2011 Notable sports deaths
Former
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A look at notable sports figures who have passed away in 2011.
Italian motorcycle rider Marco Simoncelli died in a collision on Oct. 23 at the age of 23. (Daniel Munoz/Reuters)
Former heavyweight World boxing champion Joe Frazier died in Philadelphia a month after being diagnosed with liver cancer. He died at the age of 67 years old on Monday, Nov. 7. (Will Burgess/ Reuters)
Wheldon poses with the BorgWarner trophy the day after winning the Indianapolis 500 auto race in Indianapolis in May 2011. (Jeff Haynes/Reuters)
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Former Denver Broncos defensive end and Notre Dame All-American Pete Duranko died on July 8 of
Longtime
Former UNLV star, and
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Former
Former
World Series hero Jose Pagan died June 7, 2011. A two-run double in Game Seven of the 1971 series led his
Boxer Genero Hernandez (R) died June 7, 2011, from a rare form of cancer. The two-time world super featherweight champion retired in 1999 with a 38-2-1 record, 17 of those wins coming by knockout. Hernandez was 45. (Al Bello/ALLSPORT)
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Pro football hall of famer
Margo Dydek, a 7-foot-2-inch Polish-born former NBA player, died May 27, eight days after suffering a
Hall of Fame pitcher Paul Splittorff died May 26, 2011. He was being treated for oral
Former professional wrestler ‘Macho Man’ Randy Savage died after losing control of his car due to a
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Minnesota Twins great
Former
Former NBA player Robert “Tractor” Traylor was found dead of an apparent
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British musician Jet Harris, who enjoyed a string of hits in the late 1950s and early 1960s with Cliff Richard’s band The Shadows, has died March 18 after a two-year battle with cancer. He was 71. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Director Gary Winick (pictured here with actress Amanda Seyfried) died Feb. 27 after a battle with brain cancer. He was 49. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
Leading home run hitter and Hall of Fame baseball player
Former NFL defensive back Dave Duerson died Feb. 17 from a self-inflicted gun shot. The four-time Pro Bowl safety won Super Bowls with the 1985-1986 Chicago Bears and the 1990-1991 New York Giants. Duerson was 50. Duerson is shown in the photo in 2005. (Charles Cherney/Chicago Tribune) (Charles Cherney/Chicago Tribune))
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Hall of Fame football star
Blind jazz piano legend Sir George Shearing, best known for the 1952 classic “Lullaby of Birdland,” died in New York on Feb. 14 of congestive heart failure. He was 91. (Metronome/Getty Images)
Charlie Callas, a rubber-faced stand-up comedian and Mel Brooks regular who worked on television, in films and on stage for five decades, died Jan. 27 in a Las Vegas hospice. He was 86. (CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images)
Bernd Eichinger, who produced films such as “Downfall, the “Resident Evil” series and “The Neverending Story,” died of a heart attack on Jan. 24. He was 61. (AXEL SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)
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Genius grant recipient Ellen Stewart, founder and director of the pioneering off-off-Broadway group La MaMa Experimental Theater Club, died on Jan. 13 after an extended illness. She was 91. (TORU YAMANAKA/AFP/Getty Images)
Singer Margaret Whiting died Jan. 10. Whiting’s career took off with a string of hits in the 1940s, television in the 1950s and a long run as a nightclub singer still touring as late as the 1990s. The Big Band beauty was a staple of U.S.O. tours during World War II and the Korean War. Whiting was 86. (Fernando Leon/Getty Images)
Federal Judge John Roll died Jan. 8. He was gunned down during the Tucson shooting rampage that also claimed the lives of five others. Roll was 63. (John Moore/Getty Images)
Former MLB All-Star Ryne Duren died Jan. 6. Known for his intimidating presence and 100 MPH fastball, Duren made it to the World Series twice with the Yankees in 1958 and 1960. (Diamond Images/Getty Images)