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Billy McCool

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Win–loss record
  
32–42

Name
  
Billy McCool

Saves
  
58


Strikeouts
  
471

Earned run average
  
3.59

Role
  
Baseball player

Billy McCool 1965 Topps Bill McCool PSA CardFacts

Died
  
June 8, 2014, Summerfield, Florida, United States

William John "Billy" McCool (July 14, 1944 – June 8, 2014) was a left-handed pitcher in Major League Baseball. He played most of his seven-year career with the Cincinnati Reds and spent a year each with the San Diego Padres and St. Louis Cardinals.

Billy McCool wwwbaseballalmanaccomplayerspicsbillmccool

Born in Batesville, Indiana, McCool went to nearby Lawrenceburg High School in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, where the McCools lived. He graduated from LHS in 1962 and was signed by the Reds as an amateur free agent in 1963.

Billy McCool SCF Through The Mail Manager

He started his pro career in 1963, playing Class-D ball for the Reds organization in Tampa, Florida and later that year made the jump to the then-Triple-A San Diego Padres.

Billy McCool Billy McCool Society for American Baseball Research

He made his major league debut at the young age of 19 on April 24, 1964. The first batter he faced was Jesús Alou (who singled) as McCool pitched two innings in relief of Al Worthington in a 15-5 Reds loss to the San Francisco Giants at Cincinnati's Crosley Field. That year he was named The Sporting News National League Rookie Pitcher of the Year.

In 1965 and 1966 he was second in the National League in saves and in 1966 he was named a National League All-Star. He appeared in a career-high 62 games in 1965.

He was among the players drafted by the San Diego Padres in the 1968 MLB expansion draft. He appeared in 54 games for the Padres in their inaugural season of 1969. Just prior to the 1970 season he was traded to the Cardinals, with whom he pitched 18 games. In the offseason after the 1970 season (which would be his last in the majors, at age 25), he was traded to the Boston Red Sox and later to the Kansas City Royals, but he did not appear for either team in the majors.

After retiring from baseball in 1970 McCool moved to Centerville, Ohio where he raised his family. He worked for three years (1972–74) as a sports anchor for WKEF-TV in Dayton. McCool's book, The Billy McCool Pitching Digest: A Guide to Effective Baseball Pitching, was published in 1977. He lived in Summerfield, Florida after retiring in 2004. In 2013, he was inducted into the Indiana Baseball Hall of Fame as a 1962 graduate of Lawrenceburg High School.

McCool died in his Summerfield, Florida home on June 8, 2014.

References

Billy McCool Wikipedia


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