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Johnny Vander Meer

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Johnny Vander Meer Famous memorial

Original Name
John Samuel Vender Meer
Birth
Prospect Park, Passaic County, New Jersey, USA
Death
6 Oct 1997 (aged 82)
Tampa, Hillsborough County, Florida, USA
Burial
Tampa, Hillsborough County, Florida, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section J Block E West Space 15
Memorial ID
View Source
Major League Baseball Player. Played Major League Baseball as a Pitcher for 13 seasons (1937-1943, 1946-1951) with the Cincinnati Reds, Chicago Cubs and the Cleveland Indians. He is forever known in Baseball history for his pitching two consecutive No-Hit Games in 1938. A hard thrower, he won accolades in the Minor Leagues before being brought up to the Reds in 1937, pitching sparingly in his initial season. The next year, his first full season in the Majors, he shocked the baseball world when, on June 11, he tossed a 3-0 No-Hit game against the Boston Braves. His next game, on June 15th against the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbetts Field, he pitcher another No-Hitter, a 3-walk 6-0 performance. Dodgers shortstop/manager Leo Durocher made last out on a fly ball to the center fielder. To date he remains the only Major League pitcher to toss two No-Hitters. He was named to the NL All-Star team that year, and won the game for the National League after pitching 3 shutout innings. Although he was again named to the 1939 NL All-Star team, arm troubles kept him from pitching regularly in that year and 1940. Still, in 1940 he appeared in 10 games, and was part of the Reds World Series Championship team. Cincinnati defeated the Detroit Tigers 4 Games to 3 that year, with Johnny Vander Meer pitching only a single Series inning in a 6-0 Reds loss in Game 5. Coming back healthy in 1941, he would have 3 of his most productive seasons, winning 15+ games from 1941 to 1943, pitching in 2 All-Star Games (striking out six AL batters in the 1943 contest), and leading the NL in strikeouts all three years. In 1944 he enlisted in the United States Navy, and didn't return from military service until 1946. He won 17 Games in 1948, but was never the same pitcher he once was, and was plagued by arm troubles for the rest of his career. He played for the Cubs in 1950 and the Indians in 1951 before retiring from the Majors. His career totals were 119 Wins-121 Losses, 346 Games Pitched, 29 Shutouts, 1,294 Strikeouts, and a career 3.44 ERA.
Major League Baseball Player. Played Major League Baseball as a Pitcher for 13 seasons (1937-1943, 1946-1951) with the Cincinnati Reds, Chicago Cubs and the Cleveland Indians. He is forever known in Baseball history for his pitching two consecutive No-Hit Games in 1938. A hard thrower, he won accolades in the Minor Leagues before being brought up to the Reds in 1937, pitching sparingly in his initial season. The next year, his first full season in the Majors, he shocked the baseball world when, on June 11, he tossed a 3-0 No-Hit game against the Boston Braves. His next game, on June 15th against the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbetts Field, he pitcher another No-Hitter, a 3-walk 6-0 performance. Dodgers shortstop/manager Leo Durocher made last out on a fly ball to the center fielder. To date he remains the only Major League pitcher to toss two No-Hitters. He was named to the NL All-Star team that year, and won the game for the National League after pitching 3 shutout innings. Although he was again named to the 1939 NL All-Star team, arm troubles kept him from pitching regularly in that year and 1940. Still, in 1940 he appeared in 10 games, and was part of the Reds World Series Championship team. Cincinnati defeated the Detroit Tigers 4 Games to 3 that year, with Johnny Vander Meer pitching only a single Series inning in a 6-0 Reds loss in Game 5. Coming back healthy in 1941, he would have 3 of his most productive seasons, winning 15+ games from 1941 to 1943, pitching in 2 All-Star Games (striking out six AL batters in the 1943 contest), and leading the NL in strikeouts all three years. In 1944 he enlisted in the United States Navy, and didn't return from military service until 1946. He won 17 Games in 1948, but was never the same pitcher he once was, and was plagued by arm troubles for the rest of his career. He played for the Cubs in 1950 and the Indians in 1951 before retiring from the Majors. His career totals were 119 Wins-121 Losses, 346 Games Pitched, 29 Shutouts, 1,294 Strikeouts, and a career 3.44 ERA.

Bio by: RPD2



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: RPD2
  • Added: Feb 21, 2002
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6201492/johnny-vander_meer: accessed ), memorial page for Johnny Vander Meer (2 Nov 1914–6 Oct 1997), Find a Grave Memorial ID 6201492, citing Garden of Memories Cemetery, Tampa, Hillsborough County, Florida, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.