Dick Kryhoski


Richard David Kryhoski was a first baseman in Major League Baseball who played for five different teams between 1949 and 1955. Listed at, 200 lb., Kryhoski batted and threw left-handed. He was born and raised in Leonia, New Jersey.
Kryhoski attended Upsala College in East Orange, New Jersey. He had a promising baseball career before injuries, deep slumps, and frequent trades forced his premature retirement. He served in military during World War II.
Signed by the New York Yankees as an amateur free agent in 1946, Kryhoski hit.396 with 19 home runs and 85 runs batted in with the Wellsville Yankees of the PONY League that season. As a member of the 1948 Kansas City Blues of the American Association, he hit.294 with 30 doubles, seven triples, 13 home runs and 87 runs batted in. In 1949 he hit.328 with five home runs and 50 runs batted in with the Pacific Coast League Oakland Oaks, joining the New York Yankees late in the season.
The Yankees won the 1949 World Series when Kryhoski was a rookie with them. During the off-season, he was traded by New York to the Detroit Tigers in exchange for Dick Wakefield.
Kryhoski played with Detroit from 1950 to 1951, before joining the St. Louis Browns, Baltimore Orioles and Kansas City Athletics. One of his most productive seasons came in 1951 with the Tigers, when he hit.287 with 12 home runs and 57 runs batted in, batting third in the batting order. Then, in 1953 he shared with Roy Sievers the first base job for the Browns in the last year of the team's existence. On July 16 of that year, the Browns tied, by then, a majors record with three successive home runs belted by Clint Courtney, Kryhoski and Jim Dyck, in the first inning of an 8–6 victory over the Yankees.
In a seven-season major league career, Kryhoski was a.265 hitter, 45 home runs and 231 runs batted in over 569 games, with 203 runs, 85 doubles, 14 triples, five stolen bases, and a.314 on-base percentage. As a first baseman, he collected 3768 outs, 312 assists, 394 double plays, and 40 errors in 4120 total chances for a.990 fielding percentage.
Kryhoski died at his home in Beverly Hills, Michigan, just 17 days after his 82nd birthday.