You knew this was going to end badly. Most severed head stories do.You just didn't suspect the Ted Williams saga to be quite so gruesome and tacky and thoroughly unbecoming of the man.
All he wanted was a simple departure from this earth and for his remains to be cremated and scattered over the deep waters of the Florida Keys. Instead, his wacky children had him frozen and his head was cut off.
It turned a war hero and one of baseball's greatest hitters into a national punch line, which was bad enough. And now this.
A book comes out next week detailing how workers at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation abused Williams' remains. They posed for pictures in a real-life Weekend at Bernie's takeoff. They used crude equipment to cut off Williams head, and then froze it in minus-312 degree liquid nitrogen.
They recorded the sound of his brain cracking 16 times as the temperature dropped. The head was balanced on an empty can of Bumble Bee tuna to keep it from sticking to the bottom of its case.
A worker later removed it and tried to dislodge the tuna can by swinging at it with a monkey wrench. After missing the can a few times, he smacked Williams' head, sending tiny pieces of frozen tissue around the room.
We'll pause now to let you finish recoiling.
If this weren't so sick, it'd be funny. We could joke how they could never do this to Barry Bonds because his head would never fit on a tuna can.
But even an anti-hero deserves some dignity in death. Williams deserved a state funeral for flying 39 combat missions over Korea.

Can you imagine one of today's baseball prima donnas taking five years out of his prime to battle the Taliban in Afghanistan? They can't even bat .400, which Williams famously did in 1941.
"If I was being paid $30,000 a year, the very least I could do was hit .400," he said.
Imagine one of today's players saying that.
Williams eventually retired to Florida and became one of the world's best fishermen. His legacy was the Ted Williams Museum, built in the remote rolling hills around Lecanto.
It was great place to live and fish, but not a lot of people visited. I remember making the 90-minute drive from Orlando once and being the only non-employee in the building. The curator said Williams would occasionally pop in on his golf cart, but the closest I came to him was the statue sitting on a bench out front.
Those were his declining days, when stories routinely surfaced about family squabbles and how son John Henry was manipulating his father. You didn't know whether to believe he made Williams sit for hours autographing memorabilia for sale. When he died in 2002, bizarreness really set in.
Had Williams agreed to the whole cryogenics crock?
John Henry and one daughter said yes, and they had a motor-oil stained scrap of paper signed by "Ted Williams" to prove it. Another daughter said no, and pointed out that Williams always signed official documents "Theodore S. Williams."
They fought a legal battle until the money ran out.
"We're going to leave it in God's hands now," the son-in-law said.
The book, Frozen, was written by Larry Johnson. He's a former executive at Alcor who claims to have the documents and tape recording to back up every allegation. It's not just about Williams. It details Alcor's overall operation in Arizona.
If you believe in preserving the dead in hopes future scientific advance will restore them, fine. All I know is I wouldn't want to send an ice sculpture of my worst enemy to Alcor.
Sadly, patient No. 1949 is still there. His body suspended upside-down in one tank. His head, or what's apparently left of it, sits in a frozen canister.
If only somehow the Alcor vision would work. I'd pay Yankees box-seat money to see Williams come back to life, grab a bat and take a few cuts at the guy with monkey wrench.
Since that'll never happen, all we can hope is this latest sad twist leads to a final one. Somebody needs to get Williams' remains, have them cremated and spread them over the Florida waters he loved.
Think about all he accomplished in life and all he's endured in death. If anybody deserves to finally rest in peace, it's Teddy Ballgame.











Comments (Page 1 of 10)
I couldn't agree more with he last para. No one else should have the last word than Mr. Ted Williams. Who in the hell do they think they are to not grant him his last wishes. Damn arrogant people!
I agree with ya brother, except I am extreme when it comes to dealing with sickos like that. I would have their heads whilst still alive batted around.
It's sickening knowing there are people in this world who will stoop so incredibly low. Alcor and its employees will be judged by God and rot in hell.
His children should be ashmed of themselves, they are selfish and crude to have done that to their father. I do hope they were repremanded in some way for the wrong they did and I do wonder how they sleep at night or for that matter how do they live with themselves.
I think they should finally cremate Ted. It's probably a bunch of big Yankees fans doing this to him.
imokru, stfu... this has nothing to do with being a Yankees fan... apparently, it has everything to do with your stupidity!
No way !!! I've been a Yankee fan for over 60 years, but loved Ted Williams. He was a class act.
Now imokru80 you are a very ignorant person to even write something like that... I am a yankee fan and I also feel that Ted Williams was a great man who deserves to be treated with respect and to read your stupid comment makes sick .... you must be a red sox fan!!!!!
You are a complete and utter moron
I am a RED SOX fan. Please save the Yankee bashing for the field. This awfull decision was made by his family. RIP Ted
I am a yankee fan,And i respected the heck out of the man. War heroe one of the greatest baseball players of alltime, Somebody that loves baseball with money and power should get him out of there, Sprinkle his ashes were he wanted. DAM HIS SON.
DAMN the daughter who sided with the son too!
This is a black eye for baseball,and red sox. DO something MLB.
Ted williams is a united states war hero,and a legend in MLB Pay his DAM son off and get this done,This man should be respected.Shut down alcor now.
his son is dead now too, bet not beheaded tho
One passing comment for Ace, I agree with your thoughts regardless of the fact that you used a word that doesn't exist.
I'm a life-long Yankee fan, and Ted Williams is still one of my all-time favorite baseball players. This sickens me. His rotten children have no shame...they should immediately respect their fathers' wishes, and give him the dignified burial that he deserves. And criminal charges should be brought on anyone who abused his body.
It's all about money
Kirk,
Look up the word, "irregardless." It IS, in fact, a word. It's a substitute for "regardless." It has been for some time now.
terry
well...how do you feel about "burgular?" is that a word too?