Hank Soar

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Hank Soar
Date of birth: August 17, 1914
Place of birth: Alton, RI, United States
Date of death: December 24, 2001
Place of death: Pawtucket, RI, United States
Career information
Position(s): Running back
College: Providence
Organizations
 As player:
1937-1946 New York Giants
Stats at DatabaseFootball.com

Albert Henry Soar (August 17, 1914 - December 24, 2001) was an American football running back and defensive back in the National Football League who went on to have a long career as an umpire in Major League Baseball. Soar played nine seasons for the New York Giants (1937-1944, 1946), and caught the game-winning touchdown pass in the 1938 NFL Championship Game against the Green Bay Packers at the Polo Grounds. Soar also coached briefly in the league which later became the National Basketball Association.

Born in Alton, Rhode Island, Soar later moved to Pawtucket, attending Pawtucket High School and Providence College. After being named to the Little All-American team, he left college to play semi-pro baseball and pro football, playing for the Boston Shamrocks in 1936.[1] He served in the Army during World War II, and his officiating in a baseball game drew the attention of Philadelphia Athletics manager Connie Mack, who recommended him for an umpiring career. After the war, Soar coached the Providence Steamrollers in the Basketball Association of America (now the NBA) in 1947, but the team achieved only a 2-17 record before he was replaced by Nat Hickey. He then became backfield coach for the football team at Rhode Island State College from 1947 to 1949.[1]

After working in the New England League from 1947 to 1949 and the American Association in 1949,[1] he became an American League umpire from 1950 to 1971, and as a league supervisor continued to work occasional games as a substitute through 1975 and in 1977-78. He worked in five World Series (1953, 1956, 1962, 1964 and 1969), serving as crew chief in 1969. He was the first base umpire when Don Larsen of the New York Yankees pitched a perfect game in Game 5 of the 1956 Series, and was again at first base on June 1, 1975 when Nolan Ryan of the California Angels pitched his fourth no-hitter to tie Sandy Koufax's major league record. Soar also officiated in four All-Star Games (1952, 1955, second 1959 game, 1963), calling balls and strikes for the last contest, as well as the 1971 American League Championship Series, when he again served as crew chief.

Soar died at age 87 at a family home in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and was buried in Swan Point Cemetery in Providence.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c (1971) The Sporting News Baseball Register, p. 533. 

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Robert Morris
Providence Steamrollers Head Coach
1947
Succeeded by
Nat Hickey