GOOSE TO BE INDUCTED INTO HALL OF FAME JULY 27
Article by Barry M. Bloom Media Player
NEW YORK -- The "Goose" is on the loose in the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
A year after Tony Gwynn was a first-time electee, along with Cal Ripken Jr., the induction ceremony on July 27 in Cooperstown, N.Y., will again have a distinct Padres flavor.
Rich "Goose" Gossage, who may be better known for his first tour with the Yankees (1978-83), was elected on Tuesday in his ninth year on the ballot. He'll join his former Padres manager, Dick Williams, on the stage behind the Clark Sports Center this coming summer.
"This was very emotional, off the charts. I can't even describe this," Gossage said about taking the phone call telling him he was in. "I've waited awhile, but there isn't anybody I'd rather go in with than Dick Williams. He was a great, great manager and I really enjoyed playing for him."
Jim Rice, the former star of 16 seasons, all with the Red Sox, barely missed by 16 votes as he fell 2.8 percent (72.2) below the necessary 75 percent to gain admission to the hallowed red-brick Hall on Main Street in Cooperstown. Voting trends suggest he could very well break through next year which will be his 15th and final year on the ballot.
"Today's results are obviously a disappointment," Rice said in statement released by the Red Sox. "I believe my accomplishments speak for themselves, and a majority of the voters seem to agree. It is tough to come this close, but I remain hopeful for the 2009 results."
Rice should take heart: of the 20 previous players who have registered 70 or more percent, but less than 75 percent, every one of them have ultimately been elected.
Williams, who won the World Series twice as manager of the A's and will go in wearing an Oakland cap, teamed with Gossage in 1984, as the Padres won the first National League pennant in franchise history, but lost a five-game World Series to Detroit.
Williams' wife Norma, answering the phone on Tuesday at their Las Vegas home, said Williams had already spoken to Gossage and that her husband "was just as giddy as the day he got into the Hall of Fame."
"They just acted like two crazy little people," she said.
Williams was one of five managers and executives elected last month by separate, newly formed Veterans Committees.
World Series-winning managers Williams and Billy Southworth were elected along with Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and owners Walter O'Malley and Barney Dreyfuss.
All will also be inducted late in July, although Williams is the only living member of the quintet.
"It's terrific, it's terrific," said Williams about Gossage joining him. "I got a hold of him and we were just like two little kids. I'm as thrilled about him getting in as the day they called me. This is wonderful."
Gossage, who fell short by 21 votes in 2007, was this time named on 85.8 percent or 466 of the 543 ballots cast.
Andre Dawson, who hobbled on bad knees through many of his 21 seasons with the Expos, Cubs, Red Sox and Marlins, received almost a 10-percent uptick to 65.9 percent and may be right on the bubble in 2009. Voters from the Baseball Writers' Association of America also are taking another look at Bert Blyleven, a pitcher whose career ended after 22 seasons, just 13 victories shy of 300. Blyleven finished fourth behind Gossage, Rice and Dawson with a healthy 61.9 percent of the vote.
Gossage said that all three of the runner ups should eventually get the Hall call.
"Just what I know about facing these guys, I think Jim Rice deserves to be in the Hall," said Gossage, who retired Rice and Cal Yastrzemski with a pair of runners on base and the Yankees clinging to a 5-4 lead, thus ending that famous 1978 playoff game for the division title at Boston. "No hitter scared me, but Jim Rice came the closest. Dawson should because he also has great numbers. He was a teammate of mine with the Cubs. And Blyleven was a tremendous pitcher over a great career. Those are three guys who come to my mind right away."
Of the 11 first-timers on the ballot, only one -- Tim Raines -- received the requisite 5 percent to remain. Raines earned 132 or 24.3 percent. Dave Concepcion, the shortstop on Cincinnati's great "Big Red Machine" teams of the 1970s, received 88 votes or 16.2 percent in his 15th and final chance among the writers. He'll now be eligible, beginning in 2011, to be elected by the Veterans Committee voting on players.
Gossage had one of his best years under Williams in 1984, his first of four seasons with the Padres, finishing 10-6 with 25 saves and 84 strikeouts in 62 games (102 1/3 innings). He was on the mound in the ninth inning of Game 5 against the Cubs in San Diego to close out the NL Championship Series, his final postseason save. That was also Gwynn's first of his 20 Major League seasons with the Padres.
"The impact that Goose Gossage had on this organization was incredible, on the field, in the clubhouse and for our fans in San Diego," said Dick Freeman, the Padres president now who was in a lesser role with the front office back then. "He was the final piece to our National League championship in 1984, which really established the San Diego Padres as a Major League franchise. It's hard to overstate what his contributions were to that team."
The Goose's baseball career line over 23 seasons is a road map of baseball stops around the world: Chicago (White Sox); Pittsburgh; New York (Yankees, twice); San Diego; Chicago (Cubs); San Francisco; Fukuoka; Japan; Arlington; Oakland and Seattle.
His 1978 Yankees team, after Gossage pitched the final 2 2/3 innings to vanquish the Red Sox in that playoff game, went on to defeat the Dodgers in a thrilling six-game World Series. Gossage, a nine-time All-Star, never saved a World Series game, but he was the winner of Game 4 at Yankee Stadium for pitching the final two scoreless, hitless innings of a 10-inning, 4-3, come-from-behind win.
Gossage said on Tuesday that signing with the Yankees as a free agent in 1978, was "an out-of-body experience." But he said he left the Yankees for the Padres as a free agent six years later because he tired of the endless wars between in-and-out manager Billy Martin and George Steinbrenner, the team's long-time principal owner.
"I needed a little change of scenery," Gossage said. "The fun had kind of been taken out of the game. I had always played the game for the fun of it."
Steinbrenner was more than gracious on Tuesday after learning the news that another player who starred in Yankee pinstripes had been added to the Hall.
"The Baseball Hall of Fame was really on the ball today in their selection of my close friend, Goose Gossage," he said in a statement. "Goose was a fierce competitor and one of the all-time great pitchers, who in his career set a new standard for relief pitching. The New York Yankees are very proud of his achievement and I, personally, would like to congratulate him and his family on this wonderful honor!"
Gossage finished his career as a Mariner in 1994 with a 124-107 record, 1,502 strikeouts -- nearly one an inning -- and a 3.01 ERA. His 310 saves are 17th on the all-time list, but he never had more than 33 saves in a single season -- 1980 with the Yankees.
A power pitcher who snarled beneath his mustache and intimidated hitters with his 98-mph fastball, along the way, Gossage went from rookie closer to starter back to veteran closer and finally finished as a setup man. Near the end of his career, Goose set up in Oakland for Dennis Eckersley, who was elected to Hall of Fame in 2004 and may have broken some ground for relievers.
It is the second time in the past three years that a premium reliever has been the only player elected to the Hall. Two years ago, Bruce Sutter was elected in his 13th year on the ballot.
Sutter, who had 300 saves in a 12-year career shortened by arm injuries, was preceded by Hoyt Wilhelm, Rollie Fingers and Eckersley, three closers, like Gossage, who also started during their stellar careers. Sutter is the only reliever inducted thus far who never made at least one start.
Fingers, who was inducted in 1992, had 341 saves and threw 1,701 innings in 17 seasons. Gossage had 31 fewer saves in 1,809 innings.
Fingers had seven seasons as a reliever when he logged 100 innings or more. Gossage did it four times and came close in several other seasons.
In a yardstick of how the job of closer has changed since then, Eckersley did it as a reliever only once. So has the Yankees' Mariano Rivera. San Diego's Trevor Hoffman, the all-time leader with 524 saves, never did it.
Asked how effective Gossage might have been if he'd been restricted to one-inning saves, Williams quipped: "He'd still be playing."
Hoffman and Rivera are almost certainly future Hall of Fame electees, although Lee Smith, who held the all-time record of 478 surpassed two years ago by Hoffman, has been an afterthought among the writers, garnering only 235 votes or 43.3 percent this year.
Like Smith, Gossage said he always implored the writers not to compare him to the closers of this age.
"I'm probably the only pitcher to see the evolution of the bullpen from the time I broke in to the way it is today," he said. "That's the only point I've ever tried to make: please don't compare me to these modern-day relievers. It's apples and oranges. It's not the same game. That's the only thing I've tried to set the record straight on. The way they're being used today is the way they should be used."
And the way the Goose almost never was.
Pro Players Association presented “Celebrity Bartender Night for Charity” at the Purple Martini in
Professional athletes and media personalities from all around
The bartenders included professional athletes and media personalities such as former Heavyweight Boxer Ron Lyle, former World Champion Boxer “Lightning” Lonnie Smith, current NASCAR Driver JimBob Rogers, 2007 NFL Draft Prospects - former University of Texas Longhorns Football National Champion Kasey Studdard, Ultimate Fighter/Kickboxer 5X World Champion Jeff “Big Diesel” Ford, former Green Bay Packer Walter Stanley, former Denver Broncos Ron Egloff, Aaron Smith, Mark Cooper, Le-Lo Lang, Larry Brunson, Michael Ditchfield, former Kansas City Chief Fred McHenry, USBA Boxer Andrea Orozco, Pro Bodybuilder and former Mr. America Tom Terwilliger, and 7NEWS Sports Anchor Steve Gottsegen. Some special guest “hero” bartenders who helped raise the excitement levels in the house were four members of the Colorado Army National Guard. They took command and had everyone cheering when they made their way behind the bar.
Awesome items were auctioned live by professional auctioneer Christine Dickensheet. Some highlights of the auction included the rights to display your business logo on a NASCAR, the opportunity to train with World Champion Kickboxer Jeff Ford, and the knockout bidding for the autographed boxing glove of World Champion “Lightning” Lonnie Smith! Then suddenly the front doors were thrown open to the roaring engine of a custom motorcycle blazing into the Purple’s lobby! True Kustom Paint & Fabrication and Mile High Polishing brought their award-winning bike inside for a glance of the fabulous artistic detail made available by their donation for the auction of a $2500 gift certificate towards custom work!
The most creative bartending award went to former Bronco Mark Cooper for his ingenious pouring of “Coop’s Stoplight”. The concoction was made of three-levels of red, yellow and green colored martinis, a real hit with the crowd! Later everyone joined in to dance to the sounds of the DJ’s spinning tunes.
The Fetal Hope Foundation's mission is to provide support, provide information, fund research, increase awareness and be an outlet for leading medical information pertaining to fetal distresses and syndromes. They are all about arming families with information to save their baby's lives.
Many thanks go out to the major sponsors of the evening, Purple Martini, Bacardi, Coors, First Data Corporation, KMGH-7 and FedEx-Kinkos. Thanks to all the celebrities for volunteering their time. Kudos to the Greenwood Village Police Department for their excellent extra attention provided for the event.
The event was so successful that another is in the planning stages for the

Colorado Rockies Pitcher Mike DeJean and Scott "The Sheriff" Parker of the Colorado Avalanche participated at our August 4th Road Rage Car, Truck & Bike Show at Joe's Crab Shack in Parker! Awesome Mustang Mike! Scott, next time bring out that bike of yours!
Dave Studdard and Michael Ditchfield former Broncos, Ryan Spilborghs - Colorado Rockies, and Nick Carlson and Tom Effington - Colorado Mammoth players, all participated at the Celebrity Bartender Night for Children's Hospital on November 9th at The Church in Denver.
CELEBRITY ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
PPA now offers charities, community organizations, and corporations the opportunity to have a sports and/or media personality participate in their programs and fund raising events.
Our PPA members are available to appear and/or participate in your special event. Members of PPA come from a wide variety of professional sports and media professions.
For a fee donation your organization can obtain a pro to assist in obtaining your goals in fundraising and/or public relations and awareness campaigns. It has been proven many times that through the participation of a pro athlete and/or media personality, the anticipation of the event grows, and it's attendance greatly increases in size and income, than those events without. People are drawn to, and tend to want to be more included and involved when celebrities are present.
A corporate event held at Invesco Field offered an autograph session, punt, pass and kick on the field and the opportunity to mingle with the celebrities for over 2500 guests. Former Denver Broncos who participated in the event included Billy Thompson, Howard Griffith and Randy Gradishar, Tyrone Braxton, Mark Jackson, Steve Sewell, Haven Moses, Le-lo Lang, Ron Egloff, and Dave Studdard.
For more information on the Celebrity Assistance Program, please contact our office at: 720.327.9207, or proplayersassoc@aol.com.

Billy Thompson, Howard Griffith and Randy Gradishar signing autographs for guests at a corporate event in the Broncos Locker Room at Invesco Field at Mile High.

