William Glenn McCahan (June 7, 1921 – July 3, 1986) was an American professional baseball player and right-handed pitcher in the Major Leagues with the Philadelphia Athletics from 1946 to 1949. Born in Philadelphia, he was listed as 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) tall and 200 pounds (91 kg). He graduated from Duke University and served in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II, attaining the rank of second lieutenant and earning his pilot's wings.[1] McCahan also played professional basketball for the Syracuse Nationals of the National Basketball League.

Bill McCahan
Pitcher
Born: (1921-06-07)June 7, 1921
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died: July 3, 1986(1986-07-03) (aged 65)
Fort Worth, Texas, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 15, 1946, for the Philadelphia Athletics
Last MLB appearance
June 19, 1949, for the Philadelphia Athletics
MLB statistics
Win–loss record16–14
Earned run average3.84
Strikeouts76
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams
Career highlights and awards

Early baseball career

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McCahan had begun his professional baseball career in 1942 with the Class B Wilmington Blue Rocks before entering the military. He resumed it in 1946 with the Triple-A Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League, winning 11 of 18 decisions with a solid 2.76 earned run average, and earning a late-season callup to the Athletics. In his first MLB game, on September 15, 1946, he shut out the Cleveland Indians 2–0, allowing seven hits and three bases on balls.[2] In his final start of the year, on September 29 at Shibe Park, McCahan went seven innings against the New York Yankees and allowed only two runs (both earned), but the game was ended prematurely with the Athletics trailing 2–1 by a city curfew that prohibited night baseball on Sundays in Philadelphia. McCahan was credited with his second big-league complete game, but was tagged with his first loss.[3]

McCahan followed his promising 1946 debut with a stellar rookie campaign in 1947 as a member of the Athletics' revitalized pitching staff. He won ten games, lost five, and posted ten complete games and an earned run average of 3.32.

No-hit effort

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The highlight of McCahan's 1947 season came on September 3.

On that afternoon, McCahan no-hit the Washington Senators 3–0 at Shibe Park. With one out in the second inning, Athletics' first baseman Ferris Fain, after fielding a routine ground ball, threw wildly to McCahan, covering first base. Stan Spence of the Senators made it all the way to second base, the only blemish on McCahan's otherwise perfect game.[4]

McCahan had been on the losing end of the last no-hitter prior to this one, pitched by Cleveland's Don Black on July 10 of that same season; not until Tim Lincecum in 2013 would a pitcher hurl a no-hitter after being on the losing end of the last no-hitter before it. McCahan's no-hitter would also be the last for the Athletics until Catfish Hunter's perfect game in 1968; by Hunter's time, the franchise had moved to Oakland via Kansas City.

Late career

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However, while he was working for an oil company during the 1947–1948 offseason, McCahan injured his shoulder lifting barrels[5]—ruining his 1948 season and his long-term MLB career. He won only four of 11 decisions in 1948, and although he threw five more complete games, his earned run average ballooned to a poor 5.71. In 1949, he worked in only 12 games (five of them at Triple-A), and the Athletics traded him to the Brooklyn Dodgers. He spent three seasons in the Dodgers' farm system, but, apart from an invitation to the Dodgers' 1950 spring training camp, he never saw any action with Brooklyn.

In his four-year, 57-game major league career, McCahan compiled a 16–14 won–lost record and a 3.84 earned run average. He allowed 297 hits and 145 bases on balls in 29023 innings pitched, with 76 strikeouts. McCahan had 17 complete games and two shutouts among his 40 career starts.

McCahan's service with the Double-A Fort Worth Cats led him to make his permanent home in that Texas city. He married a Fort Worth woman, worked for General Dynamics Corporation for 26 years, and died there, from cancer, at age 65.[5] He was interred at Fort Worth's Greenwood Memorial Park.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Bedingfield, Gary, Bill McCahan. Information at Baseball in Wartime
  2. ^ Retrosheet box score: 1946-09-15 (2)
  3. ^ Retrosheet box score: 1946-09-29
  4. ^ Robbins, Mike (2004). Ninety Feet from Fame: Close Calls with Baseball Immortality, p. 239 (New York: Carroll & Graf). ISBN 0-7867-1335-6
  5. ^ a b Skelton, David E., Bill McCahan. Society for American Baseball Research Biography Project
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Preceded by No-hitter pitcher
September 3, 1947
Succeeded by