Yes that moustache
caught the eyes of some of the nation’s top baseball recruiters.
Logically, Cory sorted through all of the scholarship offers to
attend ...Bringham Young University. In his first game, he hit three
home runs in his first three at-bats against UNLV. He continued
to excel, hitting .450 with 27 home runs and 85 RBI’s and
generally embarrassing teammates such as Wally Joyner, Rick Aguilera
and former White Sox pitcher Scott Nielsen. After a dominating college
career, MLB scouts drooled over that which was Cory Snyder, and
he was drafted 4th overall by the Cleveland Indians in 1984. Cory
even went on to make America proud with a Silver Medal in the 1984
Olympics, outshining such stars as Mark McGwire and Barry Larkin.
Cory took the fast track to success in the star-studded early 80’s
Cleveland farm system that would one day yield such greats as Joey
Belle, Jay Bell, and… Alex Cole. And Rated Rookie Andy
Allanson. Debuting in 1986, Cory and his moustache would quickly
show the world what they could do, smashing 24 home runs and slugging
.500 in only 103 games. 1987 was a similarly splendid year, during
which Snyder blasted 33 home runs, walked a staggering 33 times,
and struck out a meager 166 times. Unfortunately, those who fly
so close to the sun on golden moustaches often find themselves the
envy of the gods. In a cruel twist of fate, it would be the very
moustache from which Cory drew so much strength that would prove
his downfall. While having such a uniquely blond moustache was a
boon that no man could resist, it was with that blond godsend that
enabled Cory to maneuver around MLB’s incredibly strict drug
policies. By early 1988, Cory had done what many at the near-top
do, he turned to drugs. Cory, brilliant as he was, realized that
he could store cocaine in his moustache, and his plan worked well
enough to completely derail his promising career.
Battling drug addiction from 1988 through the end of his MLB career
in 1994, Cory was still one of the most intimidating hitters during
this period. Hall of Famer Nolan Ryan on Cory Snyder, “Cory
Snyder scared the living hell out of me. He never broke eye
contact with the pitcher, and when not screaming at the pitch –
he literally screamed at the baseball while it was in the air –
he would scream at me. Mostly it was gibberish, but you could
tell he was trying to get you to look into his moustache. It usually
worked, because all my pitches ended up in the dirt. He still
swung at them, though. That dude was scary.”
After retiring in 1994, Snyder disappeared. He wasn’t seen
for 7 years, until he surfaced at a YMCA softball tournament. Reportedly,
he hit nine home runs in the three game tournament, as well as two
opponents, an umpire, and three fans. After his last shot cleared
an estimated 480 feet, he hurled his bat at the centerfield scoreboard
and collapsed on the spot. On June 17, 2001, Cory Snyder died of
a massive coronary at the age of 39... R.I.P. Cory " --Andy
Audas, AndyAudas.com, 1/12/06
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