Frank Baumann (baseball)

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Frank Baumann
Strikeouts
384
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Frank Matt Baumann (July 1, 1933 – December 13, 2020) was an American

left-handed
, stood 6 feet (1.8 m) tall and weighed 205 pounds (93 kg).

Baumann signed with the Red Sox in 1952 out of high school in his native

decisions for the Triple-A Louisville Colonels in 1953, his second season in professional baseball, before being drafted into United States Army service during the Korean War
.

When he mustered out of the Army in mid-1955, he joined the MLB Red Sox in late July. In his debut, he earned a

Ron Jackson
.

In 1960, as a member of the defending American League champions, he had a 13–6 mark for the White Sox, and led AL pitchers with a 2.67 ERA. In 47 games pitched, including 20 starts, he compiled seven complete games and two shutouts. He added four saves as a relief pitcher. But he followed in 1961 with a disappointing 10–13 record, led the AL in earned runs allowed, and his ERA ballooned by almost three full runs, to 5.61. His effectiveness largely returned in 1962, but thereafter he made only one more start over his final two years with the ChiSox and in 1964 he again struggled on the mound. His ERA climbed to 6.19, and Baumann was traded to the cross-town Cubs during the off-season. He made four appearances out of the Cub bullpen in 1965, posted an ERA over 7.00, and was sent to Triple-A during the May roster cutdown from 28 to 25 men. His active career concluded after that season.

In his 11-season MLB career, Baumann posted a 45–38 record with a 4.11 ERA and 14

saves in 244 games pitched. Of his 78 starting assignments, 19 were complete gates and four were shutouts. In 79713 innings pitched, he allowed 856 hits and 300 base on balls, with 384 strikeouts
.

Baumann died on December 13, 2020, in

References

[2] [3]

  1. ^ "Frank Baumann Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Hochman: Best St. Louis prep baseball pitcher ever? Baumann won three state titles before MLB success". June 2020.
  3. ^ "Frank Baumann – Society for American Baseball Research".

External links