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suave1477
12-17-2008, 10:56 PM
This may seem like an odd topic but I thought there were some interesting things to note.

I looked up who passed away this year and so far it is about 4 or 5 players.

I looked up who passed away last year and it was 55 players.

What I did find interesting is that for one the amount difference!!

Also how many players that passed away last year that were still living up until last year.
Many players from the 30's and 40's passed away last year.

Wondering was there a health change between the 30's to the 50's example - eating habits, exercises, or something else that would of made ball players during those generations live a bit longer since there was such a drastic difference between last year and this year or is it all just mere numbers and just plain old getting old????

ironmanfan
12-17-2008, 11:04 PM
I'm not following your point....I can list 7-8 former major league baseball players that have passed away this month alone; where exactly are you getting your information from?

Bill
whhp72@yahoo.com

suave1477
12-17-2008, 11:07 PM
Ironman I was looking at Baseball Reference, they list the players that pass away each year unless I read something wrong.

ironmanfan
12-17-2008, 11:09 PM
suave, that is not for the entire calendar year but rather for former players who have passed recently.

suave1477
12-17-2008, 11:11 PM
Oh ok well thats odd because they list for the entire calendar year of last year wonder why they didn't do it this year.

Do you know where I can look to see all the ones from this year?

ironmanfan
12-17-2008, 11:14 PM
they'll do it when the calendar year is over....I'm sure you'll find no abnormal swings in terms of numbers from the past few years.

suave1477
12-17-2008, 11:17 PM
Heres an interesting article I found to add to this topic




Compared to baseball, football players die younger

By Thomas Hargrove
Scripps Howard News Service
(Archive)

Professional football players are now more than twice as likely as Major League Baseball players to die before their 50th birthday, and medical experts say the culprit is probably differing body bulk.

As part of a study of early mortality within the National Football League, Scripps Howard News Service compared the lifespan of 3,850 deceased football players against that of 2,403 dead baseball players.

The study found that baseball players and football players born before 1955 were about equally likely to suffer an early death. But the mortality rates sharply differ among athletes born more recently.

The Complete Study
Scripps Howard News Service studied 3,850 professional-football players who have died in the last century. What they found, and some issues it raised, are chronicles here:

• Study: NFL players dying young at alarming rate
• Compared to baseball, football players die younger
• Bigger isn't better as far as health is concerned
• Evidence is clear: Preps are getting bigger, too
Among the 8,961 pro-football players born in the last 50 years, at least 130 are already dead. Among 4,382 professional baseball players, 31 are known to have died. That means 1 in every 69 football players is dead compared to 1 in every 154 baseball players.

Medical experts were quick to suspect body weight. Offensive and defensive linemen average at least 100 pounds more than most baseball players.

"There certainly seems to be a big difference between baseball players and football players, speaking just from what I see on TV,'' said Dr. Sherry Baron of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. "This comparison is very interesting.''

Baron said she plans to soon repeat her 1994 study of mortality rates within the NFL. She concluded 11 years ago that most NFL players were not dying prematurely, although she said linemen had a 52 percent greater risk of death from heart disease.

The most common causes of death among baseball players are accidents, especially auto accidents, the Scripps Howard study found. Only a third of the baseball players died of medical causes.

But a majority (52 percent) of the deceased football players succumbed to conditions such as coronary disease, stroke and cancer -- diseases known to be more common among obese people.

The deceased baseball players averaged 192 pounds during their athletic careers while the dead football players averaged 238 pounds. Football players who died of medical causes averaged 248 pounds.

"There seems to be a linear relationship between weight and the likelihood of cardiovascular disease,'' said Kevin Guskiewicz, director of the Sports Medicine Research Laboratory at the University of North Carolina.

Guskiewicz has found increased occurrences of hypertension and heart disease among 2,700 retired NFL players. "It's clearly higher than in the general population,'' he said.

earlywynnfan
12-19-2008, 12:07 AM
If you go to baseball-reference, click on someone who died this year, say, Red Murff. Click on his bullpen page, and there's a link for "2008 Deaths." So far, 123.

Ken
earlywynnfan5@hotmail.com

Dewey2007
01-09-2009, 12:18 AM
I just found this website dedicated to deceased MLB players that I thought some others on the forum might find interesting.

http://thedeadballera.com/

emann
01-09-2009, 09:20 AM
Great website, thanks for posting the link.