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 ...
In a far-upper-left corner of a cramped clubhouse at Tiger Stadium that summer of 1984, they would huddle and kibitz in front of their lockers prior to that night’s game: Alex Grammas, who was manager ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Roger Craig, who pitched for three championship teams during his major league career and then managed the San Francisco Giants to the 1989 World Series that was interrupted by a ...
Major League Baseball lifer Roger Craig, who threw the first pitch in New York Mets history and went on to a lengthy managerial career in the big leagues, has died. The Durham, N.C., native was 93.
Bruce Bochy is the obvious answer, for good reason. Dusty Baker will get his fair share of votes. Alvin Dark may even have a case. But there’s another name that deserves to be mentioned right there ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Roger Craig, an accomplished major league pitcher and beloved former San Francisco Giants manager who led the club to the National League pennant in 1989, has died, the team announced ...
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 ...