Yankees great Mel Stottlemyre has died

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Mel Stottlemyre, 1941–2019 (AP/FOX 5 NY)

New York Yankees legend Mel Stottlemyre—who starred on the mound for the Bronx Bombers before presiding over five World Series titles as a pitching coach for the Yankees and Mets—died Sunday in Seattle after living with bone marrow cancer. He was 77.

The five-time All-Star was 164–139 with a 2.97 ERA in 360 games across 11 seasons with the Yankees, the only team he pitched for.

He also served as pitching coach on the 1986 New York Mets World Series team and the great Joe Torre-led Yankees teams of the late 1990s and early 2000s. The Yankees won the World Series in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000 during that run.

In the process, Stottlemyre worked with some of the greatest pitchers of the times: Dwight Gooden with the Mets and Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte, David Cone, David Wells and Mariano Rivera with the Yankees.

Stottlemyre made one of his final appearances at Yankee Stadium in June 2015 for Old Timers' Day. The Yankees honored Stottlemyre with a plaque in Monument Park.

"This is such a shock to me because the era I played in is an era where, for the most part, the Yankees have tried over the years, I think, somewhat to forget a little bit," Stottlemyre said in remarks that day. "If I never get to come to another Old Timers' Day, I will take these memories and I'll start another baseball club, coaching up there, whenever they need me."

The Missouri native was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in the spring of 1999 and underwent experimental treatment for the disease, including stem cell transplant and chemotherapy, according to the New York Daily News.

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