Marv Grissom Baseball player

Marvin Edward Grissom (March 31, 1918 – September 18, 2005) was an American pitcher in Major League Baseball for the New York & San Francisco Giants (1946 and 1953–58), Detroit Tigers (1949), Chicago White Sox (1952), Boston Red Sox (1953) and St. Louis Cardinals (1959). He was born in Los Molinos, California.He helped the Giants win the 1954 World Series. In that season he was named to the National League All-Star team and finished 24th in voting for NL MVP Award after having a 10–7 win-loss record in 56 games (3 started including 1 complete game, a shutout), 19 saves, 122 ⅓ innings pitched, 64 strikeouts and a 2.35 earned run average.In 10 seasons he had a 47–45 record, 356 games (52 started), 12 complete games, 3 shutouts, 58 saves, 810 innings pitched, 343 walks, 459 strikeouts and a 3.41 ERA. After his active playing career, Grissom had a 15-year-long tenure as a pitching coach for the Los Angeles/California Angels (1961–66; 1969; 1977–78), White Sox (1967–68), Minnesota Twins (1970–71) and Chicago Cubs (1975–76).He died in Red Bluff, California, at the age of 87. Grissom's elder brother, Lee, was a left-handed pitcher for four MLB teams between 1934 and 1941.

Personal facts

Marv Grissom
Birth dateMarch 31, 1918
Date of deathSeptember 18, 2005

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Baseball player

Career startSeptember 10, 1946
Career endJune 11, 1959
batting sideRight
former teams
San Francisco Giants
St. Louis Cardinals
position
Pitcher
teams
Boston Red Sox
Chicago White Sox
Detroit Tigers
San Francisco Giants
St. Louis Cardinals
throwing sideRight

Marv Grissom on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://twinscards.com/viewplayerscareer.php?PlayerID=5841&PlayerView=Autographs&information=Marv%20Grissom