- Van Lingle Mungo
Infobox MLB retired
bgcolor1=#083c6b
bgcolor2=#083c6b
textcolor1=white
textcolor2=white
name=Van Lingle Mungo
position=Pitcher
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=June 8 ,1911
city-state|Pageland|South Carolina
deathdate=death date and age|1985|2|12|1911|6|8
city-state|Pageland|South Carolina
debutdate=September 7
debutyear=by|1931
debutteam=Brooklyn Robins
finaldate=September 2
finalyear=by|1945
finalteam=New York Giants
stat1label=Win-Loss
stat1value=120-115
stat2label=ERA
stat2value=3.47
stat3label=Strikeout s
stat3value=1242
teams=
*Brooklyn Robins/Dodgers (by|1931-by|1941)
*New York Giants (by|1942-by|1943, by|1945)
highlights=
*All star in 1934, 1936, 1937, and 1945
*Led NL in strikeouts in 1936 with 238
*Led NL in innings pitched in 1934 with 315.3
*Led NL in shutouts in 1935 with 4Van Lingle Mungo (
June 8 ,1911 -February 12 ,1985 ) was aMajor League Baseball right-handedpitcher known for his long career with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Mungo played for the Dodgers from by|1931 to by|1941. At the end of his baseball career, he played with the New York Giants.Mungo was fairly successful in his early career, averaging 16 wins per season from 1932 through 1936 and leading the
National League in strikeouts with 238 in 1936. He was named to the All-Star team in 1934, 1936, and 1937. However, following an arm injury in 1937, he only won 13 Major League games over the next six seasons. He completed his Major League career with a 120-115 won-lost record over 2113innings pitched , with a 3.47earned run average .Stories and anecdotes about Mungo tend to emphasize his reputation for combativeness, including episodes of drinking and fighting. The most widely told story concerns a visit to
Cuba where, supposedly, Mungo was caught in a sexually compromising position with a married woman by her husband. The husband was punched in the eye by Mungo, leading the husband to attack Mungo with a butcher knife or machete, requiring Dodgers executiveBabe Hamberger to smuggle Mungo in a laundry cart to a seaplane waiting off a wharf in order to escape the country.Mungo was largely forgotten after he retired from baseball after the 1945 season, but was brought back into considerable notoriety in 1969 because of the use of his prosodic name as the title of a
novelty song byDave Frishberg . The song lyrics consist entirely of the names of baseball players of the 1940s, strung together with abossa nova beat, but Mungo is one of only five players mentioned more than once and his name functions as a kind ofrefrain . According to Frishberg,The Dick Cavett Show arranged to have him sing the song to Mungo in person, and Mungo asked him backstage if there would ever be any financial remuneration for the use of his name in the song. Frishberg then told him no, but maybe Mungo could make some money if he wrote a song called "Dave Frishberg." Ironically, today Mungo is remembered primarily because of the song.Mungo's place of birth is Pageland,
South Carolina , where he also died. During his retirement in Pageland, he owned and operated the Ball Theatre until it burned down in the fifties. During its time, the theatre played such films asThe Outlaw , starringJane Russell , and was a popular entertainment center for the town. Since this was before integration. V.L. Mungo provided balcony seating for the African American population, then referred to as 'colored'. This was an innovation, since the other small movie theatre in town was segregated."
The Sporting News " reported onSeptember 13 ,1961 , that Van Mungo's son,Ernie Mungo , was signed as a player by the Washington Senators organization.ee also
*
List of Major League Baseball strikeout champions External links
*baseball-reference|id=m/mungova01
* [http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/baseball/mlb/players/44843/ SI.com] - statistics
* [http://www.historicbaseball.com/players/m/mungo_van.html Historic Baseball] - biographical note
* [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/M/Mungo_Van_Lingle.stm BaseballLibrary] - biography and career highlights
* [http://www.baseball-almanac.com/poetry/vanlinglemungo.shtml Lyrics to Dave Frishberg's song "Van Lingle Mungo"]
* [http://www.thedeadballera.com/Obits/Mungo.Van.Obit.html The Deadball Era]
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