In honor of the Philadelphia Phillies playing host to the 2026 Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Citizens Bank Park, we here at The Good Phight are launching a yearlong series that focuses on the history of the Phillies and the All-Star Game. Check back regularly for posts about the Phillies participation (or lack thereof) in the Midsummer Classic over its history.
We’re back and it’s time to wrap up the rest of the 1980s Phillies’ one and done All-Stars. If you missed part 1 or any of the previous parts, here are the links: 1930s,1940s part 1, 1940s part 2,1950s, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s part 1. Now, settle in for a longer one.
Steve Bedrosian, 1987
“Bedrock” had one of the best single seasons for a Phillies relief pitcher ever, but way before that, he was a standout baseball, football, and wrestling star at his high school in his hometown of Methuen, Massachusetts. His prowess would later lead to the local newspaper dubbing Bedrosian the area’s “Top Athlete of the 20th Century.” Bedrosian stuck with baseball though, and after playing two years at Northern Essex Community College, he played collegiately for the University of New Haven. It was there where Bedrosian went 13-3 and was named to the Division II All-America first team.
That single year in college was good enough for the Atlanta Braves to select Bedrosian with the 53rd overall pick in the third round of the 1978 amateur draft. He moved through the Braves system rather quickly, ending 1979 in Double-A with a 3.03 ERA in 13 starts as a 21-year-old. But it was there where Bedrosian set off to learn how to pitch rather than just relying on his strong fastball. He was named a Southern League All-Star in 1980 and logged 203 innings with a 3.19 ERA. Bedrosian started 1981 in Triple-A but earned his call to the Majors in August. He made his MLB debut on August 14th in Los Angeles. The now 22-year-old Bedrosian entered in the fourth inning against the Dodgers with the bases loaded and one out after Braves starter John Montefusco couldn’t make it out of the inning and had already surrendered two runs. Bedrosian allowed Bill Russell to hit into a sacrifice fly for the second out before drilling Dodgers pitcher Dave Goltz inside the right elbow to load the bases once again. But Bedrosian avoided further damage by getting Davey Lopes to pop out to end his first taste of the Majors.
Despite that somewhat inauspicious start, Bedrosian remained in Atlanta for the rest of the season and finished 1981 with a 4.44 ERA in 15 MLB appearances including one start on August 22nd where he allowed five runs, three earned, all in the sixth inning after throwing five scoreless to start the night. He seemed primed for a good 1982, but he was involved in a car accident in the Dominican Republic while playing winter ball in late January. Bedrosian was the passenger in a car driven by his teammate that ran into a head-on collision, causing Bedrosian to suffer a concussion as well as requiring him to get 65 stiches for facial lacerations and having to have glass pulled from his eye. The injuries continued in March when he broke his left pinky finger after getting it jammed in a door at the Braves’ West Palm Beach hotel. But because he was a right hander, the injury did not cost Bedrosian a spot on the Opening Day roster, and he later became the winning pitcher in the Braves’ record-breaking 12th consecutive win to begin a season.
Bedrosian was mostly a full-time reliever in 1982, as he made only three starts but appeared in 64 games and threw 137.2 innings with a 2.42 ERA. Braves pitching coach Bob Gibson (yes THAT Bob Gibson) decided Bedrosian was best suited for a relief role despite mostly being a starter in his Minor League career. It turns out Bob Gibson knew what he was talking about, as Bedrosian continued to excel in relief for the next two seasons, pitching to a 3.09 ERA across 203.2 IP from 1983-1984 with 8.6 strikeouts per nine innings. However, new manager Eddie Haas announced before the 1985 season that Bedrosian would be in the starting rotation as the arrival of new closer Bruce Sutter allowed the move and the Braves were in dire need of starters. That decision didn’t help Atlanta’s chances, as Bedrosian pitched to a decent 3.83 ERA across 37 starts but finished with a record of 7-15 thanks to poor offensive support from a Braves team that went 66-96 and finished in last place.
New general manager Bobby Cox decided to trade Bedrosian in an attempt to get more offense for the anemic Atlanta lineup. He shipped Bedrosian to the Phillies along with Milt Thompson in exchange for catcher Ozzie Virgil, an All-Star the previous season, and pitcher Pete Smith on December 10th, 1985. Phillies president Bill Giles felt that the trade had accomplished Philadelphia’s main goals of acquiring bullpen help and a leadoff hitter. Phillies manager John Felske was confused as to why Atlanta was willing to part with Bedrosian, remarking “You look at his numbers, and he was outstanding for four innings in his starts and then had problems. But we’re going to put him in our ‘pen and he’s going to be our closer.”
That transition back to the bullpen, in addition to arm soreness in the spring. caused Bedrosian to struggle a bit to begin 1986. By the end of April, Bedrosian had a 7.27 ERA through 8 appearances and was already being serenaded with boos. However, Bedrosian turned his season around in May, pitching to a 2.12 ERA through 11 games and collecting three saves. He credited Phillies pitching coach Claude Osteen with helping him fix his mechanics that resulted in the success. Bedrosian went on to finish 1986 with a 3.39 ERA and 29 saves, as the trade that brought him to Philadelphia was talked about as one of the best of the previous year. He was rewarded for his efforts with a new two-year contract.
It turned out that the security that new deal provided worked wonders for Bedrosian, as he had a season for the ages in 1987. But it didn’t start out that way, as he once again got off to a poor start with a 7.84 ERA through the end of April. One of those rough outings proved to be historic though, as Bedrosian blowing a three-run lead to the Pirates on April 18th allowed Mike Schmidt to hit his 500th career home run in the top of the ninth to give the Phillies the lead again. But Bedrosian turned it around in May with a 1.04 ERA and 21 strikeouts in 17.1 IP. He started a streak of converting 19 of 20 save opportunities including a then-record of 13 consecutive saves. By the time of the All-Star break on July 14th, Bedrosian had a 2.77 ERA and 24 saves for a Phillies team that had only 42 wins. NL manager Davey Johnson of the Mets named Bedrosian to his All-Star pitching staff, and Bedrock joined teammates Schmidt and Juan Samuel at the game to be played in Oakland.
Bedrosian ended up playing a major role in his only All-Star game, as he entered a scoreless game in the bottom of the ninth. He walked Dave Winfield to begin the inning before retiring Tony Fernández on a sacrifice bunt. Dwight Evans drew another walk to put runners on first and second with one out. Harold Reynolds then hit a groundball to first baseman Keith Hernandez who threw to second for the force, but the throw from Hubie Brooks to Bedrosian covering first was wide, nixing the double play chance and making it possible for the winning run to score. But Bedrosian made a spectacular play, as he dove to field the errant throw and quickly stood up and fired home to Ozzie Virgil, the man he was traded for, to nab Winfield as he tried to score, securing the double play after all and ending the inning. Bedrosian’s heroics allowed the NL to eventually win 2-0 in 13 innings thanks to a Tim Raines two run triple.
Bedrosian continued his stellar season after the break and finished 1987 with a 2.83 ERA and a league-best 40 saves, becoming the first Phillie to do so since saves became official. His five wins along with those 40 saves meant that Bedrosian was directly involved in 45 of the team’s 80 wins on the season. His efforts were rewarded with a controversial Cy Young Award, as Bedrosian narrowly edged out Rick Sutcliffe and Rick Reuschel in one of the closest Cy Young Award votes in history to become only the sixth relief pitcher to ever win the honor. Five pitchers received at least one first place vote and no pitcher was named on all 24 ballots. Bedrosian won the award despite throwing just 89 innings while Sutcliffe and Reuschel both tossed over 230 and every vote recipient except Dwight Gooden had over 200. Nevertheless, Bedrosian’s win gave the Phillies their fourth Cy Young winner of the decade (Steve Carlton twice and John Denny once). All in all, Bedrosian ended 1987 with a Cy Young Award, an All-Star nomination, the Rolaids Relief Man of the Year award, the MLB record for consecutive saves, and a newborn son.
Unfortunately, the success didn’t quite carry over to 1988, as Bedrosian started the year on the injured list with a walking pneumonia that prevented his season debut until May 20th. He broke Tug McGraw’s then franchise saves record on September 25th with his 95th save in a Phillies uniform and finished with a 3.75 ERA and 28 saves in 74.1 IP. Bedrosian was the only Phillies player offered a multi-year contract after the season, and he agreed to a new three-year deal worth a little over $4M total. However, Bedrosian would not finish that contract with the Phillies, as he was traded to the Giants on June 18th, 1989, in exchange for Dennis Cook, Terry Mulholland, and minor leaguer Charlie Hayes. Shortly after, the Phillies also traded away fellow 1987 All-Star Juan Samuel, sending him to the Mets in exchange for Lenny Dykstra and Roger McDowell.
Bedrosian finished the year with the Giants and posted a 2.65 ERA and 17 saves in 51 innings. He appeared in four out of five games in the 1989 NLCS and recorded three saves, including the win that clinched the NL pennant, but pitched just 2.1 innings in the infamous “Earthquake” World Series that the Giants lost to the Athletics. He would go on to pitch another year in San Francisco in 1990 but struggled with a 4.20 ERA in 68 games. The Giants traded him to Minnesota that December where he logged a 4.42 ERA in 56 games but was able to capture his first and only World Series win, as the Twins defeated his old team the Braves in seven games. Bedrosian, a free agent, then took the next season off as medical staffs tried to find out why his once dominant fastball now only sat in the upper 80s as he suffered through numbness in his fingers. But as the 1992 season got underway, the numbness subsided, and it was blamed on tobacco use (which Bedrosian gave up) and stress from his son Cody’s leukemia treatment. With Cody now in remission, Bedrosian signed with the Braves before 1993 and the 35-year-old had a renaissance, pitching to a 1.63 ERA in 49 appearances. He played another season and a half with the Braves before abruptly announcing his retirement in August of 1995 after appearing in just 29 of a possible 95 games and logging a 6.11 ERA.
Bedrock is still third on the Phillies all-time saves leaderboard with 103, having been surpassed by Jose Mesa (112) and Jonathan Papelbon (123). His son, Cam, made 11 appearances for the Phillies in 2021 with a 4.35 ERA.
Kevin Gross, 1988
Who says a little controversy can’t lead to good results? Kevin Gross proved that in 1988. The big 6’5 right hander out of Downey, California, was originally selected by the Orioles in the 32nd round of the 1979 draft. He had thrown a no-hitter his senior year at Fillmore High School and logged 95.2 innings while helping his team to win the local championship and get to the finals for the state title. However, Gross elected to go to college rather than sign with Baltimore, first playing for California Lutheran College before transferring to Oxnard. Part of the reason for the transfer was so that Gross could once again enter the draft, and this time, he was selected by the Phillies in the first round of the secondary phase of the 1981 draft.
Gross moved quickly through the minor leagues, having reached Triple-A by 1983 as a 22-year-old. Despite struggling there with a 6.75 ERA, Gross was selected to join the Phillies rotation in June of 1983. His manager for Triple-A Portland John Felske called Gross into his office and offered him good news and bad news, to which Gross asked for the bad news first. Felske told him that he was removing Gross from the Triple-A rotation, and the reason was that he was joining the big-league pitching staff. His rise was so rapid that Gross didn’t even have a locker in the visiting clubhouse at Shea Stadium on the day of his debut on June 25th. He was impressive in that debut, as Gross went 6.1 innings while allowing two runs on five hits with five strikeouts in a 4-2 Phillies win. Gross’ start was a godsend for a Phillies rotation that was in desperate need of help after losing Larry Christenson to an elbow injury. He stayed in the Majors the rest of the year, making 17 starts and pitching to a 3.56 ERA while the Phillies made it to the World Series, although Gross didn’t pitch in the postseason.
Despite that strong rookie performance, the Phillies did not guarantee Gross a spot in the rotation for 1984. In fact, his spot on the roster wasn’t even guaranteed, as team president Bill Giles wanted to keep Tug McGraw and the Phillies would only keep nine pitchers, making Gross a possible odd man out. Pitching coach Claude Osteen believed that Gross could be used as a spot starter and middle relief despite Gross only appearing in two career minor league games as a reliever. Gross reluctantly accepted the role, and in doing so assured his spot on the 1984 roster. He appeared in 44 games that season with 14 starts and pitched to a 4.12 ERA in 129 innings.
Things changed to begin 1985, as the Phillies informed Gross early in the spring that he had a job in the rotation as long as he didn’t lose it in spring training. He didn’t, and the 24-year-old Gross became a key part of a strong rotation with a 15-13 record and a 3.41 ERA. Gross was firmly established in the rotation by 1986, and he threw a career-high 241.2 innings with a 4.02 ERA and a 12-12 record despite leading the league in home runs allowed and hit by pitches.
The 1987 season brought controversy though, as Gross was ejected from a start on August 10th after umpire John Kibner claimed that Gross was using an illegal substance on his glove to doctor the ball. Gross was the second player that month to be ejected for allegedly altering the ball, joining Joe Niekro of the Twins. Gross’ glove and the ball were confiscated, and it was found that the ball was clean but there was some sandpaper glued to his glove, resulting in Gross being suspended 10 games. Phillies manager Lee Elia admitted to seeing some discoloration on the glove, but also remarked “It might sound funny, but without my glasses I can’t see.” Gross, who was pitching through a back injury, denied that he was intentionally scuffing the ball and appealed the suspension through the MLBPA, but the suspension was later upheld by the league on September 1st. Gross admitted to expecting a suspension but was dismayed when Giles and the Phillies decided to withhold his pay over the course of the suspension. “It makes me wonder what they think about me,” Gross said to the Inquirer, “It puts doubt in my mind that I’ll be playing here anymore.” The Phillies ultimately reversed the decision to withhold his pay, and Gross was willing to put the conflict with the team in the past and move on.
Both sides did eventually move on to begin 1988, as Gross prepared once again to be a stalwart in the Phillies rotation. Gross got off to a wonderful start, going 8-5 with a 2.89 ERA across 134 innings by the time of the All-Star break. A little under a year after the sandpaper glove debacle, Gross was on the doorstep of being named an All-Star despite being stuck on a last place team. He almost lost that chance though when he suffered an ankle injury after slipping on the stairs while running barefoot to answer the phone. Nevertheless, Gross was indeed named to the All-Star team and went to Cincinnati for the festivities, joining teammate Lance Parrish as the Phillies representatives. Gross made it into the game in the top of the sixth with the AL leading 2-1. He recorded a clean inning by striking out José Canseco and retiring Dave Winfield and Cal Ripken Jr. on a pair of flyouts. Parrish made it into the game as well; except he had the honor of being the final out when he was retired by Deniss Eckersley to seal a 2-1 win for the AL.
Unfortunately, Gross couldn’t keep his momentum after the All-Star break, going 4-9 with a 4.79 ERA as the Phillies finished in last place with a 65-96-1 record. The lowly Phillies decided to cash in on Gross as a trade chip following his All-Star season, sending him to the Montreal Expos on December 6th in exchange for starter Floyd Youmans and reliever Jeff Parrett in addition to the Expos waiving their rights to reclaim Jeff Tabaka whom the Phillies then drafted in the first round. Youmans had been suspended 60 days for substance abuse in 1988 and went through rehabilitation. Giles believed it was a gamble but added “we think it will work out.” Youmans made 10 starts for the Phillies in 1989 with a 5.70 ERA and was plagued with injuries through most of the season. He underwent arthroscopic shoulder surgery in August and never appeared in the Majors again.
Gross meanwhile spent two years in Montreal and compiled a record of 20-24 with a 4.47 ERA. He signed with the Dodgers prior to the 1991 season and threw a no-hitter with L.A. on August 17th, 1992. Gross needed just 99 pitches to throw the eighth no-hitter in Dodgers history, allowing only three Giants to reach base via two walks and a hit batter while striking out six. It was the highlight of the season for a Dodgers team that finished 63-99. Gross then signed with the Rangers prior to 1995 and pitched in Texas for two rough years, finishing with a record of 20-23 and a 5.41 ERA. The 36-year-old started 1997 in the minors for the Rangers before being released and signing with the Angels in June. He made 12 appearances with Anaheim but only three starts and was once again released in July after logging a 6.75 ERA, effectively ending his career after 15 years.
Von Hayes, 1989
Von Hayes was simultaneously probably better than you remembered but still not as good as it was thought he could be. Nevertheless, Hayes’ baseball journey started in Stockton, California as the son of two remarkable parents. Lenore, Von’s mother, was a native Puerto Rican who grew up on a farm without electricity as one of 13 children. She would go on to get a nursing degree and immigrate to Stockton where she met Donald, a B-17 tail gunner in World War II who was a prisoner of war for 11 months. Von would actually be named after one of Donald’s fellow POWs.
Hayes was undersized playing baseball growing up, but that didn’t stop the family from encouraging him and his father from having him mimic the left-handed swing of Ted Williams. He was 6’1 after graduating high school where he was primarily a pitcher before shooting up to 6’5 during his tenure at St. Mary’s College of California. It was there where Hayes was moved away from pitching and started playing first and third base. He was finally a standout ballplayer, setting numerous school records and even capturing MVP honors in the United States-Japan College World Series in 1979.
His late-blooming performance was good enough for the Cleveland Indians to select Hayes in the seventh round of the 1979 MLB draft. He was a phenom almost immediately for Class-A Waterloo, as Hayes hit .329 with a .905 OPS and 15 home runs in 134 games with less strikeouts (63) than walks (66) as a 22-year-old. The Cleveland organization was so impressed with Hayes that they made the decision to jump him all the way up to the Majors out of spring training in 1981. However, he only played in one game, serving as a defensive replacement in the ninth inning of a 7-1 win on April 14th. Hayes was then sent to Triple-A where he continued tearing up the minor leagues, except this time almost three years younger than the average age of the competition. He hit .314 with an .875 OPS and 10 home runs in 105 games at Charleston, earning a call-up to the big leagues for good in August after the MLB season resumed following a players’ strike. He remained in the majors the rest of the season and hit .257 with a .741 OPS while spending time at DH, left field, and third base.
Hayes started 1982 on the Cleveland bench but won a full-time job by the middle of May. His versatility was a huge asset, as Hayes played all three outfield positions, both infield corners, and was able to bat anywhere in the lineup. He finished his first full season in the majors hitting .250 with a .699 OPS while being almost a three-win player and placing seventh in rookie of the year voting. But his efforts were wasted on a last place Cleveland team that had only finished above .500 three times in the last decade, and one of those was the strike-shortened 1981.
With Hayes on the verge of possible stardom, Cleveland decided to cash in on their former top prospect. They swung a surprising trade with the Phillies, sending Hayes to Philadelphia in exchange for Manny Trillo, Julio Franco, Jay Baller, George Vukovich, and Jerry Willard. It was a massive return for just one player, as the Phillies surrendered five total players including their starting second baseman. Trillo was set to enter the last year of his contract, and the Phillies did not seem likely to meet his demands for a five year, $5M deal. So, the decision was made to ship him out in a trade rather than letting him walk, even as manager Pat Corrales acknowledged that “People are going to criticize us and say we gave up a lot and we did.” But Corrales also expressed the team’s belief that Hayes was “going to be one of the best players around.”
Unfortunately, the Phillies didn’t take into account the effect of trading five players for one 24-year-old would have on the kid’s psyche, nor did they foresee him gaining the nickname “5-for-1” courtesy of his new teammate Pete Rose. Hayes was also making the jump from a team with little aspirations to one expecting to contend with the last gasps of a championship core. Early season injuries and disappointing performance limited Hayes’ playing time in 1983, as he finished hitting .265 with a .707 OPS. He collected only five total plate appearances in the postseason as the Phillies won the NL pennant and lost the World Series to the Orioles. Meanwhile, Julio Franco, one of the five players Hayes was traded for, finished second in Rookie of the Year voting for Cleveland.
The Phillies decided to make Hayes a full-time starter for 1984, giving him time in all three outfield positions. He made the most of it, as he hit .292 with 16 home runs and 48 stolen bases. Despite Hayes’ strong season, the Phillies sunk to 81-81, as core members of their championship core either departed or got another year older. The team was looking to turn the page to its next era, and Hayes looked to be a foundational building block. But 1985 brought a step back, as Hayes saw decreases to his batting average, home runs, stolen bases, and OPS. He did become the first player to ever hit two home runs in the first inning of a game though as part of a 26-7 shellacking of the Mets on June 11th. That night proved to be a memorable moment in an otherwise forgettable season.
1986 looked to be the start of Hayes finally putting it all together and becoming the young cornerstone the Phillies desperately needed. He hit .305 with 19 home runs and led the league in doubles (46) and runs scored (107), finishing 8th in MVP voting behind the first place Mike Schmidt. But much like the previous seasons, the Phillies disappointed in the win column, as their glory days were firmly in the rear-view mirror. 1987 wasn’t much different, as Hayes put up another good season with a career best 21 home runs and .877 OPS, but the Phillies got off to a dreadful start and never fully recovered despite a change at manager. They sunk even lower in 1988, finishing with the third worst record in baseball. New manager Lee Elia didn’t even last the full season, but that didn’t stop Hayes from hitting him in the face with his batting helmet during a game in June. Elia took exception to Hayes not running out a popup, and Hayes took exception to that exception, so he threw his helmet at his manager and had to be restrained from going after him in the dugout.
But 1989 started off much better for Hayes, even if it was more of the same for the Phillies. Now 30 years old, it finally seemed that Hayes had put it all together for sure this time. He came out of the gates on fire, hitting .382 with 7 home runs through the first 22 games of the season, earning Player of the Month honors for April. But one of the worst possible things that could have happened to Hayes happened in May: Mike Schmidt retired.
Schmidt’s abrupt retirement and the lack of any other choices thrust Hayes into the role of face of the franchise, especially after the Phillies granted him a new three-year contract worth $6.4M. If there was any doubt that Hayes was the Phillies new star, general manager Lee Thomas said as much. “This has made him the guy, there’s no doubt,” Thomas told the Inquirer, adding “Von is a good player and still has a chance to be a great player.”
Hayes carried the burden well enough to be named to his first All-Star game that summer despite cooling off tremendously from his torrid April. Nevertheless, Hayes joined the retired Schmidt as the Phillies All-Star representatives in Anaheim. Hayes had a request for Schmidt before the game, asking if the future Hall of Famer would stand in the on-deck circle so he could continue to get good pitches to hit.
The request wasn’t honored, but Hayes still was able to get into the game in the seventh inning as a defensive substitution for the Reds’ Eric Davis in center field. He came to bat in the top of the eighth with two outs and the NL down 5-2 and delivered a single to left field off of Dan Plesac that drove in the Astros’ Glenn Davis from second and cut the AL’s lead to 5-3. With Hayes now serving as the tying run, Tim Wallach of the Expos stepped to the plate with the possibility of making Hayes’ hit the start of a memorable comeback. But Wallach lined out to left field off of new pitcher Doug Jones to end the inning, and the NL lost 5-3. Much like most of Hayes’ Phillies career, his good-but-not-great contribution to a losing team was forgotten.
Hayes’ second half of 1989 wasn’t as good as his first, but he still finished with a career high 26 home runs and almost as many walks (101) as strikeouts (103). Hayes stayed fairly consistent in 1990 despite some injuries, but his fit on the team started to become less clear as a new nucleus of younger talent started to take shape in Philadelphia. Then on June 14th, 1991, a fastball from the Reds’ Tom Browning struck Hayes in the wrist, and x-rays soon revealed that the ulna bone in his hand was fractured. That injury proved fateful, as the Phillies didn’t miss a beat and continued to improve with Hayes sidelined. When he returned in September, Hayes became the first player in history to finish a season with 0 home runs one season after having at least 17.
The team may have finished in third place despite their play in Hayes’ absence, but that level of play without their “franchise player” convinced the front office that Hayes was no longer in the team’s plans. On December 8th, 1991, the Phillies traded the 33-year-old Hayes to the California Angels in exchange for Kyle Abbott and Ruben Amaro Jr. “When I first came to Philadelphia, he was the one guy I said I wouldn’t trade,” said Lee Thomas, only slightly under three years after declaring Hayes the face of the franchise, adding “We we’re going to build around him. But it just didn’t work out.” Jayson Stark may have said it best in the Inquirer when he wrote that Hayes “had seen about as much of Philadelphia as ever wanted to see. And Philadelphia had seen about as much of him as it wanted to see, too.”
Hayes played one year for the Angels and hit .225 with only 4 home runs in 94 games. He was released following the season and did not generate much interest from any other team, thus essentially ending his once promising, can’t miss, big-league playing career after 12 years. But his career as a reference for Philadelphia basedsitcoms was still to come.
Sources
Wynn Montgomery, Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) Biography for Steve Bedrosian
The Mobile Press, June 13th, 1978
The Albuquerque Tribune, August 15th, 1981
Richmond Times-Dispatch, January 27th, 1982
Shari Roan, Fort Lauderdale News, March 7th, 1982
Chris Mortensen, The Atlanta Journal, April 8th, 1985
The Daily News, December 11th, 1985
The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 10th, 1987
Jayson Stark, The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 14th, 1987
Bill Conlin, Philadelphia Daily News, July 15th, 1987
Paul Hagen, Philadelphia Daily News, November 11th, 1987
Peter Pascarelli, The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 19th, 1989
Ventura County Star, June 8th, 1979
Ventura County Star, January 14th, 1981
Ray Finocchiaro, Camden Courier-Post, June 25th, 1983
Frank Dolson, The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 26th, 1983
Hazelton Standard-Speaker, March 16th, 1984
Scranton Times-Tribune, March 17th, 1985
Ventura County Star, August 11th, 1987
Peter Pascarelli, The Philadelphia Inquirer, August 12th, 1987
Peter Pascarelli, The Philadelphia Inquirer, September 2nd, 1987
Peter Pascarelli, The Philadelphia Inquirer, September 5th, 1987
Frank Dolson, The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 11th, 1988
Jim Donaghy, The Morning Call, December 7th, 1988
Bill Plaschke, The Los Angeles Times, August 18th, 1992
Gordon Edes, Fort Meyers News-Press, January 1st, 1995
Plainview Daily Herald, March 18th, 1997
Ventura County Star, June 21st, 1997
Zac Petriello, Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) Biography of Von Hayes
The Daily News, December 10th, 1982
Jeff Young, Intelligencer Journal, June 29th, 1983
Mark Whicker, Philadelphia Daily News, January 18th, 1983
Ralph Bernstein, Standard Speaker, March 6th, 1984
Bernard Fernandez, Philadelphia Daily News, June 12th, 1985
Paul Hagen, Philadelphia Daily News, June 27th, 1988
Jayson Stark, The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 12th, 1989
Frank Dolson, The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 3rd, 1989