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One of baseball's greatest icons Stan Musial has passed away at 92.
The St. Louis Cardinals lost their icon this weekend when Stan “the Man” Musial passed away. While it is a sad day for baseball, it’s a great opportunity to remember what it was that made ...
In this March 23, 1964 file photo, Stan Musial visits his former teammates at the St. Louis Cardinals spring training baseball camp in Florida. Musial, one of baseball's greatest hitters and a ...
But Stan Musial is an excellent businessman. When one visits his website , the first page offers signed baseball. photos, bats and other items. Stan Musial has adapted—but he hasn't changed.
Looking for that perfect gift for a friend, a family member, your significant other, or even yourself? Signed sport memorabilia has traditionally proved a wise investment and none more so than ...
Baseball signed by St. Louis Cardinal great Stan Musial (b.1920) in 1963. Stan "The Man" Musial (1920-2013) played first base for the St. Louis Cardinals from 1941 to 1963, winning seven National ...
Stan Musial, “Stan the Man,” who was the National League’s preeminent player in the decade after World War II and whose 22 seasons playing the outfield and first base for the St. Louis ...
On one occasion, Post-Dispatch baseball writer Bob Broeg incorporated “The Man” into his game account. And that was how Musial forever after was referred to in St. Louis: “Stan the Man.” ...
Stan “The Man” Musial, one of major league baseball’s most prolific hitters and a model of good sportsmanship during his Hall of Fame career with the St. Louis Cardinals, died Saturday.
Stan Musial won three NL MVP awards and still ranks fourth in baseball history with 3,630 hits :: /Getty Images We took Stan Musial for granted. When he retired after the 1963 season, after 24 ...
ST. LOUIS — Stan Musial was remembered during a funeral and memorial outside Busch Stadium on Saturday as a Hall of Famer and a St. Louis icon embraced by generations of fans who never had the ...
Musial was the first Cardinals player to have his number, No. 6, retired. And his top baseball honor came in 1969, when he was a first-ballot selection to Baseball’s Hall of Fame in Cooperstown ...