Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

The Unofficial Website of the New York Yankees

Bill Dickey

Search:
Home
Yankee News
Yankee Roster
Baseball Trivia
Game Wrapup
Polls
Scorecard
Schedule
Did You Know?
Retired Numbers
Yankee Stadium
Yankee Links
TV & Radio info
Minor Leagues
Hall of Famers
Newsletter
Message Board
Guestbook
Promotions and Giveaways
Player of the Week
Yankee Quotes
Player Pages
Won/Loss Archive
Photo Gallery
Bi-weekly Column

Other:
Webrings
Link Me
Contact Me
Make this site your home page!
Add to Favorites
Rate this site
Write columns for this site
What's new
Questions? Comments?
Submit a Column
Tell others about this site

FREE YANKEE NEWSLETTER
Enter Your E-Mail Address To Subscribe:



Bill Dickey's career stats
G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB CS BA
2120   1789 6300 930 1969 343 72 202 1209 678 289 36 29 .313


  • Born: June 6, 1907, Bastrop, Louisiana
  • Died: November 12, 1993, Little Rock, Arkansas
  • Bats: left
  • Throws: right
  • Weight: 185 lb.
  • Debut: August 15, 1928
  • Played for: New York Yankees
  • Elected to Hall of Fame by BBWAA: 1954
  • 202 votes of 252 ballots cast: 80.16%


As famed sportswriter Dan Daniel once said, "Bill Dickey isn't just a catcher, he's a ballclub." A key performer for the Yankees on eight American League pennant-winners and seven World Series champions, the expert handler of pitchers with the deadly accurate throwing-arm was also a clutch hitter, batting over .300 in 10 of his first 11 full seasons. Known for his durability, he set an American League record by catching 100 or more games 13 years in a row. He finished his 17-year career with a .313 batting average.

The premier catcher of the late 1930s and early 1940s, the lefthanded-hitting Dickey was the soul of the Yankee dynasty bridging the Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and Joe DiMaggio eras as a player, and the Mickey Mantle era as a coach. He was a keen handler of pitchers, especially the erratic Lefty Gomez, as quiet as his roommate, Gehrig, consistent, setting a major league record for catching 100 or more games in 13 straight seasons, and never played another game at another position. He was the first Yankee to find out about Gehrig's illness and was the only active player to play himself in the Gary Cooper movie "Pride of the Yankees." The Yankees retired his number 8, but ironically Dickey didn't wear that number at the start or the end of his Yankee days. When Dickey first came up, Benny Bengough wore number eight. When he came back to coach, Yogi Berra was wearing it.

Dickey's quiet demeanor off the field belied fiery behavior behind the plate. On July 4, 1932 he was suspended for 30 days and fined $1,000 for breaking the jaw of the Senators' Carl Reynolds with one punch, after a collision at home plate. In the 1934 All-Star Game, Dickey broke Carl Hubbell's strikeout string with a single. After six straight .300-plus seasons, Dickey dipped to .279 in 1935, but came back the next season with a fury. From 1936 to 1939, Dickey, who had never hit more than 14 homers in a season, belted 102 in four years. He had a career high of 29 in 1937, including grand slams on consecutive days, August 3 and 4. His batting average bloomed as well, with a career-high .362 in 1936, followed by a .332 mark in 1937.

Dickey continued his batting onslaught in the second game of the 1936 World Series against the crosstown Giants when he hit a two-run homer and knocked in five runs. On July 26, 1939 he slammed three straight homers against the Browns in a 14-1 win. In the four-game World Series sweep that year against the Reds, Dickey slammed two homers and drove in five runs, including the winning run in the bottom of the ninth in Game One. Dickey also caught more World Series games than any catcher, 38.

Both Dickey's average and power dropped drastically in 1940 and 1941, totaling only 16 homers in two years. In 1942, Dickey caught only 82 games, and only 85 in 1943, but drove in the only two runs with a homer in the fifth and final game of the World Series against the Cardinals, avenging the Yankees' loss the year before. At the end of the season, at age 36, Dickey enlisted in the Navy. He came back for a final go-round in 1946, but appeared in only 54 games. Midway through the season, he took over the managerial reins from Joe McCarthy, who had gone to manage the Red Sox. He guided the Yankees to a 57-48 mark, but resigned right after the season. He came back as a coach under Casey Stengel from 1947 to 1957, passing along his knowledge to Berra. He scouted for the Yankees in 1959 before retiring. (SEW)



Did you know ... that Bill Dickey starred as himself in two baseball movies: "Pride of the Yankees" with Gary Cooper and "The Stratton Story" with Jimmy Stewart?


We Want you! If you are interested in becoming a writer for this site, sign up here.




Yankee Newsletter

Search this site:


Click on a link below to visit that part of this web site.

Home

Yankee News

Yankee Roster

Baseball Trivia

Schedule

Game Wrapup

Polls

Scorecard

Did You Know?

Retired Numbers

Yankee Stadium

Yankee Links

TV & Radio Info

Minor Leagues

Hall of Famers

Message Board
Guestbook
Giveaways
Newsletter
Player of the Week
Yankee Quotes
Player Pages
Won/Loss Archive
Photo Gallery
Columns



© 2003 Yankees Advanced Media, L.P. All rights reserved.
The Unofficial Website of the New York Yankees