As long as he could play 16-inch Chicago softball — which he did from age 16 into his 60s — he was happy.
For many years, Mr. Ganir played for the Dwarfs, a team that dominated the diamonds at Clarendon and Kelly parks. Between 1968 and 1973, he pitched the Dwarfs to 25 park district championships, according to the Chicago 16-inch Softball Hall of Fame, to which he was inducted in 2012.
He had a lifetime batting average of around .560, said his son David, and hit more than 200 home runs and scored over 2,500 runs.
Fellow Hall of Famer Don DeBat, a former Chicago Sun-Times editor, called him “one of the most competitive sports personalities I ever played with or against.”
“He really pounded the ball,” DeBat said.
He could also hold his own at trash-talking and umpire-arguing, according to DeBat, who said, “He wanted to win.”
CLICK FOR MORE




