St. Louis Browns Muncrief graduated from
Ada High School and began his 22-year professional baseball career in 1934. He spent his maiden season in the Class C
West Dixie League in the extensive
minor-league system of St. Louis' dominant
National League club, the
Cardinals, but was acquired by the Browns in 1935; he promptly won 15 games for the
Palestine Pals of the West Dixie circuit. Two years later, on September 30, 1937, Muncrief made his
MLB debut starting for the Browns against the
Detroit Tigers, allowing two
runs (one
earned) in two
innings pitched. The lowly Browns won the game, 10–3, but the victory went to
Julio Bonetti, who came on in the third
inning and allowed only one run the rest of the way. Muncrief would make just two more appearances on the mound for the Browns (both in September ) until . In 1941—baseball's last pre-
World War II season—Muncrief, still a
rookie at age 25, began the year in the Brownie
bullpen until getting four starting assignments in late May and early June. He joined the Browns' starting rotation for good in July, and ended up winning 13 games against eight losses, with 12
complete games and two
shutouts and a respectable 3.65
earned run average. His 13 victories (for a team that won only 70 of its 154 games all year) were tied for tenth in the American League. In , the
Browns enjoyed their first over-.500 season since , but Muncrief fell off to a 6–8 record. For each of the next three seasons (1943–1945), however, he would win 13 games for the Browns and compile stellar earned run averages. The Browns slumped to a 72–80, sixth-place season, but Muncrief notched another 12 complete games with three shutouts with a 2.81 earned run average. Then, in , Muncrief was an integral part of the Browns' only American League championship team. His 13 victories were tied for third on the pitching staff, he lost only eight, and his ERA was a solid 3.08 in 219
innings pitched. He was selected to represent the American League in the
1944 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, played July 11 at
Forbes Field,
Pittsburgh. Muncrief tossed 1 scoreless innings in
relief and allowed only one hit, but the National League took the contest, 7–1. The Browns went on to win 89 games during the regular season, one better than the second-place Tigers, to earn their first
World Series berth. Pitted against their National League rivals, the Cardinals, in the all-St. Louis
1944 World Series, Muncrief was relegated to a relief role in his two appearances, each time replacing starter
Nels Potter. In Game 2, he relieved Potter in the seventh inning of a 2–2 tie and allowed only one run over the next 4 innings, but he was out-dueled by Cardinals' relief pitcher
Blix Donnelly and the Redbirds won 3–2, with Muncrief absorbing the loss. Then, in Game 6, he came in for Potter in the fourth inning. He quelled a Cardinal rally and threw two more shutout frames, but the NL champions had already forged an insurmountable 3–1 lead en route to the world championship. In , the Browns dropped back to third place with an 81–70–3 record, but Muncrief paced the American League with his .765 winning percentage. He finished 22nd in voting for the 1945
American League Most Valuable Player Award for his 13–4 won–lost record, ten complete games and 2.72 ERA. He also spent parts of the 1944 and 1945 seasons away from the Browns, working in a war-related factory. The first two postwar seasons, and , were disappointing for the Browns, who lost a combined 183 games, and Muncrief, who won only 11 contests, lost 26, and saw his ERA balloon to two runs over his 1945 standard. He was traded to the Cleveland Indians in November 1947.
With 1948 champion Cleveland Indians In , Muncrief joined a Cleveland staff headed by
Baseball Hall of Famers
Bob Feller and
Bob Lemon and rookie sensation
Gene Bearden. Pitching infrequently as both a starter and reliever during the campaign's first three months, he lowered his earned run average to 1.58 on June 26 after a three-
hit shutout of the
Washington Senators improved his won–lost mark to 5–1. However, he was ineffective over the remainder of the regular season, dropping his final three
decisions and seeing his earned run average rise to 3.98. Still, his Indians prevailed in a furious pennant race, finishing in a
dead heat with the
Boston Red Sox at season's end, and then humbling the Bosox 8–3 in the
1948 American League tie-breaker game at
Fenway Park on October 4, behind Bearden's complete game. In the
1948 World Series that followed, Muncrief again worked in relief, tossing two more scoreless innings against the
Boston Braves in Game 5. The following day, October 11, the Indians won their second-ever world championship.
Late career The Indians sold Muncrief's contract to the
Pittsburgh Pirates in November 1948. He went 1–5 with the Pirates and was relegated to the bullpen before being claimed off
waivers by the
Chicago Cubs on June 6, 1949. He posted a mediocre 6–11 record and 5.12 earned run average in 47 games in his only National League season. He then spent all of 1950 in the
Triple-A Pacific Coast League, where he won 15 games and earned his final MLB opportunity as a
Rule 5 selection of the New York Yankees. He worked in only two games and three total innings for the
Yankees before being sent down at the May cutdown, and spent his last five pro seasons back in the minor leagues. In his 12 major-league seasons and 288 games pitched, Bob Muncrief had an 80–82 win–loss record, 67 complete games, 11 shutouts, nine
saves, and a 3.80 career earned run average. In 1,401 innings pitched he allowed 1,503 hits and 392
bases on balls, with 525
strikeouts. In three career World Series games, he worked a total of 8 innings and allowed only one run (on six hits and four bases on balls) for an earned run average of 1.04. However, that run—tallied by the Cardinals in the bottom of the 11th inning of Game 2 of the 1944 Fall Classic—earned Muncrief his only World Series decision, a defeat. He died in
Duncanville, Texas, at the age of 80. ==References==