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Dick Sisler


 

Richard Alan (Dick) Sisler (November 2, 1920 - November 20, 1998) was a player, coach and manager in Major League Baseball. A native of St. Louis, Missouri, Sisler was the son of Hall of Famer George Sisler. He batted left handed and threw right handed.

Related Topics:
November 2 - 1920 - November 20 - 1998 - Coach - Manager - Major League Baseball - St. Louis, Missouri - Hall of Famer - George Sisler

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Sisler was a journeyman left fielder and first baseman, whose career with the St. Louis Cardinals (1946-47, 1952-53), Philadelphia Phillies (1948-51) and Cincinnati Reds (1952), was distinguished by one shining moment. On the closing day of the 1950 season, at Ebbets Field, he hit a tenth-inning, opposite-field, three-run home run against the Brooklyn Dodgers that would give the Whiz Kids Phillies their first National League pennant in 35 years. Had Philadelphia lost, the Phillies and Dodgers would have finished in a flat-footed tie for the championship and a best-of-three playoff would have resulted. The home run made Sisler world famous - Ernest Hemingway feted him in his novel The Old Man and the Sea.

Related Topics:
Journeyman - Left fielder - First baseman - St. Louis Cardinals - Philadelphia Phillies - Cincinnati Reds - 1950 - Ebbets Field - Home run - Brooklyn Dodgers - Whiz Kids - National League - Ernest Hemingway - The Old Man and the Sea

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In a eight-season career, Sisler was a .276 hitter with 55 home runs and 360 RBI in 799 games. He made the National League All-Star team in 1950.

Related Topics:
RBI - Games - National League All-Star

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After managing in the minor leagues with the AA Nashville Vols and AAA Seattle Rainiers, Sisler became a coach for Cincinnati in 1961, serving under manager Fred Hutchinson. In August 1964, Sisler was promoted to acting manager under tragic circumstances, when Hutchinson, suffering from cancer, had to give up the reins. Sisler managed the Reds to a 32-21 record, the team finishing second to the Cardinals. After his formal appointment as manager in October 1964, Sisler brought the Reds home fourth in 1965 with an 89-73 record before his dismissal at season's end. He then returned to the major league coaching ranks with the Cardinals, Padres and Mets. In his late 60s he was still working with young players as an instructor in the Cardinals' farm system.

Related Topics:
Minor leagues - Nashville Vols - Seattle Rainiers - Fred Hutchinson - Padres - Mets

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Dick Sisler died in Nashville, Tennessee, at 78 of age.

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