- Home
- Our Stories
- 1967 BBWAA Career Excellence Award Winner Damon Runyon
1967 BBWAA Career Excellence Award Winner Damon Runyon
A reporter, sports columnist, and popular short story writer, 1967 J.G. Taylor Spink Award winner Damon Runyan was described by Connie Mack as "a master of characters and plots such as we see every day in our grandstands." Runyon was a moody man who always showed just a hint of a smile.
As Fred Lieb recalled, "you felt he was laughing at the world, not with it."
Born in Manhattan, Kan., in 1884, Runyon arrived in New York in 1910 and covered the New York Giants for the New York American from 1911-1920. As author Gene Fowler put it, Runyon "underscored excitement by casting his stories in the present tense." Runyon was responsible for nicknaming Brooklyn manager Wilbert Robinson "Uncle Wilbert."
Following his career as a baseball reporter, Runyon turned to literature. Called "a master of the art of anonymity in the first person," Runyon became best known for his short stories that later became successful musicals and movies such as Guys and Dolls and Little Miss Marker. In the language of Reader's Encyclopedia, he "interpreted the semiliterate in slangy Americanese and with unusual observation."
Throat cancer in 1944 left Runyon unable to speak, but he continued to write until his death on Dec. 10, 1946.
More BBWAA Career Excellence Award Winners
Hall of Fame Awards
Related Stories
1968 Hall of Fame Game
Nolan Ryan becomes baseball’s first million dollar man
Dave Winfield signs with hometown Minnesota Twins
Hall of Famer Filmography
1942 Hall of Fame Game
Hall of Famer Carlton Fisk Featured in Nov. 7 Voices of the Game event as Museum Unveils Whole New Ballgame Exhibit
01.01.2023
Hall of Fame Legends Boggs, Gossage, Fingers, Marichal, Niekro and Smith Headed to Cooperstown for Classic Weekend, May 26-28
01.01.2023
Inductees Exhibit for Class of 2017 Now on Display in Cooperstown
01.01.2023