Harry Dorish
American baseball player
Died when: 79 years 171 days (953 months)Star Sign: Cancer
Harry "Fritz" Dorish (July 13, 1921 – December 31, 2000) was an American professional baseball player.Born in Swoyersville, Pennsylvania, he was a right-handed pitcher over all or parts of ten Major League seasons (1947–56) with the Boston Red Sox, St.
Louis Browns/Baltimore Orioles and Chicago White Sox.He was a United States Army veteran of World War II, where he served in the Pacific Theater of Operations.
Dorish was listed as 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) tall and 204 pounds (93 kg).For his big-league career, he compiled a 45–43 record in 323 appearances, mostly as a relief pitcher, with 48 saves, a 3.83 earned run average and 332 strikeouts.
He allowed 850 hits and 301 bases on balls in 8341/3 innings pitched.Dorish led the American League in saves in 1952 as a member of the White Sox.
He stole home plate on the front end of a double steal on June 2, 1950, and is the last American League pitcher to steal home.
Dorish was a scout for the Red Sox, Houston Astros and Cleveland Indians, a minor-league manager, and the pitching coach for the Bosox (1963) and the Atlanta Braves (1968–71) after his 16-year (1941–42; 1946–59) playing career.
He died in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, at the age of 79.