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Captain Earthman dies at 61: Iconic Coors Field beer vendor battled brain cancer

Brent Doeden was diagnosed with two Grade-IV tumors last August

Denver Post sports intern Ben Arthur ...
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Brent Doeden, affectionately known as Captain Earthman, the beloved Coors Field beer vendor since the Rockies’ inaugural season in 1993, has died. He was 61.

His wife of 29 years, Becky Scharfenberg, said that he passed away at 11:30 Monday morning surrounded by four of his daughters and four grandkids at his Arvada home.

Earthman was diagnosed with two Grade IV tumors last August, and doctors gave him 6 to 18 months to live.

Earthman was known as a pioneer in the vendor profession — famous at Coors Field for his hand-crafted hats, peanut earrings and a booming voice that reverberated across the ballpark’s seats. He acquired a cellphone so customers could call him for beers in the early 2000’s and distributed business cards in the stands with his number.

“He touched so many lives in such a unique way,” Scharfenberg said. “Everybody that met him has some kind of quirky story about him and you just don’t find that in people. To him, every single person that he met was the most important person to him at that moment. He made them feel that way.”

He began his career at the University of Colorado’s Folsom Field in 1985 during the Buffs’ football games. He began working Rockies games at Mile High Stadium in 1993 before the team moved to Coors Fields in 1995.

His terminal diagnosis came on Aug. 31st last year, and he had to stop his job immediately. The two tumors in his brain damaged his short-term memory and his ability to carry on conversations. In recent months, Scharfenberg said, he was unable to communicate.

He attended his last Rockies game with his family on Father’s Day.

“We’ve always been so incredibly humbled by the number of people that have given us well wishes,” Scharfenberg said. “Itap been amazing from that point how much love (my family) yet again, that I’m feeling yet again.”

The family will put on a celebration of life event sometime in the next couple weeks.

“We do want everyone out there to come share their stories about him,” Sharfenberg said.

He is survived by six daughters and nine grandchildren.


Updated July 10, 2017 at 18:23 p.m. Because of a reporting error, Doeden’s age was originally misreported. He was 61 years old.

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