play college football changed when his father died at the age of 45. Mr. Blue’s mother, Sallie Blue, told him that now he was the man of the family.

When he was around 18 years old, he got an offer from the Athletics with a $35,000 signing bonus, according to Time. He gave much of it to his family.

Blue retired before the 1987 season. After his career as a ballplayer, he worked as a television analyst for the Giants.

He was denied a place in the Hall of Fame, and he spoke to journalist­s periodical­ly about his perception that his drug use was to blame.

Informatio­n about Blue’s survivors was not immediatel­y available.

As an old man, Mr. Blue spoke to a group of high school students at the prompting of a friend, The Washington Post reported in 2021. One boy was going through a dark period at home. Mr. Blue took him aside and discussed his own struggles in his youth. Both of them wound up crying.

“I worked my tail off to polish that image back up and renew the name Vida Blue Jr.,” he told the Post. “It’s a constant battle to do that every day.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE 1971 ?? Mr. Blue was a summer sensation during the 1971 season, winning the Cy Young and Most Valuable Player awards.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE 1971 Mr. Blue was a summer sensation during the 1971 season, winning the Cy Young and Most Valuable Player awards.
 ?? JEFF CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Athletics players, from left, Rollie Fingers, Mr. Blue, and Gene Tenace were honored last month in Oakland.
JEFF CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Athletics players, from left, Rollie Fingers, Mr. Blue, and Gene Tenace were honored last month in Oakland.

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