It was an early evening before a Reds' game in 1994. I was seated in the press dining room

A tall young man with a shaved head asked permission to join us. As he smiled and sat down he immediately joined our baseball conversation. It was clear he had advanced knowledge of the game but I had never met Darrel Wayne Rodgers before that day.
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After a pleasant conversation and our meal was finished, he got up and walked away. Charles Henderson, who worked in the tiny over worked media relations department with Joe Kelly, tapped me on the shoulder.
"That is Doc Rodgers. He and John Allen have been like a breath of fresh air in the office," Henderson said.
I would often see Rodgers, who was born in Walters, Oklahoma on October 6, 1962. He was drafted in the 36th round by the New York Mets in 1981 as right-handed pitcher out of Eisenhower High School. Rodgers chose to pitch at the University of Oklahoma. He was drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 38th round in 1984 but returned for his senior year after which he was drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the 16th round.
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Doc Rodgers pitching in the Mexican League |
He finished his playing career

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Rodgers moved back to Cincinnati and hosted postgame shows on 700WLW. He got his real estate license and refereed high school basketball.
Doc and I would often talk baseball. He taught me so much about the game-withing-the-game, the individual battle between the batter and the pitchers. Doc was always free

I wish that I had the chance to say goodbye. When I saw him at a Colerain girls game

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