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Thread: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

  1. #81
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    Daxil Solshok's Avatar
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Aww, the memories....

  2. #82
    Ellsworth M. Toohey
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    In my e-mail today, I just got an updated spreadsheet of a Dead Pool that four of us in college started back in September 1992. The idea is that first one to get all 25 wins, but actually two of us mistakenly picked people who were already dead, so it's really first one to 24. The list was just updated with Lena Horne and Ernie Harwell (one of my picks). Clearly, I'm terrible at this -- almost 18 years later and I still have 6 people alive on my draft picks:

    Raisa Gorbachev - RIP
    John Lee Hooker - RIP
    BB King
    The Queen Mother - RIP
    Scott Muni - RIP
    Wolfman Jack - RIP
    Nelson Mandela
    Jack Paar - RIP
    Will Eisner - RIP
    Joe Schuster - OOPS, was already dead
    Jake LaMotta
    Walter Cronkite - RIP
    Benny Carter - RIP
    Harry Helmsley - RIP
    Kim-Il-Sung - RIP
    Jonathan Winters
    Erik Honekker - RIP
    Sid Caesar
    Ozzy Osborne
    Harry Caray - RIP
    Ernie Harwell - RIP
    Clark Terry
    Pope John Paul II - RIP
    Fredrick Pohl - RIP
    Ray Bradbury

  3. #83
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Nelson Mandela and Jonathan Winters tell you, "I'm not dead yet!"

  4. #84
    Ellsworth M. Toohey
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Eight people then. I'm even worse than I thought.

  5. #85
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Your incompetence has the power to grant life!

  6. #86
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Quote Originally Posted by PPatty View Post
    Eight people then. I'm even worse than I thought.
    When did Fredrick Pohl die?

  7. #87
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Really, Harry Caray, REALLY?! He was a walking talking stroke. I was watching Cubs games and keeping an eye open and hope out that he would be singing the seventh inning stretch and stroke out on live TV.

    A 1, 2, 3 strikes you're out....aahhh, Stoney halp....splat.
    Virtually all U.S. senators, and most of the representatives in the House, are members of the top 1 percent when they arrive, are kept in office by money from the top 1 percent, and know that if they serve the top 1 percent well they will be rewarded by the top 1 percent when they leave office

  8. #88
    Ellsworth M. Toohey
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Quote Originally Posted by jaly View Post
    When did Fredrick Pohl die?
    Hm. I guess he's not dead. For some reason, our death pool commissioner listed him as dead. Oh well. Guess I'm even worse at this than already acknowledged.

  9. #89
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    So, who's next?

  10. #90
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Quote Originally Posted by Ronin View Post
    So, who's next?
    To be declared dead or brought back to life?

  11. #91
    Formerly: Baelan Shadowbane
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Quote Originally Posted by jaly View Post
    To be declared dead or brought back to life?
    With PPatty there's a 50/50 shot

    "With your shield, or on it"

  12. #92
    Mangina at large.
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Congrats to Gloria Stuart, my pick in the pool, who today turned 100 years old. And curse your longevity!

  13. #93
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    100 years? Geez, you got screwed by the odds there ~

    Nerkahia
    Retired 85 Wizard of Ascentia, The Nameless

  14. #94
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Bet no one had Bob Probert dieing

    http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?id=5356462

    ESPN.com news services
    Former NHL enforcer Bob Probert died after collapsing in a boat in Ontario on Monday, police told The Windsor Star. He was 45.

    [+] Enlarge
    Rick Stewart /Getty Images
    Bob Probert finished his career with 163 goals, 384 points and 3,300 penalty minutes -- fourth in NHL history -- in 935 games.
    OPP spokeswoman Shawna Coulter told the paper that emergency crews performed CPR on Probert on the shore of Lake St. Clair in Windsor, Ontario, before transporting him to Windsor Regional Hospital.

    While playing for the Detroit Red Wings from 1985-86 to 1993-94, Probert was charged several times with driving under the influence. He also was caught trying to carry cocaine from Canada into the United States, and served a prison term.

    He was placed on inactive status for the 1994-95 season after he was involved in a motorcycle accident and tests showed alcohol and cocaine in his system.

    Probert retired in November 2003 after 17 seasons with the Red Wings and the Chicago Blackhawks. He finished his career with 163 goals, 384 points and 3,300 penalty minutes -- fourth in NHL history -- in 935 games.

    Probert's family has called a 6 p.m. news conference at the hospital.

    Information from The Associated Press contributed to this story.

  15. #95
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Ilene Woods, Voice Of Disney's Cinderella, Dies At 81

    The LA Times reported Ilene Woods, voice of Disney's Cinderella, died last week at age 81. Woods was 18 when Walt asked her to voice Cinderella She was born Jacquelyn Ruth Woods on May 5, 1929, in Portsmouth, N.H. When asked in a 2006 interview for Starlog magazine what the best thing was about having been "Cinderella," she replied: "Oh, I love the idea that after I'm gone, children will still be hearing my voice." As was her request, no funeral will be held.

    Ilene Woods: May 5, 1929 – July 1, 2010

  16. #96
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    was already posted
    Last edited by aazdazen; July 13th, 2010 at 08:09 AM.

  17. #97
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool


  18. #98
    Ellsworth M. Toohey
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Next pick: Seve Ballesteros

  19. #99
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    No one picked him but Harmon Killebrew passed away o and some rapper,M-Bone, was killed in a drive by.

    http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=6559023
    MINNEAPOLIS -- Harmon Killebrew, the Minnesota Twins slugger known for his tape-measure home runs, has died at his home in Scottsdale, Ariz., after battling esophageal cancer. He was 74.

    The team said Killebrew died peacefully Tuesday morning with his wife, Nita, and their family at his side.

    He had announced in December that he had been diagnosed with cancer. Last week, Killebrew announced that doctors had deemed his cancer incurable and he would no longer fight the "awful disease."

    Power, Kindness Forever Remembered

    Harmon Killebrew gave Minnesotans a ballplayer -- and a person -- that they were proud of during a Hall of Fame career, writes Jim Caple. Story

    Killebrew hit 573 home runs during his 22-year career, 11th-most in major league history. His eight seasons with 40 or more homers still is tied for second in league history to Babe Ruth.

    "No individual has ever meant more to the Minnesota Twins organization and millions of fans across Twins territory than Harmon Killebrew," Twins president Dave St. Peter said. He said Killebrew's legacy "will be the class, dignity and humility he demonstrated each and every day as a Hall of Fame-quality husband, father, friend, teammate and man. The Twins extend heartfelt sympathies and prayers to the Killebrew family at this difficult time."

    Former teammate Tony Oliva said Tuesday the Twins flew him out to Arizona on Saturday so he could spend time with Killebrew.

    "It's very hard, we knew each other about 50 years," Oliva told ESPN on Tuesday after learning of Killebrew's death. "I saw him Saturday and he looked very good, even though he was very sick. He was smiling and making jokes."

    Pitcher Tommy John told ESPN that Killebrew was "one of the nicest, most compassionate guys I ever met in baseball." He said Killebrew hit five home runs against him, "and the most he had off anybody was six."

    "He never showed you up, no flaps down or anything, just that little number 3 -- like Babe Ruth -- trotting like he hit 'em before and he would hit 'em again."

    Killebrew broke in with the Washington Senators in 1954 as an 18-year-old. He spent most of his first five seasons in the minors, then hit 42 homers in his first full season in 1959.

    The Senators moved to Minnesota in 1961, and Killebrew hit 190 homers in his first four seasons there, including 49 in 1964.

    The 11-time All-Star was the American League's Most Valuable Player in 1969 after hitting 49 home runs with 140 RBIs and 145 walks, all team records that stand to this day.

    "I found out early in life that I could hit a baseball farther than most players and that's what I tried to do," Killebrew said.

    [+] Enlarge
    Malcolm Emmons/US Presswire
    Harmon Killebrew hit 573 career home runs and was the 1969 AL MVP after hitting 49 homers with 140 RBIs and 145 walks -- all Twins records that still stand.
    Behind their soft-spoken slugger nicknamed "The Killer," the Twins reached the World Series for the first time in 1965 and back-to-back AL Championship Series in 1969 and 1970.

    Former Twins owner Calvin Griffith used to call Killebrew the backbone of the franchise. "He kept us in business," Griffith said.

    The man whose silhouette inspired Major League Baseball's official logo was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1984, the first Twin to be enshrined. Killebrew's No. 3 jersey was retired in 1975. Killebrew's easygoing demeanor contrasted starkly with his nickname and standing as one of baseball's most feared hitters.

    "I didn't have evil intentions," Killebrew said on his website. "But I guess I did have power."

    Harmon Clayton Killebrew was born June 29, 1936, in the Idaho farm town of Payette. He was an all-state quarterback in high school, but it was his power with a baseball bat in his hands that got Killebrew noticed by Washington Senators scout Ossie Bluege.

    On Killebrew's website, Bluege recounts the story of how he signed the 17-year-old to a $30,000 contract in 1953.

    "I waited for the rain to stop in Payette, Idaho and then he hit one a mile over the left field fence," Bluege said. "I stepped it off the next morning and measured it at 435 feet. That convinced me."

    Killebrew didn't just hit balls over the fence, he turned at-bats into longest-drive contests. He never worried much about his short game, preferring instead to swing for the fences, and wound up with a career .256 average.

    "I didn't think much about batting average when I was playing," Killebrew said.

    Killebrew Dominated the 1960s
    From 1960-69, there was arguably no better power hitter in the majors than Harmon Killebrew.

    Killebrew's stats, 1960-69
    MLB Rank
    HR 393 1st
    BB 970 1st
    RBIs 1,013 2nd
    XBH 593 4th
    powered by
    On June 3, 1967, Killebrew belted the longest home run in Met Stadium history, a shot that reached the second deck of the bleachers in the old park, some 500 feet from home plate.

    "He hit line drives that put the opposition in jeopardy," Bluege once said. "And I don't mean the infielders. I mean the outfielders."

    Killebrew finished his career with one season in Kansas City in 1975.

    Jane Forbes Clark, chairwoman of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, said Killebrew personified Hall of Fame excellence and was simply one of the greatest hitters of all time.

    "Since joining the Hall of Fame family in 1984, Harmon was a beacon of light among his fellow Hall of Famers, always smiling, always enjoying every moment that life delivered to his doorstep," she said. "We have so many fond memories of this wonderful baseball hero, and we will miss him enormously."

    Killebrew and Nita had nine children.

    In retirement, he became a successful businessman in insurance, financial planning and car sales. He also traveled the country with baseball memorabilia shows and returned to the Twin Cities regularly, delighting in conversations with fans and reunions with teammates.

    "I never thought anything would compare to being elected into the Hall of Fame, but being able to interact with fans once my playing days were over has been just as gratifying," Killebrew said.

    Information from ESPN's Willie Weinbaum and The Associated Press was used in this report.

  20. #100
    Ellsworth M. Toohey
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    Re: The Graffe's Celebrity Death Pool

    Next pick: George McGovern

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