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David H. Murdock, a fierce rags-to-riches corporate raider, dies at 102
David H. Murdock, a fierce rags-to-riches corporate raider, dies at 102

Boston Globe

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Boston Globe

David H. Murdock, a fierce rags-to-riches corporate raider, dies at 102

He gained a reputation as a relentless and often ruthless turnaround specialist who didn't hesitate to lay off thousands of workers, slash benefits, and make deep cuts in order to reshape and sell a company. He would look for companies with what he deemed 'undervalued assets,' swoop in, make necessary if painful changes, and then sell the entity at a significant profit. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up In his oft-stated quest to build the largest private financial empire in the United States, Mr. Murdock took on powerful unions and dominant corporate chieftains, among them Armand Hammer of Occidental Petroleum, and emerged as one of the richest, most successful corporate investors in the nation. In April, Forbes estimated his fortune at $3.7 billion. Advertisement His lack of formal education and humble beginnings fueled his determined rise to wealth and power. In a 1983 interview with The Wall Street Journal, he said: 'Nobody is satisfied with what he has. We were brought on earth to achieve. As long as we want to achieve, we're alive. If we're satisfied, we're already half dead.' Advertisement Well into his 90s, he continued to achieve, serving as chair and CEO of Dole and its parent company, Castle & Cooke, for several decades. 'I never had a boss in my whole life,' he told The New York Times Magazine in 2011. 'I've totally destroyed anybody's ability to tell me what to do.' It was his purchase in 1985 of Castle & Cooke, a venerable and nearly bankrupt Hawaiian agricultural concern, that fueled his ascent as a corporate takeover artist. Castle & Cooke, which had introduced Hawaiian pineapples to the American mainland, provided him with significant land holdings in Hawaii, including Lanai, the sparsely populated and sixth-largest Hawaiian island, home to a vast pineapple plantation. Over time, he turned Castle & Cooke into a successful real estate developer, separating it from its Dole subsidiary. In 2012, he took in hundreds of millions of dollars by selling Lanai to Oracle CEO Larry Ellison. But it was Dole, which Mr. Murdock rebuilt into one of the world's largest sellers of fruit and vegetables, that exemplified his business prowess. He ran Dole for more than 30 years, piling up enormous profits year after year through its global reach, with world headquarters in Dublin and US headquarters in Charlotte, N.C. His only major setback came in 2015, when a Delaware judge ruled that in taking the company private in 2013, Mr. Murdock and its chief operating officer had fraudulently driven down Dole's stock price so that he could buy the business at a cheaper price. The two men were ordered to reimburse shareholders $148 million. Advertisement Mr. Murdock used Dole's profits in the late 2000s to build a $500 million food research center in Kannapolis, N.C., northeast of Charlotte. Its central mission was to study how plant-based diets might lead to longer lives. Married five times, Mr. Murdock was especially devoted to his German-born third wife, Gabriele Murdock, whom he married in 1967. The couple had two sons, and Mr. Murdock adopted a son from his wife's previous marriage. Nearly 20 years her senior, he was devastated when she received a diagnosis of advanced ovarian cancer in 1983. When she died in 1985 at 43, Mr. Murdock had become convinced that lifestyle and diet had contributed to her cancer, and he became obsessed with finding a healthy and sustainable nutrition regimen for himself and for the world. 'If I had known what I know today, I could have saved my wife's life,' he said in the Times Magazine profile, by Frank Bruni. Beginning in his 60s, Mr. Murdock began a quest to change his diet, eating only fruits and vegetables and occasionally fish, eliminating sugar and dairy. 'He wants to reach 125,' Bruni wrote, 'and sees no reason he can't, provided that he continues eating the way he has for the last quarter-century: with a methodical, messianic correctness that he believes can, and will, ward off major disease and minor ailment alike.' David Howard Murdock was born April 11, 1923, in Kansas City, Mo., the middle child and only son of Merte Floyd Murdock, a traveling salesman, and Ruth Gweneth Murdock, who took in laundry and scrubbed floors to help support the family. When David was very young, his father moved the family to Montgomery Township, Ohio, where the boy, who was dyslexic, struggled in school. His learning disabilities made school nightmarish for him. He was taunted and managed only D's, and at age 14 he quit school, just two months into the 10th grade. He was 17 when his mother died of cancer at 42, a loss that haunted him throughout his life. He began working at a service station pumping gas until he was drafted into the Army in 1943. Advertisement After leaving the military at 22, he landed in Detroit penniless. For a time he lived in a park, sleeping under a bush. With the help of a loan company employee he had met in a Detroit diner, he managed to secure $1,200 in loans to buy the diner. He spruced it up, sold it for a small profit and set out for California. He got as far as Phoenix, where he encountered a young city exploding with an influx of postwar transplants. He began to buy up cheap land and build affordable houses for the new arrivals. 'I was building as fast as I could break ground,' he said in the Times Magazine article. 'Bang, bang, bang: I could hardly get a house finished before it was sold.' In 1968, after 17 profitable years, he set off for Los Angeles, where he continued to build, but this time he took on much larger projects, including office buildings. He began investing large stakes in public companies and eventually bought whole companies rather than just stock. In 1974, he acquired Pacific Holding Co. after leading a group of dissident shareholders in a takeover. He took the company private in 1978. That same year, he acquired 19 percent of the shares in Iowa Beef Processor, which he then exchanged for 2.8 percent of the shares in Armand Hammer's Occidental Petroleum, at the time the world's largest independent oil company. Advertisement By 1981, Mr. Murdock had become the largest shareholder of Occidental and began to bang heads with the dynamic Hammer. There was talk that he was angling to succeed Hammer when Hammer retired -- rumors that Mr. Murdock denied. He continued to focus on acquiring stakes in a wide range of companies. Mr. Murdock was not shy about flaunting his wealth. He owned five homes, including a 2,200-acre ranch in Southern California, where he collected longhorn cattle and horses, along with orchids and works of art. He served as co-chair of the Joffrey Ballet Company. At the height of his financial influence, however, Mr. Murdock suffered grievous losses. Less than a year after losing his wife to cancer in 1985, his oldest son, Eugene, 23, drowned in the pool at the family's estate in Beverly Hills. Mr. Murdock's second son, David II, was killed at age 36 in a car crash on the Santa Monica Freeway in 2004. Mr. Murdock leaves his youngest son, Justin, and a granddaughter. This article originally appeared in

Powerful Monaghan finish defeats Down to book All-Ireland quarter-final spot
Powerful Monaghan finish defeats Down to book All-Ireland quarter-final spot

The 42

time15-06-2025

  • Sport
  • The 42

Powerful Monaghan finish defeats Down to book All-Ireland quarter-final spot

Monaghan 2-27 Down 1-26 Paul Keane reports from Armagh FOUR POINTS DOWN with 20 minutes to go, Monaghan turned a tricky situation into a hugely significant four-point All-Ireland SFC win for themselves, propelling them through to the quarter-finals as group winners. Jack McCarron's half-time introduction was vital in Armagh where the Farney claimed top spot in Group 3 and a last eight place in a fortnight. In what was a thrilling shoot-out for top spot between the two sides with perfect records in the group, Tailteann Cup holders Down led by that four-point margin with 50 minutes on the clock. But Monaghan, All-Ireland SFC semi-finalists just two seasons ago, showed all their big game experience to turn things around and McCarron's goal really got them going. The ciotog attacker added another two-pointer, as well as a single, to take his tally to 1-3 as the Farney squeezed Down out. Boss Gabriel Bannigan may be a little alarmed at just how many scoring opportunities they coughed up to a livewire Down side who picked off 1-26. But with a dozen different scorers, and tonnes of experience in this Monaghan team, he will still believe that they can go deep into the All-Ireland series as they excel under the new rules. All is not lost for Conor Laverty's Down as they will still advance to an All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final next weekend as runners up in Group 3. Pat Havern hit a dozen points for the 2010 finalists but they will rue a couple of late missed opportunities as they fought desperately to reel Monaghan in. Both sides had been putting up big scores in the group stage so an open, attacking game was always anticipated and we weren't let down. The first-half alone yielded a combined 2-29 with Down edging it by 1-15 to 1-14. Monaghan edged the two-point count in that half, four to three, with goalkeeper Rory Beggan drilling two long-range frees. Advertisement Conor McCarthy and Michael McCarville curled over two beauties as well though the Farney's early 0-6 to 0-3 lead didn't last long. Down were slightly better at sweeping up the breaking ball and created chance after chance for themselves. They scored one goal, through John McGeough in the 21st minute, but could have had a couple more. The McGeough goal came at the end of a speedy move up the field, a Danny Magill kick-pass up to the influential Ryan McEvoy followed by another 30m kick pass into McGeough who finished smartly. But Beggan pulled off a great save to deny Magill a goal in the 30th minute, diving full length to his left to tip over. Murdock fired just over close to half-time while Monaghan defender Ryan Wylie twice blocked goalbound efforts from James Guinness and Murdock. Havern had a thrilling duel with Scotstown's Ryan O'Toole. O'Toole conceded 0-5 to Havern from play and the Down free-taker filled his boots from placed balls too, converting his second two-point free in the 43rd minute to leave Down 1-20 to 1-16 ahead at that stage. They started the second-half strongly but suddenly found themselves in Monaghan's slipstream again as the promoted Division 2 team rallied. Half-time substitute McCarron pulled Monaghan back with a 50th minute goal, finishing at the third attempt after McCarthy and Bannigan had gone close. McCarron butchered a second goal chance soon after as the ball hit the post and bounced out to safety. But the experienced attacker slotted a brilliant two-pointer in the 58th minute to tie a pulsating game up yet again, 2-21 to 1-24. Monaghan brought all their big game know-how to bear in the closing 15 minutes or so as they managed the contest superbly, picking off points from O'Toole, Beggan and substitute David Garland to keep Down just about at arm's length. Monaghan scorers: Jack McCarron 1-3 (1 tp, 0-1f), Rory Beggan 0-6 (3 tpf), Micheal Bannigan 1-2, Stephen O'Hanlon 0-3, Conor McCarthy 0-2 (tp), Micheal McCarville 0-2 (tp), Dessie Ward 0-2, Andrew Woods 0-2, Ryan O'Toole 0-2, Aaron Carey 0-1, Louis Kelly 0-1, David Garland 0-1. Down scorers: Pat Havern 0-12 (2 tpf, 3f), John McGeough 1-0, Danny Magill 0-4 (tp), Adam Crimmins 0-2, Daniel Guinness 0-2, Odhran Murdock 0-2 (0-1f), Conor McCrickard 0-2 (0-1f), Ceilum Doherty 0-1, Eugene Branagan 0-1. Monaghan 1. Rory Beggan 23. Killian Lavelle 3. Kieran Duffy 4. Dylan Byrne 2. Ryan Wylie 5. Ryan O'Toole 20. Aaron Carey 8. Micheal McCarville 6. Dessie Ward 12. Ryan McAnespie 10. Stephen O'Hanlon 7. Conor McCarthy 14. Andrew Woods 11. Micheal Bannigan 15. Stephen Mooney Subs 13. Jack McCarron for Mooney (h/t) 18. Louis Kelly for Lavelle (49) 25. David Garland for Woods (57) 19. Darren Hughes for Duffy (59) 21. Ciaran McNulty for McAnespie (70) Down 1. Ronan Burns 3. Peter Fegan 6. Pierce Laverty 2. Patrick McCarthy 4. Ceilum Doherty 7. Miceal Rooney 5. Ryan Magill 11. Odhran Murdock 13. James Guinness 10. Danny Magill 14. Pat Havern 8. Daniel Guinness 21. Adam Crimmins 15. John McGeough 9. Ryan McEvoy Subs 23. Caolan Mooney for James Guinness (h/t) 12. Eugene Branagan for Rooney (54) 26. Conor McCrickard for McGeough (56) 22. Oisin Savage for Ryan Magill (65) 18. Aaron McClements for Crimmins (67) Referee: David Coldrick (Meath).

David Murdock, billionaire businessman who twice reshaped NC town, dies at 102
David Murdock, billionaire businessman who twice reshaped NC town, dies at 102

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

David Murdock, billionaire businessman who twice reshaped NC town, dies at 102

David Murdock, the billionaire businessman who reinvigorated the iconic Dole Food fruit brand, helped rebuild Kannapolis after the collapse of former textile giant Pillowtex, once owned a Hawaiian island and hoped to live to 125, has died. He was 102. A high school dropout, Murdock made his fortune through a hardscrabble ladder of ever-growing business ventures. He started with a diner, which he turned into a homebuilding business in Arizona, which he turned into an office-building business, which he used to buy stakes in major corporations, which would turn him into a billionaire. But for all his business success, late in life Murdock became intensely interested in health and wellness. In the 2000s, he financed the creation of the North Carolina Research Campus in Kannapolis to study agriculture and wellness in support of this mission. The project, as well as other investments and philanthropy he made in the town, contributed to its recovery from the collapse of its textile industry, which he also had been a part of. Murdock died Monday, Dole Food stated on LinkedIn, stating: 'David H. Murdock stood apart — a singular force in American business — a self-made billionaire, visionary entrepreneur, and enduring advocate for health, longevity, and innovation. 'As our guiding star from 1985 to 2020, Mr. Murdock transformed the global produce landscape through bold investments, science-driven leadership, and an unwavering belief in the power of nutrition,' Dole Food said. The city of Kannapolis shared the following statement Wednesday with The Charlotte Observer: 'Mr. Murdock's investment in the North Carolina Research Campus was pivotal to the city's revitalization. The research, led by Duke, UNC-CH, UNCC, ASU, NC A&T, NC Central, NCSU, and UNCG, in the fields of health, nutrition, exercise continues to make a significant difference both in North Carolina and across the United States. 'Murdock's legacy of having eight universities in one location focused on these targeted scientific fields has been important in the understanding of how foods and exercise impact everyone.' The X account called How many days until David H Murdock 125th birthday on Wednesday, created in April to countdown the days until he turned 125, simply posted 'RIP.' Ventura County Supervisor Jeff Gorell in California said on X that Dole's philanthropy and health initiatives positively touched thousands of people. 'David helped me launch my local political career in 2004. His impact on Ventura County and the world will be forever felt.' Murdock was listed at No. 979 on Forbes' 2025 World's Billionaires List with a net worth of $3.7 billion. Born in Kansas City, Murdock grew up in Wayne, Ohio. He dropped out of high school at 14. After serving in the Army, he ended up homeless in Detroit at the age of 22, according to a 2011 profile of Murdock in the New York Times Magazine. A fellow veteran offered to help, and Murdock would use that assistance to buy a diner that he hung out at, which he flipped for a profit, bought a car and drove out west. In Phoenix, Murdock built a business building cheap homes for Americans moving west after World War II. The business eventually became a sprawling home and office building empire across the country, the funds of which Murdock used to buy up stakes in major U.S. firms. Murdock first appeared in the Charlotte area in the 1980s, when he bought Cannon Mills in Kannapolis. He quickly turned around and resold it to an entity that would become Pillowtex, but held on to a house on Kannapolis Lake called Pity's Sake Lodge. Ever since, he's had a close association with Kannapolis, investing millions in the town. In 1985, Murdock purchased Castle & Cooke, the colonial Hawaiian company that owned Dole, the fruit company which had fallen on hard times. He turned Dole around, which also coincided with a new personal obsession with living long life through a healthy diet. The death of his wife Gabriele from cancer in 1985 was the spark: 'If I had known what I know today,' about wellness, he said to the New York Times Magazine, 'I could have saved my wife's life. And I think I could have saved my mother's life too.' In turning around one of the world's biggest fruit and vegetable companies, Murdock began a parallel mission to finance research into long life through those same fruits and vegetables. Murdock once stopped by a fast-food restaurant, the type of place whose food he abhorred, the (Raleigh) News & Observer reported. He told people there: 'I eat only fruits and vegetables, nuts. ... I'm 91 years old, and I'm as healthy as any one of you there. That should be a good example of proper eating: fruits and vegetables.' That mission to tout healthy living ultimately would be conducted in a place that by the 2000s had grown to know Murdock well: Kannapolis. After Pillowtex collapsed, Murdock bought the abandoned mill site in Cabarrus County that he once owned at auction for $6.4 million. On it, he spent $500 million of his own money to build the North Carolina Research Campus, a center of scientific research looking into plants and wellness. Couldn't hurt the owner of a produce company, either. He brought academics from across the state and country to the former mill site, which he turned into an opulent set of mock neo-Classical buildings. It helped diversify the economy of Kannapolis, and spurred on other development in the downtown area. Twenty years ago, when Murdock first had designs to reinvigorate Kannapolis with his research campus, he invited a Charlotte Observer reporter to his Kannapolis mansion on Kannapolis Lake for a rare interview. The home was called Pity's Sake Lodge. When asked why he chose Kannapolis as the site for his ambitious dreams of a research campus centered on health and nutrition, Murdock replied, 'You can't live in an area, if you have any kind of a heart and soul, and not feel you want to end up adding something to that area.' He later added, 'I've tried to build the city up. I like creativity. That's the foundation of my entire business world, creating things.' Murdock called Kannapolis his second home, and the project he was about to publicly unveil 'the love of my life.' While sharing his vision, he also mixed a veggie smoothie that he insisted the Observer's reporter and reporter drink. Murdock professed not to know his total wealth, saying he only worried about having enough in his wallet on trips, and keeping quarters in his car's ashtray to feed parking meters. Around Kannapolis at the time, in 2005, he drove himself around town in a 1982 burgundy Cadillac. In public and private, he typically appeared in crisp, dark suits with monogrammed cuff links. And even his closest, long-time associates called him 'Mr. Murdock.' Murdock remained involved in even the most minute detail of his businesses, from helping the caretaker at Pity's Sake Lodge with a sheep struggling to give birth to deciding which flowers to plant at his developments. 'They sometimes call me a dictator, you know, but..., ' he said with a smile and a shrug. Murdock said he travels more than 200,000 miles a year, which enough to circle the globe eight times. And he's a self-described 'nut for coffee' who can down a dozen cups a day. Associates said he also occasionally would offer up a hymn or showtunes. Oh and that smoothie? It was a little heavy on the celery, but still fairly drinkable. Near the end of his life, he shrunk his empire even as his ambitions for life stayed grand. After nearly four decades overseeing Dole, he relinquished his leadership in the company when it merged with Irish firm Total Produce in 2021 to create Dole plc. That combined company is headquartered in Dublin, and has its U.S. headquarters in Charlotte. Once the owner of much of the Hawaiian island of Lanai, Murdock sold that, too. In 2012, he sold it to fellow billionaire Larry Ellison for $300 million. Murdock stepped back from his signature day-to-day involvement in the Kannapolis research campus in the 2010s as well. In September 2023, Forbes estimated his fortune at $2.3 billion. But in 2024, Murdock's wealth shot up to $3.4 billion, according to the annual Forbes list of the world's richest people, making for a 48% rise. Murdock ranked No. 949 on the list of billionaires in April 2024. A man who once told a magazine in the 1980s that 'All my life I've had one desire — to be No. 1,' turned into one who told the Observer iduring that 2005 visit to his home that 'I'm not a money-hungry man. I guess I satisfied that hunger quite a few years ago. My desire is to do things that are good for mankind.' Former Observer reporters Hannah Lang and Austin Weinstein, and Observer archives, contributed to this report.

David Murdock, billionaire king of fruit and vegatables, dies at 102
David Murdock, billionaire king of fruit and vegatables, dies at 102

Yahoo

time11-06-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

David Murdock, billionaire king of fruit and vegatables, dies at 102

In his astonishing rags-to-riches life, it seemed there was little David Murdock could not do by sheer determination. The billionaire financier who transformed Dole into the world's largest producer of fruits and vegetables was a dyslexic high school dropout who made and lost a fortune by the time he was 40. He then moved to California to start again, becoming a mainstay on lists of the richest Americans. One of the few self-set goals that Murdock failed to meet was his plan to celebrate his 125th birthday. Murdock, who in his later years became a messianic promoter of exercise and healthful eating for longevity, died Monday at what he no doubt would have considered the premature age of 102, according to William Goldfield, a spokesperson for Dole Food Co., which Murdock led from 1985 to 2021. Forbes estimated his net worth at $3.7 billion at the time of his death. He was a longtime resident of Lake Sherwood in Ventura County. Well into his 80s, Murdock lifted weights several times a week, walked on a treadmill daily and drank smoothies made of 20 different kinds of fruit and vegetables including pulverized banana peels. He whipped them up himself in a Jack LaLanne juicer. His health proselytizing was both public and private. He spent more than $500 million of his fortune on a nutrition research institute in Kannapolis, N.C., as well as founding the California Health and Longevity Institute, a medical spa in Westlake Village ('to teach people to eat because they eat wrong'). He also wasn't shy about scolding dining companions who committed such sins as buttering their bread or not eating all their vegetables. 'People are afraid to have dinner with him,' his friend and physician Rolland Dickson told the Wall Street Journal in 2006. Murdock's immense wealth and business acumen came about with little formal education or social advantage. He was born David Howard Murdock on April 10, 1923, in Kansas City, Mo., and grew up in the small town of Wayne, Ohio. His father was a traveling salesman. His mother took in laundry and scrubbed floors. She died from cancer when she was 42 and he was 17. He was raised in a household where 'if it wasn't cooked in bacon grease, it didn't taste good," a by-then vegetarian Murdock told The Times in 2006. At school his teachers told him he was stupid, and he believed them. He earned poor grades and dropped out after the ninth grade. No one recognized his dyslexia at the time. He went to work pumping gas and changing oil until he was drafted into the U.S. Army. He ranked the highest on an IQ test out of 1,500 men. During his World War II service, an army buddy shared his love of books and for the rest of his life Murdock never stopped reading. He said that he was lucky to be uneducated because he spent his whole life learning. He consumed everything from 'Think and Grow Rich' by Napoleon Hill to Shakespearean sonnets. When Murdock took over Dole, the first thing he did was to buy a stack of books on fruits and vegetables. 'There is nothing you can't learn reading. If you read the three best books on a subject, you'll know what you need to know,' he said more than once. At age 22, he was out of the service, living in Detroit, broke and jobless. He did his reading at a diner counter. A friend who worked there would give him free sandwiches. But the place was for sale and his meal ticket was about to run out. One evening he struck up a conversation with another diner at the counter. He told the man he was looking for a job and the man, who worked for a loan company, told him he should buy the little greasy spoon. With the man's help, he raised $1,200 and 18 months later, after fixing the place up, sold it for $1,900. Murdock would go on to develop projects around the world and own a string of corporations, but he always kept the single penny and the one nickel that were in his pocket the night his destiny changed at the diner. With $75 of the profit from the sale, he bought a car and headed to Phoenix. For 17 years, he built houses and office buildings, creating a multimillion-dollar enterprise. But the city became overbuilt and the housing boom went bust in the mid-1960s. Murdock had to sell almost everything to pay off his debt. 'I had all my eggs in one basket and didn't even know it,' he told the Wall Street Journal. At 43, he moved to Los Angeles to start over with what he could salvage of his fallen empire. He built homes and offices, but this time also bought companies. He specialized in undervalued corporations that produced basic goods such as bricks or towels. He could be ruthless in closing divisions and factories while in search of profits. Murdock even described himself as having a 'dictatorial streak.' In the early 1980s, he became the largest shareholder in Occidental Petroleum. He then tried to take over the corporation, famously battling with chairman Armand Hammer, who called Murdock a 'barracuda.' In 1984, Occidental paid a 40% premium on Murdock's stock to get him out — he left with a reported $100 million. In 1985, Murdock took over the nearly bankrupt Hawaiian real-estate company Castle & Cooke, which owned Dole, then a pineapple and banana producer, and the Hawaiian island of Lanai. Investors complained Murdock was incommunicative. He seldom gave interviews or detailed reports of his financial plans. 'I don't believe in going back to Wall Street and shooting my mouth off,' he told The Times. He split Castle & Cooke and Dole into separate publicly listed corporations in 1995, then took both private — Castle & Cooke in 2000 and Dole in 2003. Murdock returned Dole to public trading in 2009, then in 2013, at age 90, reacquired it as a private company. He later reached two settlements with former Dole shareholders who claimed he had shortchanged them in that deal. Along the way, he quietly turned Dole into an operation selling food products in countries across the globe. In 2012, Murdock sold his portion of Lanai, 98% of the island, to fellow billionaire and Oracle Corp. founder Larry Ellison, saying, 'I have learned in life that change is inevitable and can be quite positive when guided in the right direction.' In 2018, Murdock sold a 45% stake in Dole to Dublin, Ireland-based Total Produce Plc. for $300 million. In 2021, Dole returned to the market for its third run as a public company, and Murdock stepped down from its board. There were times when the change he experienced was the result of deep personal loss. In 1983, Murdock's wife Gabriele, well-known in the Southern California arts community, was diagnosed with advanced ovarian cancer. Murdock read everything he could on nutrition, trying to find a way to save her. She died in 1985 at age 43. He believed if he would have known about healthier eating habits earlier, he could have saved her, and his mother as well. Eleven months later, his oldest son, Eugene, died in a swimming pool accident after hitting his head at 23. Another son, David II, died in a Los Angeles car accident at 36. The corporate magnate slowly turned into a health guru with a populist bent. The same man who built the Regency Club, which for 30 years catered to the business elite in Los Angeles, took Oprah Winfrey on his weekly trip to Costco to show her viewers healthy shopping tips. For, though seeking longevity, Murdock also celebrated change. 'To step outside what you already know is the most exciting thing,' Murdock told the BBC in a 2010 interview. He credited his triumphs to being able to envision possibilities. 'When I look at something, I look not at what is there. But what could be there,' he said. 'In order to do the impossible, you must see the invisible.' Bloomberg News contributed to this article. Sign up for Essential California for the L.A. Times biggest news, features and recommendations in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Athletics DFA righty Noah Murdock, call up righty Elvis Alvarado
Athletics DFA righty Noah Murdock, call up righty Elvis Alvarado

Yahoo

time10-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Athletics DFA righty Noah Murdock, call up righty Elvis Alvarado

Athletics DFA righty Noah Murdock, call up righty Elvis Alvarado originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area The Athletics announced on Friday that they designated rookie right-handed reliever Noah Murdock for assignment. The team promoted righty Elvis Alvarado from Triple-A Las Vegas to replace Murdock, who the A's selected No. 4 overall in the 2024 Rule 5 Draft in December. Murdock, 6-foot-8 and 205 pounds, struggled to find a command correlating with his intimidating frame. He carried a 13.24 ERA over 14 games during the 2025 MLB season and allowed 26 hits, 25 runs and 20 walks to 21 strikeouts collected. Advertisement Murdock's statistical woes undoubtedly peaked on April 29. In a 15-2 loss to the Texas Rangers, the 26-year-old allowed four hits, three walks and seven runs without earning a single out. But, besides the steep ERA, the likely needle-mover for A's manager Mark Kotsay and the team's management was Murdock's final outing – a 6-5 loss to the Seattle Mariners on Wednesday, where he gave up a 5-4 lead in the eighth inning, leading to a crucial slide in the competitive AL West. Alvarado, 6-foot-4 and 183 pounds, is someone the A's are looking to for middle-relief stability. Over 14 games with Triple-A Las Vegas, the 26-year-old posted a 3.45 ERA through 15 2/3 frames with 22 strikeouts, to just four walks, and a perfect 5-for-5 record on save attempts. Alvarado's opportunity will be his first in the majors after he spent his first seven years paving his way through the minors. He could debut as early as Friday night as the A's begin their weekend series against the AL East-leading New York Yankees at Sutter Health Park in West Sacramento.

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