St. Louis Browns OF Myril Hoag was born on March 9, 1908 in Davis, California. By the time Hoag became a member of the Browns, he had already established himself as one of the most reliable outfielders in the American League. He would enjoy a 24-year professional baseball career that would only be interrupted by his service time in World War II.
Myril Hoag played at Sacramento High School, and was signed by the Sacramento Senators in 1926 at the age of 18. He would spend four seasons with the Senators, before signing with the New York Yankees prior to the 1931 season. The crowded Yankee outfield would limit the amount of playing time he saw, but in that time he had one of the highest fielding percentages of any Bronx fielders.
On July 28, 1936, Hoag collided with Yankee outfielder Joe DiMaggio which resulted in Hoag being hospitalized with a brain clot. The collision came as both players were attempting to field a ball hit by Washington's Goose Goslin. Hoag and DiMaggio were both knocked unconscious, although DiMaggio returned to the game once he regained awareness. Hoag was removed from the game. After no showing no trauma from the collision, Hoag returned to the lineup the following day and recorded a hit. The night of July 30, Myril Hoag collapsed in his hotel room due to a blood clot in his brain, from which he suffered from the collision. The emergency operation was successful, but he missed the rest of the season.
After two more quality seasons in New York, the Browns would acquire Hoag on October 26, 1938. The Browns would send RHP Oral Hildebrand and LF Buster Mills to the Yankees for Hoag and catcher Joe Glenn. Myril Hoag would spend the next two compete seasons with the Browns. The 1939 season would be one of his best of his career. He appeared in 139 games, where he recorded 142 hits, including 23 doubles, ten home runs, and 75 runs batted in. His .295 average would help him earn his only American League All-Star game appearance. He would also finish among the league leaders in assists, and double plays turned by an outfielder.
After only one game in 1941, the Browns sold the contract to the Chicago White Sox on April 30, 1941. While playing for Chicago Hoag enlisted in the US Army Air Corp in November of 1942, but was discharged in November of 1943 due to dizziness from his 1936 injury.
Hoag would play three seasons with the White Sox (1941-422, 44), and Cleveland Indians (1944-45), before spending the final six season as a player-manager in the minors. He managed the Gainesville G-Men from 1947-48 and again in 1951, and led the G-Men to the championship of the Florida League (1947-48, 51) He would later spend time with the St. Petersburg Saints (1949), Rome Red Sox (1950), and the Valley Rebels (1950).
Myril Hoag would settle down in High Springs, Florida, where he would spend his time telling stories of his Browns teammates and his four World Series rings he earned with the Yankees.