Hard-throwing left-handed pitcher Marshall
Bridges toiled for six seasons in the minor leagues before earning a
call-up to the major leagues at the age of 28 in 1959. He hung around for
several years as a journeyman reliever before finding stardom as the closer for
the 1962 New York Yankees. Unfortunately, a gunshot wound suffered at a bar
during spring training the following year put a damper on what had been a late
developing but promising career.
Known as the Sheriff or Fox, Bridges was a veteran of the
Negro Leagues before signing with the New York Giants in 1953. He pitched for
the St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds prior to joining the Yankees in
1962. He immediately grabbed the closer role for the eventual World Series
Champions, going 8-4 with a 3.14 ERA and 18 saves in 52 relief appearances
(spanning 71.2 innings). He permitted opposing hitters just a .194 batting
average, including a .169 mark for lefties. New York manager Ralph Houk called
him his “lifeline reliever.” “Some pitchers go all to pieces,” explained
the skipper. “He just seems to growl and get tougher and madder.”
On February 14, 1963, Bridges was shot in the leg by 21
year-old Carrie Lee Raysor at a Ft. Lauderdale Elks Lodge bar. Accounts
differed as to what led to the shooting. She claimed that the married
31-year-old father of three tried to “pick her up” and “put his arm around me
and tried to pull me over and I didn’t like this kind of mugging.” She further claimed
that he repeatedly offered to drive her home and wouldn’t take no for an
answer.
Bridges indicated he was nursing a solitary drink while
waiting for a friend to pick him up for dinner when he was shot. Regardless of
which side was telling the truth, she pulled out a handgun and fired a shot. A
bullet lodged in the fleshy part of his left leg, broke a small bone and caused
some muscle damage. He elected
to leave the bullet in his leg, as this alternative to surgery shrunk his
recovery time from the entire season to a matter of weeks.
Although the initial prognosis was that he would miss at
least four weeks, Bridges downplayed the injury, stating it “feels good and I
can walk now if they let me.”
Houk even made light
of the situation, telling
his pitcher, “I’m going to have to get you a holster. You’re too slow on the
draw.”
Raysor was arrested on charges of aggravated assault. While
Bridges was interviewed he was ultimately not detained. He was not disciplined
for his part in the incident and returned to action before the season was over,
earning nicknames from his teammates like Bang Bang and Lead Leg. He was 2-0
with a 3.82 ERA in 23 games while striking out more than a batter per inning.
He was replaced as the closer by Hal Reniff,
who matched his 18 saves from the year before.
Despite it all, the Yankees were not happy. As the
preeminent franchise in all of baseball, they were not fans of their players
having brushes with the law. It also did not help that he was black at a time
when non-white players were supposed to be seen and not heard. He was sold that
offseason to the Washington Senators, for whom he pitched for two more
nondescript seasons and two more for their Triple-A team) before retiring
following after the 1967 season.
Bridges finished with a major league record of 23-15 with a
3.75 ERA and 25 saves in 206 games (five starts) over seven seasons.
(Perhaps for good reason) Bridges elected to not press
charges against Raysor. What happened to her was not able to be found. Following
baseball, Bridges worked as a handyman for the State Capitol building in
Jackson, Mississippi. He passed away in 1990 at the age of 59. While
fruitlessly speculative, it’s nevertheless interesting to wonder how his career
might have ended if he had not been in that bar on that night and found himself
on the wrong end of the barrel of a gun.
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Excellent write-up, I'm grateful that you dig in and get these kinds of stories for us fans. Love your blog and please do keep up the great work.
ReplyDeleteR.