DECEMBER 5, 2011 4:24PM

Ron Santo. Hall of Famer

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A green field stadiium full of angles is roaring. A towering cheer for eternity, for doing what's right. For Ron Santo. Finally. In Baseball's Hall of Fame.

Today. Almost exactly one year from the day he died, Ron Santo was elected to baseball's Hall of Fame. He'd been told "No" nineteen times. Today he got 15 of the 16 votes. He's in. Forever.

Everybody has a hero. Doesn't have to be a baseball player. Could be anybody.

And if all the golden angels of the universe were to stand and start applauding for your hero, that would be what it feels like right this moment.

 A blustery grey December day in Chicago.

Suddenly became like the first warm day of spring.

Cubs Win.

 **************************************************

When Your Hero Dies

Reprinted From December of 2010.

 

When your hero dies, it’s as if the very shape of the earth has now changed. Ripples of heavy heart pain stab your soul, you walk down the street and you stumble for no reason, and the timing of the seasons goes awry. Spring could be a little late this year.

 

My hero, a man named Ron Santo, died in Phoenix Arizona last night. Complications of bladder cancer. He made it to 70. But it’s what he made it through that’s the story. He was a baseball player and a broadcaster. But to define him by baseball is  like defining a human being by their blood. It’s narrowing the focus of why they are your hero. When your hero dies, it’s about so much more than what they do for a living.

 

We are floating in the green grass late summer roar of 40,000 of our closest friends as the man wearing “Number 10” walks out unto the baseball field sunshine . . .. with no legs.

 

Two prosthetic legs kept Ron Santo walking. Just one of the physical battles this professional athlete had faced down and conquered since discovering at age 18 that he had diabetes. A disease, which, the 18-year-old Santo went to the library and found out, predicted a life expectancy of 25.

 

The outpouring of love roaring in the sounds of all those voices on Ron Santo Day washed across the park, circled the ball field in the billowing of ivy along the outfield walls, leapt to the scoreboard, fueled the wind in the flags around the top of the, park and soared like a home run slammed up  beyond all sight and time. This was about so much more than baseball. This was about inspiring hope.  If Ronnie could do it---whatever “it” was---than so could you.

 

One day the 18 year old Ron had no idea what juvenile diabetes was. The next day, after the routine physical, he was in the library reading that the 25-year life expectancy also included blindness, kidney failure and hardening of the arteries.

 

So, and the words sound so simple, such paltry representations of his decision, he decided he was going to fight the disease and beat it.

 

In addition to the amputation of his legs, he fought through numerous heart attacks, quadruple bypass surgery, bladder surgery and vision problems. And that just the list that’s reported.

 

Along the way raising millions of dollars to combat the disease and always, always, having time for those individuals who fought the battles with him.

 

The roar subsiding on that September day, Ron Santo stepped up to the microphone and told us all, “This couldn’t have been any better. With all the adversity I have been through if it wasn’t for you, I wouldn’t be standing here right now.” Santo was famous for being the player most deserving to be enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame who never received that honor. But on that September day he told us: “This means more to me. This is my Hall of Fame.”

 

And the toughest, grittiest, street smart hardest cadre of Chicagoans---those who had seen it all, shrugged, and then went to work the next day, wiped away tears,

 

Memories of your hero never really stop. Especially when your hero dies.

 

It’s a pristine autumn day in the golden wonder of upstate New York. Cooperstown. The National Baseball Hall of fame. Six of us. Souring the souvenir shops looking for the perfect Ron Santo baseball card. His rookie year. That night, tiptoeing out to the ball field next to the Hall of Fame in the dead of a cool autumn night, we all climb the fence to jump down to the grandstands that ring the ball field. (Not realizing till it’s time to leave that the gate was unlocked and we could have simply walked in.) We trot out to our positions on the field. Heads down. Cool guy baseball player style. No real ball or bat but it doesn’t matter. We run the bases and slide roaring out SAFE! We scramble back fast to catch the pop up not being winded because we’re not old men, we are baseball players. We hurl a change up over the plate. Smack it hard up into the stars of a cool country night.

 

And exhausted we troop out to find a bar. Leaving traces of our youth in the very same dust where once Babe Ruth rounded third and headed home.

 

The next day was our ceremony. Ron Santo’s induction into the hall of fame. If the political powers behind the hall wouldn’t do it---then we would.

 

The 6 of us. Drenched in serious business and a mission stood on a step. Everyone said something. Along the likes of “Go Ronnie!” And then we did it.

We went into the hall and while 5 of us provided cover, one of us scotch taped that baseball card of Santo’s rookie year up next to Ernie Banks.

 

Where it stayed for at least 10 minutes. When a security guard took it down.

 

Ron Santo was a guy who made a character out of his hairpiece. Often he’d wear, as he called it, his “Gamer.” But sometimes, he’d switch off to other pieces. All of it chronicled in conversation with his masterful rock of a partner Pat Hughes.  There was the time the hairpiece caught on fire from the space heater in the booth at a Mets game. The Ron Santo stories flowing like the very rhythm of the game itself and the way it gave the larger games of our lives order or a solace or escape or even sometimes pure simple joy.

 

That’s what happens when your hero dies. The stories spin in  to memories; an autumn sadness settles in, you think about how nothing will ever be the same.

 

This morning when I walked outside, helicopters were circling Wrigley Field. Grabbing pictures for news shots. This is a big story here in Chicago.

 

But there is a bigger story that this touches, applicable to all of us. What is it that happens when your hero dies?

 

Ron Santo thought he had tops seven years to live. But he wanted to be a big league ballplayer so bad that he battled. And he won.

 

So what happens when your hero dies?

 

You remember.

 

You trudge through snow on a day so cold it burns. You look up at a flagpole, empty now, where you know that in the eternal spring there will be green grass again. And whatever it is you, just you, no one else, whatever it is you battle: unemployment, hunger, illness, family, loneliness, depressions, crying at the winds of our sad and troubled world, you keep walking.

 

Even if you have no legs, you keep walking.

 

Just like your hero would have done it. You know that because you have stories.

 

Like the stories of Ron Santo.

 

My hero.

 

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This is such a magnificent tribute to an amazing man and role model.
I watched him play many times and saw his determination.
If only they would have given this to him before he died, yet, if spirit lives, he is happy today for the induction and for your words of love.
rated with love
It was about time, but it does sadden me that they waited until Ron Santo was dead to grant him entrance to the Hall. As much as I would like to see Ron’s family not show up for the ceremony that was so overdue because they would have rather had their dad alive when the honor came, it would not be what their dad would want them to do.

Too bad these guys didn’t learn anything and still denied Minnie a place while he is still alive.
Sounds like the guy was made for Chicago. And while I'm sure he meant it when he said "This is my Hall of Fame." He clearly was a guy who meant what he said. But the shame persists, of his dying before being inducted, if only because Halls of Fame are where the heroes congregate and their stories are repeated and respect is publicly paid, especially to guys like Santo whose life was more a list of stats. There should be a Hall of Fame for men & women from every walk of life who, like Santo, bring something worth remembering to the lives of us hero-starved folk.
Wow, man, talk about tears. I didn't know they finally, finally, voted him in. A travesty of major proportions he was not voted in when he was alive. When the Mick died, and knew he was dying, and said, "I'm not a hero." He thought because he drank and was an asshole when he drank, that he was not a hero. He was wrong. When I saw him hit two out of Yankee Stadium, he was damn sure a hero that day, and remained one even now, and will for all eternity. Congrats to the Santos family and to you my man!
Chicagoguy - Ron Santo was a hero to every juvenile diabetic - including me. He deserved to be elected to the Hall while he was still alive. Those voters should be ashamed of themselves.

Beautiful tribute to a beautiful man. / R
My dad, brother, and nephew were all in tears today. Well deserved HOF. I'm hoping somehow, somewhere RS knows about it. Great tribute.
Would've been in long ago, 'cept for a rule change. Remember '67? Nobody could hit Bob Gibson. Or '68? McLain wins 31 games. Low scoring lowered the mound in '69, well into Santo's career, certainly through most of his prime. Mike Schmidt set the new standard at 35-40 homers to be considered a power hitter. Through many of the years Santo hit 22 to 28 homers, many teams lacked a single guy who could hit 20 or 25. But he shoulda' got in with his glove. He was the best in the game for eight years at least. He'd spit at the thought that he should have gotten in because he did this as a diabetic. He should'a got in sooner because he deserved it. 'Bout time folks in the Hall made it right. Full disclosure notice: I parked his car a few times and he dropped a fin when a duce was standard. Not enough to make me a Cub fan, but give the man his due. He was one of the good guys.
Nice tribute CG. I never followed the National League that much buy I remember in the 90s when I spent a lot of time on the baseball newsgroups, several posters there made a strong case for his induction. And the Cubs fans sure loved him. I didn't know he was diabetic.
RP--I think (and of course I really don't know) that he would have loved seeing how happy this made people. Like some sort of cosmic wrong had been righted.

Grandpa--You are so right about what their Dad would have wanted. I saw Minnie play in the first game my Dad ever took me too. I got hope he'll get in.

JH--You got the real message. A hall of fame for the real heroes. And for us hero starved folks.

Scanner-- When I got the news this afternoon sitting in my little cubicle, doing my little contract job---there were a few tears.

One of the great things about heroes is that they prompt thoughts of other heroes. I recently read Mick's biography. And when I was a kid I had a Mickey Mantle plastic model. The fact that Mantle and Santo both played their careers with HUGE physical disabilities---the knee and the diabetes--says a lot. I'm guessing that wherever they are, they are both celebrating tonight.

toritto---$60 million dollars raised to work on juvenile diabetes. He did that. And even after he is gone, the money is still coming in from the walks that bear his name.


Bernadine---He knows. And if he doesn't---all of us who consider him family know. And maybe that's enough.

Jimmy! How the hell are you! Yes on the glove. That really is true. 21 years broadcasting, he'd talk about Gibson and Koufax---and he said the same thing you did.

A true honor to hear from a Sox fan tonight. Thank you. You checking in means a lot.

Abrawang--Thanks! The numbers were there. And he is only the 12th third baseman inducted. What this really was about was politics. Ronnie had a tendency to speak from the gut. And some of the vets didn't like him. But that's all gone now. They finally did the right thing.
Great, great guy. As a baseball fan with a very high bar for admission into the Hall, you and I can get together at a more appropriate time to discuss the vote.
I just knew you would write this. It is a beautiful tribute to one of the greats. His selection is way overdue.
I am proud of the fact that among those who have rated your post, I am #10 thus far. I still associate Ron Santo with #10 in spite of knowing Leon Durham with that number in the 1980's; Ronnie's number was retired at Wwrigley Field before the Hall of Fame voters removed their heads from their asses. My only wish is that Ron had lived to see this for himself; he belonged in Cooperstown a long time ago, and "this old Cub" has become this eternal legend.
Paul Haider, Chicago
No one writes a better memorial tribute than you. I loved this the first time too! I'm glad to see the update that he made the Hall of Fame but I think he was probably content with the all the hearts that invited him in over the years!
Santo was Mr Cub, along with Ernie Banks. In the midst of the furor at Penn State and Syracuse, it's important to keep in mind that sports does have its redeeming qualities -- and its heroes. Unfortunately -- like every thing else associated with crapitalist perversion -- obscene compensation seems to drive out the good and reward the greedy.
stim--the tough part about the vote was that the rules changed every time--so for those of us with a high bar--it was tough to make a call. And then there is the fact that the HOF is a family business--which once had an almost alliance with Hugo Chavez. . .(true story!)

Procopius--Yeah for you and about 3 other people, I am predictable!

Paul ---You mean Leon "Pass Me the Cheetos in the dugout" Durham.

JG--I believe you are right---he was a passionately happy guy.

TC--The obscenity of the money and what it did was one of Santo's favorite topics as a broadcaster. He would have been right with you on that.
Poetess has the right word for this: Magnificent. But it's what I always get on your blog, Roger.

When I heard on the car radio that my hero, Ray Nitschke, died I ditched the cigarette I was about to light and quit, cold turkey, a four-pack-a-day habit and haven't had another smoke since. The angels are still singing for that one.