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Indians lose family member

Longtime trainer dead at 60 following brain hemorrhage

Posted: Tuesday July 16, 2002 6:07 PM
Updated: Wednesday July 17, 2002 11:57 AM
  Jim Thome, Paul Shuey The Cleveland Indians observe a pregame moment of silence for Jim Warfield. AP

CLEVELAND (AP) -- Jim Warfield, a popular trainer for more than 30 years with the Cleveland Indians, died Tuesday after suffering a brain hemorrhage a day earlier at Jacobs Field. He was 60.

Warfield, who started with the ballclub in 1969, became ill after arriving at the ballpark on Monday morning. He was taken to the Cleveland Clinic, where he underwent surgery.

Team spokesman Bart Swain said Warfield died at 5:15 p.m.

The Indians canceled batting practice before Tuesday night's game against the Chicago White Sox, and the clubhouse was closed to reporters.

"He was as loved as anyone in the game of baseball," third baseman Travis Fryman said shortly after learning of Warfield's death.

Fryman said the Indians were heartbroken by the loss, but decided to play because that's what Warfield would have wanted.

A moment of silence was observed before the first pitch as a photograph of a smiling Warfield was shown on the giant scoreboard in center field. The Indians said there will be a private memorial service at Jacobs Field following Thursday afternoon's game against the Minnesota Twins.

"There is nothing we can do that will do him justice," Fryman said. "He had a tremendous effect on a lot of people. There isn't a funeral home big enough to hold all the people."

Beginning Friday, the club will wear a "JW" patch on their jerseys and the training room at the Jake will soon be dedicated as the "Jimmy Warfield Training Room".

White Sox 5, Indians 4
CLEVELAND -- Magglio Ordonez's second homer of the game, a leadoff shot in the ninth inning off Bob Wickman, gave the Chicago White Sox a 5-4 win Tuesday night over the grieving Cleveland Indians.

Ordonez, who also hit a two-run homer in the first, connected for his 17th off Wickman (0-3) as the White Sox won for just the second time in six games and capped a dark day for Cleveland.

The Indians played with heavy hearts after learning of longtime trainer Jim Warfield's death less than two hours before gametime Tuesday.

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Indians general manager Mark Shapiro said the players considered not playing out of respect for Warfield.

"The only reason they talked about playing is because of the person we're dealing with," Shapiro said. "He never missed a day of work in his life. He always had a smile on his face and he's a lightning rod for energy, positivity and everything that is good about baseball.

"Anybody who has to work right now in the Indians family, going on with day-to-day life is not easy and there isn't anyone in the Indians' family who hasn't been touched by Jimmy Warfield."

Some of the Indians players who came onto the field to stretch before Tuesday's game fought back tears after learning of Warfield's passing. As they did on Monday night, many of them paid tribute to him by writing "JW" on their caps.

First baseman Jim Thome, one of the players closest to Warfield, sketched his friend's initials in the dirt after taking his position in the field Monday night.

Warfield was in his 32nd season with the Indians. Players said he was much more than someone who taped ankles or gave soothing rubdowns.

"He was like a second father to me," said White Sox catcher Sandy Alomar Jr., who spent 11 years with the Indians. "He always tried to put me back together."

Alomar, who was crying after he met with some of his former teammates, remembered the hours he spent working with Warfield while rehabilitating following several surgeries.
 
Verducci: A friend to all
Baseball is a game of perfect dimensions in which the distances between the bases and the number of outs and innings seem to have formed as naturally as mountains or rain. What makes the game special, though, is its people. And baseball is a little less special today because Jimmy Warfield is gone.

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    "I am so sad because Jimmy always was there for me," he said. "He's one of the finest people I ever met, always kind and caring."

    Manager Joel Skinner, who played three seasons with the Indians, said he also appreciated Warfield's soft touch.

    "I've know him since Day One," Skinner said. "He was the first person I ever met here. He helped me get my uniform. It's tough when someone in your family is ill. We're all teammates when it comes to things like this. It's tough."

    Fryman said Warfield didn't have any enemies.

    Even after being mugged three times while on road trips, Warfield couldn't find any fault with his attackers.

    "Jimmy never said a negative thing about the people, except that they probably needed the money more than he did," Fryman said. "He never said a bad thing about them. That embodies the type of person he was."

    Warfield joined the Indians' organization in 1969 as trainer for the team's Class AA affiliate before becoming Cleveland's trainer in 1971.

    He was the Indians' head trainer for 26 seasons before becoming Paul Spicuzza's assistant in 1997.

    Warfield was one of the American League's trainers for the All-Star game in 1971 and 1997. He and Spicuzza were jointly honored as "Trainer of the Year" in 1992 by the Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society.

    Warfield is survived by his wife, Linda, and son, Jordan, a student manager for the Ohio State basketball team.

     
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