St. Louis Browns LHP Harry Brecheen was born on October 14, 1914 in Broken Bow, Oklahoma. He would be the only player to make the Major Leagues out of Broken Bow, and one of the greatest left-handed pitchers to ever come from Oklahoma. By the time Harry Brecheen threw a single pitch for the Browns, he was already a St. Louis baseball legend as one of the greatest pitchers in St. Louis Cardinals history.
Harry Brecheen began his celebrated 19-year baseball career as a 20-year old prospect out of East Central University (1933-35). He would then spend eight years bouncing around the minor leagues that included time with the Greenville Buckshots (1935), Galveston Buccaneers (1935-36), Bartlesville Bucs (1936), Poertsmith Cubs (1937), Houston Buffaloes (1938-39), and Columbus Red Birds (1940-42). Brecheen would start the 1940 season with the Cardinals, but would not become a solid member of the pitching staff until 1943.
Within his 11 seasons as a Cardinal he would establish himself as the best pitcher of the 1940s. He would finish the decade in the top three of eight major pitching categories. He would finish first with 1,277 innings, 96 wins, 101 complete games, and 606 strikeouts, second with 22 shutouts and 1.17 WHiP, and third with a 2.75 ERA and a .241 opponent batting average. Harry Brecheen would be the first left-handed pitcher to win a World Series game in the 1944 "Streetcar Series". His 1948 campaign would be his career-year when he led the National League with 149 strikeouts and a 2.24 ERA. He would be a two-time National League All-Star (1947-48) and a Sporting News All-Star in 1948. His final season with the Cardinals came in 1952, when he tallied seven wins, with 54 strikeouts, and a 3.32 ERA.
The St. Louis Browns wasted no time acquiring "Harry the Cat" when the Cardinals released him on October 30, 1952. Brecheen joined a staff that included starters Don Larsen, Virgil Trucks, and Duane Pillette, and quickly established himself as the leader of the group. His five wins in his 26 starts was more of a reflection of the poor team around him than his pitching performance. He would strikeout 44 batters while walking just 31. His 3.07 ERA was the best on the staff and his 137 ERA+ was the fifth best mark he would have in his career.
Harry Brecheen would move to Baltimore when the team relocated in 1954. He would become the Orioles pitching coach from 1954-67, where he was key in mentoring pitchers like Jim Palmer, Dave McNally, and Milt Pappas. He was also responsible for extending the Hall of Fame careers of Hoyt Wilhelm and Robin Roberts.
Harry Brecheen is one of the best pitcher in the history of baseball in St. Louis. With most of his career in Cardinals' red, it is important that he had his final accomplishments in a Browns uniform.