Paul Krichell Baseball player

Paul Bernard Krichell (December 19, 1882 – June 4, 1957) was a Major League Baseball catcher, best known for being the head scout for the New York Yankees for 37 years until his death. Krichell's talent evaluations and signings played a key role in building up the Yankees' run of success from the Murderers' Row teams of the 1920s to the 1950s teams led by Casey Stengel.Krichell began his professional career in the minor leagues, playing as the reserve catcher for the St. Louis Browns before a serious injury threatened his career. He continued to play in the minor leagues and began to move into coaching before Yankees manager Ed Barrow signed him as a scout in 1920. Considered one of the greatest scouts in baseball history, Krichell signed over 200 players who later played professional baseball, including future Baseball Hall of Famers Lou Gehrig, Hank Greenberg, Phil Rizzuto, Whitey Ford, and Tony Lazzeri. His recommendation of Stengel as the Yankees manager was instrumental in Stengel's appointment in 1948. Barrow called Krichell "the best judge of baseball players he ever saw".

Personal facts

Paul Krichell
Birth dateDecember 19, 1882
Birth place
New York City
Date of deathJune 04, 1957
Place of death
New York City

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Baseball player

Career startMay 12, 1911
Career endSeptember 22, 1912
batting sideRight
former teams
Baltimore Orioles
position
Catcher
teams
Baltimore Orioles
throwing sideRight

Paul Krichell on Wikipedia