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==Plane crash report==
==Plane crash report==
[[Image:Coryaircrash.jpg|thumb|310px|Cory Lidle with his airplane]]
[[Image:Coryaircrash.jpg|thumb|310px|Cory Lidle with his airplane]]
According to WCBS-TV, [[October 11, 2006 New York City plane crash|the plane that crashed in New York City's Upper East Side]] on [[October 11]], [[2006]] was registered to Lidle.{{fact}} The Associated Press has now confirmed Lidle's ownership, and there is speculation that he was on board the plane. New York Yankees manager Joe Torre says the plane that crashed into a building in Manhattan is registered to team pitcher Cory Lidle. Agencies report that he was the pilot.
According to WCBS-TV, [[October 11, 2006 New York City plane crash|the plane that crashed in New York City's Upper East Side]] on [[October 11]], [[2006]] was registered to Lidle. The Associated Press has now confirmed Lidle's ownership, and there is speculation that he was on board the plane. New York Yankees manager Joe Torre says the plane that crashed into a building in Manhattan is registered to team pitcher Cory Lidle. Agencies report that he was the pilot.


CNN is reporting that Cory Lidle was infact on the plane and died on impact.
CNN is reporting that Cory Lidle was infact on the plane and died on impact.

Revision as of 20:56, 11 October 2006

Cory Lidle
New York Yankees – No. 30
Starting pitcher
Bats: Right
Throws: Right
debut
May 8, 1997, for the New York Mets
Career statistics
(through October 2, 2006)
Record82-72
ERA4.57
Strikeouts838
Former teams

Cory Fulton Lidle (March 22) is a Major League Baseball pitcher. He plays for the New York Yankees.

Biography

Born in Hollywood, California, Lidle was a descendant of Robert Fulton. [1] He attended South Hills High School, graduating in 1990. During this time, he was a teammate of Jason Giambi. Lidle married Melanie Varela on January 7, 1997; the pair have one son, Christopher. He is now injured after crashing his plane.

Plane crash report

File:Coryaircrash.jpg
Cory Lidle with his airplane

According to WCBS-TV, the plane that crashed in New York City's Upper East Side on October 11, 2006 was registered to Lidle.[1] The Associated Press has now confirmed Lidle's ownership, and there is speculation that he was on board the plane. New York Yankees manager Joe Torre says the plane that crashed into a building in Manhattan is registered to team pitcher Cory Lidle. Agencies report that he was the pilot.

CNN is reporting that Cory Lidle was infact on the plane and died on impact.

Baseball career

Lidle was signed in 1990 by the Minnesota Twins as an amateur free agent. After his release in 1993, he was signed by the Milwaukee Brewers. Lidle was then traded in 1996 to the New York Mets, and made his Major League debut for the Mets on May 8, 1997. Lidle is one of the few Major League Baseball players who is not a member of the MLB Players Union. As a replacement player during the 1994 baseball strike, he is not eligible to join the union. Lidle has since appeared for the Arizona Diamondbacks, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Oakland Athletics, Toronto Blue Jays, Cincinnati Reds, and Philadelphia Phillies. On July 30, 2006, Lidle was traded along with outfielder Bobby Abreu from the Philadelphia Phillies to the New York Yankees for minor league shortstop C.J. Henry, the Yankees first round pick in the 2005 draft, along with lefty reliever Matt Smith, minor league catcher Jesus Sanchez, and minor league right hander Carlos Monasterios.

The Yankees Organization has confirmed that Corie Lidle was on the plane. Died in plane crash age 34

Controversies

After being traded by the Phillies in July 2006 at the trade deadline Lidle called out his former team. "On the days I'm pitching, it's almost a coin flip as to know if the guys behind me are going to be there to play 100 percent." He noted he was joining a Yankees team that expects to win all the time.

"That's why I'm most excited about it," Lidle said. "Sometimes I felt I got caught up kind of going into the clubhouse nonchalantly sometimes, because all of the other guys in the clubhouse didn't go there with one goal in mind."

In response former teammate Arthur Rhodes said, "He is a scab. When he started, he would go 5 1/3 innings and (the bullpen) would have to win the game for him. The only thing Cory Lidle wants to do is fly around in his airplane and gamble. He doesn't have a work ethic. After every start, he didn't run or lift weights. He would sit in the clubhouse and eat ice cream. ... He shouldn't say that, he shouldn't say anything like that because he is a scab. He crossed the line when guys like me, Flash (Tom Gordon) and (Mike) Lieberthal were playing. He is a replacement player."