Marius Russo
Marius Russo | |||
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File:Marius Russo.jpg | |||
Pitcher | |||
Born: Brooklyn, New York |
July 19, 1914|||
Died: Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Ft. Myers, Florida |
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MLB debut | |||
June 6, 1939, for the New York Yankees | |||
Last MLB appearance | |||
August 4, 1946, for the New York Yankees | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Win–Loss record | 45–34 | ||
Earned run average | 3.13 | ||
Strikeouts | 311 | ||
Teams | |||
Career highlights and awards | |||
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Marius Ugo Russo (July 19, 1914 – March 26, 2005) was a starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the New York Yankees (1939–43, 1946). Russo batted right-handed and threw left-handed.
Contents
Profile
On June 6, 1939, Russo debuted with the New York Yankees. He gave four years of good services for his team, winning 14 games in both 1940 and 1941, and was their best pitcher in 1941. Beside this, he made two postseason starts in the 1941 and 1943 World Series, both complete game wins. He joined the army in 1944, and pitched briefly in 1946.
Career
Russo, known as "The Kid From LI", was born in Brooklyn, New York. He played baseball for Richmond Hill High School in Queens. Later, he attended Brooklyn College and Long Island University in Brooklyn.
After graduating, Russo played for the Newark Bears, International League farm team of the Yankees. In his rookie season for New York, he finished with an 8-3 record and a 2.41 ERA in 116.0 innings including two shutouts and nine complete games. A noted control ace, in 1940 Russo issued just 55 walks in 189.1 innings for a 2.61 W 9/I percentage while compiling a 14-8 mark with a 3.28 ERA and 15 complete games in 24 starts. After he retired. he moved with his wife Stasia to Florida.
Russo enjoyed a career year in 1941. He compiled a 14-10 mark with three shutouts and 27 complete games in 1941. His 3.09 ERA was the best of the Yankees pitching staff and the 4th best in the American League, being surpassed only by Thornton Lee (2.37), Al Benton (2.97) and Charlie Wagner (3.07). He also led his team in strikeouts (105), games started (27), complete games (17) and innings pitched (209.2), and finished second in victories (14) behind Lefty Gomez and Red Ruffing (15 each). In the same season, he pitched a one-hit shutout and made the AL All-Star team.
The World Series
Russo also started and won a complete game 2-1 victory in the Yankees 1941 World Series win over the Brooklyn Dodgers. In Game 3, with the Series tied 1-1, Russo was locked in a scoreless duel with Dodgers' pitcher Freddie Fitzsimmons when, with two out in the seventh inning, Russo hit a line drive that caught Fitzsimmons flush on the knee. While shortstop Pee Wee Reese caught the deflected ball on the fly to end the inning, Fitzsimmons was through for the day. Then, Dodgers reliever Hugh Casey was cuffed for four hits and two runs in the eighth, and Brooklyn, able to get only four hits off Russo, lost 2-1.
The reports on Russo from 1942 were not good. A sore arm limited him to pitch in only 45.1 innings, ending with a 4-1 record and a 2.78 ERA in nine games (five as a starter). In 1943, he never had control problems, his arm wasn't hurting, but his fastball was losing velocity while trying to simplify his delivery, and finished 5-10. Unfortunately, the Yankees provided him with 3.50 runs per game in offense, pretty close to his 3.72 ERA in that season. Moreover, Russo responded with a brilliant offseason.
In the 1943 World Series, Russo limited the St. Louis Cardinals to seven hits in Game 4, and helped himself with the bat, hitting two doubles and scored the winning run in the eighth inning as New York won 2-1.
After the 1943 season, Russo left his team and his family to serve in the Army Signal Corps in Hawaii. When he returned two years later, he played for the Yankees again briefly.
Career statistics
In a six-season career, Russo posted a 45-34 record with 311 strikeouts and a 3.13 ERA in 680.2 innings. A solid hitter, he went 50-for-235 for a .213 batting average with 25 RBI and 23 runs. In the post season, Russo compiled a 2-0 record with a 0.50 ERA in two complete games.
Last years
Following his retirement as a player, Russo worked as an expediter for Grumman Aircraft Eng. Corp. in Bethpage, New York. Ending the 1970s, he retired and spent time traveling with his wife, Statia Russo. "We'd take trips to Europe, stay a while in Phoenix and go up to The Berkshires", she said in an interview. The couple moved to Florida in 2001.
Marius Russo died of heart illness in a hospital near his home in Fort Myers, Florida, at 90 years of age.[1]
Fact
- I remember going to New York early that year (1941), and why they didn't pull the shift on me that day I'll never know. Marius Russo was pitching, a left-hander with a sidearm fastball that sank. He was good in the Stadium because right-handers couldn't get the ball in the air off him. - Ted Williams, excerpt of his book My Turn at Bat - The Story of My Life, 1988.
Sources
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
- Baseball Almanac
- Baseball Historian
- Baseball Library
- Newsday
- Upper Deck Card
- Pages with broken file links
- 1914 births
- 2005 deaths
- American League All-Stars
- American people of Italian descent
- Brooklyn Bulldogs baseball players
- LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds baseball players
- LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds men's basketball players
- Major League Baseball pitchers
- Baseball players from New York
- New York Yankees players
- Newark Bears (IL) players
- Kansas City Blues (baseball) players
- Seattle Rainiers players
- Sportspeople from Brooklyn