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词条 Sal Maglie
释义

  1. Playing career

  2. Coaching career

  3. Legacy

  4. Career Statistics

  5. See also

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Infobox baseball biography
|name=Sal Maglie
|position=Pitcher
|image=Sal Maglie 1956.jpg
|caption=Maglie in about 1953.
|birth_date={{Birth date|1917|4|26}}
|birth_place=Niagara Falls, New York
|death_date={{death date and age|1992|12|28|1917|4|26}}
|death_place=Niagara Falls, New York
|bats=Right
|throws=Right
|debutleague = MLB
|debutdate=August 9
|debutyear=1945
|debutteam=New York Giants
|finalleague = MLB
|finaldate=August 31
|finalyear=1958
|finalteam=St. Louis Cardinals
|statleague = MLB
|stat1label=Win–loss record
|stat2label=Earned run average
|stat3label=Strikeouts
|stat1value=119–62
|stat2value=3.15
|stat3value=862
|teams=
  • New York Giants ({{baseball year|1945}}, {{baseball year|1950}}–{{baseball year|1955}})
  • Cleveland Indians ({{baseball year|1955}}–{{baseball year|1956}})
  • Brooklyn Dodgers ({{baseball year|1956}}–{{baseball year|1957}})
  • New York Yankees ({{baseball year|1957}}–{{baseball year|1958}})
  • St. Louis Cardinals ({{baseball year|1958}})

|highlights=
  • 2× All-Star (1951, 1952)
  • World Series champion (1954)
  • NL wins leader (1951)
  • NL ERA leader (1950)
  • Pitched a No-hitter on September 25, 1956

}}

Salvatore Anthony Maglie (April 26, 1917 – December 28, 1992) was an American Major League Baseball pitcher and later, a scout and a pitching coach. He played from 1945 to 1958 for the New York Giants, Cleveland Indians, Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Yankees, and St. Louis Cardinals. Maglie was known as "Sal the Barber", because he gave close shaves—that is, pitched inside to hitters.[1] Coincidentally, he also sported a five o'clock shadow look. He also had the distinction of being one of the few players to play for the Giants, Dodgers and Yankees at a time when all three teams were in New York City[2] (Maglie's playing career pre-dated the 1962 establishment of the fourth New York major league team, the expansion New York Mets, with whom he was never affiliated). During a 10-year major league baseball career, Maglie compiled 119 wins, 862 strikeouts, and a 3.15 earned run average.

Playing career

Maglie broke into the major leagues with the Giants in 1945, but jumped to the Mexican League prior to the 1946 season. For this, Maglie was banned from organized baseball by Commissioner Happy Chandler, and Maglie was unable to return to the Giants until 1950. The ban had been lifted in 1949, but Maglie chose to remain with the Drummondville Cubs, with whom he was playing at the time, and with whom he was making more money than he did with the Giants.[3]

After his return to the majors, Maglie was integral to the success of the New York Giants teams of the early 1950s. After a stint with Cleveland, Maglie was purchased by the Dodgers in May 1956. Maglie had a sterling comeback season for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1956 (who won the NL pennant by one game over the Milwaukee Braves and two games over the Cincinnati Reds), going 13–5 with 2.89 ERA. On September 25 of that year, he no-hit the Philadelphia Phillies 5-0 at Ebbets Field. He finished second to Don Newcombe in the first balloting for the Cy Young Award, and was also second to Newcombe in MVP balloting. He was the Dodgers' pitcher opposing Don Larsen of the Yankees in the latter's famous perfect game in Game 5 of the 1956 World Series.

Hall of Fame pitcher Don Drysdale credited Maglie with teaching him the art of brushing back batters while the two were teammates in Brooklyn.[4]

Coaching career

After one year (1959) as a scout for the Cardinals, and two stints (1960–62; 1966–67) with the Boston Red Sox as a pitching coach, Maglie was hired as a pitching coach for the expansion Seattle Pilots in 1969. He was profiled unflatteringly in Jim Bouton's book Ball Four, despite the fact that he was Bouton's boyhood hero. Bouton commented that Maglie rarely gave useful advice to the pitchers, and frequently second-guessed their choice of pitches, often contradicting his previous second guessing. In one such instance, Bouton related:

The man I love [Maglie] had quite an adventure tonight. Darrell Brandon pitching, and with Rod Carew on third base he's using a full wind-up. At the last moment he decides to take a look over at Carew, who's taking a pretty good lead. So he backs off the rubber and Sal yells at him, "For crissakes, get the hitter. The runner isn't going anyplace."

So Darrell winds up and lets fly. And Carew steals home.

When Darrell comes into the dugout at the end of the inning, Maglie lets him have it. "Dammit", he says. "You know you've got to pitch from the stretch in that situation."

Jim Lonborg, AL Cy Young Award winner in 1967, credited his effectiveness that year to Maglie's lessons on pitching inside while he was a pitching coach for the Red Sox.[5]

Legacy

During the 1950s, Maglie lived in Riverdale, The Bronx.[6]

Maglie appeared on the game show What's My Line? the night before Game 5 of the 1956 World Series, with former Yankee Phil Rizzuto as one of the panel members.[7][8]

Maglie died in 1992 due to complications from pneumonia.

Sal Maglie Stadium, located in Hyde Park in his hometown of Niagara Falls, New York, was named after him in June 1983. The ceremony featured the world's shortest baseball bus excursion. A bus loaded with friends and family of Maglie left the Stadium Grill located about two hundred yards across the street and drove into Sal Maglie Stadium. The event was captured in a story done by Bob Koshinski and aired on ESPN.

Sal Maglie Stadium is now the home to the Niagara Purple Eagles college baseball team, Niagara Falls Wolverines (high school baseball), Niagara Catholic Patriots (high school baseball), and Niagara Power of the NYCBL.

Career Statistics

W L PCT ERA G GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB SO HBP WP BF WHIP
119 62 .657 3.15 303 232 93 25 14 1723 1591 684 603 169 562 862 44 18 7182 1.250

See also

{{Portal|Baseball}}
  • List of Major League Baseball annual ERA leaders
  • List of Major League Baseball annual wins leaders
  • List of Major League Baseball no-hitters

References

1. ^{{cite book|last=Dickson|first=Paul|title=The Dickson Baseball Dictionary|year=1989|publisher=Facts on File|location=United States|isbn=0816017417|page=29|pages=}}
2. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/friv/multifranchise.cgi?level=franch&t1=LAD&t2=NYY&t3=--&t4=SFG|title=Players who played for Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants {{!}} Baseball-Reference.com|website=Baseball-Reference.com|language=en|access-date=2017-12-10}}
3. ^SABR article on the 1949 Drummondville Cubs {{webarchive|url=http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20120510155741/http%3A//quebec.sabr.org/drum49.htm |date=2012-05-10 }}
4. ^[https://www.nytimes.com/1992/12/29/sports/sports-of-the-times-when-sal-the-barber-pitched.html When Sal The Barber Pitched]
5. ^Sal "The Barber" Maglie: A Baseball Legend
6. ^Collins, Glenn. [https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B06E6DC1E3EF932A15753C1A9669C8B63 " BASEBALL: SUBWAY SERIES; 1956 vs. 2000? It's Deja Vu All Over Again, Except for When It's Not"], The New York Times, October 21, 2000. Accessed May 3, 2008. "In 1956, the Dodger legend Pee Wee Reese occupied a modest brick duplex on Barwell Terrace in Bay Ridge, pitcher Sal Maglie lived in Riverdale and many Yankees occupied an apartment hotel on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx."
7. ^{{Cite episode |title= Sal Maglie; Ann Miller; Phil Rizutto [panel] |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuy0CbPp7vw |access-date=29 Jun 2017 |series=What's My Line? |date=7 Oct 1956 |number=331}}
8. ^{{cite web|title=What's My Line? (1950-67 Daly)|url=http://game.shows.angelfire.com/whats_my_line.html#1956|website=Kent's Game Show Trading Page|accessdate=29 June 2017}}

External links

{{Baseballstats |mlb=118140 |espn=24526 |br=m/maglisa01 |fangraphs=1007968 |cube=14643 |brm=maglie001sal }}
  • {{Find a Grave|13358212}}
{{s-start}}{{succession box |title=No-hitter pitcher | before=Mel Parnell |years=September 25, 1956 |after=Don Larsen}}{{succession box | title=Boston Red Sox pitching coach | before=Dave Ferriss
Mace Brown | years=1960–1962
1966–1967 | after=Harry Dorish
Darrell Johnson}}{{succession box | title=Seattle Pilots pitching coach | before=Franchise established | years=1969 | after=Wes Stock
(Milwaukee Brewers)}}{{s-end}}{{NL wins champions}}{{NL ERA champions}}{{San Francisco Giants Opening Day starting pitchers}}{{1954 New York Giants}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Maglie, Sal}}

26 : 1917 births|1992 deaths|Baseball coaches from New York (state)|Baseball players from New York (state)|Boston Red Sox coaches|Brooklyn Dodgers players|Buffalo Bisons (minor league) players|Cleveland Indians players|Deaths from pneumonia|Drummondville Cubs players|Elmira Pioneers players|Jamestown Falcons players|Jersey City Giants players|Major League Baseball pitchers|Major League Baseball pitching coaches|National League All-Stars|National League ERA champions|National League wins champions|New York Giants (NL) players|New York Yankees players|Niagara Purple Eagles baseball players|Sportspeople from Niagara Falls, New York|People from Riverdale, Bronx|St. Louis Cardinals players|St. Louis Cardinals scouts|Seattle Pilots coaches

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