Related News
WASHINGTON — David Vincent once said in an interview that he never hit a home run. Yet, in a way, clearing the fences defined him. The baseball statistician and author was called “the Sultan of Swat Stats” because of his knowledge of home run history. Vincent even hit a professional grand slam of his own in 2005: After scoring thousands of minor league and amateur games, he was hired as the Washington Nationals’ lead official scorer. He died Sunday from stomach cancer. The Centreville, Virginia, resident was 67. Vincent worked the Nationals’ first game at RFK Stadium, their first game at Nationals Park, Stephen Strasburg’s dazzling 2010 debut and Jordan Zimmermann’s 2014 no-hitter. And in a game dominated by numbers, Vincent was a noted authority, one who was well respected among media professionals and baseball researchers alike. “He was a good scorer, but an even better person,” said WTOP Sports’ J. Brooks. “David was the kind of guy who would always light up a sometimes-mundane day in the Nats’ press box, either with his infectious smile or bad pun.”
In Memoriam: David Vincent, 67, an extraordinary baseball historian & @Nationals official scorer: https://t.co/jwsjVX75uM @Retrosheet #SABR pic.twitter.com/wDhyKf7qkO
— SABR (@sabr) July 3, 2017
