Del Ennis

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Topps baseball card - 1952 Series, #223
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Topps baseball card - 1952 Series, #223

Delmer Ennis (June 8, 1925 - February 8, 1996) was an American left and right fielder in Major League Baseball who played most of his career for the Philadelphia Phillies. During his career from 1946 to 1959, he had more runs batted in (1284) than any other major leaguer except Stan Musial; in 1950 he led the National League with 126 RBI as the Phillies won their first pennant in 35 years. He held the Phillies career record of 259 home runs from 1956 to 1980, and ranked 10th in NL history with 1824 games in the outfield when his career ended.

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[edit] Career

Del Ennis (1950s)
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Del Ennis (1950s)

Ennis was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and was signed by scout Jocko Collins out of Olney High School in 1942. He broke into the major leagues with the Phillies in 1946 after one season in the Interstate League in 1943, followed by naval service in the South Pacific in World War II. After being discharged from the Navy on April 5, 1946, and eleven weeks after his debut, Ennis became the first Phillies rookie ever to make an All-Star team. He also became the first Sporting News Rookie Award winner, and finished eighth in the MVP voting after batting .313 with 17 home runs and 73 RBI and placing second in the NL in slugging average (.485) behind Musial.

Ennis showed his power in 1948, driving in 95 runs with 30 home runs – a Phillies record for right-handed hitters, breaking Gavvy Cravath's 1915 total of 24. A year later, he hit .302 with 25 homers and 110 RBI, and he finished second in the NL in doubles both seasons. But his most productive season came in 1950, when he hit .311 with career highs of 31 home runs and an NL-best 126 RBI; the 31 HRs were the team record for right-handed hitters until teammate Stan Lopata hit 32 in 1956. As a member of the 1950 team dubbed the "Whiz Kids," he helped the Phillies to win their first pennant since 1915 in an exciting finish that saw Philadelphia beat out the powerful Brooklyn Dodgers on the last day of the season. But the team was swept in the World Series by the New York Yankees, with Ennis hitting only .143 with no RBI. Ennis placed fourth in the MVP voting, won by teammate Jim Konstanty.

From 1952-55, Ennis collected four 20 HR-100 RBI seasons, with highs of 29 and 125 in 1953. He was also named to three All-Star Games in 1946, 1951 and 1955. In 1956 he passed Chuck Klein to become the Phillies' all-time home run leader, and he held the record until Mike Schmidt passed him in 1980. Also in 1956, he broke Ed Delahanty's record of 1544 games with the Phillies; Richie Ashburn broke his record in 1958. By the end of the 1956 campaign he was also among the NL's top ten career home run leaders, though he dropped out of the top ten before his career ended. Traded to the St. Louis Cardinals before the 1957 season for Rip Repulski, Ennis responded with a .286 average, 26 home runs and 105 RBI, the latter being second in the NL behind his teammate Musial. But his production dropped off sharply in 1958, and after two years in St. Louis he finished his career in 1959 playing for the Cincinnati Redlegs and Chicago White Sox. In a 14-season career, Ennis compiled a .284 batting average with 288 home runs, 2063 hits, 1284 RBI and 985 runs in 1903 games.

Following his retirement as a player, Ennis operated a bowling alley and bred greyhound race dogs. Ennis also spent a year coaching baseball at the Penn State University Abington Campus (formerly Ogontz campus). He remembered his 1950 Phillies days in his sports enterprise, calling three dogs scheduled to run in Florida racetracks Whiz Kids Ennis, Whiz Kids Ashburn and Whiz Kids Roberts. In 1983, during the Phillies' 100th anniversary year, he was selected for the Philadelphia Phillies Centennial Team.

Ennis died in Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania at 70 years of age from complications of diabetes. He was buried in Hillside Cemetery, Roslyn, Pennsylvania.

[edit] Highlights

  • 3-time All-Star (1946, 1951, 1955)
  • TSN Rookie of the Year (1946)
  • Led National League in RBI (1950)
  • Had a 3 HR-game (July 23, 1955)
  • Spoiled three no-hit games, including one by Ramón Monzant on April 29, 1956

[edit] Feat

[edit] 1950 highlights

Del's salary for 1950 was $30,000 at the time the highest ever paid a Phillie

  • July 27 - Ennis hit a double and a grand slam with seven RBI against the Chicago Cubs, as the Phillies won 13–3 at Shibe Park. Philadelphia won 11 of their next 15 games to hold first place by four games over the Boston Braves.
  • July 30 - In the first game of a doubleheader, he hit his second grand slam in three days in a 10–0 win over Pittsburgh Pirates. He added a two-run homer as the Phillies won the second game, 4–2. His seven RBI in two games gave him 41 for the month, a new Phillies mark.
  • August 16- The Phillies beat the second-place Braves 5-1 on Robin Roberts' three-hitter, scoring 4 runs in the 4th inning off Vern Bickford including Ennis' 26th HR of the season.
  • August 21 - The Phillies beat the New York Giants as Ennis had three hits and drove in his 100th run of the season to bolster Curt Simmons' four-hit shutout for his 16th win of the season. Philadelphia head west with a 5 1/2 game lead in the NL pennant race.
  • September 15 - In a doubleheader against Cincinnati, Ennis hit 5-for-10, including a three-RBI double in the 18th inning of game two, as the Phillies won both games.
  • September 24 - As the Phillies near the end of a pennant season, Ennis powered the faltering "Whiz Kids" past the Boston Braves with a home run, three singles, and four RBI in an 8–7 win.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links