Did You Know There Is A MLB Groundskeepers Hall Of Fame?

Former Orioles groundskeeper Pat Santarone, who died in 2008, has been named to the Major League Baseball Groundskeepers Hall of Fame.

Santarone … wait, there’s a Major League Baseball Groundskeepers Hall of Fame?

Sure enough, there is, though I haven’t been able to find a website. The Orioles story explains:

To be considered for induction to the Major League Baseball Groundskeepers Hall of Fame, a person must have ceased employment in the profession for at least five years, and have made a significant contribution to groundskeeping and/or the sports turf industry at the Major League level. An individual’s impact on the community is also considered. Nominees are submitted to the MLB Groundskeepers Association for a vote. Each team has one vote, and a nominee must receive 75 percent of the vote of all active association members to be elected.

Anyway, back to Santarone:

Santarone began his career at age 23 with Class-A Elmira, taking over the field from his father, VAL SANTARONE. During the 1960’s with Elmira as the Orioles Double-A affiliate, Santarone worked with future Orioles manager and Hall of Famer EARL WEAVER. The two reunited in Baltimore, where they shared a fondly-remembered annual tomato growing competition. Santarone spent retirement in Montana and passed away in May of 2008.

Santarone and PETE FLYNN of the New York Mets will be inducted the evening of January 11 at Coors Field in Denver, joining previous inductees EMIL BOSSARD (Indians), GEORGE TOMA (Royals), JOE MOONEY (Red Sox), DICK ERICSON (Twins), and HARRY GIL (Brewers) in the MLB Groundskeepers Hall of Fame.

Apparently there is also a groundskeepers blog, hosted at the MLBlogs Network.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s