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Niteowl049
Baseball fan following baseball since 1955. Have been fortunate enough to have seen Ted Williams, Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, Johnny Bench, Roberto Clemente and Dale Murphy play baseball in Kansas City and Houston. Served in Army in Hawaii and Vietnam with 25th Infantry Division.

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Players From the Past: Harry Agganis

by Niteowl049
created May 06, 2008, last edited June 03, 2008
11
Vote


Aristotle George Agganis (The Golden Greek)

Born on April 29th, 1929 in Lynn, Massachusetts
Died on June 27, 1955 in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Major League Debut: April 13, 1954
Final Game: June 2, 1955

Harry Agganis was the seventh child of Greek immigrants and his mother called him Ari, which eventually became Harry, the name he was known by.

At Lynn Classical High in Lynn, Massachusetts in 1967, there were 160,000 fans that attended the home games in the senior year of Agganis. The team even traveled to Miami to defeat Granby High of Norfolk, Virginia. General Bob Neyland of Tennessee who witnessed that game said of Agganis "That young man could step into any college backfield right now. While at Classical High he threw 48 touchdown passes and scored 24 touchdowns himself and kicked extra points.

Because he wanted to stay close to his mom, he attended Boston University despite being courted by 75 colleges. Frank Leahy, the famous Notre Dame coach, called Agganis "the finest prospect he had ever seen". He was so well known that when he played his first freshman game against Holy Cross that 18,000 fans showed up to see him play. He missed the 1950 season serving the country during the Korean War, but never went to Korea.

Agganis was a classic two way player in college, playing both baseball and football; he played quarterback, defensive back and punter. He had a 46.5 average as a punter and intercepted 15 passes one season. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1974.

After finishing at Boston University, he was drafted in the first round by the Cleveland Browns, who offered him a $20,000 to sign with them. However, Tom Yawkey, the Red Sox owner at that time, offered him $35,000 to sign; therefore, Agganis signed with the Red Sox.

In 1954, he made his Major League debut with the Boston Red Sox. He hit 11 home runs and drove in 57 runs while hitting .251. It wasn't a great year, but for a first year in the majors it was a good season.

Next year, he started hitting and was hitting .313 when he died. On June 2, 1955, he could only make it to second on what should have been a triple since he was exhausted. He was sick on the train that night and he was rushed back to Boston where he found out he was diagnosed with pneumonia and phlebitis.

On June 27th, he died of a massive pulmonary embolism. Agganis was dead at the age of 26. 30,000 mourners attended his wake and 20,000 lined the streets as his funeral procession passed.

A portrait of Agganis is in the Hall of Fame. If he had lived, he may have had a plaque hanging on the wall since his work ethic would have probably landed him in the Hall of Fame.

He batted 517 times total in his two seasons, which is about how many times a player bats in one season. He had 11 home runs and 67 RBI's. His second year's average of .313 was a 62 point improvement from his 1954 season.

In 2005, Boston University opened their new basketball and hockey arena in honor of Agganis, which is called Agganis Arena.

Although most of the accomplishments Agganis made were on the gridiron he was ready to make his mark on the baseball diamond as his life ended prematurely 53 years ago.

For those interested in reading even more about Agganis:

http://www.coachwyatt.com/harryagganis.htm

The following article is about baseball players who died premature deaths:

http://www.cbc.ca/sports/story/2002/06/24/baseball020622.html


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
573 days ago
Score 1+-
Nice job, Niteowl. Always an interesting read - and Agganis was so young. Really a shame.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
573 days ago
Score 0+-
He showed in his second season he was ready to be a longtime major leaguer and no telling how well he would have done if he had lived.
Permalink | Reply
JuTMSY4Legend
573 days ago
Score 1+-
For those of you on the boston area, absolutely go to Agganis Arena...even as a NU Alum, its the best new Arena in Boston (yes even better than Conte)... Still got nothin on historic Matthew Arena though ; - )
Permalink | Reply
RomiezzoLegend
573 days ago
Score 1+-
I've never heard of Harry Agganis. I'm glad you wrote this article, Niteowl. It's so tragic that he died at such a young age. I hate it when deaths like that happen.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
573 days ago
Score 0+-
And it seemed like he was on track to be a good hitter when he died. He had to be a real athlete to be a quarterback, defensive back and a kicker. Thanks for the Agganis photo. He was very well known in Massachusetts since his football exploits were in Massachusetts. Think there are some other places named after Agganis in Massachusetts.
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
573 days ago
Score 0+-
The quarterback-defensive back combination is very impressive. He was trying to keep the other team's defensive backs from intercepting his passes then he goes on defense and tries to intercept the other quarterback's passes. 15 interceptions in a college season is very impressive.
Permalink | Reply
Smmonroe2Varsity Captain
572 days ago
Score 1+-
nice article
Permalink | Reply
Niteowl049AAA-er
572 days ago
Score 0+-
ThanksSmmonroe2...it was fun writing it since I had never really researched his life story.
Permalink | Reply
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Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Niteowl049 | May 6, 2008 | May 2008 | MLB Opinions | Harry Agganis Opinions | Boston Red Sox Opinions

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