St. Louis Browns catcher, Lou Criger, was born on February 3 1872, in Elkhart, Indiana. He would play 18 seasons in professional baseball between the major and minor leagues. He would tally 3759 plate appearances in 1054 total games, but only a few came with the St. Louis Browns. He would actually suit up for the three St. Louis teams with Perfectos, Cardinals, and Browns.
Lou Criger began his baseball career with his hometown Elkhart Truths, first as a pitcher then moving behind the plate. After five seasons (1890-94), Criger was signed in 1895 by the Kalamazoo Celery Eaters of the Michigan State League. He would go on to play for the Fort Wayne Farmers before finishing the 1896 seasons with the Cleveland Spiders. In three seasons with the Spiders, he would appear in just 125 games and reaching a batting average of .258.
The Cleveland Spiders and the St. Louis Perfectos were owned by the same management group, and Lou Criger was optioned from Cleveland to St. Louis on March 29, 1899. The Perfectos would change their name to the Cardinals in 1900, and Criger would remain the primary catcher. Prior to the 1901 season, he would jump to the Boston Americans of the newly formed American League. He would play eight seasons with the Americans (later known as the Red Sox) where he struggled at the plate (.208 BA) but excelled in the field (.975 fielding percentage).
The Browns acquired Lou Criger on December 10, 1908, when they sent catcher Tubby Spencer and $5,000 to Boston. With the Browns he would see the most action (74 games) as he platooned at catcher with Jim Stepehens (79 games), Wib Smith (17 games), and Bill Killefer (11 games). His .986 fielding percentage was the best of his career, but his offense continued to struggle (.170 BA). He would record 36 hits, just one double and triple, and fail to hit a home run. He did score 15 runs and drive in another nine, but those numbers do not reflect a strong starting catcher. His best performance came in the second game of a double header against the New York Highlanders on August 3, going 3-for-4 with a run scored.
The Browns would trade Lou Criger to the Highlanders on December 16, 1906 for OF Ray Demmitt and catcher Joe Lake. He would play one season in New York (1910), and split the 1911 season between the Milwaukee Brewers and Boyne City Boosters.
Lou Criger would join Bobby Wallace's staff as the pitching coach of the Browns in 1912. Although he was a member of the coaching staff, Criger would see action on June 3, 1912. He would go 0-for-2 with a run scored, reaching base twice on a walk and an error.
Lou Criger would retire from baseball and suffer from tuberculosis. He would move his family to the dry desert of Tucson, Arizona, where he opened a family bakery. He would be inducted into the Indiana Baseball Hall of Fame, and the Northern Indiana SABR chapter carries Lou Criger's name.