| Born in 1913 in Penetanguishene, Ontario, a small
town on an inlet off Georgian Bay, Phil Marchildon grew up to be the ace
of the postwar Athletics pitching staff. It was not an easy climb for
Phil, and his tenure at the top was to be all too brief, its brevity occasioned
in part by his wartime experiences.
Of French-Canadian stock, although he spoke only English,
Marchildon was raised in relative poverty in Penetang. Still, he
considered his childhood a happy time, with his three brothers and
three sisters, playing whatever games were available, and delivering
the Toronto Star to help the family finances.
Marchildon never played baseball until high school,
but when he started it was clear that he had a real talent for the game.
He thrived as a pitcher on a town team, although he had little idea where
the ball was going when he let it go. The young man subsequently took
a job with Creighton Mine, in a town west of Sudbury, where he worked
in a nickel mine and pitched semi-pro ball for the local team.
Eventually one of Marchildon's former hometown coaches
arranged for him to try out with the Toronto Maple Leafs of the
International League, and the young fastballer impressed manager
Dan Howley enough to win a contract.
Phil Marchildon started his professional baseball career
in the spring of 1939 with Toronto, at the advanced age of 25 years
old. After a brief stint at Cornwall in the Canadian-American League,
Marchildon returned to Toronto and pitched well enough in 1939 and
1940 that his contract was purchased by the Athletics for a September
callup and two big league games at the end of the '40 season.
In 1941 and 1942, Marchildon established himself as
a regular starter on last-place Athletics teams, with records of
10-15 in '41 and 17-14 in 1942. Coach Earle Brucker took the unpolished
young pitcher in hand, smoothed out his motion, and improved his
control. Marchildon, grateful for Brucker's help, never warmed to
Connie Mack, regarding him primarily as a tight-fisted employer
who would not pay him what he was worth, and he was particularly
embittered that Mack did not even say goodbye to him when he left
for military service after his fine '42 season.
Marchildon, a proud Canadian, joined the Royal Canadian
Air Force, turned down opportunities to play service baseball or
to be a physical trainer, and instead became a tail-gunner in a
Halifax bomber attacking Adolf Hitler's Festung Europa. Flying out
of a base near the Yorkshire village of Skipton-on-Swale, Marchildon
and his crew had successfully completed twenty-five missions when
their plane was shot down on the night of August 16, 1944. Fished
out of the North Sea by two Danish resistance fighters, Marchildon
and a fellow crew member were captured by the Germans when they
reached shore.
Eventually sent to Stalag Luft III, the prison camp
105 miles southeast of Berlin from which the famous "Great Escape" had
been made seven months earlier, Phil Marchildon was an unwilling guest
of the Third Reich until he was liberated by a British patrol on May 2,
1945. For several months before that happy event, he and his fellow prisoners
were marched around Germany in an effort to keep them away from approaching
Allied forces. Far out of baseball condition, underweight, and suffering
from nervous attacks, Marchildon returned to Penetang to regain his health
and get married.
Summoned back to the Athletics early in July, Marchildon
had no expectation that he would pitch during the '45 season, and Brucker,
the pitching coach, agreed. But Mister Mack planned a Phil Marchildon
Night, with the returned pitcher as the A's starter, and Marchildon reluctantly
went along. Before a crowd of 19,000 fans, he pitched five decent innings
before injuring his leg, as might have been expected. After another abortive
start a few days later, Marchildon's '45 season came to a close.
In 1946, however, Phil Marchildon, now 32, regained
his spot as the A's number one pitcher. With a bad team behind him,
Marchildon, using a sizzling fastball, good curve, and occasional
forkball, won 13 and lost 16, with a 3.49 earned run average. The
next year, with Eddie Joost and Ferris Fain added to his supporting
cast, Phil was superb, posting a 19-9 and 3.22 record. With the
Athletics in the first division most of the year before slipping
to fifth place in September, Marchildon was now recognized as one
of the American League's premier moundsmen.
In 1948, as the Mackmen made a legitimate run for the
pennant, however, Marchildon was a great disappointment. A nervous
condition lingering from his prison camp experience sapped his strength
and he was not able to produce as he had done in the past. A record
of 9 and 15 testified to his loss of effectiveness. The next season
arm troubles - probably an undiagnosed torn rotator cuff, Marchildon
later believed - reduced him to sixteen bad innings in seven games.
At the end of spring training in 1950, the Athletics sold Marchildon
to Buffalo, where he lost five games before being released. In July
he hooked on briefly with the Red Sox, but after one unimpressive
outing he was dropped. Another comeback effort with Toronto in 1951
also ended in failure.
His baseball career ended, Marchildon returned to Canada
and his home town. Disappointed by the hand fate had dealt him,
Marchildon brooded. Like so many professional athletes, he was not
prepared for the workaday world facing him when his baseball days
were done. Finally, with the help of friends and his wife, Marchildon
pulled his life together and found work as an expediter in an aircraft
plant and, later, with a manufacturer of hospital furniture outside
of Toronto.
In 1976 Marchildon was elected to the Canadian Sports
Hall of Fame and in 1982 to the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame. He published
his memoirs in 1993, and on January 10, 1997, at the age of 83, he died.
While his baseball career started late and was sadly shortened, Phil Marchildon
was justly proud of the recognition that came to him in his native land,
the land for which he had gone to war. |