Friends remember Hancock

Memorial service held for Cardinals pitcher

St. Louis Cardinals players Russ Springer, left, and Randy Flores arrive for a memorial service at First United Methodist Church. The player attended the memorial Thursday in Tupelo, Miss., for pitcher Josh Hancock, who died in an automobile accident early Sunday.

? St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Randy Flores will miss playing catch with Josh Hancock.

“Every day, I was reminded of his heart,” Flores said Thursday at a public memorial for his fellow reliever. “Josh loved being a baseball player.”

The Cardinals were among an estimated 500 mourners for Hancock, who died in an automobile accident early Sunday. Flores was the only teammate who spoke at the service, and he recalled Hancock’s playful nature.

Organizers had expected three or four Cardinals to participate, including manager Tony La Russa. They also anticipated that several players would speak after the service.

Instead, on the advice of center fielder Jim Edmonds, the traveling party of 50 filed onto two buses behind the church and left immediately without talking to the media.

“What do you want me to say?” general manager Walt Jocketty said before boarding.

The 29-year-old Hancock was driving a rented Ford Explorer early Sunday when it crashed into a flatbed tow truck on a highway in St. Louis. Autopsy results have not been released, and toxicology tests were pending.

The World Series champion Cardinals play their first home game since the wreck when they host Houston on Friday night. St. Louis has lost five in a row and is in last place in the NL Central.

Hancock’s sister, Katie, a star athlete at Tupelo High School, called him a “great guy, a great man and a great big brother.”

She remembered the time her big brother took her horseback riding, but instead saddled her on a cow. She imitated his laugh, recalling the prank.

Hancock’s agent, the scout who signed him to his first pro contract and a high school coach all related memories – many of them prompting laughs – in a mostly uplifting hour-long service at First United Methodist Church.

Hancock’s father, Dean Hancock, wore a red ribbon with the No. 32 – his son’s uniform number – on his left lapel as he read a statement before the service. He took no questions, thanking the media for “respecting our privacy and for respecting Josh’s honor.”

“Professional baseball players are brothers within a family, and the St. Louis Cardinals players and coaches are bonded together, in my opinion, like no other family in baseball,” Hancock said. “Josh was so proud to be a member of that family.”

During his sermon, the Rev. John Sudduth held a prized possession, a ball autographed by Hancock after signing his first professional contract with the Boston Red Sox in 1997.

Cas McWaters, an assistant coach at Vestavia Hills High School in suburban Birmingham, Ala., when Hancock was a star, talked about the pitcher’s struggles with chemistry class.

“He kept asking me, ‘When am I ever going to need chemistry?’ I told him, ‘To graduate,'” McWaters said.

Hancock set the Alabama prep record with 27 straight wins and helped Vestavia Hills – where Yankees pitcher Colter Bean was a teammate – win three straight state championships in the mid-1990s.

Hancock broke into the major leagues in 2002 and played for four teams. He was 3-3 with one save last season and led Cardinals relievers in innings with 77.

“He wasn’t a household name,” McWaters said. “He was what I call just beginning to come into the strength of his career.”

Joe Mason signed Hancock to his first contract. He said if the reliever played in the 1930s he’d have been friends with Dizzy Dean but that if he’d grown up in the 1960s “he would have gone to Woodstock.”

Three days before the fatal wreck, Hancock was involved in a predawn accident in Sauget, Ill., that police treated routinely.

Hancock was buried Wednesday in rural Itawamba County.