Desperate for players, as many had gone off to war, the Phillies took a flyer on the 16-year-old McKee in 1943; he was the youngest player to appear in a
National League game that season. He made his major league debut on August 18, 1943, in a home
doubleheader against the
St. Louis Cardinals at
Shibe Park. On October 3, 1943, the last day of the season, McKee started the second game of a doubleheader against the
Pittsburgh Pirates at
Forbes Field and pitched a
complete game, winning 11–3. 17 years and 17 days old at the time, McKee thus became the youngest pitcher in baseball history to be credited with a
win and to throw a nine-inning complete-game victory; no pitcher as young as McKee has accomplished this since. In 1944, the then-17-year-old pitcher spent most the season with the
Wilmington Blue Rocks, batting .225 as a first baseman and going 6-8 with a 4.25 ERA on the mound. But with the war still on, McKee got another chance to pitch in the majors; on September 26, 1944, he appeared in a contest against the
Chicago Cubs in which Philadelphia was already trailing, 14-0. McKee tossed the final two innings of the game, allowing only one additional run; it would be his last MLB contest. Overall, he posted a 1–0 record and a 5.87
earned run average in five games (one start), allowing 10 runs on 14
hits and six
walks, while
striking out one in 15
innings of work. McKee was in the Navy in 1945, but returned to baseball the following year to play with the Phillies farm club in
Terre Haute. He later switched to the
outfield, but never returned to the big leagues, spending nine seasons in the
minors through 1957, collecting a
batting average of .287 and 115
home runs in 1,173 games. In 2014, Roger McKee died in his hometown of Shelby, North Carolina, 15 days short before of his 88th birthday. ==References==