ESPN baseball analyst Peter Gammons, whose Sunday notes column in the Globe had a seminal impact on the way the sport is covered, came out of surgery and was in intensive care last night for a brain aneurysm. Gammons, who had planned to be at Fenway Park last night, was stricken near his home on Cape Cod and air-lifted to a Boston hospital, his wife, Gloria, told the Globe's Bob Ryan. Indications were he will remain in intensive care for 10-12 days, his wife said. Doctors are being cautiously optimistic on his recovery.
Gammons, a native of Groton, Mass., and a 1969 graduate of the University of North Carolina, primarily serves as a studio analyst for ESPN's ``Baseball Tonight," but he also does regular spots for ``SportsCenter," ESPNEWS, and ESPN Radio and contributes to ESPN The Magazine. He is a columnist and writes a popular blog for ESPN.com.
He was the recipient of the J.G. Taylor Spink Award for outstanding baseball writing during the 2005 Hall of Fame induction ceremony July 31 in Cooperstown, N.Y., and is popularly known around the game as the ``commissioner" because of his ubiquitous presence. Recently, Gammons worked an ESPN ``Sunday Night Baseball" game in Los Angeles, took a red-eye home, and was at Fenway at 9 the next morning for the Sox' Patriots Day game.
With a story in which he shared a byline with Ryan (on whether baseball should be played after Robert Kennedy was assassinated), Gammons began his career as a summer intern in 1968 for the Globe, where he developed his weekly notes column of information, anecdotes, trade rumors, and gossip into a must-read in the industry. Gammons, who also worked for Sports Illustrated covering the National Hockey League, college basketball, and Major League Baseball (1976-78, 1986-90), has been cited as the inspiration for a generation of sportswriters who followed.
Born April 9, 1945, Gammons had just finished recording a CD, scheduled for release July 4, in which members of the Red Sox, including GM Theo Epstein, contribute, along with many of his friends in the music industry. The CD is entitled, ``Never Slow Down, Never Grow Old," and is to be released by Rounder Records.
``Our thoughts are with Peter and his family," ESPN spokesman Nate Smeltz said last night.
IMAGES AND INFO For a gallery of photos from last night's game and news updates heading into Pedro Martínez's return to the mound at Fenway Park tonight, go to www.boston.com/redsox.![]()