CNN Time Free Email US Sports Baseball Pro Football College Football 1999 NBA Playoffs College Basketball Hockey Golf Plus Tennis Soccer Motorsports Womens More Inside Game Scoreboards World
EVENTS
MLB Playoffs
Rugby World Cup
Century's Best
Swimsuit '99

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Multimedia Central
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Teams
 Cities

AD PARTNERS

  Power of Caring
  presented by CIGNA


SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
 This Week's Issue
 Previous Issues
 Special Features
 Life of Reilly
 Frank Deford
 Subscriber Services
 SI for Women

FEATURES
 Trivia Blitz
 Free Email

TELEVISION
 CNN/SI - TV
 Turner Sports

SHOPPING
 CNN/SI Travel
 Golf Pro Shop
 MLB Gear Store
 NFL Gear Store

SI FOR KIDS
 Sports Parents
 Games
 Buzz World
 Shorter Reporter

SITE RESOURCES
 About Us
 myCNN
 
Inside Game

Joe D, star of stars

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Monday March 08, 1999 12:32 PM

 

I grew up in a city, New Haven, Connecticut, that was largely Italian. Pizza was called "apizza" and manicotti was called "mahn-e-gotts" and the best player in baseball was called "Joe DiMaggio."

The New York Yankees in my neighborhood were -- and still are -- the team of choice, not because they won the World Series just about every year, but because they had stars whose names sounded like they were entrees in a small cafe on the Via Veneto.

There was Lazzeri at the start and then Rizzuto and Berra and Frankie Crossetti, coaching third, and Joe Pepitone and even now, hey, there's Joe Girardi behind the plate and Joe Torre in the dugout.

The star of stars, though, was Joe D. He was Sinatra in baseball shoes. He was smooth, elegant, wonderful. He married Marilyn Monroe. OK? There was never a hair out of place in any picture anyone ever took of him. He not only hit, he hit for power. He not only ran, he ran as if his feet didn't touch the ground. He never said anything wrong. He never did anything wrong.

He was a figure of far-away mystery and majesty, a cigarette in his lips as he sat in a celebrity booth at the Copacabana.

The idea that he is dead, even at age 84, after a series of physical problems, is almost incomprehensible. Joe D? Dead? I don't know if the song - Where have you gone Joe DiMaggio? Our nation turns its lonely eyes to you? - was right for the entire country, but it was perfect for my neighborhood.

Where do we look now?

Sports Illustrated senior writer Leigh Montville appears regularly on CNN/Sports Illustrated.

 
Related information
Stories
Sports Illustrated Flashback: The Longest Hitting Streak in History
Viewpoint from CNN's Jim Huber: Give thanks for Joe DiMaggio
Multimedia
Click here for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call 1-888-53-CNNSI.


To the top

Copyright © 1999 CNN/SI. A Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.