Phil Collier
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Phil Collier (December 7, 1925 – February 24, 2001) was a sports journalism, sports writer who worked in the San Diego area for many years. Collier began his career as a sportswriter in Baytown, Texas in 1939. After a military service and a stint at Texas Christian University, he joined the ''Fort Worth Star-Telegram''. In San Diego, Collier covered the Pacific Coast League San Diego Padres (PCL), San Diego Padres until the Brooklyn Dodgers moved to Los Angeles. For the next decade, he covered both Dodgers and Los Angeles Angels games for the ''The San Diego Union-Tribune, San Diego Union''. Collier was the sportswriter who Sandy Koufax called to inform the world of his sudden retirement. When San Diego was awarded the San Diego Padres, Collier began covering the team, which he would do for 18 seasons. In 1987, Collier became the national baseball columnist for the ''Union''. He continued to write for the ''Union-Tribune'' after its merger with the ''San Diego Tribune'' in 1992. He retired from the paper in 1996. He was awarded the J. G. Taylor Spink Award in 1991, was inducted into the writers section of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, Baseball Hall of Fame. He was born in Stanton, Texas and died in San Diego, California of prostate cancer.


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Baseball Hall of FameBR Bullpen
1925 births 2001 deaths Sportswriters from California Sportswriters from Texas Baseball writers BBWAA Career Excellence Award recipients Deaths from prostate cancer Deaths from cancer in California People from San Diego People from Stanton, Texas {{US-sportswriter-stub