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Paul Stuffel

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Win–loss record
  
1–0

Name
  
Paul Stuffel

Innings pitched
  
11


Strikeouts
  
6

Earned run average
  
5.73

Role
  
Baseball player

Paul Stuffel wwwbaseballalmanaccomplayerspicspaulstuffel

Paul Harrington Stuffel (born March 22, 1927) is an American former professional baseball player, a former right-handed pitcher who worked in seven games over portions of three Major League seasons for the Philadelphia Phillies.

Paul Stuffel Paul Stuffel Photograph Signed Autographs Manuscripts

Biography

A native of Canton, Ohio, Stuffel attended Kent State University. He stood 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m) tall and weighed 185 pounds (84 kg). Stuffel signed with Philadelphia in 1947 and was recalled in September 1950 after spending the year with the Triple-A Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League. The "Whiz Kid" Phillies used him in three games in relief — all losses — as the Phils struggled (ultimately successfully) to maintain their lead in the National League pennant race. Stuffel, however, pitched well, allowing only four hits, one base on balls and one earned run in five full innings pitched. As a late-season callup, he was not eligible to play in the 1950 World Series.

He spent all of 1951 and most of 1952 in the minors, although he was called up again by the Phillies in September 1952. Stuffel then made his only Major League starting assignment on September 27 against the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds. He allowed four hits (all singles) and two earned runs in five innings pitched, but walked seven batters. Still, he was credited with his only MLB win, a 7–3 triumph.

He had a final trial with the Phils in early 1953, but was wild and ineffective in two appearances, facing four batters and walking all four — allowing four earned runs and posting an earned run average of infinity. They were his final games in the Majors, where in his seven games and 11 innings pitched he permitted nine hits, 12 bases on balls and seven earned runs. He struck out six. Stuffel continued his career in the minors into 1957; he would win 105 minor-league games.

References

Paul Stuffel Wikipedia