Skizas attended
Crane High School in Chicago and was signed by the
New York Yankees when he was 17. He made his Major League debut with the Yankees in a road game that the Yankees lost 7–3 to the Washington Senators on April 19, 1956. Pinch-hitting in the fifth inning for pitcher
Mickey McDermott, after leadoff hits by
Elston Howard and
Andy Carey put runners on second and third, Skizas singled to right field for the Yankees' first run of the game. Skizas would get only six at-bats for New York. He was traded on June 14 of that season with teammate
Eddie Robinson to the
Kansas City Athletics for two players and cash. For the remainder of that season, Skizas appeared in 83 games for Kansas City and batted .316 with 11 home runs. He was a contact hitter who struck out just 17 times in 297 at-bats that season for the A's. A 12-man trade between Kansas City and the
Detroit Tigers was made on November 20, 1957, in which Skizas went to Detroit along with teammates
Billy Martin,
Gus Zernial and the man he pinch-hit for in his first MLB at-bat, McDermott. In 1959, his last season in the majors, Skizas appeared in eight games for the
Chicago White Sox, but did not play for them in the
1959 World Series. After retiring from the Major Leagues he played minor league baseball in Central America and later was a Health Sciences teacher and Baseball Coach at Centennial High School in Champaign, Illinois. Skizas died in
Savoy, Illinois, on November 17, 2023, at the age of 92. ==References==