Cafardo’s love of baseball and commitment to his craft compelled him to report to JetBlue Park, the spring training home of the Red Sox, on one of his rare days off. He was apparently stricken by an embolism at the park, and members of the Sox medical team were unable to revive him.

Nick Cafardo, the Boston Globe’s nationally recognized and widely respected baseball columnist, died Thursday in Fort Myers, Fla. He was 62.

Cafardo joined the Globe in 1989, after covering the Sox for the Patriot Ledger. Over the next three decades, he established himself as one of Boston’s most prominent sports reporters. He covered the Patriots for the Globe between stints on the paper’s Sox beat, and he authored the 2002 book, “The Impossible Team: The Worst to First Patriots’ Super Bowl Season.’’


As much as Cafardo enjoyed covering the Patriots, he longed to return to baseball, and for the last 15 years, he traveled the country covering the Sox as well as other major league games for the Globe. He was popular throughout the major leagues and formed close relationships with figures at all levels of the sport, from groundskeepers and clubhouse attendants to players, scouts, managers and team executives.

His Sunday baseball notes column was one of the Globe’s most popular features.

“Nick was one of the best people to ever walk through our doors — generous with his time and insights, immensely knowledgeable, deeply devoted to the Globe,’’ the Globe’s editor, Brian McGrory, said. “He had a view of the Red Sox and the game on a national scale that is virtually unrivaled.

“For those reasons, he was one of our most read writers, constantly attracting followers near and far, his weekly baseball notes column being destination reading for tens of thousands of people.’’

The Red Sox released a statement, saying, “For over three decades, Nick was a fixture at Fenway Park and throughout ballparks across the country. His coverage was as consistent as the game itself.


“His opinions on the Red Sox and the most pressing issues facing Major League Baseball were a constant, particularly through the prominent Sunday baseball notes column in the Boston Globe.

“The Cafardo family will always be a part of the Boston baseball family, and the Red Sox will honor Nick’s legacy at the appropriate time.”

Cafardo wrote several other books, including “If These Walls Could Talk’’ with Jerry Remy. He also authored “Inside Pitch: Playing and Broadcasting the Game I Love,’’ with baseball Hall of Famer Tom Glavine.

Cafardo was a regular guest on Sox pregame shows on the New England Sports Network.

He is survived by his wife Leeanne, and two children, Ben and Emilee.

Bob Hohler can be reached at robert.hohler@globe.com.