Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Ernie Koob

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Win-Loss record
  
23-31

Role
  
Baseball player

Name
  
Ernie Koob

Strikeouts
  
121

Earned run average
  
3.13


Ernie Koob

Died
  
November 12, 1941, Lemay, Missouri, United States

Koob pitches 17 inning tie, Parnell pitches no-hitter, and Rose tramples Hickman on July 14th


Ernest Gerald Koob (September 11, 1892 in Keeler, Michigan – November 12, 1941 in Lemay, Missouri), is a former professional baseball player who played pitcher in the Major Leagues from 1915 to 1919 for the St. Louis Browns. On May 5, 1917, Koob no-hit the eventual World Champion Chicago White Sox 1-0, besting Eddie Cicotte—himself a no-hit pitcher against the Browns less than a month earlier, on April 14. The very next day, his teammate Bob Groom also no-hit the White Sox, 3–0 in the second game of a doubleheader; to date, Koob and Groom are the only teammates to pitch no-hitters on consecutive days.

Ernie Koob Ernie Koob St Louis Browns colorized Baseball Dead Ball Era

Koob attended college at Western State Normal School.

An obituary published in the November 1941 issue of "The Sporting News" contained statements which complement and to some extent contradict the above information. It states that Mr. Koob was born in St. Louis in 1894; that he died in the Mount St. Rose Sanatorium (St. Louis) on 12 November 1941, of a lung ailment; that he played baseball under the name "Smith" while attending Kalamazoo State College; that he served in the US Army during The Great War; and that he played with the Browns until 1920.

References

Ernie Koob Wikipedia