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Ted Gray
Date and Place of Birth: December 31 1924 Detroit, Michigan
Died:
Baseball
Experience:
Major League
Position: Pitcher
Rank: Ship’s Cook Second Class
Military Unit: US Navy
Area Served: Pacific Theater of Operations
You can’t tell any of the fellows in this war sector that when peace is restored, Ted Gray won’t match the records of Grove, Hubbell, Pennock, Newhouser and the other great lefthanders.
The Sporting News February 22, 1945
Gray enlisted in the Navy at age 18 in March 1943. He reported to
Great Lakes Naval Training Station in Illinois, where he pitched for
the Blue Jackets under manager, Mickey Cochrane. Gray then pitched
in California, defeating Fort Ord, 4-0, before leaving for the
Pacific.
Based in
the New Hebrides, Gray was a pitching sensation, winning 12 straight
games and averaging 17 strike outs per contest. He struck out 21 in
a 2-0, two-hitter against a Navy cruiser team, struck out 18 in a
2-0, two-hitter against a Seabee outfit. On another occasion he was
beaten 2-0 despite striking out 19.
“He’s thin and wiry,” wrote Emmett Maum in The Sporting News on
February 22, 1945, “and in no way has too much weight on his frame .
. . He is so slight of build, in fact, that one can scarcely realize
that the kid has a real blazing fast ball.”
In January
1945, Gray pitched for the Navy All-Stars in the third annual
Army-Navy New Hebrides series. Despite striking out 19, he lost the
opening contest, 3-1, and was again beaten, 3-1, in game three. But
with Navy wins in games two and four, Gray hurled the sailors to
victory in the fifth and deciding game, striking out 13 in the 4-2
win.
Gray had
run his strikeout total for the series to 46, eclipsing the previous
record of 41, established the year before by the Army’s Fred Martin.
Gray
returned to the United States on a 30-day leave in July 1945, and
worked out with the Tigers at Briggs Stadium. But it was not until
November that he received his discharge while based at El Centro,
California.
Gray’s
major league debut was on May 15, 1946, against the Washington
Senators. He would pitch just three games in the majors that season
for an 0-2 record.
After a
little more seasoning in the minors, Gray was back with the Tigers
in 1948, posting a 6-2 record in 26 appearances. Although Ted Gray
did not live up to his wartime hype, he pitched in the major leagues
over a 10 year period and won 59 games against 71 losses.
Created April 14, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved. 
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