Bob Elliot
Born in Kingston, Ont., in 1949, Elliott was introduced to baseball by his father, Bob, and grandfather, Chaucer, both of whom were superb athletes. A second baseman who discovered early in his teens that he couldn’t hit the curveball, Elliott turned his attention to baseball statistics. His career in journalism began when he started compiling box scores for Kingston’s senior team and submitting them to the Kingston Whig-Standard – a job that paid him $100 a season. When he was 17, he was offered a job as a sports reporter by the paper.
Bob has been involved at every level of baseball in Kingston, Ottawa, Mississauga and Georgetown as either a baseball player, scorekeeper, statistician, general manager, manager or coach.
Bob coached the 1973 Ontario Baseball Association Senior Champion Kingston Ponies )Ontario’s representative in the Canada Summer Games) and in Georgetown, won a 2007 Canadian Pee Wee championship and a 2009 Canadian Bantam title. He was inducted into the Ottawa Nepean Canadians Hall of Fame in 2009.
Bob’s career as a journalist began with the Kingston Whig Standard in 1967. He has written for the Ottawa Journal, the Ottawa Citizen and since 1987, the Toronto Sun. He covered the Montreal Expos from 1978 to 1986 and the Toronto Blue Jays ever since. He has been a member of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America for 35 years and president of the Toronto chapter for 15 years. He is the author of three baseball books and a co-founder of the Canadian Baseball Network.
Bob has won major awards from Baseball Canada (2002), Sports Media Canada (2008), Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame (2011), and in 2012, he was the first Canadian journalist to be honoured by the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.
Bob has been involved at every level of baseball in Kingston, Ottawa, Mississauga and Georgetown as either a baseball player, scorekeeper, statistician, general manager, manager or coach.
Bob coached the 1973 Ontario Baseball Association Senior Champion Kingston Ponies )Ontario’s representative in the Canada Summer Games) and in Georgetown, won a 2007 Canadian Pee Wee championship and a 2009 Canadian Bantam title. He was inducted into the Ottawa Nepean Canadians Hall of Fame in 2009.
Bob’s career as a journalist began with the Kingston Whig Standard in 1967. He has written for the Ottawa Journal, the Ottawa Citizen and since 1987, the Toronto Sun. He covered the Montreal Expos from 1978 to 1986 and the Toronto Blue Jays ever since. He has been a member of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America for 35 years and president of the Toronto chapter for 15 years. He is the author of three baseball books and a co-founder of the Canadian Baseball Network.
Bob has won major awards from Baseball Canada (2002), Sports Media Canada (2008), Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame (2011), and in 2012, he was the first Canadian journalist to be honoured by the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y.