Steve Stone (Baseball) Bio, Wiki, Age, Height, Family, Wife, WSCR, ESPN, Salary,Twitter

Steve Stone (Steven Michael Stone) is an American former Major League Baseball (MLB) player, and current sportscaster and author.

Steve Stone Biography

Steve Stone (Steven Michael Stone) is an American former Major League Baseball (MLB) player, and current sportscaster and author. He pitched for four MLB teams between 1971 and 1981.

In 1980, Stone was the AL Cy Young Award winner, and an American League All Star, finishing the season with a record of 25–7. Between 1983 and 2004, he was WGN-TV’s color commentator for Chicago Cubs broadcasts, missing a couple of seasons late in his tenure due to health problems.

He worked in radio until 2009, when he became the color commentator for Chicago White Sox television broadcasts.

Steve Stone Age

Steve was born on July 14, 1947 in South Euclid, Ohio, United States. He is 75 years old as of 2022.

Steve Stone Height

Stone stands at a height of 5 feet 10 inches tall.

Steve Stone Family

Stone is the son of Dorothy (a waitress) and Paul Stone (who changed records in juke boxes, and later became an insurance salesman), who were Orthodox Jews. His maternal grandfather, Edward Manheim, lived to see Stone celebrate his bar mitzvah in September 1960.

Steve Stone
Steve Stone

Steve Stone Wife

Stone has been married two times. He is married to Lisa Stone since 2006. He was previously married to Nancy Nathanson from 1970 to 1972.

Steve Stone Salary

Stone earns an estimated to be around $10000 to $50000 annually.

Steve Stone Net Worth

The baseball Player has a net worth of $9 million.

Steve Stone Education

Stone attended Charles F. Brush High School where he played high school ball for baseball Coach Jim Humpall. He has won several tennis championships, was a ping pong champion, and was a proficient golfer.

He then attended Kent State University where he was an outstanding pitcher and his catcher was Thurman Munson. He was selected to the All Mid-American Conference team, and was named team captain as a junior.

In 1968, he had a 2.00 ERA for the Chatham Anglers in the Cape Cod League. Stone also starred on the bowling, volleyball, and tennis teams. He became a Brother in Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity. In 1970, he graduated with a teaching degree in history and government.

Steve Stone Draft And Minor Leagues

In 1968 he was drafted by the Cleveland Indians in the 16th round of the draft, but did not sign. In February 1969 he was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the fourth round of the draft (secondary phase).

From 1969–71 Stone pitched in the minor leagues. In 1969 he pitched for the Fresno Giants, in 1970 for the Phoenix Giants and Amarillo Giants, and in 1971 again for Phoenix. He compiled a 32–24 record, and struck out nearly a batter per inning.

Steve Stone Major league career

San Francisco Giants (1971–72)

Breaking the stereotype of ballplayers in his era, Stone said:

Charlie Fox (manager of the Giants in 1971) felt the only way a ballplayer could perform was to chew tobacco, wear a sloppy uniform and, as he put it, not be afraid to get a bloody nose, and eat, drink and sleep baseball. I never thought a bloody nose was all that comfortable, and tobacco upsets my stomach. I like to eat – but not baseball – and I never thought sleeping with the game would be all that enjoyable. I think he thought reading hurt your eyes.

Ron Fimrite mused in Sports Illustrated in May 1971 that Stone was “a Jewish intellectual who just might be a right-handed [(Sandy) Koufax.” In 1972 he was 6-8 with a 2.98 ERA. In November 1972, after suffering a sore arm, Stone was traded by the Giants with Ken Henderson to the Chicago White Sox for Tom Bradley.

Chicago White Sox (1973)

In 1973 he was 6-11 with a 4.24 ERA, and was fourth in the AL in strikeouts per 9 innings pitched (7.04), and 8th in hit batsmen.

Chicago Cubs (1974–76)

In December 1973 he was traded by the White Sox with Jim Kremmel, Ken Frailing, and Steve Swisher to the Chicago Cubs for Ron Santo. In 1974 he was 8-5 with a 4.14 ERA. In 1975 he was 12–8 with a 3.95 ERA, and pitched 214.3 innings.

Chicago White Sox (1977–78)

In November 1976, after suffering a torn rotator cuff and undertaking cryotherapy after refusing surgery and cortisone injections, he signed as a free agent with the Chicago White Sox for $60,000 ($335,000 today), turning down offers from four other teams. In 1977 he was 15–12 with a 4.51 ERA in 207.1 innings. During that year on August 29 Stone gave up a home run to Cleveland Indians second baseman Duane Kuiper – Kuiper’s only career home run in 3,379 at bats. In 1978, when he was paid $125,000 ($480,000 today), he was 12–12 with a 4.37 ERA in 212 innings.

Baltimore Orioles (1979–81)

In November 1978, he signed a 4-year, $760,000 ($2,919,000 today) deal as a free agent with the Baltimore Orioles, again turning down four other offers. In 1979 Stone was 11–7 with a 3.77 ERA in 186 innings, and was 7th in the league in fewest hits allowed per 9 innings pitched (8.37).

His best year was 1980, when he went 25–7 (.781) for the Orioles, won the Cy Young Award and The Sporting News Pitcher of the Year Award, and came in 9th in the AL MVP voting. Stone’s relief pitchers did not blow a save for him all season until his last start of the year. He led the league in wins (his 25 wins set a team record) and won-lost percentage, and was second in games started (37), seventh in ERA (3.23), strikeouts (149), hits allowed/9 IP (8.04), and hit batsmen (6), and ninth in innings pitched (250.7).

He also won the American League June 1980 Pitcher of the Month Award. He also started and pitched three perfect innings in the All-Star Game that year.

“I knew it would ruin my arm. But one year of 25–7 is worth five of 15–15.”
— Stone, on throwing over 50% curveballs in 1980
Stone threw as many as 73 curveballs in a game at least twice that season, even though he knew he might damage his pitching arm.

“I used to try not to lose before”, Stone said in 1980. “Now, when I go out, I go out to win every time, and I’m certain I am. I try to envision myself literally walking off the mound a winner. I allow no negatives in my thinking. When certain ones start creeping in, I erase them and make it like a blank blackboard waiting to be filled in with things like, ‘The team is going to play well, is going to score some runs, I’m going to throw strikes, I’m going to win.’ ”

After his Cy Young season, the pitcher who was listed as 5′ 10″ commented:

All my life, because of my size, people have been telling me what I couldn’t do. They said I was too small and not durable enough. First they said I’d never pitch in high school. Then they said I’d never pitch in college. Then they said okay, but you’ll never pitch professionally. Then they said well, maybe you’re pitching professionally but you’ll never make it out of the minors.

When I got to the majors, they said well, you may be in the majors but you’ll never be good. Now those same people are saying I won’t have a good year this year. That kind of thing is reiterated by people who’ve never achieved a great deal themselves. Stone suffered from shoulder tendonitis in 1981, going 4–7 with a 4.60 ERA, and retired due to it at age 34.

He is considered one of the best Jewish pitchers in major league history. Through July 2011, Stone was third among Jewish pitchers in career wins (107) and strikeouts (1,065), behind Ken Holtzman and Sandy Koufax and directly ahead of Jason Marquis, and ninth in games pitched (320), behind Barry Latman. Reminiscing about Sandy Koufax’s influence on him and others when he was a child, he said, “He gave little Jewish boys some hope.”

Steve Stone Sportscasting career (1983-present)

Covering the Cubs (1983-2004)

In 1983, Stone became a color commentator for the WGN television broadcasts of the Chicago Cubs, teaming for 14 years with Hall of Fame announcer Harry Caray. In 1985, he posed for Playgirl. After Harry Caray’s death in February 1998, Stone was paired with Caray’s grandson Chip Caray. Stone left the booth due to health reasons in 2000, including a case of coccidioidomycosis (Valley fever) and kidney stones, and returned to the Cubs booth in 2003 and 2004.

Leaving the Cubs booth

Stone refused a contract extension as the Cubs color-man after the 2004 season amid a controversy involving Cubs players who felt he was being overly critical of their performance. Even so, he was a fan favorite. One reason he was so well-liked was his ability to accurately predict what might happen in various game situations, explaining to the audience why the strategy or pitch would be successful prior to the play.

A famous example of this was him expressing “I wouldn’t pitch to this guy” in a 2004 game, seconds before the batter (Adam Dunn) hit a home run off Cubs pitcher Mike Remlinger to give the Reds the lead. Stone expressed frustration with Cubs manager Dusty Baker for not controlling his players. At one point during the 2004 season, Kent Mercker called the broadcast booth from the bullpen during a game to complain about comments made, also confronting Stone in a hotel lobby.

Among the comments that reportedly irked Mercker were Chip Caray’s praise of Houston Astros pitcher Roy Oswalt. It was also reported that Mercker and left fielder Moisés Alou shouted at Stone on a team charter plane to a road game in 2004, and that Alou tried to have Stone and Caray banned from the team charter flights. On September 30, 2004, in the wake of a 12-inning loss to the Cincinnati Reds that all but eliminated the Cubs, Stone strongly criticized the team.

“The truth of this situation is [this is] an extremely talented bunch of guys who want to look at all directions except where they should really look, and kind of make excuses for what happened… This team should have won the wild-card [playoff berth] by six, seven games. No doubt about it.” The comments stunned manager Baker, and were a factor in Stone’s resignation as a Cub broadcaster the following month.

2005–present

In early 2005 Stone was hired by Chicago radio station WSCR to provide commentary and host a weekly talk show, hosted on Mondays by Terry Boers and Dan Bernstein, on Tuesdays by Mike North, and on Thursdays by Brian Hanley and Mike Mulligan. He was also hired by ESPN to work some of that network’s baseball telecasts. In early August 2007, Stone filled in for Chicago White Sox color commentator Darrin Jackson, while Jackson took leave for the birth of his child, during which he successfully predicted a walk-off home run by Juan Uribe in extra innings.

In October 2007, Stone called postseason games for TBS, partnered with play-by-play announcer Ted Robinson. On March 4, 2008, Stone was named the color commentator for White Sox radio broadcasts for the 2008 season on WSCR AM670 The Score, replacing Chris Singleton, who moved to ESPN’s Baseball Tonight. On September 13, 2008, Stone accepted the job as the color commentator for the White Sox television broadcasts for six years beginning with the 2009 season.

He said he enjoys being in the booth with Hawk Harrelson, stating that he likes his nickname “Stone Pony.” Stone also acts as a fill-in play-by-play announcer when Harrelson isn’t available. He works with either analysts Tom Paciorek or Tony Graffanino.

Steve Stone Writing/Books

Stone, along with Barry Rozner of the Chicago suburban area Daily Herald, authored Where’s Harry?, a memoir of his experiences with Harry Caray in the WGN booth in 1999.

Books

  • Where’s Harry? (1999) (with Barry Rozner) Taylor Publishing; ISBN 0-87833-233-2
  • “Said In Stone: Your Game, My Way” (2011) Triumph Books; ISBN 1-60078-538-7

Steve Stone Stats

Pitching:

Year Lg Team W L W% ERA G GS GF CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB IBB SO HBP BK WP BF
1971 NL San Francisco Giants 5 9 .357 4.15 24 19 1 2 2 0 110.7 110 56 51 9 55 4 63 3 1 2 485
1972 NL San Francisco Giants 6 8 .429 2.98 27 16 2 4 1 0 123.7 97 48 41 11 49 2 85 2 1 2 506
1973 AL Chicago White Sox 6 11 .353 4.24 36 22 7 3 0 1 176.3 163 87 83 11 82 0 138 7 0 2 759
1974 NL Chicago Cubs 8 6 .571 4.14 38 23 3 1 0 0 169.7 185 92 78 19 64 4 90 4 0 1 753
1975 NL Chicago Cubs 12 8 .600 3.95 33 32 1 6 1 0 214.3 198 103 94 24 80 3 139 5 2 2 911
1976 NL Chicago Cubs 3 6 .333 4.08 17 15 0 1 1 0 75.0 70 36 34 6 21 1 33 3 0 0 312
1977 AL Chicago White Sox 15 12 .556 4.51 31 31 0 8 0 0 207.3 228 115 104 25 80 3 124 5 1 10 917
1978 AL Chicago White Sox 12 12 .500 4.37 30 30 0 6 1 0 212.0 196 110 103 19 84 1 118 3 0 2 898
1979 AL Baltimore Orioles 11 7 .611 3.77 32 32 0 3 0 0 186.0 173 91 78 31 73 1 96 1 0 3 781
1980 AL Baltimore Orioles 25 7 .781 3.23 37 37 0 9 1 0 250.7 224 103 90 22 101 3 149 6 0 7 1048
1981 AL Baltimore Orioles 4 7 .364 4.60 15 12 1 0 0 0 62.7 63 39 32 7 27 0 30 1 0 0 270
Totals 107 93 .535 3.97 320 269 15 43 7 1 1788.3 1707 880 788 184 716 22 1065 40 5 31 7640

 

Batting:

Year Lg Team GP PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB DP HBP SH SF IBB
1971 NL San Francisco Giants 24 42 34 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 5 19 .000 .128 .000 .128 0 1 0 3 0 0
1972 NL San Francisco Giants 27 41 34 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 15 .118 .143 .118 .261 4 0 0 6 0 0
1973 AL Chicago White Sox 39 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1974 NL Chicago Cubs 42 65 58 2 7 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 20 .121 .150 .121 .271 7 0 0 5 0 0
1975 NL Chicago Cubs 34 83 72 3 8 2 0 0 3 0 0 3 29 .111 .158 .139 .297 10 1 1 7 0 0
1976 NL Chicago Cubs 17 22 21 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 .143 .143 .143 .286 3 0 0 1 0 0
1977 AL Chicago White Sox 31 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1978 AL Chicago White Sox 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1979 AL Baltimore Orioles 32 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1980 AL Baltimore Orioles 49 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1981 AL Baltimore Orioles 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 340 253 219 9 22 2 0 0 7 0 0 11 92 .100 .147 .110 .257 24 2 1 22 0 0

Fielding:

Year Lg Team Pos GP GS Inn. PO A E DP Fld% RF/9 RF/G
1971 NL San Francisco Giants P 24 19 111.0 12 21 1 2 .971 2.676 1.375
1972 NL San Francisco Giants P 27 16 124.0 6 21 3 0 .900 1.960 1.000
1973 AL Chicago White Sox P 36 22 176.3 13 24 2 2 .949 1.888 1.028
1974 NL Chicago Cubs P 38 23 169.7 15 30 3 0 .938 2.387 1.184
1975 NL Chicago Cubs P 33 32 214.3 21 27 3 1 .941 2.016 1.455
1976 NL Chicago Cubs P 17 15 75.0 3 6 1 1 .900 1.080 .529
1977 AL Chicago White Sox P 31 31 207.3 5 34 2 2 .951 1.693 1.258
1978 AL Chicago White Sox P 30 30 212.0 12 28 4 1 .909 1.698 1.333
1979 AL Baltimore Orioles P 32 32 186.0 21 27 1 3 .980 2.323 1.500
1980 AL Baltimore Orioles P 37 37 250.7 14 26 2 1 .952 1.436 1.081
1981 AL Baltimore Orioles P 15 12 62.7 3 10 0 0 1.000 1.867 .867
Totals 320 269 1789.0 125 254 22 13 .945 1.907 1.184

 

Postseason – Pitching:

Year Lg Team Rnd W L W% ERA G GS GF CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB IBB SO HBP BK WP BF
1979 AL Baltimore Orioles WS 0 0 9.00 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.0 4 2 2 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 12
Totals 0 0 9.00 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.0 4 2 2 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 12

 

Postseason – Batting:

Year Lg Team Rnd GP PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB DP HBP SH SF IBB
1979 AL Baltimore Orioles WS 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

 

Postseason – Fielding:

Year Lg Team Rnd Pos GP GS Inn. PO A E DP Fld% RF/9 RF/G
1979 AL Baltimore Orioles WS P 1 0 2.0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000
Totals 1 0 2.0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000

 

 

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