George Susce (catcher)

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George Susce
Catcher
Born: (1907-08-13)August 13, 1907
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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Sarasota, Florida
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
April 23, 1929, for the Philadelphia Phillies
Last MLB appearance
October 1, 1944, for the Cleveland Indians
MLB statistics
Batting average .228
Home runs 2
Hits 61
Teams

George Cyril Methodius Susce (August 13, 1907 – February 25, 1986) was an American Major League Baseball catcher for the Philadelphia Phillies (1929), Detroit Tigers (1932), Pittsburgh Pirates (1939), St. Louis Browns (1940) and Cleveland Indians (1941–44). Susce was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and attended Glenville State College and St. Bonaventure University. He threw and batted right-handed, stood Lua error in Module:Convert at line 452: attempt to index field 'titles' (a nil value). tall and weighed 200 pounds (91 kg). His son, George Jr., was a Major League pitcher.

In eight big-league seasons, Susce played in 146 games and had 268 at bats, 23 runs scored, 61 hits, 11 doubles, one triple, two home runs, 22 runs batted in, one stolen base and 25 walks, with a .228 batting average, .301 on-base percentage, .299 slugging percentage, 80 total bases and ten sacrifice hits. In 1940, his last year as a full-time player, Susce appeared in a career-high 61 games for the Browns, starting 37 games at catcher.

Susce served as a Major League bullpen coach for 29 years, for the Indians (1941–49), Boston Red Sox (1950–54), Kansas City Athletics (1955–56), Milwaukee Braves (1958–59) and the expansion Washington Senators/Texas Rangers (1961–67; 1969–72). He managed in the farm systems of the Indians (1948) and Red Sox (1950), but also spent at least parts of those seasons as a Major League coach with the parent clubs. In addition, Susce coached for the Triple-A Louisville Colonels and Jacksonville Suns.

Susce died in Sarasota, Florida at the age of 78. His unusual nickname, "Good Kid", was given to him as a young player because of his eagerness to help with mundane tasks associated with baseball.[1]

References

  1. The Baseball Register 1965 edition. St. Louis: The Sporting News

External links