Former WSU standout Gene Conley, both a MLB and NBA champion, dies at 86

BOSTON (AP) — Gene Conley, one of the only players in history to win championships in two major professional sports, has died. He was 86.

The Boston Red Sox, for whom Conley played for from 1961-63, say he died Tuesday.

Conley helped pitch the Milwaukee Braves to a World Series championship in 1957 and won three NBA titles with the Celtics. Otto Graham won championships in the NFL and the NBL, a precursor to the NBA.

Conley was a right-hander and three-time All-Star who spent 11 years in baseball with four teams. He was selected by the Celtics in the 1952 draft and, after spending most of the next six years playing only baseball, he returned to the NBA in 1958 and won three consecutive titles.

Conley spent two years at Washington State University and played on championship basketball and baseball teams. At WSU, the athletic department said, Conley played center on Coach Jack Friel's championship basketball team of 1950, and he pitched for Coach Buck Bailey's 1950 Cougar team that won the Northern Division and District Eight and finished second in the College World Series.

Born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, Conley and his wife, Katie, established the Foxboro Paper Company in Foxborough, Massachusetts. They had three children and seven grandchildren.