A native of
Central Falls, Rhode Island, the right-handed Surkont was in the
St. Louis Cardinals organization as a major league prospect. He was highly touted in 1942, prior to injuring his arm during
spring training. This impeded his advancement throughout the season, as the injury was of a lingering kind. Surkont was sold to the Braves before being returned to the Cardinals after manager
Billy Southworth passed on him. He was again shipped to the
Rochester Red Wings, where he remained until 1949. Then the
Chicago White Sox risked the draft price on Surkont. The team was struggling at the time to emerge from the
second division of the
American League standings. In 1950, he pitched for the
Sacramento Solons of the
Pacific Coast League. Sportswriter Jim Cooper wrote on June 12, "Folks are saying that six-foot Max Surkont of the Sacramento Solons is the handiest man tossing the pill in the Pacific Coast League." ==Career highlight==