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MLB News: Brooklyn Native Who Roamed Dodgers’ Outfield Passes Away
Al Ferrara was born in Brooklyn in 1939, making the perfect time to appreciate the Dodgers’ run of success in the 1950s. The Dodgers moved west to Los Angeles in 1958, and Ferrara was fortunate enough to move with them.
The Dodgers signed Ferrara for a $9,000 bonus in 1958. He debuted in Los Angeles five years later, collected a World Series ring in 1965, and spent most of his eight major league seasons with his hometown team.
Ferrara died at age 84 after a long battle with pneumonia.
“I was never motivated by money,” Ferrara told the Society for American Baseball Research. “I was from Brooklyn and I grew up a Dodger fan. If you told me that I would wind up batting cleanup for the Dodgers I would have paid you. Playing the game was the important thing to me. Getting paid to play was just a bonus.”
In 574 major league gmes with the Dodgers (1963-68), San Diego Padres (1969-70) and Cincinnati Reds (1971), Ferrara batted .259 with 51 home runs and 198 RBIs.
Ferrara rejoined the Dodgers in their community relations department in 2009. He was a frequent guest at alumni events over the next decade.
More to come on this story from Newsweek Sports.
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