NY METS AFFILIATE HONOR FORMER A's LOU BRISSIE IN SAVANNAH, GA
Former 1947 Sand Gnats teammate Bill Hockenbury with Brissie.
Photo & article compliments of the Savannah Morning News
A hero on the baseball and battle fields
NATHAN DOMINITZ | Tuesday, April 29, 2008 at 12:30 am
Sand Gnats honoring Lou Brissie with banquet, pregame ceremony
Former major league all-star pitcher Lou Brissie can tell stories
about his ballpark encounters with the likes of Babe Ruth, Ted Williams,
Connie Mack and Satchel Paige.
Monday night and today, people are sharing stories about Brissie,
Savannah's own living legend for his starring role on the 1947 South
Atlantic League championship team.
"We didn't measure speed in those days, but I know he must
have thrown close to 100 miles an hour," said longtime friend
Bill Hockenbury, an all-star third baseman on the 1947 Savannah
Indians, a Class A affiliate of the then-Philadelphia Athletics.
"I'm serious. He just reared back and threw that ball."
Brissie, now 83, might have enough power in his left arm to throw
out the first pitch tonight at Grayson Stadium, where the Savannah
Sand Gnats will retire his No. 3 jersey before the 7 p.m. game against
the Hickory Crawdads. The first 1,000 fans receive a replica Brissie
jersey T-shirt courtesy of the Philadelphia Athletics Historical
Society.
There was a "Lou Brissie Day" scheduled in 2007, but
it was rained out, rescheduled and rained out again late last season
in Savannah. Brissie didn't think a higher power was sending a message.
"No, he speaks plainer than that," said Brissie, a North
Augusta, S.C., resident for the last 30-plus years with his wife,
Diana.
The Sand Gnats also organized a banquet in his honor Monday night
at the Riverfront Marriott. Again it rained, but thankfully this
event was indoors. Attendees received the T-shirt as well as a figurine
of Brissie pitching.
Brissie's own story is worthy of a movie, and indeed it was re-enacted
decades ago for a television program starring former pro athlete
Chuck Connors, famous as "The Rifleman." Brissie also
is the subject of an ongoing book project.
True grit
The dramatic elements are there. A teenage pitching prospect enlists
in the U.S. Army during World War II. On a battlefield in Northern
Italy in 1944, the corporal nearly has his left leg blown off when
an artillery shell lands at his feet.
"I broke an ankle and my feet. My leg was shattered in 30
pieces between the knee and the ankle," said Brissie, who would
receive two Purple Heart medals and a Bronze Star during his military
service.
Amputation was an option, but Brissie knew that would end hopes
of a baseball career. He persuaded doctors to save the leg, and
credits a military surgeon, Capt. Wilbur Brubaker, for doing the
incredible.
"I was just a guy with a dream," said Brissie, who would
spend parts of seven seasons in the majors with the Athletics and
Indians, including an appearance in the 1949 All-Star Game. "I
think I was just blessed from Day One. There weren't guys who attain
the major leagues who were as fortunate and blessed as I was."
Brissie, through 23 surgeries and countless setbacks, would pitch
again - eventually for the Philadelphia Athletics, who originally
signed him in 1940 and resigned the 6-foot-4, 210-pound lefty in
1946.
He was assigned to Savannah, posting a 23-5 record, 1.91 ERA and
SAL-record 278 batters in 254 innings. He wore a brace on his left
leg, which was about 1 1/2 inches shorter than the right. He also
had the admiration of his teammates, who saw his daily routine of
playing with a leg that under the bandages "looked like a piece
of tissue paper," Hockenbury said.
"He was our hero," recalled Hockenbury, a World War II
veteran and one of half a dozen Indians to eventually make it to
the big leagues. "He was great. He was our leader. He was our
superstar."
Home-field advantage
Savannah responded, packing Grayson Stadium when Brissie pitched
and often when he didn't, Hockenbury said.
"We had great community support," Brissie said. "The
fans were just tremendous. We had community business support. I
think it was the ideal time after World War II and before television."
The talented team, playing in a league stocked with future major
leaguers, had the unity necessary for success over the long summer
months.
"In all of that time, I never heard two guys have a bad word
or get upset," Brissie said. "Everybody was for everybody
else. It's really one of my greatest memories."
The retiree makes weekly visits to a Veterans Administration hospital
and speaks with injured servicemen. He shares motivational stories
and asks them not to give up their dreams.
"You've got to live each day and look for something better,
and it will show up," he said.
LOU BRISSIE FILE
Born: Leland Victor "Lou" Brissie on June 5, 1924 in
Anderson, S.C., and raised in Ware Shoals, S.C.
Size: 6-foot-4, 210 pounds.
Position: Pitcher
Major league debut: Sept. 28, 1947 for the Philadelphia Athletics
against the host New York Yankees on "Babe Ruth Day."
The rookie said Ruth looked over to him and gave him a thumbs up
during warm-ups.
Major league career: Athletics, 1947-51; Cleveland Indians 1951-53.
Totals - 44-48, 4.15 ERA, 29 saves, 234 games, 93 starts. Pitched
three innings of the 1949 All-Star Game, allowing two runs (earned)
and batting 0-for-1.
On Ted Williams: Brissie called him the greatest player he ever
saw. The left-handed Williams once laced a line drive off Brissie's
rebuilt left leg, causing the pitcher to collapse to the ground.
Williams stopped at first base, then came over to check on him.
"I just looked up at him and said, 'Why don't you learn to
pull the ball?' He got a big laugh out of that." During the
same 1948 season, Williams launched a monster shot out of the stadium
in Philadelphia. "I didn't mean pull it that far," Brissie
cracked to Williams as he rounded the bases.
Click
here to visit Savannah Morning News website and watch video interview.
Lou Brissie & A's Society representative Fred Coleman
on field prior to game.
Lou Brissie & son Bob
Brissie with his framed shirt on field
Brissie & Coleman at minor league game.
Lou Brissie with long time fan & friend Lamarr Garrard
from Lincolnton, Georgia
Fred Coleman, & Bill Hockenbury with Brissie
Mr & Mrs Lou Brissie (right) at special banquet admire
framed Brissie shirt with friends.
THE A'S SOCIETY WISHES TO
EXPRESS ITS MOST SINCEREST APPRECIATION TO ALL OF THE FOLKS AT THE
SAVANNAH SAND GNATS STAFF WHO MADE THIS SPECIAL EVENT TO HONOR LOU
BRISSIE .... WE ESPECIALLY WANT TO "TIP OUR HATS " TO
EVENT COORDINATOR MS. LAUREN POVIA OF THE SAND GNATS STAFF WHO WORKED
DILIGENTLY OVER THE PREVIOUS MONTHS.

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