Leo Macdonell | |
Birth Date: | August 17, 1888[1] |
Birth Place: | Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin |
Death Place: | Northridge, Los Angeles, California |
Known For: | President, Baseball Writers' Association of America, 1946 |
Employer: | Detroit Times (1924-1957) |
Occupation: | Sportswriter |
Spouse: | Mary (Schibret) Macdonell |
Nationality: | American |
Leo Abbott Macdonell (August 17, 1888 – October 6, 1957) was an American sportswriter at the Detroit Times for 33 years from 1924 to 1957. He served as the president of the Baseball Writers' Association of America in 1946.
Macdonell was born in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin in August 1888.[2] He was the son of Donald Macdonell (1861-1948) and Mary Harrett (Ermatinger) Macdonell (1868-1925). By 1900, the family had moved to Superior, Wisconsin, where Macdonell's father was employed as a storekeeper,[3] and later in the life insurance business,[4] and as a bookkeeper in a coal office.[5]
By 1910, Macdonell was employed as a reporter for a newspaper in Superior, Wisconsin.[5] At the time of World War I, Macdonnella was a newspaper reporter for the Superior Telegram.[2] At the time of the 1920 United States Census, Macdonell was living in Superior, working as a journalist.[6] He became the managing editor of the Superior Times and also worked as a boxing promoter.
Macdonell came to Detroit, Michigan as a sportswriter for the Detroit Times, a position he held for 33 years.[7] While with the Times, Macdonell covered the Detroit Tigers, Detroit Red Wings, and Michigan Wolverines. At the time of the 1930 United States Census, Macdonell was living at 3781 West Philadelphia Street in Detroit. He was employed as a newspaper reporter.[8]
Macdonell was the Detroit Times hockey and golf reporter in the early 1930s, but he was recruited to cover the Detroit Tigers for the 1934 World Series.[9] In March 1937, Macdonell gave up the hockey beat at the Detroit Times to cover the Tigers on a full-time basis.[10] By the late 1930s, he was also the sports editor at the Detroit Times.[11] [12]
In 1939, Macdonell was added to the committee of 24 baseball writers responsible for selecting the American League's Most Valuable Player.[13]
The Detroit Times was part of the Hearst newspaper syndicate, and Macdonell's baseball writing was often published in other Hearst newspapers through the International News Service, Hearst's wire service. In July 1945, Macdonell's story about Hank Greenberg hitting a home run in his first game after returning from wartime military service was published in Hearst newspapers across the country and for military personnel in Stars and Stripes.[14] [15]
In October 1945, Macdonell was elected as the vice president of the Baseball Writers' Association of America.[16] He became the president of the Baseball Writers' Association of America in 1946.[17] He was also selected to serve on the Association's board of directors in October 1947.[18]
Macdonell also served as official scorer at the 1946 World Series between the St. Louis Cardinals and Boston Red Sox.[19]
Macdonell insisted to his fellow reporters that "the toughest decision for a sports writer to make was the one that would take him off his beat."[20] Explaining his love for sports writing, Macdonell once asked and answered this question while interviewing Hank Greenberg: "When millionaires retire what do they do? They go to big golf tournaments, visit Florida baseball camps, attend big prize fights and watch Davis Cup matches at Forest Hills. It is their idea of paradise, the ideal existence. A sports writer is even closer to the fun than an ordinary spectator. Why should he give up all that if his health is OK?"[20]
Macdonell was married to Mary (Schibret) Macdonell. They had two sons Robert (1921-1994) and Donald (1924-1956) and a daughter, Mrs. Daniel Sheahan.[8]
Macdonell suffered from Parkinson's disease during the last several years of his life.[21] He retired in the summer of 1957 and moved to Northridge, Los Angeles, California. He died there in October 1957 at age 69.[21]
After Macdonell died, the Baseball Writers' Association of America established the Leon Macdonell Trophy for the "most co-operative American League player to the press."[22] Tigers' shortstop Harvey Kuenn was the first recipient of the trophy.[22]