MLB champion Steve Blass returns home

NORTH CANAAN — It was a hot spring day as fans gathered in the bleachers and around the fence to watch the Red Sox take on the Pirates. Hot dogs were being sold, music was being played, and like many times throughout his career, Steve Blass found himself on the mound once again.

Despite his playing days being nearly 50 years behind him, Blass fired one down the line, throwing the first pitch on a day celebrating the Northwest Connecticut Steve Blass Little League (NWCTSBLL), baseball in general and the community that it draws together.

Nikki Blass, who is the president of NWCTSBLL and also the cousin of the baseball great, said the original plan was to have Blass throw the first pitch for a game on Saturday, May 22. However, as ideas got rolling, the event evolved into festivities, including a flyover by a local pilot.

 Blass was in town for the Friday, May 21, dedication of the Housatonic Valley Regional High School scoreboard to Ed Kirby, a long-time baseball coach, local historian and paramount community member who died this year (see story, Page A1).

“I would not have missed that. There was no way I was not going to be here for that,” said Blass. “He was a big influence on my life. He helped me with all my journey through baseball.”

On Saturday morning, Blass, who played in the MLB for 10 years and won the 1971 World Series with the Pittsburgh Pirates, was greeted on the mound by both the Pirates from North Canaan and the Tri-Town Red Sox from Litchfield.

Signing players’ baseballs, gloves and even some of the jerseys they were still wearing, Blass gave advice and joked around with the players and their families.

“You know what the best pitch in baseball is? It’s not a fastball, not a curve ball,” he said. “It’s a strike.”

 Before handing out trophies to the undefeated All-Star team of last year, which could not be celebrated due to COVID-19 restrictions at the end of the season, Pirates coach David Moran welcomed the crowd before honoring two people the community lost in recent years: Dena Solan, a longtime umpire and a familiar face who died in 2019, and Shea Cohen, a high school student from Falls Village who died last year.

“At this time we would like to remember two prominent individuals whose memory could never be erased,” Moran said as two banners honoring Solan and Cohen were unveiled.

After a moment of silence, the microphone was handed to Blass who spoke to the crowd about his love for both baseball and his hometown. 

“It’s so great to come back home, not just to the field but to see friends and family,” said Blass. “I’ve been accused, and rightfully so, of going down to McDonald’s and getting a Quarter Pounder and sitting on the fence out there, just looking at this field.”

Blass got his own banner, honoring 60 years of working with the Pittsburgh Pirates, as well as a signed team photo from last year’s undefeated All-Star team, before heading out to the mound to deliver his pitch and start the game.

“Baseball is good for so many reasons, not the least of which is that it can remove you momentarily from issues, and of course nothing recently has been bigger than COVID-19,” Blass said. 

“To have the reopening of the country and the world, and to have baseball be part of it, I don’t care if it’s Little League or the major leagues or the World Series, it’s nice to know that baseball can be a part of that.”

MLB Champion Steve Blass threw the first pitch of the game between the Tri-Town Red Sox out of Litchfield and the Pirates from North Canaan on Saturday, May 22. Photo by Hunter O. Lyle

Photo by Hunter O. Lyle

MLB Champion Steve Blass threw the first pitch of the game between the Tri-Town Red Sox out of Litchfield and the Pirates from North Canaan on Saturday, May 22. Photo by Hunter O. Lyle

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