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Fitzgerald touched many lives

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“I see Pat (Fitzgerald, Elroy’s brother) at school the next day and he asked me about the technical,” Olson said. “I said, ‘How did you hear about that?’ He said, ‘My brother T’d you up. He’s on the school board.’ I thought, ‘Great, I’m one and done here.’ ”

Bell recalled another time when their football crew was doing a game in Elkhorn, Wis., in 1982, at the same time Milwaukee and St. Louis were playing in the World Series.

“There’s a TV in the concession stand and Elroy is telling everyone, “Hey, this guy here’s a Cardinals’ fan,’ ” Bell said. “He got hit really hard (during the football game) and it took him a while to get up. When we got in the van to come home, he just laid down in the back and didn’t even care if we went out to eat. I said, ‘That’s what you get for telling them I’m a Cardinals’ fan.’ We just had a lot of good times together.”

Even those who didn’t work with Fitzgerald enjoyed his company.

“I just liked watching a game with him,” local official Steve Bellmore said. “He’d always have stories for you. He’ll be missed.”

Fitzgerald had that way of brightening your day whenever you bumped into him. And you never knew where that might be. He seemed ubiquitous.

“Some people aren’t ever supposed to pass,” local umpire Jim Ayers said.

• Joe Stevenson is a senior sports writer for the Northwest Herald. He can be reached by email at joestevenson@shawmedia.com. You also can follow him on Twitter @nwh_JoePrepZone.

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