"The Yankees are incredibly saddened to learn
of the passing of Hall of Famer Whitey Ford," the team said in a
written statement. "The Chairman of the Board was one of the
best lefties to ever toe the rubber. He will be deeply missed."
Alongside fellow icons of the sport Yogi Berra and Mickey
Mantle, Ford helped usher in one of the Yankees' most successful
eras in the 1950s and 1960s, appearing in 11 World Series and
winning the Cy Young award and the World Series MVP title in
1961.
Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner said Ford "encapsulated the
spirit of the Yankees teams he played for."
"Whitey's name and accomplishments are forever stitched into the
fabric of baseball's rich history," Steinbrenner said in a
statement. "Whitey was New York tough."
Fourteen-time All-Star Alex Rodriguez, who won the World Series
with the Yankees in 2009, called Ford "a true legend and hero."
Ford won a franchise record 236 games with the Yankees and had a
.690 winning percentage, the best in the 20th century for a
pitcher with 200 or more victories, according to the Baseball
Hall of Fame, where he was inducted in 1974, the same year the
Bronx Bombers retired his number.
"I was a Yankee fan I guess since I was five or six years old,"
Ford said in his induction speech. "To think when I was 21 years
old I'd be playing with (Joe) DiMaggio and Berra ... it's just
something I can't fathom."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Paul Simao and Grant
McCool)
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