MAJE McDONNELL PASSES AWAY

By Dave Jordan

Phillies fans the country over were saddened to learn of the death on July 8 of Robert A. “Maje” McDonnell, just shy of his ninetieth birthday.

 

 

Since 1947, Maje has been a batting-practice pitcher, scout, coach, goodwill ambassador, and jack-of-all-trades for the Philadelphia National League club. “He could energize a rabbit,” said longtime public relations director Larry Shenk; “he just keeps going and going.”

Maje, born in 1920, grew up in Philadelphia and served in the Army in World War II, rising to the rank of - what else? - major and earning in combat in Europe a Bronze Star, Purple Heart, and five battle stars. He attended Villanova University, playing baseball and basketball (in spite of being only 5 feet 6 inches tall), and it was in pitching for the Wildcats in an exhibition game against the Phillies that Maje caught the eye of G.M. Herb Pennock. Pennock, looking for an assistant, offered Maje a job, and the longtime Phillies fan promptly accepted, pitching batting practice and learning the ropes in the front office.

From then on, Maje McDonnell became a Phillies institution. He coached for the team through 1957, under managers Ben Chapman, Eddie Sawyer, Steve O’Neill, Terry Moore, and Mayo Smith, and was a scout for the team through 1960. Over the years since then, Maje worked with the team on the field and in the clubhouse and was the face of the club in the community, projecting good humor and baseball knowledge wherever he went. “With Maje,” said Todd Kalas, Harry’s son, “there’s never a time when you’re in a bad mood, because he’s always so happy, always so cheerful.”

Never a fan of the A’s in his early years (the Phillies gave out free tickets at his playground when he was a kid; “I fell in love with the Phillies,” he said), Maje McDonnell made up for that omission with numerous visits to functions of our Philadelphia Athletics Historical Society, where many of us got to see up close just what it was that made Maje such a popular figure over the years with Phillies players, executives, writers and fans. Philadelphia baseball will not be the same without Maje McDonnell.

Links:

 

Maje McDonnell “I went from welfair to Mayfair”

Whiz Kids coach Maje McDonnell dies at 89

Former Phil Maje McDonnell dies at 89

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