Steve Blass finds you can come home again


NORTH CANAAN — Baseball great Steve Blass returned to the Northwest Corner this month, to take part in the Steve Blass Golf Tournament and to present a check to help with repairs to the Little League field here that bears his name.

Last week, Blass and his wife, Karen, donated $1,500 to North Canaan/Canaan Little League.

The money will be used to finish the refurbishing of the field that started last year in honor of the 25th Anniversary Steve Blass Day, which pays respect to Blass’s dominant performance in the 1971 World Series.

Blass shared some of his memories of the field from his youth.

"It’s a fabulous field. I remember playing Little League here in 1950 for Jerry Fallon, who was my first Little League coach. It was a wonderful introduction to organized baseball."

He also noted that he holds a rare distinction from his Little League days.

"I was traded in the Little Leagues, I think I am the only one in the history of the league. I was traded to the Giants because the Little League Yankees didn’t have a uniform small enough for me."

Blass displayed great joy in being able to return to his roots.

"I’m proud to come back home and help out where I grew up and played Little League. It kinda disproves the saying that you can’t come home; you can come home."

The Steve Blass Gold Tournament was held at the Egremont Country Club on Sept. 17, raised about $9,000 through the tournament and a raffle, auction and dinner. Proceeds from the event will go to the Region One Athletic Fund.

Featured in the auction was memorabilia from some of the sports world’s biggest names, including but not limited to Derek Jeter, Hines Ward, Mario Lemieux and Ken Griffey Jr.

Blass was very appreciative of all the people who made the event a possibility and a success.

In addition to the country club, and to the Interlaken Inn (which provided lodging for the baseball great and his wife), he thanked North Canaan’s Champ Perotti for his efforts as well.

"Champ is, and has been, the driving force behind this event and one of the reasons it succeeds," Blass said.

Stadium System Inc. in North Canaan, where Blass works during the off season, donated sports equipment for the raffle.

"There was no free agency in baseball [in the early 1970s], so the money ballplayers made was a bit different than it is today," he said of his winter employment.

The $9,000 the tournament earned this year was a higher figure than the previous year’s tournament.

"The golf event was great, we had a cocktail hour and I got up and told some old baseball stories. Overall it was a great sports event."

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