William Tucker `62

Author, Retired Attorney
Owner of the Salem –Keizer Volcanoes Minor League Baseball Team
The Single A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants


A Major League Lawyering Mentor

Major league shortstop Cody Ransom and pitchers Joe Nathan and Tim Lincecum, along with many other major league baseball players all got their start playing for William Tucker `62 owner of the San Francisco Giant’s Minor League affiliate - the Salem Keizer Volcanoes.  This number is small compared to the number of individuals who learned “big league” lawyering skills from now retired attorney, William Tucker, who spent thirty-plus years with the firm of Cullen and Dykman in Brooklyn and Garden City, New York.

Mr. Tucker became involved in Minor League Baseball ownership after meeting Jerry Walker of Everett, Washington at a Mickey Mantle Fantasy Baseball Camp that he attended as a birthday present from his wife, Dolores.  Together, Tucker and Walker attended several more Mantle Fantasy Camps.  They then got an opportunity to attend the Major League Baseball Winter Meetings where they learned that a few minor league clubs were available for sale.  After a series of meetings, and due diligence on the part of Minor League Baseball, with ownership approval in hand, they successfully negotiated the purchase of the Franchise that became the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes in Oregon.  The Tucker-Walker baseball enterprise has been going strong for twenty one years since inception.
Tucker and Walker’s ownership exploits are documented in their first book “DP – Or Billy and Jerry in the Promised Land”.  That book was followed by their second book, “Moving Home Plate – The Miracle on I-5” which chronicles the relocation of a minor league baseball franchise and constructing a stadium with no public financing in an era prior to wide acceptance of governmental economic development incentives.  Those books are a “must read” for baseball fans disenchanted with big salary baseball.

Tucker has also written three mysteries, fiction novels about the law “Kingsway – 37”, a tale of drugs, vigilantism, murder and the law set in Brooklyn.  The vigilantes being members of the local church parish, a concept that lends itself to literary twists and turns and makes for a good, quick read.  As reviewed by Writer’s Digest, “The author’s expertise in the field of law practice is very evident in the amount of detail that this book has concerning procedural intricacies of prosecution.  The author has a very good grip on the motivations and the desires of his characters.  I totally loved the surprise ending.” 

Baseball has changed considerably since a young William Tucker would hitchhike from Kingston, NY to Yankee Stadium because of dissatisfaction with the poor local television reception and limited coverage of the World Series.  The same could be said for the practice of law.  Mr. Tucker reminisces about the early years at Cullen and Dykman, where the closing rooms were named for baseball greats and furnished with memorabilia. 
The father of three (one being an attorney) and grandfather of seven, Mr. Tucker offers this advice to today’s legal students, “Stay focused, and always put your client’s interest before your own.  In an era where the world wants everything now and distractions surround the client – attorney relationship, you will ultimately achieve more and better results by maintaining a client-first focus.”

William Tucker