Login Profile
Get News Updates Real Estate Automotive Employment Services
    Classifieds Marketplace
      Media Kit Submit Announcements
      Front Page September 3, 2004  RSS feed


      Former wartime pitcher for Yankees dies at 88

      Remembered as one
      who kept baseball
      alive during WWII
      BY DICKMETZGAR
      Staff Writer

      Former wartime pitcher
      for Yankees dies at 88
      Remembered as one
      who kept baseball
      alive during WWII
      BY DICKMETZGAR
      Staff Writer

      BRICK — Hank Borowy will forever be remembered as one the New York Yankees let get away, and, in doing so, became one of the footnotes of baseball history.

      A right-handed pitcher, Borowy helped the Yankees reach the World Series in 1942 and 1943, started the 1944 All-Star Game for the American League and then was unceremoniously traded by the Yankees in the middle of the 1945 season for $97,500 to the Chicago Cubs, where he helped the team win the National League pennant.

      Henry L. "Hank" Borowy, who was born and raised in Bloomfield, died at his home in Brick on Aug. 23 at the age of 88. He had moved to Point Pleasant 12 years ago and to Brick two years ago.

      "My father was a very humble man," recalled his daughter, Mary Ellen Borowy, of Bloomfield, who was born the year her father retired from baseball in 1952. "I remember him as a family man and a wonderful dad, not as a celebrity."

      Borowy will be remembered as one of the more talented pitchers who helped keep major league baseball alive and flourishing during World War II.

      Borowy was one of the players the Yankees brought up to the parent club as a rookie in 1942, the first war year for major league baseball after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. Borowy was 26 at the time.

      "My father was already a family man when he came to the major leagues," his daughter said.

      As a rookie, Borowy was 15-4 on a team that won the pennant. In 1943, he was 14-9 with a Yankees club that again won the pennant and defeated the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series. He was the winner in game three.

      Borowy started the all-star game for the American League in 1944, when he was 17-12, and was selected to the all-star squad in 1945, but the game was canceled because of wartime travel restrictions.

      Ironically, his career reached a historic crossroads when he had his best year in 1945, when the Yankees’ new owners, Dan Topping and Del Webb, and Larry Mc-Phail, the team’s new president, took over.

      Borowy was 10-5 in July when the Yankees shocked the baseball world by shipping their star pitcher to the Cubs. He was 11-2 for the Cubs and led them to the World Series against the Detroit Tigers. He posted a 2-2 record in the series, losing the seventh game. He is one of only two pitchers to record four decisions in a single World Series. That was the Cubs’ last appearance in the World Series.

      To this day, the deal that sent Borowy to the Cubs is a mystery since the Yankees, then as now, apparently didn’t need the cash.

      Allegedly, McPhail maintained that at the age of 29, Borowy would falter during the last half of the 1945 season, and that the Yankees were looking toward a youth movement.

      Borowy would later pitch for the Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates and Detroit Tigers before retiring in 1952 after a 10-year major league career. His record was 108-82.

      "He had a great history in baseball," said Bill Sybel, Borowy’s neighbor in Point Pleasant.

      Sybel said he remembers Borowy as being a very friendly person. He said he was lucky enough to get an autographed baseball and a picture of Borowy.

      "I befriended him and we became very well-acquainted," Sybel said.

      Borowy played baseball during the wartime because he had a deferment be­cause his off-season job was in a war plant.

      His daughter said that during World War II, her father was sent to Alaskan Army and Navy bases in Kodiak, Anchor­age and the Aleutian Islands as a mem­ber of a sports cavalcade to entertain the troops.

      Following his graduation from Bloom­field High School in 1935, Borowy at­ten-ded Fordham University in The Bronx, N.Y., for three years, where he posted a 33-1 record for the school’s base­ball team.

      Following his retirement from major league baseball in 1952, Borowy owned the Hank Borowy Realty Co., retiring 15 years ago.

      "My father really had two careers," his daughter said. "He had his baseball ca­reer and then his business career in real estate and insurance when he devoted his time to being a family man and dad. When we asked him baseball questions, he would answer, but he was able to ac­cept that his baseball days were over and moved on with his life."

      There was one Hall of Famer that Borowy remembered with fondness, the late Yankees catcher Bill Dickey, who was with the club during Borowy’s years as a Yankee, his daughter said.

      "He said he had very good memories of Bill Dickey as a teammate," his daughter said. "But he never really dwelled on his baseball career after retiring. There are still old-timers in Bloomfield, however, who remember dad as a pitcher."

      Borowy is survived by another daugh­ter, Claire Gelli, Florence, Italy; a son, Henry, of California; a sister, Helen Mur-aski; two brothers, Edward and William; and four grandchildren. His wife, Katherine, died in 1983.