Alex Cosmidis

Alexander Nicholas Cosmidis (born September 22, 1928, at Fayetteville, North Carolina) is an American professional baseball scout. He was a minor league baseball infielder for eleven seasons, a manager for eight, and a scout since 1982.

Cosmidis grew up in Norfolk, Virginia, and went to school at Illinois Wesleyan University where he played baseball and joined Theta Chi. During this time, he was also on a semi pro team in Colerain, North Carolina. He was signed by the Chicago White Sox who assigned him to their farm team in Hot Springs, Arkansas where he earned co-MVP honors in the Cotton States League. His minor league playing career saw him in Waterloo, Iowa, Gastonia, North Carolina, and Nashville, Tennessee playing for the local nines. He spent three years with the team in Dallas and set a Texas League fielding record of sixty-six errorless games at second base. In 1957, he was awarded the Rawlings Silver Glove trophy for best minor league second baseman. He spent a campaign with Portland in the Pacific Coast League and one with Rochester in the International League at the Triple-A level but never made it to the big leagues as a player.

After a knee injury in 1960, Cosmidis turned to managing. In 1961, his team from Salisbury won the Western Carolina League trophy. He also managed in Asheville, Salem, Appleton, and Lynchburg before rounding out his managerial career with the Kinston Eagles of the Carolina League in 1970.

Cosmidis returned to baseball in 1982 as a scout for the California Angels. Since 1987, he has worked as a scout for the Chicago White Sox based in Raleigh, North Carolina.[1] His signees include Bryan Harvey, The Vidalia King Roberto Hernandez, Ray Durham and James Baldwin.

References

  1. Baseball America, 2010 Annual Directory]

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, January 16, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.