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Encyclopedia > Bill Skowron

William Joseph ("Bill" or "Moose") Skowron Jr. (born December 18, 1930) was a Major League Baseball player, primarily a first baseman.


Skowron was born in Chicago, Illinois. His father was a garbage collector. His friends called him Mussolini as a joke, after his grandfather gave him a haircut which looked like the dictator's, but his family shortened the nickname to Moose. The name stuck throughout his career.


He went to Purdue University on a football scholarship, but found himself better suited to baseball when he hit .500 as a sophomore, a record in the Big Ten Conference that lasted ten years.


He was signed by the New York Yankees in 1950 as an amateur free agent. He played his first game for the Yankees on April 13, 1954. He wore uniform number 53 in the 1954 season, but switched to #14 in 1955 and stayed with that number for the rest of his years with the Yankees. In the beginning, he was platooned at first base with Joe Collins, but from 1958 on he became the Yankees' full time first baseman. He played in five All-Star Games as a Yankee: 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, and 1961.


On November 26, 1962 he was traded by the Yankees to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Stan Williams. He kept his Yankee uniform number, 14, on the Dodgers.


On December 6, 1963 he was purchased from the Dodgers by the Washington Senators (currently the Texas Rangers). The Senators gave him uniform number 3.


On July 13, 1964 he was traded by the Senators to the Chicago White Sox. He took uniform number 5 on the Sox at first, but with the 1965 season went back to his old uniform number on the Yankees and Dodgers, 14. In 1965 he once more got to play in the All-Star Game.


On May 6, 1967 he was traded by the White Sox to the California Angels. He kept his uniform number 14 on the Angels.


He was released by the Angels on October 9, 1967.


He played in a total of 1478 games, all but 15 as a first baseman. (He was in 13 games as a third baseman and two as a second baseman.)


On June 12, 1980 he was inducted into the National Polish-American Hall of Fame.


External links

  • Bill Skowron at:
    • Baseball Almanac (http://www.baseball-almanac.com/players/player.php?p=skowrbi01)
    • Baseball Digest (article) (http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m0FCI/8_62/104362925/p1/article.jhtml)
    • Baseball Library (bio) (http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/S/Skowron_Bill.stm)
    • Baseball Reference (stats) (http://www.baseball-reference.com/s/skowrbi01.shtml)















  Results from FactBites:
 
Bill Skowron | BaseballLibrary.com (1536 words)
When Skowron homered in the 14th inning on April 22, 1959, the Yankees and Senators set the AL record for the longest game to end 1-0 on a home run.
Skowron's arm is broken in two places and he is out for the rest of the season.
Skowron's follows a Berra blast with his 2nd homer in the 8th but Cleveland answers with two in the bottom of the 8th for an 11–8 lead.
Tracking down the Moose: former slugger Bill Skowron looks back on a storied big league career Baseball Digest - Find ... (887 words)
Skowron was nicknamed Moose when his grandfather gave him a short haircut as a kid and his friends thought he looked like Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.
Skowron has the face of a boxer, but fighting never was part of his life.
Skowron was to have been Purdue's right halfback with quarterback Dale Samuels, who went there on Skowron's recommendation, but signed with the Yankees for $25,000 and missed the Boilermakers' 1950 upset of Notre Dame to end the Irish's long winning streak.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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