Mel Parnell, the greatest left-handed pitcher to toe the rubber
for the Boston Red Sox,
died yesterday after a long battle with cancer. He was 89.
Parnell spent his entire 10-year
big league career with the Red Sox with a remarkable won loss
record of 123-75. His best season came in 1949 when the Sox
came so precariously close to winning the American League
pennant. That year Parnell went 25-7 with a 2.77 ERA leading the
league in wins, complete games (27) and innings pitched (295 and
one third innings to be exact.) Parnell would also win 21 games
during the 1953 season but an arm injury curtailed his
effectiveness and won only 12 more big league games. However,
Parnell would end his career on a positive note
throwing a no-hitter against the Chicago White Sox during his
final season in 1956 becoming the first Red Sox pitcher to
toss a no-no since the 1920s.
Parnell’s 123 wins are the most for a Sox lefthander. That might
not seem earth shattering but there’s pretty darn good company that
comes after him. Lefty Grove has the second most wins by the Sox
lefty with 105 followed by Bill Lee with 94. Behind ths Spaceman is
none other than George Herman “Babe” Ruth who won 89 games with the
Sox. Yes, the Bambino started his career as a pitcher. Red Sox fans
from the 1980s will remember Bruce Hurst who won 88 games in a Red
Sox uniform while Opening Day 2012 starter Jon Lester has 76 wins
and counting.
Seventy-one of Parnell’s 123 wins came at Fenway Park. The Green
Monster has gotten the better of many a lefty. But Parnell pitched
inside to righthanded hitters with a slider. And that probably
explains why he finished his career with more walks than strikeouts
(758 to 732). Thrice in his career, Parnell walked more than 100
batters in a season including his 25-win campaign in 1949 when he
walked 134 batters against 122 strikeouts. Usually this is not a
formula for success but it’s better to walk a batter with your best
pitch than to have him take you deep with your worst pitch.
After his playing career, Parnell returned to his native New
Orleans where he was the baseball coach at Tulane University before
becoming the general manager of the New Orleans Pelicans. Parnell
rejoined the Red Sox in the 1960s serving as a scout, a minor
league manager and even as a broadcaster. While Parnell never
pitched in a World Series, he was a member of the Red Sox broadcast
booth when they won the AL pennant in 1967. Parnell also coined the
phrase the “Pesky Pole”, the right field foul pole which is only
302 feet away from home plate and was named after Johnny Pesky, a
Red Sox legend who was not known for his power.
Let me leave you with Parnell calling the final
out on the last day of the 1967 season as the Sox clinch the AL
pennant against the Minnesota Twins on a Rich Rollins pop up to
Rico Petrocelli at short.
Quin| 3.21.12 @ 2:05PM
May Parnell rest in peace.
It was in large part due to Mel Parnell that I became a Red Sox fan. You see, my father became a Red Sox fan for two reasons: he admired Ted Williams as a war hero in addition to admiring his hitting prowess, and... as a New Orleanian, my dad rooted for Mel Parnell as the best New Orleanian in the American League.
Far more than half of my love for the Red Sox was inherited from my father. (It helped that Fenway is, well, Fenway, which means magical, and it helped that the 1975 team, which is the one that cemented my Sox fanship when I was 11 years old, with its spate of young stars and world-class "characters," was so fun to watch.)
Butch| 3.21.12 @ 5:24PM
I had a Mel Parnell baseball card--several of them, in fact. Didn't he play with Jim Piersall for a few years?
When I was in college, my Mom threw away my old baseball cards, and there were many. I'm pretty sure they really did print 50 Gus Zernials for every Mickey Mantle, and we boys would buy scads of them trying to get the biggies: Mickey, Yogi, Ted Williams, Willie Mays, etc. They printed a fairly large number of Mel Parnells I assume, because I had about five.
I was surprised that he was still alive, but I see he was 89. Brings back old, old memories of watching Dizzy Dean and Pee Wee Reese on Saturday afternoon on our family's first black and white TV. RIP indeed.
Aaron Goldstein| 3.21.12 @ 11:07PM
Yes, Parnell and Piersall were teammates. Piersall was brought up at the end of the 1950 season and was in Boston to stay by 1952.
Occam's Tool| 3.21.12 @ 6:57PM
Yup. The Bambino also had an ERA in the 2s. Imagine if he had spent those years as a full time hitter? He had a .342 batting average and 714 homers as it is! ERA 2.28, 94-46, 5 years pitching. 5 years--say, averaging an extra 25 homers a year (modest for the Bambino)--that would have been over 850 homers!
Cobb and Ruth were truly unbelievable in their field. 1 and 2 in the HOF, and for good reason. The two best of all time.