Английская Википедия:Howie Fox

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Howard Francis Fox (March 1, 1921 – October 9, 1955) was an American professional baseball pitcher, who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Phillies, and Baltimore Orioles, in 9 seasons, between Шаблон:By and Шаблон:By. During his playing days, Fox stood Шаблон:Convert, weighing Шаблон:Convert. He batted and threw right-handed.

The year after Fox's last big league appearance, he acquired a local tavern in San Antonio, while he pitched for the Missions of the Double-A Texas League; a month into the offseason, he was stabbed to death at age 34 during a disturbance at that establishment.

Early life

Fox was born in Coburg, Oregon. He played baseball and basketball at the University of Oregon.[1] Signed by the Cincinnati Reds as a free agent in 1943, he played for a Pioneer League team in Ogden, Utah, in Шаблон:By, followed by stints with minor league teams in Birmingham and Syracuse.[2]

Major league career

A hard thrower with a sharp curveball, Fox debuted in MLB in Шаблон:By with the Reds, playing seven years before joining the Philadelphia Phillies, in Шаблон:By, and the Baltimore Orioles, in Шаблон:By. His most productive season came in Шаблон:By, for Cincinnati, when he went 11–8, a year after his 6–19 record gave him the most losses of any pitcher in the major leagues. In Шаблон:By, Fox collected nine victories, with a 3.83 earned run average (ERA), in a career-high 228 innings, but suffered 14 losses.

Before the 1952 season, Fox was dealt to Philadelphia in a seven-player transaction that included Smoky Burgess, Niles Jordan, Eddie Pellagrini, Connie Ryan, Andy Seminick, and Dick Sisler. In Шаблон:By, he played for Triple-A Baltimore, and a year appeared in 38 games for the MLB Orioles during their first year in MLB since 1902.

In nine major league seasons, Fox posted a 43–72 record, with 342 strikeouts, a 4.33 ERA, in 248 appearances, including 132 starts, 42 complete games, five shutouts, six saves, and Шаблон:Frac innings of work. In 253 games, Fox hit .189, with two home runs, and 25 runs batted in (RBI).

Fox also played in the Venezuelan Winter League (1953–Шаблон:By) and in the 1954 Caribbean Series. In the Venezuelan Winter League, he was pitching for Pastora when popular player Luis Aparicio, Sr., of Gavilanes took himself out of a 1953 game and allowed his son, Luis Aparicio, to pinch hit for his first professional baseball at bat. The younger Aparicio became a star MLB player and member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.[3]

Death

While he was a minor league pitcher in the Texas League for the San Antonio Missions in 1955, Fox purchased a San Antonio tavern. That October, he was attempting to kick three men out of the bar and a struggle ensued in front of the business. Fox was stabbed three times and he died as he was trying to crawl back to the door of the establishment. A San Antonio College student, John Strickland, was arrested and two other men were held as material witnesses.[4] Strickland was charged with murder with malice and another man was indicted on an aggravated assault charge in the stabbing injury of Fox's bartender.[5]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Baseballstats