- George Kissell
Infobox Person
name = George Kissell
image_size = 200
caption =
birth_date =September 9 , 1920
birth_place =Watertown, New York
death_date =October 7 , 2008
death_place =Tampa, Florida
education =
occupation =Baseball coach
parents =
spouse = VirginiaGeorge Marshall Kissell (
September 9 ,1920 --October 7 ,2008 ) was an Americanbaseball minor league player, manager, coach, scout, and instructor, as well as a major league coach, for theSt. Louis Cardinals organization. Born inWatertown, New York , he attendedIthaca College , where he earned both bachelor's and master's degrees in history and physical education. As a player he stood 5'8" (173 cm) tall and weighed 175 pounds (79 kg). He threw and batted right-handed. [Marcin, Joe, ed., "The Official 1970 Baseball Register." St. Louis:The Sporting News , 1970]Kissell was signed as an
infielder in 1940 byBranch Rickey , and spent 69 years with the Cardinals organization. He was primarily athird baseman , although he also playedshortstop , and never rose above the Class B level as a player. By 1946, after three seasons in the military duringWorld War II , he had become a playing manager for theLawrence Millionaires of the Class BNew England League . His most successful season as a manager came in 1950 with the Class BWinston-Salem Cardinals , who won 106 of 153 regular-season games and theCarolina League playoff championship. Kissell managed in the Cardinalfarm system through 1957, scouted for them from 1958-62, then returned to the field as a minor league manager from 1963-67. In 1968, he spent his first season as a roving instructor in the Cardinal system, where his efforts led to the nickname of "the Professor," and his influence is generally regarded as being a major basis for what came to be known as the "Cardinal Way".cite news|url=http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/sports/stories.nsf/cardinals/story/F2136A2EF45B8D9D862574DD00111643?OpenDocument|title=Students pay tribute to Kissell|last=Goold|first=Derrick|date=2008-10-09|work=St. Louis Post-Dispatch |accessdate=2008-10-09] He mentored a number of major league managers, includingSparky Anderson ,Joe Torre , andTony LaRussa .cite news|url=http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/sports/stories.nsf/cardinals/story/C8A40753ED4823BC862574DC00170C66?OpenDocument|title=George Kissell: 1920-2008|last=Goold|first=Derrick|date=2008-10-08|work=St. Louis Post-Dispatch |accessdate=2008-10-08]Kissell received numerous honors for his work in baseball, including induction into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. In recognition for his years of service to the game, Kissell received the King of Baseball award from minor league baseball. In addition, the Cardinals' spring training clubhouse in
Jupiter, Florida was named after him during spring training in 2005. The Cardinals organization annually honors a minor league coach with the George Kissell award.In the middle of his long career as a minor league manager and farm system official, Kissell spent seven seasons with the major league Cardinals (1969-75) as a third-base coach on the staff of skipper
Red Schoendienst . In his final decades with St. Louis, he served as field coordinator of system-wide instruction, then senior field coordinator. Said former Cardinal managerWhitey Herzog in 2005, “He is one of those baseball lifers that loves to talk baseball ... George Kissell is the only man I know who can talk for 15 minutes about a ground ball.”cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/09/sports/baseball/09kissell.html?ref=baseball|title=George Kissell, 88, Dies; Taught the Techniques of Baseball |last=Goldstein|first=Richard|date=2008-10-08|work=New York Times |accessdate=2008-10-09]Kissell died on the evening of Tuesday,
October 7 , 2008, as the result of injuries sustained in a car accident inPinellas Park, Florida the preceding night.cite news|url=http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/accidents/article843509.ece|title=Crash claims baseball mentor George Kissell|last=Lindberg|first=Anne|date=2008-10-08|work=St. Petersburg Times |accessdate=2008-10-08]References
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