Popular ex-MLB pitcher dies suddenly

Jose Lima gestures before the Dodgers' game against the Tigers on Friday. The former pitcher died Sunday at age 37 of an apparent heart ******.

(Jon SooHoo/AP Photo/Los Angeles Dodgers)
The big man wearing the crazy mustard-colored, three-piece suit and the bright red Angels cap introduced his ***, who smiled shyly, shook hands firmly and nodded yes he plays baseball.

The 11-year-old boy admitted finally his fastball is pushing 70 mph, but that he really loves to hit, and the big man, who used to pitch a little himself, laughed and pulled the boy so close that suit nearly swallowed him up.

“Throws hard,” the man said. “You should see him.”

The boy squirmed.

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They were together at Angel Stadium barely more than a week ago, the man and his ***, young in his features but built sturdy, and this morning I thought again about Jose Lima(notes) Jr.

His ******, just 37 years old, is gone, suffering an apparent heart ****** early Sunday morning.

“He just went in his *****,” said Dan Evans, the former Los Angeles Dodgers general manager who’d signed Lima six years ago, remained his friend and early Sunday morning was with the Lima ******.

Evans’ voice broke.

“I loved the man,” he said.

Born in Santiago, Dominican Republic, in 1972, Lima won 89 games over 13 major league seasons, 37 over two seasons – 1998-99 – with the Houston Astros and 13 for the Dodgers in 2004. Alive with energy and enthusiasm, his starts – his electric persona, even – became known as “Lima Time,” even as his ability to get outs faded.

Planning a return to the big leagues, Lima pitched in the Dominican winter league in 2007, in Korea in 2008 and for the independent Long Beach Armada and Edmonton Capitals in 2009. Recently, however, Lima had turned to developing a youth baseball academy in Pasadena, Calif., which quickly drew more than 250 applicants, attending high school games with Evans, and getting on with life after baseball.

On Friday night he was at Dodger Stadium with Jose Jr., receiving a grand ovation from the crowd there. On Saturday night he went dancing.

“He was doing so many great things in the community,” Evans said. “It was so wonderful to see his life get settled and that’s the shame – there are thousands of **** that would have been touched like so many of us were.”

Lima had big plans. From his suit jacket pocket, he produced glossy cards that touted his academy, which aimed to better the lives of L.A.’s youth through baseball. Photos of Lima – celebrating a strikeout, shushing a road crowd, just being Lima – leapt from both sides. He was proud of his new calling, this effort to build something meaningful for boys and girls he’d not yet met.

“It’s going to be great,” Lima had said.

Lima also reconnected with the Dodgers, recently joining the team’s alumni association, for which he would appear at community events.

The club issued a statement on behalf of owner Frank McCourt, which read, in part, “Though he was taken from us way too soon, he truly lived his life to the fullest and his personality was simply unforgettable. He had the ability to light up a room and that’s exactly what he did every time I saw him.”

In the organization’s most fallow period, Lima sang the national anthem before a game during the 2004 regular season, and in the playoffs pitched a five-hit shutout to beat the St. Louis Cardinals, the club’s first postseason win in 16 years.

“This guy had just a zest for life,” Evans said. “And he was planning on doing so much more. The terrible shame of it is, the thing that everybody loved so much about him – his heart – is what did him in.”

On Friday night at Dodger Stadium, Lima leaned over a rail, shook hands with friends and strangers, and loudly told them he was back, feeling good, ready for whatever was next.

“How are you, sir,” he shouted to an acquaintance, bowing and tipping a bright blue Dodgers cap.

“Hey-hey!” he greeted Mitch Poole, the Dodgers’ clubhouse manager.

Players on the field for batting practice yelled his name and waved. He smiled and pointed back to them, then gestured to the young man beside him, “My ***,” he said, and the boy too would smile and wave.

The crowd of friends around Jose Lima grew, just as it always did, him laughing and them laughing, too, because that’s what it was to be with him.

Not two days later, Evans was on the phone in a hospital corridor, unable to make the slightest sense of Lima’s passing.

“He was one of the guys you liked to be around,” he said. “That part of me is gone and I miss him already. I can hardly come to grips with the wish I had one more conversation with him.”

Jose Jr., he said, was coping the best he could.

“Jose was so excited to be around him, to help him out,” Evans said. “They’d gone to that game Friday, they’d had a great time and Jose got that ovation. That’s his last impression of his ***.”
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
What a shame. So young. He was one of the most colorful and popular players ever the wear the Astro uniform. Sadly, Lima-time is over for good. RIP Jose....we hardly knew ye. :(
 

Ace Bandage

The one and only.
I'd be very surprised if PEDs or ***** weren't involved. I'm not trying to tromp on a man's grave or or anything, but to die that young of a heart ****** makes me think something else was involved. Just sayin'...

RIP, Jose.
:very sad face:
 
Working in baseball, I knew Jose. He was a great guy. He was always upbeat, spoke his mind, and always had time for the ****. Please let the man rest in peace and celebrate his career and let's not speculate how he died. I know there is a problem with PED's in all sports, but the man has only been gone for a little more then 24 hrs. Thank you
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
Jose Lima was popular? :confused:

OMG yes....he created a sensation in Houston with his antics and his fan-friendliness. He won 37 games in 2 years and was about as good as anyone in the game at the time. His downfall was the phobia he developed with the Crawford boxes and that short left-field porch once the Astros moved to Enron....er, Minute Maid Park. He was never the same after that.

I wish I could find a video of his Casa Ole' commercial....it was a classic. :bowdown:
 
OMG yes....he created a sensation in Houston with his antics and his fan-friendliness. He won 37 games in 2 years and was about as good as anyone in the game at the time. His downfall was the phobia he developed with the Crawford boxes and that short left-field porch once the Astros moved to Enron....er, Minute Maid Park. He was never the same after that.

I wish I could find a video of his Casa Ole' commercial....it was a classic. :bowdown:

When I said popular I meant in a sense that one is well known nationally, not in the sense that he was well liked by people around him or the locations he played at.

I know who he is, but I was also a hardcore baseball fan until about nine or ten years ago.
 

StanScratch

My Penis Is Dancing!
I always enjoyed watching Jose pitch...unless it was against the Reds, whom he seemed to eat for dinner every time he took the mound. He seems like he would have been one of the more fun guys to be around.
May he rest in peace.
 

feller469

Moving to a trailer in Fife, AL.
I thought Curt Schillings' comments on the Colin Cowherd show today were great. He said that Lima was a better person than baseball player and he was a good player. He will be missed. Hopefully some player will see the impact Lima had on the community and try to follow in Lima's footsteps.
 
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