Ray Kelly
Legacy of Excellence
Baseball Hall of Fame and long-time Phillies beat writer
Raymond Kelly was a
stocky, cigarette smoking
sportswriter who covered
Philadelphia baseball
for more than three
decades. He was known
as “The Dean” of American
baseball writers.
During his 52-year career with The
Philadelphia Bulletin, Kelly rose from
a 16-year-old copyboy to a veteran
reporter who covered the Philadelphia
Athletics from 1948 until 1955 and then
the Phillies for much of the time until his
1979 retirement.
After a stint covering horse racing during
the early 1940s, Kelly started reporting
about baseball while Connie Mack was
managing the Athletics.
Known for his knowledge of the game
and likable manner, which made
Kelly the friend of former players and
coaches during an era when teams and
sportswriters kept closer company,
Kelly traveled across the country
season after season.
Traveling by train to
out-of-town games,
Kelly learned to talk
to team members
and coaches for
hours on end. A
semiprofessional
soccer player himself,
he already knew a
lot about sports and during those train
rides he developed his outstanding
understanding of baseball.
In the press box he typed swiftly in
his two fingered style, and often went
through three typewriters a year. He was
the sort of writer who could write amid
the worst din, even in the middle of a
crowded bar.
“He was a good writer as I’ve ever
dealt with as far as honesty and
professionalism go,” said Philadelphia
Sports Hall of Fame inductee Larry Bowa,
former Phillies shortstop and manager.
“He was outstanding. It seemed the
questions he asked you were always the
right questions, maybe even when the
timing wasn’t right, and he always put
into conversation the guy’s feelings if
he had a bad game. It wasn’t all job, he
cared for individuals.”
Kelly covered the Phillies during
memorable stretches of their history,
including their 1961 record losing streak,
and the 1964 pennant race collapse.
“He loved baseball,” recalled his son Ray
W. Kelly, sportswriter for The Camden
Courier Post for many years. “A lot of
people in baseball thought he was one
of the best writers, one of the few writers
who could have gone through the press
box to the field and managed the team.”
A boyhood friend of legendary second
baseman Eddie Stankey, Ray Kelly
played baseball in his early years but
broke his leg sliding into second base
during a sandlot game. It was then he
decided to stick with writing about
sports, especially baseball.
Through the 1930s and into the early
1940s, Kelly played soccer with the
Philadelphia German American Club and
was on several championship teams.
However, he never told his Bulletin
editors about his soccer playing, and was
once assigned to cover a championship
game he was also scheduled to play in.
Kelly not only played – he scored the
game winning goal. But his article gave
the credit to a teammate because Kelly
was supposed to be on the sidelines with
his notepad.
As a sportswriter, the gregarious Mr.
Kelly enjoyed the people as much as
the reporting and writing. His family
said he was the kind of writer for whom
Ted Williams walked across the field to
say hello and Tommy Lasorda made a
fuss over.v
Upon his death, Phillies great and
Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame
inductee Richie Ashburn said: “If you had
the opportunity to meet Ray, you were
blessed, and if you had the privilege
of working with him, you were twice
blessed. He was quite simply, one of the
nicest, one of the most unforgettable
men I’ve ever known.”
Kelly formed great friendships with many
players including Philadelphia Sports
Hall of Fame inductee Steve Carlton.
As Ashburn put it, “Yes, the same Steve
Carlton who wouldn’t give sports writers
the time of day, loved Ray
Kelly.” According to Ashburn,
Carlton knew Kelly would never
hurt him no matter what he told him.
It is safe to say Ray Kelly was the only
sportswriter Carlton ever trusted.
“Ray, being a good athlete, I think he had
a good insight into what was involved
in performing,” said former Philadelphia
Inquirer sportswriter Allen Lewis, who
also covered the Phillies. “He had insight,
a great knowledge of the game, and he
had a great capacity for enjoying life.”
A president of both the Philadelphia
and national chapters of the Baseball
Writers’ Association of America, Kelly
was a posthumous recipient of the
J. G. Taylor Spink Award at the 1989
National Baseball Hall of Fame induction
ceremonies. He has also been inducted
into the Pennsylvania Soccer Hall of
Fame and the Philadelphia Old Timers’
Soccer Association.
Ray Kelly died November 22, 1988.
Compiled from Ray Kelly’s Philadelphia
Inquirer obituary (11/23/88) and
Philadelphia Daily News column by
Rich Ashburn (11/25/88).