College and minor league baseball Ferriss received the first full baseball scholarship to
Mississippi State University, where he pitched in 1941 and 1942 and joined the
Kappa Sigma fraternity. He was signed by the Red Sox in 1942, and he appeared in 21 games for the
Greensboro Red Sox of the Class B
Piedmont League, compiling a 7–7 record. Shortly afterward, he was drafted into the Army for service in
World War II, serving for over two years at
Randolph Field in
Texas, where he was able to continue playing baseball in a military league. He went on to set a longstanding
American League (AL) record for scoreless innings pitched at the start of a career with 22, which stood until 2008, when it was broken by
Brad Ziegler. Ferriss compiled a 21–10
win–loss record for the Red Sox in his rookie season. Ferriss then compiled a 25–6 record (the best in the AL) that helped the Red Sox win the
AL pennant in 1946. He was selected for the
All-Star Game that season for the first and only time but did not pitch, as the
1945 All-Star Game was not held due to wartime travel restrictions. He started two games in the
1946 World Series against the
St. Louis Cardinals, and pitched a complete-game shutout in the third game before getting a
no-decision in the seventh and deciding game, which was won by the Cardinals. Ferriss' record in 1947 was 12–11. His arm troubles and
asthma restricted him to only nine starts and 31 appearances in 1948, and four appearances in 1949. His final major league appearance was on Opening Day of the 1950 season, when he pitched only one inning. Ferriss compiled a career record of 65–30, and shares the MLB record for consecutive home wins to start a season (13, in 1946). He was inducted into the Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2002. Ferriss was a very good hitting pitcher in his six-year major league career, posting a .250
batting average (93-for-372) with one
home run, 52
RBIs, and 44
runs scored. He had 19 RBIs in each of the 1945 and 1947 seasons. He finished his career with a .979
fielding percentage. ==Coaching career==