Las Vegas Sun

May 2, 2024

Former big league outfielder Oscar Gamble dies at 68

Oscar Gamble

AP

In this Sept. 10, 1974, file photo, Cleveland Indians’ Oscar Gamble flashes a smile after sliding safely into third in the sixth inning of baseball game against the Detroit Tigers in Cleveland, Ohio.

NEW YORK — Oscar Gamble, an outfielder who hit 200 home runs over 17 major league seasons, has died of a rare tumor of the jaw. He was 68.

Gamble, recognizable during his playing days for an Afro that spilled out of his helmet, died Wednesday at UAB Hospital in Birmingham, Alabama, according to his second wife, Lovell Woods Gamble.

She said he was diagnosed with a benign tumor of the jaw, ameloblastoma, about nine years ago. It became ameloblastic carcinoma in 2016 and he had the first of several operations that August. He entered the hospital on Jan. 22. She said he never chewed tobacco.

Gamble spent seven seasons with the New York Yankees in two stints, playing for AL pennant winners in 1976 and 1981. He lived in Montgomery.