Everything about Clint Courtney totally explained
Clinton Dawdson Courtney (
March 16,
1927 –
June 16,
1975) was an
American catcher in
Major League Baseball who played for the
New York Yankees,
St. Louis Browns (-),
Baltimore Orioles ( ),
Chicago White Sox,
Washington Senators (-) and
Kansas City Athletics . Courtney batted
left-handed and threw
right-handed. He was born in
Hall Summit, a
village in tiny
Red River Parish,
Louisiana.
Listed at 5' 8" and 180 pounds, Courtney was an
American League catcher whose pugnacity and timely base hits made headlines in the
1950s. Fiercely combative, he played his position under unusual handicaps. A natural left-hander, he taught himself to use his right arm, and he also was
myopic, being widely considered as the first Major League catcher to wear
eyeglasses.
Courtney appeared in one game for the New York Yankees in before being traded to the St. Louis Browns at the end of the season. He was obtained by the Browns at the request of
manager Rogers Hornsby, who had managed him at
Beaumont of the
Texas League. In, he won the
TSN American League Rookie of the Year award after hit .286 with five
home runs and 50
runs batted in from 116
games.
Nicknamed "Scrap Iron", Courtney was frequently embroiled in fights. Two of his more celebrated brawls involved the Yankees. The first came in, when he spiked
Billy Martin and then slugged him when Martin hit Courtney between the eyes. A year later, he touched off a free-for-all by spiking
Phil Rizzuto in trying to stretch a
single into a
double. Then Martin jumped on Courtney in a wild melee that produced a then American League record $850 in fines. The episode cost Courtney $250. Off the field, his temperament was reportedly more genial and affable.
On July 16, 1953, Courtney entered the record books when the Browns tied, by then, a Major League mark with three successive home runs during the first inning of a 8–6 victory over the Yankees. Courtney started the feat, followed by solo shots of
Dick Kryhoski and
Jim Dyck. Then, in Courtney joined the Orioles when the franchise moved to Baltimore. On Opening Day, he hit the first home run in
Memorial Stadium history. He finished with a .270 average in 397
at bats, and
struck out a league-low seven times, the lowest since
Joe Sewell in .
Courtney split the 1955 season between the White Sox and the Washington Senators, batting a combined .309 in 94 games. In he hit .300 for the Senators and was back in Baltimore in . That season, he became the first catcher to wear an oversize
mitt to handle the
knuckleballs of
Hoyt Wilhelm. The mitt, designed by Baltimore manager
Paul Richards to combat the
passed-ball problem while catching Wilhelm, was half again as large as the standard glove and 40 ounces heavier.
Courtney appeared briefly with the Kansas City Athletics in and returned for a third stint with the Orioles for the rest of the year, his last Major League season as a player.
In an 11-season career, Courtney was a .268 hitter with 38 home runs and 313 RBI in 946 games. As a catcher, he recorded 3,556
putouts with 379
assists and only 50
errors in 3,985
chances for a .987
fielding percentage.
In, Courtney worked as the
bullpen coach for the
Houston Astros. He later managed the
Atlanta Braves' Triple-A
Richmond affiliate between and . In, he was prominently mentioned as a possible successor to
Eddie Mathews to manage the Braves, but the job instead went to
Clyde King and Courtney continued to manage Richmond. On June 16, 1975, he was playing
ping pong with one of his players during a road trip in
Rochester, New York, when he was stricken with a fatal
heart attack at the age of 48.
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