Len Koenecke


Leonard George Koenecke was an American baseball player who played Major League Baseball for the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants. He died of a blow to the head at the hands of the pilot and a passenger of a plane of which he had seized control.

Early life

Koenecke was the son of a locomotive engineer and had worked as a fireman for the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad.

Minor league career

Koenecke made his professional debut for the Moline Plowboys in the Mississippi Valley League in 1927.
In 1928 he joined Indianapolis in the American Association.

Major League career

After several seasons with Indianapolis, Koenecke was signed to the New York Giants in December 1931 in a deal worth $75,000. Manager John McGraw predicted he would "be a bright star in the National League". He played just the one season with the Giants. Koenecke made his debut for the Giants, going hitless against the Philadelphia Phillies on April 12, 1932
In 1933, playing for the International League Buffalo Bisons, he hit.334 and drove in 100 runs batted in with eight home runs. In 1934, Koenecke joined the Brooklyn Dodgers, where in his first season he hit 14 home runs, 73 RBIs and set a National League fielding record with a percentage of.994. His second season saw a decline in his onfield performance and his drinking became a problem to the point where he was cut on September 16, 1935, during the middle of a road trip after a game in Chicago.
Just one day later, he would be dead.

Death

After being sent home from the road trip, Koenecke caught a commercial flight for New York City. During the flight, he drank a quart of whiskey and became very drunk. After Koenecke had harassed other passengers and struck a stewardess, the pilot had to sit on him to restrain him as he was shackled to his seat. He was removed unconscious from the flight in Detroit. After sleeping on a chair in the airport, he chartered a flight to Toronto in the hopes of rejoining the Bisons. While flying over Canada, he had a disagreement with the pilot and a passenger, and attempted to take control of the aircraft.
In order to avoid a crash, Koenecke was hit over the head with a fire extinguisher by both the pilot, who had left his controls, and the other passenger. After an emergency landing at Long Branch Racetrack in Toronto, it was found that Koenecke had died of a cerebral hemorrhage. The two men were charged with manslaughter but were found not liable by a coroner's jury soon after.
He was buried in Mount Repose Cemetery at Friendship, Wisconsin.

In popular culture

Koenecke's death was referenced in season 5, episode 6 of the animated TV series Archer, "Smuggler's Blues".