Roger Craig, a well-traveled major league baseball player and coach who became a pitching guru in the 1980s teaching the merits of the split-fingered fastball, has died. The San Francisco Giants ...
Nothing sours the mood of a former Los Angeles Rams defensive player quite like the memory of Roger Craig’s churning knees. “That’s where the pain starts,” former NFL safety Vincent Newsome told NBC ...
Roger Craig, who helped rally the San Francisco Giants to prominence in the 1980s and was known as “Humm Baby” for his positive and inspirational demeanor, died Sunday after what the team said was a ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. NEW YORK (AP) — Roger Craig, who pitched for ...
Roger Craig, who had the distinction of winning the last game in Brooklyn Dodgers history and the first game in Mets history and who was also a longtime major league manager, died Sunday. He was 93.
After winning three World Series as a player, Craig became a coach and spread the gospel of the split-fingered fastball, what one player of the time called “the pitch of the ’80s.” By Richard ...
To most in baseball, Roger Craig is remembered as a manager of the San Francisco Giants, the pitching coach of the 1984 World Series champion Detroit Tigers and a 20-game loser as an original member ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. NEW YORK (AP) — Roger Craig, who pitched for ...
American League manager Tony La Russa, center left, from the Oakland A's, and National League manager Roger Craig, of the San Francisco Giants, watch batting practice at Wrigley Field in Chicago, July ...