Photo of
a young Phil Rizzuto, courtesy Nancy Cataldi
Phil Rizzuto attended Richmond Hill High School and was the
Captain of the Richmond Hill High School Baseball Team and played the
Shortstop position. He graduated Richmond Hill High School in 1936.
Phil Rizzuto (left), Captain of the Richmond Hill HS baseball team
Phil Rizzuto Highlights
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About Phil Rizzuto, NY Yankee Baseball Player
Born in Brooklyn, NY - September 25, 1917 (possibly 1916)
Died in West Orange, NJ - August 14, 2007
"The Scooter"
Although Phil Rizzuto
was born in Brooklyn, he grew up in Glendale, Queens and attended high
school in Richmond Hill. During Phil Rizzuto's time at Richmond Hill
HS, Phil's father drove a trolley car and young Phil would hitch a ride
every morning to Richmond Hill HS with his dad. Despite his physical
height of 5'6", Phil Rizzuto overcame his dimunitive size to become
the star of the Richmond Hill HS Baseball Team in the 1930's.
Rizzuto grew up a Dodgers fan, because, he said, "it was
easier to sneak into Ebbets Field than Yankee Stadium."
He tried out for the Dodgers in 1937, but was brusquely rejected by
the manager, who told Rizzuto he would earn a better living as a shoe-shine
boy than as a ballplayer. He also tried out with the New York Giants,
Boston Red Sox, and St. Louis Cardinals, but the consensus was that
Rizzuto, at 5'6", was too small to play major-league ball.
He was eventually signed by the Yankees, the only major league team
he ever played for. Rizzuto broke in with the Yanks in 1941,
and he was primarily a singles hitter, with a career batting average
of .273, which dropped 27 points in his 52 World Series games. He was
an excellent bunter, a superb defensive shortstop, and played in nine
World Series, with the Yankees winning seven. But his accomplishments
are even more remarkable considering that he lost three years of his
career serving in the Navy during World War II.
Rizzuto and Yankees centerfielder Joe DiMaggio had
a special friendship, and roomed together on the road. Rizzuto often
said he could take extra chances chasing a grounder at short, knowing
DiMaggio was backing him up in center field.
He became eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame in
1961, and was inducted in 1994. As of 2006, Rizzuto
was the oldest living member of the Hall of Fame. His Yankees
jersey, #10, was retired in 1985. When his playing career ended,
Rizzuto stepped into the broadcasters' booth, where he covered the Yankees
for 40 years, from 1957 to 1996. He was often incapable of constructing
a proper sentence, but fans came to love his stream-of-consciousness
commentary. The Village Voice reprinted Rizzuto verbatim, setting his
words as verse: "Absolutely! / If you don't get a little / a few butterflies
/ no matter what you do / on the first day of anything / you're not
human."
Like Harry Caray, Rizzuto's catch phrase as a broadcaster was "Holy
cow!" Rizzuto often beat the traffic by leaving the ball park
in the game's late innings, announcing on-air for his wife, "I'll be
home soon, Cora" as he left the booth. He stirred a minor controversy
in 1995, chiding the Yankees' then-manager Buck Showalter for not giving
rookie shortstop Derek Jeter more playing time. In
2003, when the New York Daily News named him the Yankees' all-time best
shortstop, Rizzuto complained that Jeter was better, or at least deserved
a tie. |