Hard
Work and Hard Play Made Marion Fricano a Good Ballplayer and Good
Citizen
By H.A. Bamford
Over five decades ago, a knuckleball pitcher from Western New York
made his professional baseball debut. Marion Joseph Fricano was
born in Brant and raised in North Collins. Though his major league
baseball career was brief, his lifetime dedication to good sportsmanship
and fair play earned him lasting respect in his hometown community
and in professional sports.
Marion Fricano, sometimes called “Frick” or “Tony”
on the ball field was born the oldest and only son of John and Mary
Fricano. Mary and John were descendents of hard working Italian
immigrants who came to southern Erie County to work in the fruit
orchards. One of Fricano’s younger sisters, Jeannette Geiger
still resides in North Collins and describes her late brother as
having “…a wonderful personality…He was always
helpful…He never gave anyone a problem.” The Fricano
family moved to North Collins when Marion was very young. In school
Fricano excelled at almost any sport he played, but was especially
good at baseball, basketball and soccer. His father’s ill
health compelled Marion to divide his time between his sports his
studies and work that would help support his mother and three sisters.
In fact, Fricano had to juggle these responsibilities up until he
was playing professional baseball in the late 1940s.
Fricano graduated from North Collins High School in 1942 and decided
to postpone thoughts of a baseball career until he finished his
education. He enrolled at Cortland State Teachers College to pursue
a degree in physical education. These plans were also put on hold
when Fricano decided to enlist in the US Navy, serving in the Amphibious
Unit as a radio operator from 1943-1947. During the war years, Fricano’s
father passed away. Fricano wrote to his mother nearly every day
– even from a distance and under those circumstances, trying
to reassure his family during a time of grief. Mrs. Geiger still
possesses and cherishes these letters.
After service, Fricano again entertained ideas of a professional
baseball career and in 1947 he signed his first professional baseball
contract with the Dodgers organization. Fricano had not been a top
prospect with local scouts – his slight frame of 5’11’’
and 170 pounds and quiet demeanor made him an unlikely candidate
for such a competitive sport. However he had tryouts with the Boston
Braves, Boston Red Sox, New York Giants and Brooklyn Dodgers, ultimately
ending up in the Dodgers organization. He was sent to Johnstown,
PA to play for their Class C Middle Atlantic League team, compiling
a 5-2 record that year.
Fricano spent the next several years moving from city to city delivering
his unique knuckleball style pitch playing Class D ball in Valdosta,
Georgia in 1948; Class B ball in early 1949 with Nashua, New Hampshire
of the New England League, and Class A ball for Pueblo, Colorado
of the Western League. In 1950 and 1951 he moved up to play Class
AA ball for Mobile Alabama in the Southern Association and on to
Triple A ball in St. Paul at the start of the 1952 season. By a
twist of fate, Fricano was sold to the Triple A Ottawa Athletics
of the International League in May 1952. In 1952, despite a 2-0
start with St. Paul the previous year, Fricano was informed he was
being sent back down to Class AA Mobile Alabama and that his contract
would be sold outright to that team. Fricano asked if he could perhaps
be sold to another Triple A organization. He was offered as a “30-day
look” to the Philadelphia A’s Triple A Ottawa team.
Fricano played his best season at Ottawa in 1952, compiling a 17-8
record in 30 games with a 2.26 ERA – the tops in the league
that season. It wasn’t until after his major league career,
while playing in Dallas Fort Worth that Fricano expressed his dissatisfaction
with the treatment he had received from the Dodger's organization.
In a newspaper interview Fricano stated it had been a mistake on
his part to accept the $1,500 contract with the Dodgers back in
1947, believing that “the dollars invested by a major league
club determine how much of a chance a rookie gets.” Fricano
said, “I got my bonus and Loes (another pitching prospect
at the time) received $22,000. Loes received the attention, I didn’t
even get a tumble even after winning 21 games in 1949.”
Mrs. Geiger recalls that Fricano would subscribe to the local papers
and send them to her. She still keeps the scrapbooks that document
her brother’s minor league career. One clipping is a feature
story, recounting a time when “Bobo” Newsom had a no-hitter
going in a game in Mobile. The article explains how the night was
spoiled for Newsom when Fricano stepped to the plate and bunted,
beating out Newsom’s toss and making it safe at first. Two
years later, the two men would become teammates in the majors.
All during this time, Fricano amazingly continued to pursue his
studies in the off season, obtaining his Bachelor’s Degree
from Cortland in 1949. Nearly every season he also played winter
ball in Puerto Rico In spite of the mounting excitement and attention
being given to Fricano’s professional career, he still maintained
his hometown contacts. During the 1952 season a “Marion Fricano
Night” was held at the North Collins High School. Fricano
was the recipient of a cash award that he promptly offered back
to the town to help start a youth recreation program for children.
In early September 1952, Fricano’s family made the trip north
to see him get his 17th win of the season as Ottawa beat Montreal
in Montreal. The next day the family traveled to Ottawa to see Fricano
accept his team’s MVP award. The day after that Marion Fricano
realized his dream of a lifetime – he was told to report to
the Philadelphia A’s club in Boston the next day! The A’s
manager Jimmy Dykes (who coincidentally had managed a western New
York club not too far from Fricano’s hometown, the Class D
Lockport White Sox in 1942-1943) played Fricano in 5 innings in
the final weeks of the 1952 season which ended in a 1.80 ERA for
the rookie’s first action in professional baseball!
1953 was Fricano’s first full season in the majors and he
posted a 9-12 record in 39 games for a 3.88 ERA. Outside baseball
he kept just as busy as ever, enrolled at the University of Buffalo
for his masters in education! Mrs. Geiger remembers meeting a number
of the players from Philadelphia who Fricano befriended in the next
couple of years. She recalls meeting players such as Lou Boudreau,
Bobby Shantz, Neill Wallington and Forest Jacobs. She remembers
that Fricano especially liked his manager, Jimmy Dykes. By this
time Mrs. Geiger was married and had a young son. Fricano posed
with her son for the picture that would be used for his bio in the
A’s 1953 yearbook. She recalls that for every year Marion
was in baseball she and her family would take their vacation wherever
he was playing.
However, Fricano’s career with the A’s and in the majors
was to be a short one. In 1954 the A’s hoped for a better
finish than their 7th place finish in 1953. Eddie Joost replaced
Jimmy Dykes as Manager. The team finished last and Fricano posted
a 5-11 record in 42 games. In 1955 the team was moved to Kansas
City and Lou Boudreau became the A’s Manager. Fricano only
pitched in 10 games that season. Fricano began the 1956 season with
the team but was sent down to the minors soon after the season started.
He spent successive seasons pitching for Dallas Fort Worth, the
Toronto Maple Leafs, the Phoenix Giants, and the Seattle Rainiers
before he finally quit professional baseball for good in the early
1960s. Marion Fricano, now a husband and father, returned home to
North Collins.
But his association with baseball did not end there. Fricano continued
to play for town teams locally, including a stint as pitcher at
the age of 41 in the Buffalo Evening News’s Suburban Baseball
Association Lakeshore League in 1964. In 1959, the town of North
Collins once again held a “Marion Fricano Night” as
part of its annual Fourth of July Friendship Festival. During the
remainder of the 1960s, Fricano taught at and eventually became
Director of Recreation at the Gowanda Psychiatric center. In 1961
he successfully ran for Town Supervisor, a position he held until
1973. Residents of North Collins benefited from Fricano’s
tenure getting ambulance service and curbside house numbers for
emergencies.
The tragedy was that Marion Fricano had given so much and seemed
as if he had more to give his community when he died suddenly at
the age of 52 on May 18, 1976. The cause of his death was attributed
to pneumonia, a complication from cancer he had been diagnosed with
earlier. Fricano left a wife, four children, three sisters, and
entire community with an enormous sense of loss.
Today you can see the sign, “Marion J. Fricano Town Park”
from Route 62 as you drive through North Collins. Fricano’s
name can also be found in the Cortland State College Sports Hall
of Fame where he was inducted in 1972. There are also the baseball
cards from his professional career. And of course there are the
documented memories kept by his sister, Mrs. Geiger.

Marion Fricano , circa 1953.
Photo courtesy of George Brace Photos
Chicago, IL |

This 1953 photo of Mario Fricano
was donated to the Society by Jeanette Geiger the sister of
Mr. Fricano at an earlier A's Society Breakfast Reunion in
Warrington, Pa. |
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