Tomorrow (June 21, 2011) we will be making a major upgrade to the bullpen software. Please be warned that the bullpen may be down for multiple hours and that any changes made tomorrow may be lost.
We apologize for the inconvenience this may cause.
Bill Bell
From BR Bullpen
William Samuel Bell (Ding Dong)
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 6' 3", Weight 200 lb.
- Debut September 5, 1952
- Final Game April 16, 1955
- Born October 24, 1933 in Goldsboro, NC USA
- Died October 11, 1962 in Durham, NC USA
Biographical Information
Before the season in 1951 Bill Bell was signed as an amateur free agent by the Pittsburgh Pirates. They shipped the 17 year old off to the Mayfield Clothiers of the Kitty League and the young man came up with a 6-8 won-loss record and a 3.46 ERA.
1952, a magical year as far as Bill was concerned, saw him throw the first back-to-back no-hitters in organized baseball since the Cincinnati Reds's Johnny Vander Meer did it in 1938. His teammate, Ron Necciai pitched a no-hitter in the same season during which he struck out 27 batters.
Pitching in the Appalachian League with the Bristol Twins Bell beat the Kingsport Cherokees 1-0 with 17 strikeouts on May 22, and four days later followed up with a second no-hitter 4-0, over the Bluefield Blue-Grays, in a game in which he struck out 20 batters. Necciai's 27 strikeout gem came on May 13. Bell then tossed an unbelieveable third no-hitter on August 25, also over Bluefield 4-0, which again put him in the record books.
It should be mentioned here that, Johnny Vander Meer, the man who had first turned the back to back trick, although in the majors, on July 15, in this same year, while pitching in the Texas League, threw a no-hitter for the Tulsa Oilers, beating the Shreveport Sports 12-0.
The 6'3" right-hander was rewarded with a call-up to the Pirates making the long jump from class D to the major leagues in the same season. He lost his only decision in four appearances before returning to the minor leagues. He made it back to Pittsburgh for just one more game three years later in 1955, with no decision, before an ailing right arm ended his mound days. His major league career numbers showed that he appeared in 5 games, pitching 17 innings, going 0-1 and had a 4.32 ERA.
Bell's minor league career showed an active seven years of playing time, 1951 through 1959. He served in the United States Armed Services, two seasons, in 1953 and 1954.
While on the minor league mound, Bill built a 46-50 record, appearing in 161 games, pitching 823 innings, allowing 617 hits and 728 base on balls for a 4.38 ERA.
Bill Bell died on October 11, 1962 at age 28 at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Durham, NC. His death came ten months after he was seriously injured in an auto accident in Fort Myers, FL. He never regained consciousness after the accident.
Sources
Baseball Players of the 1950s
SABR MILB Database:page

