Page 328 - 1975 BoSox
P. 328

’75—THE RED SOX TEAM THAT SAVED BASEBALL 321
Brian Stevens resides with his wife, Catherine, and their canine companions in Jericho, Vermont. He is a CPA, a 25-year Smugglers’ Notch Resort employee, and as a consequence of continuous domestic remodel- ing projects, is well recognized in area hardware stores.
Wayne Strumpfer is the Chief Legal Counsel for the California Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board. He graduated from California State University, Sacramento and the University of the Paci c, McGeorge School of Law. He also teaches mock trial at Sacramento Country Day High School. He grew up in Northern California and has been a San Francisco Giants fan for 45 years. Wayne has contributed to the SABR Annual Conference magazine and with several other SABR projects.
Cecilia M. Tan has served as Publications Director for SABR since the end of 2011. She has written for Baseball Ink, Baseball Prospectus, Yankees Magazine, and Fenway Fiction, and was the editor of all the incarnations of the Yankees Annual. She is the author of  e 50 Greatest Yankees Games and co-author (with Bill Nowlin) of  e 50 Greatest Red Sox Games.
John Vorperian, a SABR member since 2000, hosts and produces Beyond  e Game, a sports themed cable television program seen in New York and www.wpcommunitymedia.org. A columnist for www.boxscorenews.com, Johnny V. has covered the
current NASL’s NY Cosmos and taught Sports Law and the Business of Sport courses at Concordia College and Manhattanville College. e American University alum hopes to see a Red Sox-Nationals World Series.
Nick Waddell has been a baseball fan ever since he was born. He can remember his  rst trip to Tiger Stadium, and once had dinner with Ernie Harwell.  ere are two things he believes: the Old English D is the best logo anywhere, and Opening Day should be a national holiday.
Dave Williams is a lifelong Mets fan. He is currently a Territory Manager with Wilson Sporting Goods in Glastonbury, Connecticut where he resides with his wife and daughter.  ey do not understand how he can agonize over the Mets’ lack of o ense year after year. [biography for the 2005 edition]
A lifelong Pirates fan, Gregory H. Wolf was born in Pittsburgh, but turned his back on the Smoky City and now resides in the Windy City area with his wife, Margaret, and daughter, Gabriela. A Professor of German and holder of the Dennis and Jean Bauman endowed chair of the Humanities at North Central College in Naperville, Illinois, he served as editor of the SABR book,  ar’s Joy in Braveland:  e 1957 Milwaukee Braves (April 2014). He is also editor of two additional SABR books, Winning on the North Side: 1929 Chicago Cubs and one on the 1965 Minnesota Twins, both published in 2015.


























































































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