Bobby Sprowl Baseball player

Robert John Sprowl (born April 14, 1956 in Sandusky, Ohio) is a retired professional baseball player who was a pitcher in Major League Baseball from 1978 to 1981. He played for the Boston Red Sox and Houston Astros.Sprowl was a star pitcher at the University of Alabama, leading the nation in strikeouts per nine innings in 1977. He was selected by the Red Sox in that year's amateur draft.Sprowl is best known for losing two critical games in the 1978 pennant race between the Red Sox and the New York Yankees. Before he was called up to the majors, Sprowl had compiled a 9-3 record in the AA Eastern League. Boston's minor league organization claimed that he "had ice water in his veins," and manager Don Zimmer gave Sprowl three starts late in the season.His second start was against the New York Yankees. Zimmer passed over veterans Bill "Spaceman" Lee and Luis Tiant, who had dominated the Yankees during their careers. (Lee, for example, won 12 out of 17 decisions against the Yankees in 10 years with Boston.) Sprowl allowed four walks, one hit and one run in the first inning before being pulled.Sprowl went 0-2 with a 6.39 earned run average. The following season, he was traded to the Astros. He pitched in 19 games over the next three years, mostly in middle relief. He was sent back to the minors in 1982, and spent three seasons in the Astros and Baltimore Orioles organizations. The closest he ever got to the majors again was three games for the Astros' top affiliate, the Tucson Toros. He ended his major-league career with an 0-3 record in four years.He is currently the head coach of the Shelton State Community College baseball team.

Personal facts

Birth dateApril 14, 1956
Birth place
Sandusky Ohio

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Baseball player

Career startSeptember 05, 1978
Career endOctober 03, 1981
batting sideLeft
former teams
Boston Red Sox
Houston Astros
position
Pitcher
teams
Boston Red Sox
Houston Astros
throwing sideLeft

Bobby Sprowl on Wikipedia