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Bill Conlin
Bill Conlin
from Wikipedia

William T. Conlin Jr. (May 15, 1934 – January 9, 2014) was an American sportswriter. He was a columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News for 46 years.[2] Prior to that, Conlin worked at the Philadelphia Bulletin.[3] He was a member of the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Conlin received the J. G. Taylor Spink Award in 2011.[3][4] However, he resigned from the Daily News and ended his career later that year, when seven people accused him of sexually abusing them as children.

Key Information

Biography

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Conlin was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and raised in Brooklyn, New York City.[3] While in school, he was a champion swimmer. He attended Peekskill Military Academy on an athletic scholarship, worked as a lifeguard in the 1950s. He was inducted into the Ocean Rowing Hall of Fame in 1983.[5]

Conlin was a 1961 graduate of Temple University,[3] where he was an editor-in-chief for The Temple University News. Before being hired by the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin in June 1960, he received the Sword Award for service to Temple University. After five years at the Evening Bulletin, he joined the Philadelphia Daily News in 1965.[2] He appeared on more than 300 editions of ESPN's The Sports Reporters, a Sunday morning show of debate among American newspaper columnists.[3] In 2009, he was inducted into the Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame.[6]

Conlin died on January 9, 2014, in the Largo Medical Center in Largo, Florida. He had been admitted with multiple illnesses, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, and a colon infection.[7]

Sportswriting

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Conlin's sportswriting has been praised for its wit and intelligence. Fellow columnist Mitch Albom wrote, "For years, sitting next to him on The Sports Reporters all I got from Bill Conlin was the spit of his opinions in my ear. His writing is far less messy. It's also brash, charming, intelligent, historical, and at times almost elegant."[8]

However, Conlin drew criticism for failing to include pitcher Nolan Ryan on his Hall of Fame ballot.[9] In November 2007, he caused controversy after quipping in an email that "the only positive thing I can think of about Hitler's time on earth: I'm sure he would have eliminated all bloggers."[10][11][12]

Allegations of child molestation

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On December 20, 2011, Conlin resigned from his sportswriting position just hours prior to the publication of allegations of child molestation from four people. One of Conlin's accusers was his niece, Kelley Blanchet, a prosecutor in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The claims of abuse were first reported to the police in 2009 when Blanchet said she became concerned for the safety of Conlin's other young relatives.[13][14] Three more people later claimed they had been abused by Conlin.[15][16][17]

The Baseball Writers Association secretary/treasurer Jack O'Connell issued a "member in good standing" statement on December 20. It said in part, "The allegations have no bearing on [Conlin's] winning the 2011 J.G. Taylor Spink Award, which was in recognition of his notable career as a baseball writer".[18]

The day before the story broke, Deadspin editor A.J. Daulerio reported he had an email conversation with Conlin in which Conlin talked about suicide and criticized his accusers and Inquirer reporter Nancy Phillips.[15][19] According to Daulerio, Conlin's attorney, George Bochetto, called Daulerio in the afternoon and requested him not to post the story, and said Conlin denied emailing Daulerio. The story was posted, and about three hours later, the Inquirer posted its story.[19]

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Bill Conlin (May 15, 1934 – January 9, 2014) was an American sportswriter and columnist known for his 46-year career with the Philadelphia Daily News, where he established himself as one of the leading voices in baseball journalism, particularly covering the Philadelphia Phillies. His work earned him the J.G. Taylor Spink Award from the Baseball Writers' Association of America in 2011, the highest honor for baseball writing. Conlin began his career in Philadelphia sports journalism in the late 1950s and joined the Daily News in 1965 after working at the Evening Bulletin, covering a variety of beats before focusing on the Phillies as a beat writer and later as a columnist. He also contributed to television and authored books on baseball, chronicling the sport through its major events and figures for over half a century. Conlin received the Spink Award in 2011. In December 2011, following public allegations from multiple individuals claiming he had sexually abused them as children in the 1970s, Conlin resigned from the Daily News. Conlin died on January 9, 2014, at the age of 79.

Early life

Birth and family background

William T. Conlin Jr., better known as Bill Conlin, was born on May 15, 1934, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was raised in Brooklyn, New York. Limited public information is available regarding his parents, siblings, or detailed early family circumstances, though his birth in Philadelphia and upbringing in Brooklyn shaped his early years before he returned to the Philadelphia area later in life.

Education

Bill Conlin attended Peekskill Military Academy for his high school education. He briefly enrolled at Bucknell University but was dismissed in 1954, a fact he later referenced in his Baseball Hall of Fame acceptance speech. Conlin then attended Temple University, where he began his involvement in journalism by serving on the staff of the student newspaper and covering various sports. His interest in sports journalism developed during this time through these campus activities. Conlin graduated from Temple University in 1961.

Career

Early journalism

Bill Conlin began his professional journalism career at the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, where he worked for five years before joining the Philadelphia Daily News in May 1965. During his tenure at the Evening Bulletin, he covered multiple sports beats, including Penn State football, boxing, and the Big 5 college basketball conference featuring Philadelphia's major universities. These early assignments established his experience in regional sports reporting in the Philadelphia area prior to his specialization in major league baseball.

Philadelphia Daily News tenure

Bill Conlin joined the Philadelphia Daily News in 1965 after five years at the Evening Bulletin. In 1966, he became the Phillies' beat writer for the paper, a role he held for 21 seasons through 1986. He transitioned to columnist in 1987 and continued in that capacity for the remainder of his time at the newspaper. His overall tenure at the Philadelphia Daily News lasted 46 years until his retirement in 2011. During this period, Conlin established himself as a dominant figure in Philadelphia sports journalism and the city's most-read sportswriter. His columns reached hundreds of thousands of readers each summer, making him a central voice in local sports coverage during an era before widespread digital media. He also gained national recognition through his work, including contributions to The Sporting News as the National League columnist.

Baseball coverage and writing style

Bill Conlin covered the Philadelphia Phillies as their beat writer for the Philadelphia Daily News from 1966 through 1986, a span of 21 seasons, before shifting to a full-time columnist position at the paper. In addition to his local focus, he served as the National League columnist for The Sporting News, extending his baseball insights to a national readership. His primary passion remained baseball throughout his career, though he occasionally reported on other major events such as Wimbledon and the Olympics. Conlin approached the game with consistent enthusiasm, observing that "If you go to the ballpark every day expecting to be amazed, you probably won't be disappointed. Games are like snowflakes: No two are alike." Conlin's writing style stood out for its crisp wordsmithing, sharp wit, sarcasm, and playfulness with language and ideas. He frequently used creative nicknames and constructed columns around outrageous premises, while his recurring "When I'm King of the World" pieces showcased caustic wit and pithy commentary. His prose often blended antic humor with lyrical elements, delivering both edgier, inside perspectives on games and vivid breakdowns of their nuts-and-bolts details. Conlin's work conveyed a learned, smart-ass voice that combined street-corner poet energy with barroom brawler intensity, making him brashly erudite and pugnacious in tone. His columns featured vivid, colorful metaphors and savage descriptive passages that captured dramatic moments in baseball history. For the 1970 farewell to Connie Mack Stadium, Conlin wrote sarcastically and evocatively: "Connie Mack Stadium is an old woman dancing nude at the Medicare Senior Prom. You know what she once might have been, but tonight she is an obscene accordion of yellowed flesh." Describing the Phillies' rapid 1977 NLCS collapse, he noted: "The Phillies' 1964 collapse took ten games. This one took ten minutes. It was like watching the shambles of 1964 compressed into an elapsed-time film sequence." On the 1980 World Series clincher, he painted a grand scene: "…surrounded by new centurions on horseback, helmeted soldiery carrying truncheons, snarling attack dogs and a whooping cast of 65,838 extras aflame with passion… The scene looked like something Cecil B. DeMille would have filmed in the Promised Land." In a sarcastic reflection on Steve Carlton's Hall of Fame induction silence toward the media, Conlin quipped: "Hey, don't I rate a blank plaque or something? To go with all those notebooks Lefty refused to fill." Another example of his exaggerated humor appeared in a column on a sweltering day at Veterans Stadium: "Hot town, summer in the city. … Yesterday was one of those brain-poachers where any inning I expected public address announcer Dan Baker to intone, ‘Now pitching for the Phillies … Omar Sharif.’" Conlin's distinctive voice—marked by strong opinions, fearlessness in critique, and a blend of drama, humor, and deep game knowledge—made him a central figure in Philadelphia baseball journalism whose columns readers sought out for major events. His approach influenced peers by encouraging brash erudition and pugnacious energy in sports writing.

Awards and recognition

J.G. Taylor Spink Award and Hall of Fame induction

In 2011, Bill Conlin received the J.G. Taylor Spink Award from the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA), honoring his meritorious contributions to baseball writing over more than four decades. The award, established in 1962, recognizes writers who have made significant impacts on the sport through their work. Conlin's selection was announced on December 7, 2010, during the BBWAA meeting at the Major League Baseball winter meetings in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. Conlin was formally inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame as a writer during the 2011 induction weekend in Cooperstown, New York, and was honored on July 23, 2011. The induction placed him alongside fellow honorees in the Hall's scribes and broadcasters wing, capping his long career covering the Philadelphia Phillies and national baseball for outlets including the Philadelphia Daily News and The Sporting News. He spoke at the ceremony about receiving the prestigious recognition. The Spink Award (renamed the BBWAA Career Excellence Award in 2021) represented the pinnacle of Conlin's professional achievements in baseball journalism, affirming his influence on the field through beat reporting, columns, and national coverage. Following child sexual abuse allegations against Conlin in December 2011, public debate arose regarding his Hall of Fame status, but the honor was not revoked.

Controversy

2011 child molestation allegations

On December 20, 2011, allegations of child sexual abuse from the 1970s against Bill Conlin surfaced in an article published by Deadspin. The report detailed claims by four individuals (three women and one man), including family members such as a niece, who accused him of molesting them when they were children. The accusers alleged that Conlin groped them, fondled them, and touched their genitals on multiple occasions during the 1970s. Prosecutors in Gloucester County, New Jersey, where the alleged incidents occurred, stated that no charges could be brought because the statute of limitations had expired for cases predating 1996. The allegations emerged months after Conlin's receipt of the Spink Award. In the context of heightened public awareness of child sexual abuse following the Penn State scandal, the accusers said they were emboldened to come forward after decades of silence. Conlin responded to the allegations in private communications, describing them as stemming from a "decades-old family vendetta" and expressing deep concern for the impact on his family. He denied the claims in those conversations and did not issue a public admission of guilt.

Response from the Baseball Hall of Fame

Following the emergence of child molestation allegations against Bill Conlin in December 2011, the National Baseball Hall of Fame addressed questions about his status as a 2011 J.G. Taylor Spink Award recipient. Hall of Fame spokesman Craig Muder stated that Spink Award recipients are not actual members of the Hall of Fame, and no person in any category had ever been removed from the Hall, as there was no mechanism in place to do so. The Hall declined to comment specifically on Conlin's future inclusion in the Scribes and Mikemen exhibit, where his portrait was prominently displayed as the most recent honoree. The exhibit was scheduled to remain unchanged until the 2012 Spink Award recipient was installed in late July 2012. Media coverage highlighted the Hall's difficult position, with reports noting that the allegations placed the institution in an uncomfortable spot regarding the honor bestowed earlier that year. Public reaction included discomfort from some Hall visitors; one described seeing Conlin's photo as disconcerting, stating that the nature of the allegations was too offensive for the display to remain. The Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA), which presents the Spink Award, issued statements affirming that the allegations had no bearing on Conlin's selection for the honor, which recognized his career achievements in baseball writing. No action was taken to revoke the award or alter the exhibit, and Conlin's portrait remained on display as part of the historical record until it was replaced by the subsequent honoree. Amid the controversy, Conlin resigned from his longtime position at the Philadelphia Daily News.

Personal life

Family and later years

Bill Conlin was married to Irma Conlin beginning in 1960 until her death from cancer in 2009. The couple raised three children together: sons Pete and Bill Jr., along with daughter Kim. In his later years, Conlin lived full-time in a condominium in Largo, Florida, having relocated there permanently after spending much of his career in New Jersey. He maintained limited contact with family members during this period, with his son Pete remaining one of the few who stayed in touch. The 2011 allegations strained family relationships, including long-standing estrangement from his daughter and expressions of disappointment from one son. Bill Conlin died on January 9, 2014, at Largo Medical Center in Florida at the age of 79. His sons Pete and Bill Jr. traveled to Florida to arrange for his cremation following his death.

Death

Legacy

References

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