News

151; -- RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. -- Ralph Kiner, who slugged his way into the baseball Hall of Fame and enjoyed a half-century career as a popular broadcaster, died Thursday. He was 91. Kiner ...
Tim McCarver worked alongside Ralph Kiner on Mets television broadcasts ... He used to talk about his mom in very sweet tones. What he had to say about his mother was always very nice, but for ...
The subject, as you might have gleaned from the spelling, is “Kiner’s Korner,” the late, beloved postgame show hosted by the late, beloved Mets announcer Ralph Kiner. The idea for the book ...
This was late one San Francisco night, years ago, and Ralph Kiner was well into a fourth hour of telling stories, filling one more room with laughter and good cheer, a Hall of Famer forever ...
Ralph Kiner played for the Pirates for eight seasons and his #4 is retired by the organization. Kiner was a broadcaster with the Mets from their inception until his death in 2014. He was 91.
Ralph Kiner spent more than a half-century analyzing Mets games on TV and radio, making him an iconic figure for not only several generations of fans but for several generations of his fellow ...
Before Monday’s game against the Mets at Citi Field, Kiner-Falefa met his second cousin Scott Kiner, son of Ralph, who wrote a book, “One of a Kiner,” confirming the relationship. “I will ...
Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio were taken. I chose Ralph Kiner of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Kiner lead the National League in home runs for seven straight years, twice hitting more than 50.