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Pete Reiser
Date and Place of Birth: March 17, 1919 St Louis, Missouri
Died: October 25, 1981 Palm Springs, California
Baseball Experience:
Major League
Position: Outfield
Rank: Private
Military Unit: US Army
Area Served: United States
Reiser was a gifted athlete although
he states that his brother, Mike, who tragically died at 17 from
scarlet fever shortly after signing with the New York Yankees, was
the true athlete of the family.
Pete Reiser played baseball, football
and soccer. "I was a helluva soccer player," he told Donald Honig in
Baseball When the Grass was Real. "I was playing for the
Catholic school in St Louis when some guy came along and offered me
$50 to kick soccer one Sunday. He was trying to compete against the
pros in St Louis, and he was signing all the kids from the Catholic
schools who could kick soccer and who could run. And he was giving
us $50, which was a lot of money. Hell, my dad was making $25 a week
and supporting twelve children."
He was originally signed by the St Louis Cardinals as a shortstop,
but was granted free agency in 1937 and signed with the Brooklyn
Dodgers the following year.
He had a spectacular debut with the Dodgers at spring training in
1939. In 11 trips to the plate against major league pitchers he hit
four home runs, four singles and drew three walks.
Reiser made his major league debut with the Dodgers in 1940, playing
58 games at third base, shortstop and the outfield, batting an
impressive .293. The next year he led the league with a .343 batting
average, a .558 slugging percentage, 39 doubles, 17 triples and 117
runs scored. Reiser was a potential superstar with blinding speed
and a reckless abandon when chasing fly balls, often crashing into
outfield walls.
In 1942, Reiser had been converted to a full-time outfielder and was
tearing up the league with a .350 batting average when he crashed
into the wall at St Louis while running for a fly ball. He retrieved
the ball and returned it to the infield before collapsing with a
fractured skull. Reiser never fully recovered from the affects of
the crash and suffered from headaches and dizziness the rest of his
career.
Reiser tried to join the Navy after the 1942 season, but baseball
injuries had lefty him 4-F. On January 13, 1943, he was given a
physical examination by the Army. He was again rejected but an Army
captain - recognizing Reiser as a baseball player - inducted him.
Two days after being assigned to Fort Riley, Kansas, Private Reiser
caught pneumonia following a 50-mile forced march in weather that
was 15 degrees below zero. He was awaiting his medical discharge
when the commanding officer at Fort Riley decided he would like the
Dodgers' centerfielder to play for the camp team. "He writes out a
pass for me, from 0600 to 0600 daily," Reiser told Donald Honig. "I
can go anyplace I want. I also get a private room in the barracks -
which made my hard-assed sergeant turn blue in the face - and no
duties. I stayed there for a couple of years, playing center field
for Fort Riley. We ended up with a hell of a club. We had Joe
Garagiola, Lonny Frey, Creepy Crespi,
Harry Walker,
Al Brazle,
Murry Dickson, Rex Barney,
Ken Heintzelman. We whomped everybody we played."
Reiser’s all-out style of played even extended to military games.
During one game at Fort Riley, he jumped through an outfield hedge
in pursuit of a fly ball, falling down a concealed ten-foot ditch
and badly jammed his throwing shoulder.
It was during this time that
Reiser first saw future teammate
Jackie Robinson. "One day a Negro lieutenant came out for the
ball team," he explained to Donald Honig. "An officer told him he
couldn't play. 'You have to play with the colored team,' the officer
said. That was a joke. There was no colored team. The lieutenant
didn't say anything. He stood there for a while, watching us work
out. Then he turned and walked away. I didn't know who he was then,
but that was the first time I saw Jackie Robinson. I can still
remember him walking away by himself."
Reiser served at Camp Lee, Virginia in 1945, and almost became part
of a team being sent to entertain occupational troops, but instead
returned to the Dodgers in January 1946. He batted .277 in 1946, and
made the all-star team. But in 1947, he again collided with an
outfield wall – this time at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn - and was left
paralyzed for ten days. These and various other injuries brought a
premature end to what should have been a Hall of Fame career. He
ended his playing days with Cleveland in 1952, playing 34 games and
batting just .136.
He later managed in the minors and was voted Minor League Manager of
the Year in 1959. Reiser coached the Dodgers from 1960 to 1964, the
Cubs from 1966 to 1969, the Angels from 1970 to 1971 and the White
Sox from 1972 to 1973.
Pete Reiser passed away on October 25, 1981 in Palm Springs,
California, following a long respiratory illness. He was just 62.
Some of the
information contained in this biography was obtained from "Baseball
When the Grass was Real" by Donald Honig.
Created May 27, 2007. Updated August
26, 2007.
Copyright © 2007 Gary Bedingfield (Baseball
in Wartime). All Rights Reserved. 
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