Bob Habenicht

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Robert Julius Habenicht (Hobby)

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Bob Habenicht was a native of St. Louis, MO., who had the distinction of pitching for both his hometown Cardinals and Browns, Bob was in three games for the Cardinals in 1951 and had one outing for the last edition of the Browns in 1953. The 18 year old righthander was signed by the St. Louis Cardinals as an amateur free agent before the 1944 season and was assigned to the class D Lima Red Birds of the Ohio State League where he went 1-2 in four games and then was with the class B Allentown Cardinals of the Interstate League, pitching 12 innings with no decisions before being called up to the United States Army Air Force for the remainder of 1944-45, during World War II.

"Hobby" as he was mostly referred as, would get back for the 1946 season with the class D Carthage Cardinals of the Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri League where he was unimpressive with a 2-11 record but did have a 3.60 ERA. "Hobby" would spend five more seasons in the minors, where in 1948 he went 12-3 with a 2.11 ERA for the Lynchburg Cardinals and the move that in all probability helped him get his call to the major league Cardinals came with the 1951 AAA Rochester Red Wings where he went 11-6 with a 4.32 ERA. His late season look got Bob in three games with no decisions and a ticket back to the minors in 1952 where he was with both the Houston Buffaloes and the Rochester Red Wings, with a combined 5-3 record.

Habenicht was selected off waivers by the St. Louis Browns from the Cardinals on October 1, 1952. "Hobby" appeared in one game for the Browns in 1953 with no decisions which gave him a 0-0 in four appearances in the majors and spelled the end of that part of his baseball career. Bob spent the rest of 1953 with the Charleston Senators of the American Association where he won 4 and lost 7 with a 3.51 ERA.

"Hobby" would be with the Richmond Virginians of the International League in 1954, going 7-13 with a 4.48 ERA. He showed up with the same group in 1955, leading the IL in losses with 18, along with 9 wins and a 3.77 ERA. This was the year he received his law degree from Saint Louis University and was later quoted as saying: "I was studying law books in the dugout when my manager thought I should be studying the hitters."

"Hobby" had spent 11 seasons in the minors, winning 77 games and losing 97. He appeared in 339 outings, pitching 1,543 innings, giving up 1534 base hits along with 743 base on balls for a career 3.94 ERA.

He continued to make his home in Richmond where he became a prominent attorney. He also entered the political arena and was elected to the city council and served as vice-mayor of Richmond, VA, where he died December 24, 1980, at age 54.


[edit] Sources

Baseball Players of the 1950s
Baseball-Reference.com:page


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