Dick
Fitzgerald - Over 70 and still Pitching
Coach of Connie Mack’s great, great, grandson
By Kathleen McGillicuddy Kelly
Connie Mack's Grandaughter
Roy Mack's Daughter
Dick Fitzgerald is one very special man. Having been an outstanding
pitcher for many years, and although he was never considered a household
name in the pitching world, there may not be another pitcher in
baseball history who has stood on the mound longer, or has thrown
as many pitches.
Dick was born and raised in Narberth, PA, suburb of Philadelphia.
When he was a 10 year old boy, his father took him to Shibe Park
to see the Philadelphia Athletics play. After the game they saw
Connie Mack. Dick’s father had a baseball with him and said
to his son, “Let’s ask Mr. Mack to sign it”. Connie
Mack was very gracious, talked with them, and signed the ball.
Afterward, Dick asked why it took so long for Mr. Mack to sign
the baseball. They looked at the ball and to their astonishment
it was signed Cornelius McGillicuddy . Unfortunately through the
years, the ball was lost.
Who knows? Maybe someone out there has a one of a kind signed baseball?
Dick, better known as Coach Fitz, now coaches at Notre Dame Prep
H.S. in Scottsdale, Arizona, where Brian Mack Poupore, great,great,
grandson of Connie Mack, attends high school and plays on the Notre
Dame Prep baseball team.
While living in the Philadelphia area, Dick attended Merion Elementary,
Bala Cynwyd Jr. High, Lower Merion H.S., Lafayette College in Easton,
PA. Remarkably for over 60 years, Dick has pitched in youth, (Narberth
State Jr. American Legion Champions in 1950, 15 yr olds.) high school,
college, professional AAA, amateur, semipro,and senior men’s
baseball leagues. Over 60 consecutive years Dick Fitzgerald has
won well over 700 games pitching almost 8000 innings on five different
continents. He played on a World Baseball Tour with Baseball International
in 2005. It included playing in Japan, China, the Phillipines, Australia,
Sri Lanka, Egypt, Italy and France .
Many people believe that Dick has thrown more pitches than Nolan
Ryan and Satchel Paige combined. Of course he admits not quite as
hard, although at age 55, his fast ball was clocked at 83 mph. At
the tender age of 73 he is able to throw his age at 75+mph.
After pitching 4 ½ years in the Baltimore Orioles minor league
system, Dick retired from professional baseball at age 25 to enter
the business world. He became a successful CEO in the insurance/investment
industry. In 1968, Dick, moved from Philadelphia, PA to a suberb
of Seattle, WA where he opened an office for the company he was
with at the time.
One of his partners was Robin Roberts, Hall of Fame Pitcher for
the Philadelphia Phillies, who remains a good friend and teases
Dick about still pitching by telling him, he’ll never make
the majors.
Recently Dick was honored at a Seattle Mariners/Chicago White
Sox game along with six teammates for playing in the Seattle senior
baseball league since it’s inception 20 years ago. At age
42, Dick pitched batting practice for the Seattle Mariners for six
years.
As of last year Dick and his wife, Sally, now spend 6 mos in the
Seattle area and 6 mos. in Arizona , which brought him to coach
at Notre Dame Prep. about 5 blocks from their condo.
When not pitching, Dick has instructed over 1,000 youth, high
school, college and adult pitchers, plus numerous coaches. He has
served as a pitching instructor and speaker for various baseball
camps, clinics and colleges, including the US Naval Academy. He
continues to be a member of the American Baseball Coaches Association.
Besides coaching, Dick most enjoys playing with two of his three
sons on the same team in the senior league in Seattle.
He can still pitch nine innings once a week, and is considered
one of the ageless miracles of senior baseball.
After hearing about the Philadelphia Athletic’s Historical
Society, and going to the web site, besides being very impressed,
he told me two players who were favorites of his Dad were Lou Brissie
and Sam Chapman. Dick said they were heroes of his growing up, along
with the older boys in his neighborhood who went off to fight in
WW II. Dick said he would really like to visit the Philadelphia
Athletic’s Historical Society museum in Hatboro, PA sometime
in the future.
Author Kathleen McGillicuddy Kelly is shown in this November 2000
visit to Hatboro. Left to right, her son Sean, Kathleen, brother
Tom McGillicuddy and daughter, Kathy Poupore.
|