Pro football HOFer Ace Parker died Wednesday in his hometown of Portsmouth, Virginia. Parker played professionally in baseball and football in the 1930s and 1940s, continuing in pro baseball into the early 1950s. At his death, Parker was the oldest living US-born major-leaguer.
More on Ace after the jump.
Despite an All-American selection as a tailback for Duke University, baseball was Parker’s first love. Debuting professionally in the majors, Parker played the outfield, shortstop and second base for Connie Mack‘s 1937 Athletics. Sent down to the minors in June, Parker appeared briefly for his hometown Portsmouth club in the Class B Piedmont League before getting called up again in July.
Perhaps owing to a .117 batting average in 100 PA that first season, Parker decided to give pro football a whirl in the autumn of 1937. Despite appearing in only 4 games for the NFL’s Brooklyn Dodgers, Parker made 2nd team All-NFL as a 5-foot-10, 178 lb quarterback. Though he originally intended his NFL stint as a one-season lark, 1937 would be the first of six seasons (interrupted by military service during World War II) playing both pro baseball and pro football.
Parker followed up his 1937 NFL debut with four seasons as the starting pivot for the Brooklyn club, making first team All-NFL in 1938, 1939 and 1940. After the war, Parker appeared for the 1945 Boston Yanks before finishing his gridiron career leading the 1946 New York Yankees to the All-America Football Conference championship game. Parker was a 1972 inductee to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Parker’s last major league appearance would be in 1938, but he continued to toil in the minors until 1952, only once (in 1940) rising above Class B. Other than that 1940 stint with the AA Syracuse Chiefs, Parker played his entire minor league career in familiar places, with his hometown Portsmouth Cubs, and in his college town with the Durham Bulls of the Carolina League.
Parker debuted on Apr 24, 1937 as a pinch-runner and scored one of three 9th inning runs as the As rallied to beat the Senators 6-4. A week later, Parker appeared as a pinch-hitter and homered off Wes Ferrell in his first major-league plate appearance. His only other career HR would come 3 months after that, against the Indians’ Whit Wyatt in a 3-hit, 4-RBI game, leading the As to an 11-7 win. Parker would have one other 3-hit game (and another 4-RBI performance) in a 14-11 win over the Red Sox in 1938.
A couple of final notes. Ace Parker was the last living player to have appeared in a game with or against Rogers Hornsby. With his passing, there remain only 3 living players who played in the 1930s: Bobby Doerr (whose major league debut came 4 days before Parker’s); and two truly obscure pitchers, Art Kenney and Mike Palagyi, with but 3 major league games between them.