As a kid, Jane Leavy was an anomaly — a Jewish baseball fan who didn’t root for Sandy Koufax. Blame her grandmother, who lived around the corner from Yankee Stadium and bought Leavy her first baseball ...
On April 24, 1962, Hall-of-Famer and Los Angeles Dodgers legend Sandy Koufax set a Major League record with 18 strikeouts in a complete game. The Dodgers defeated the Chicago Cubs, 10-2, at Wrigley ...
Sandy Koufax dominated baseball like no other player. He won three Cy Young Awards and led the Dodgers to four World Series titles. In 1966, chronic arthritis forced him to retire at 30, but he stayed ...
The fun of watching televised baseball in the age of Covid lasted about, oh, two games. So I’ve returned to YouTube for my sports entertainment. I’ve now watched every summer Olympics documentary ...
On June 30, 1962, Los Angeles Dodgers legendary left-hander Sandy Koufax threw the first no-hitter of his career. Koufax issued five walks and finished with 13 strikeouts against the New York Mets in ...
Clayton Kershaw and Joe Torre were the primary speakers ahead of the unveiling of a bronze statue of Hall of Famer Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koufax at the Centerfield Plaza at Dodger Stadium on Saturday.
There were plenty of jokes on Twitter/X as Game 3 of the World Series extended into its sixth hour about National Baseball Hall of Famer and Los Angeles Dodgers legend Sandy Koufax, who is 89 years ...
Born in Brooklyn, New York in 1935, Sandy Koufax became one of the most dominant pitchers in Major League Baseball (MLB) history. He played his entire career for the Los Angeles Dodgers from 1955 to ...
The New York Post apologized to Sandy Koufax and retracted a gossip column item that caused the Hall of Fame pitcher to end his 48-year relationship with the Dodgers. The Post and the Dodgers are both ...
Once the buzz had begun to die down following Monday night's 18 thrilling innings of October baseball, Will Klein returned to ...