Dodger Thoughts

Jon Weisman's outlet for dealing psychologically with the Los Angeles Dodgers, baseball and life

Vin Scully’s transcendent tribute to Dr. Frank Jobe

[mlbvideo id=”31904295″ width=”550″ height=”308″ /]

photo-4By Jon Weisman

Friends and family paid wonderful tribute to Dr. Frank Jobe today at Dodger Stadium, as Ken Gurnick recaps at MLB.com. Dr. Neal ElAttrache became choked up as he described how Jobe, who died March 6, “touched and affected us in very profound ways.”

But at the risk of telling you exactly what you’d expect, there was something about Vin Scully’s words that transcended. Whatever your expectations might have been, Scully topped them. Paraphrasing Albert Schweitzer, Amos Bronson Alcott, William Wordsworth and the Bible, Scully at once spoke about Jobe and about life itself.

So I requested that we be able to post the entirety of Scully’s remarks online, in the video above.

“Success can be measured by what you receive from your fellow man, but the value of a man is what he gives back,” Scully said. “Frank was successful, but more importantly, he was a man of substance and most certainly of value. He spent a lifetime giving back.

“The tragedy of life is what dies inside a man while he lives. But the triumph of life is to be hopeful, kindly, cheerful and keep the heart unwrinkled. Frank kept his heart unwrinkled, and for that he was triumphant. What then do we ask of life, but to serve, to love, to commune with our fellow man and with ourselves, and from the lap of earth look up into the face of God. The best portion of a good man’s life is his little nameless unremembered acts of kindness and love.”

Previous

A.J. Ellis headed for surgery

Next

In case you missed it: Ellis, Wilson, Jansen, Pederson and more

5 Comments

  1. John Young

    Reblogged this on Transparent Christina.

  2. Who on God’s green diamonds of grass will ever be able to eulogize the immortal, irreplaceable, and the human closest to being the perfect man, when he passes? I hope I never see that day. Because with it, so too shall pass my listening to Dodger games on TV or radio. I will just mute the box, and pretend I can hear every story, and call from Heaven as I watch my artful Dodgers! God bless Vin Scully, the master orator and a true man of the masses!
    RIP Frank Jobe … If not for you, my ACL/MCL and left rotar cuff would never have been fixed by the fine doctors at Kerlan Jobe.

  3. So beautiful his words and the sound his words make and the meaning as well. Jon, out of curiosity, which was the Schweitzer quote? I got the others….

    • Jon Weisman

      I believe it was “The tragedy of life is what dies inside a man while he lives,” but I could be wrong.

  4. The very last sentence, what a fantastic line!

Comments are closed.

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén