Lou Skizas

This article was written by Matt Bohn

“I was a character in baseball. I saw it as an interim type of career,” Lou Skizas told Bill Gleason.1

Skizas, known as “The Nervous Greek” during his four-season major-league playing career, was perhaps best known for an unusual ritual that he followed before coming to bat. Before reaching the plate, the right-handed-batting Skizas dropped his bat, covering it with dirt. Then, wiping the bat off by rubbing it between his pants legs, he kissed the end of the bat before reaching into his back pocket at least three times to touch an object that was said to be a good-luck piece. Placing all of his weight on his right leg, Skizas kept his left foot off of the ground until just before the pitch reached the plate. This was the unorthodox style that belonged to the man Casey Stengel once called “the greatest natural-looking hitter I’ve ever seen.”2

Born June 2, 1932, in Chicago, to Greek immigrants Peter and Bessie (Stamos) Skizas, young Lou struggled in school in his early years because of a lack of familiarity with English. “We lived in the vicinity of Polk and Kedzie, the only Greek family on the block,” Skizas told Bill Gleason. “We spoke Greek in my home, and the first day I went off to school, the teacher sent me home. I couldn’t understand her so she thought I was retarded.” 3 Skizas eventually graduated in 1948 from Crane Tech in Chicago, where he excelled in baseball.

John Kringas, a businessman who sponsored teams for young athletes in the Chicago area, told the Chicago News Journal in 1976 about Skizas’s start in major-league baseball. “Our team was playing in Riis Park and a scout came out to look at the opposing pitcher, who was a tall and highly regarded right-hander,” Kringas said. “Skizas, only 16 at the time, blasted out four hits against the highly regarded hurler and right then and there got the recognition that led to a professional career.”4 After signing a contract with the New York Yankees in 1949, Skizas began his professional baseball career as a third baseman for Fond du Lac of the Class-D Wisconsin State League. He finished the season with Independence of the Kansas-Oklahoma-Missouri (KOM) League. With Independence, Skizas batted .297 in 102 games, driving in 76 runs.

In 1950, Skizas and three other Yankee prospects (including shortstop Mickey Mantle, who remained a lifelong friend of   Lou’s) were promoted to Joplin of the Class-C Western Association. Moving to the outfield, Lou hit .273 in 124 games with Joplin with 21 home runs and 87 RBIs. Scout E.H. “Dutch” Zwilling, in a report to the Yankees, said Skizas was a “fair hitter” with power, but was “weak on slow pitches.”   The scouting report, found in Skizas’s file at the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, also said the 18-year-old had a “careless attitude” and “indifferent disposition” and concluded that he “may develop into real good hitter — has power — may be slow in coming but has possibilities.”   Zwilling ended his report on Skizas by describing him as “not a thinker at present.”5

The following year, Skizas was moved up to the Class-B Piedmont League, where he played for the Norfolk Tars. Making his debut on April 29, 1951, Lou hit two home runs and three singles, driving in five runs. A month and a half later, on June 16, he had another impressive performance for Norfolk, hitting three home runs and driving in seven runs against Richmond. Hitting .311 for the season, Skizas helped lead Norfolk to the Piedmont League championship.

After spending 1952 and 1953 in the Army, serving overseas in Germany and Italy, Skizas began the 1954 season with the American Association Kansas City Blues. Sent down to the Southern Association Birmingham Barons in late May, Skizas made an impressive debut with the Barons, racking up five hits in seven at-bats during a May 30 doubleheader. His unique batting style entertained the fans, reported sportswriter George K. Leonard: “When he appeared in Nashville’s Sulphur Dell for the first time, June 1, Skizas entertained a crowd of 2,847 with his sideshow shuffling and arm waving. After going through a long ritual before each pitch, Lou stuffed his hand in his back pocket as a good luck gesture just before swinging. Occasionally that gimmick backfired when the opposing pitcher quick pitched.”6 Skizas batted .305 during his 69 games in Birmingham.

Moving up to the Yankees’ American Association team in Denver in 1955, Skizas had a good, albeit injury-plagued, season. Sidelined for two weeks after catching a fly ball on the top of his ring finger, Skizas was leading the league in hitting with a .353 average by early August. But a groin injury on August 6 kept him out of the lineup for 10 days. Shortly after returning to the lineup, Lou was ordered to “bed rest” on August 28. Finishing the season with a .348 average, Skizas was 24 at-bats short of the 400 needed to put him in the running for the league’s batting championship. He ended the season with 21 home runs and 99 RBIs.

Skizas’s excellent year in Denver got the attention of Yankees general manager George Weiss, who was looking for a “solid outfielder” after the team’s loss to the Dodgers in the World Series. “Skizas may be our man,” Weiss told sportswriter Dan Daniel.7

Starting his major-league career with the Yankees in April 1956, Skizas made an impression on manager Casey Stengel. Not only did his manager call him “the greatest natural-looking hitter I’ve ever seen,” he added that “he can hit any pitcher who ever lived.”8   But though impressed with Skizas’s hitting skills, he was less impressed with the player’s fielding ability, and Skizas made only six pinch-hit appearances with the Yankees, managing just one hit, before being sent down to the Yankees’ Triple-A team in Richmond.

Shortly after arriving in Richmond, Skizas was struck with what The Sporting News referred to as a “mysterious back ailment” that left him on the bench for most of the month.9 After playing only 16 games at Richmond, Skizas was traded to the Kansas City A’s on June 14 with first baseman Eddie Robinson for pitcher Moe Burtschy, outfielder Bill Renna and cash. Spending most of the season playing left and right field for the A’s, Skizas batted .316 with 11 home runs and 39 runs batted in. Summing up Lou’s performance at the end of the season, Kansas City sportswriter Joe McGuff wrote, “For the most part his defensive work proved to be a pleasant surprise, although at times he had alarming lapses.”10

In the offseason, Skizas played winter ball in the Dominican and Puerto Rican leagues, then spent the entire 1957 season with Kansas City. His eccentric batting style had quickly made him a favorite with the Athletics’ fans. By this time, he had taken to occupying the batter’s box by walking a path between the catcher and the umpire. Asked about his unusual batting practices by reporter Ernest Mehl in March, 1957, Skizas somewhat cryptically insisted that he didn’t adopt his batting style out of superstition. “I definitely am not superstitious,” Skizas said. “A lot of players are, I know. I’m not. Of course, I’ll admit that I can’t see myself as others see me. But what I do seems natural to me.”11

Again he spent most of the season playing right field, though he did see some games at left field (the position he preferred) and third base. His average dropped dramatically. In 119 games, Skizas batted just .245. On November 20, he was traded to the Detroit Tigers in a 13-player deal.

Playing in left field and at third base, Skizas’s place with the Tigers did not appear to be secure early in the season. Skizas was hitting just.242 in just 23 games, and his defensive play may have made up manager Jack Tighe’s mind. “Tighe didn’t think I could do anything for that matter,” Skizas told Charleston Gazette reporter A.L. Hardman. “He not only thought I was a terrible third baseman but not a very good outfielder.”12 Skizas and pitcher Bob Shaw were sent to the Tigers’ Triple-A team in Charleston on June 5.

Skizas, who had been attending college courses in the offseason for many years, did not report to Charleston until nearly two weeks after he was assigned there. “There comes a time when a man must reevaluate things,” he told A.L. Hardman. “That’s what I’ve been doing. It wasn’t that I minded playing in Charleston. But I wondered if being sent back to the minors again didn’t signify that I might be failing in baseball. I wanted some time to think it over.”13   He belted out three hits in his first game with Charleston, on June 17, but then struggled, hitting just .163 in his 28 games there. Sent down to the Double-A Birmingham Barons in late July, Lou pulled a leg muscle and a tendon in his second game with the Barons, on August 5, and was out for the rest of the season.

In December 1958, Skizas was selected in the Rule 5 draft by the Chicago White Sox. It was a move that intrigued his former manager, Casey Stengel. “You can’t figure him out,” the Perfessor said in his prolix way. “He’s a guy who fires managers. He’s got ability, but he scares you because he might not feel like going after a ball hit his way. I know he’s smart, but why doesn’t he decide to play baseball or get out of it?   I hear he’s going to the state university in Illinois and is one of the brightest students there. I understand all the boy’s kinfolk come out to watch him play. This gives me the idea that’s why the White Sox drafted him. He just might be inspired to be a hell of a player in Comiskey Park.”14

Skizas’s tenure with the pennant-winning White Sox was brief. In just 13 at-bats in April, he had only one hit, a single against his former team, the Yankees, on April 30. The next day, Skizas and pitcher Don Rudolph were traded to the Cincinnati Reds for outfielder Del Ennis. The Reds immediately sent Skizas to the International League Havana Sugar Kings. Skizas, still only 27, never played in the major leagues again.

Skizas played 36 games in Havana in 1959, batting .286, but didn’t enjoy playing there. Reportedly suffering a “digestive ailment” from eating Cuban food, he asked to be sent to a team in the United States and was sold to the Seattle Rainiers of the Class-AAA Pacific Coast League. Skizas played with Seattle through part of 1960 before being sent down to the Nashville Vols of the Double-A Southern Association. He saw action in the next two seasons with Indianapolis, Macon, Denver, and finally the Mexico City Tigers before ending his playing career in 1962.

Continuing his education had always been a priority for Skizas. “My parents stressed the importance of education and my older brother, Gus [who earned a master’s degree in math], motivated me toward college,” he told Bill Gleason. “Gus was an outstanding shortstop for the University of Illinois but four years in the Marine Corps put an end to his dream of being a big leaguer.” (Gus spent part of the 1950 seasons with Vincennes, Indiana, of the Class D Mississippi-Ohio Valley League.) Lou obtained his bachelor’s degree in 1960, a master’s in 1962, and a Ph.D. in biology in 1965. “Counting two years of winter ball and two years in the Army, it took me 11 years to get my bachelor’s degree. I’d always start the semester about two weeks late and have to leave in the late winter but I was determined to stay with it,” he said.15 The man who had been labeled “not a thinker” by a baseball scout was now a Ph.D., a rarity for a professional ballplayer.

Skizas taught at Illinois State University for five years before taking a position at the University of Illinois in Champaign as an associate professor in the Department of Life Sciences. He also coached the university baseball team for 10 years. Retiring from teaching in 1995, Skizas lived in the Chicago area, spending his spare time visiting family members (including daughter Jane and son Louie Jr. as well as his cousin, actor John Stamos.)   However, even in retirement, Skizas kept his hand in baseball. “I do a little scouting for the Cubs,” he told Diamantis Zervos in the late 1990s. “I like scouting. It’s not a whole lot of pressure on me. I’m just kind of a bird dog in this area and I watch a lot of baseball games. I stay close to baseball. That’s my game. I don’t have time for any other game. I love the game.”16

Skizas died November 17, 2023  in Savoy, Illinois at 92 years old.

An earlier version of this biography originally appeared in SABR’s “Go-Go To Glory: The 1959 Chicago White Sox” (ACTA, 2009), edited by Don Zminda.

 

Sources

In addition to the sources cited in the Notes, the author also consulted:

Falkner, David. The Last Hero  The Life of Mickey Mantle (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995).

And a number of articles, including:

Haraway, Frank. “Skizas, Bears’ Fidgety Slugger, Gives Flingers Fits With His Hits; ‘Nervous Greek’ Bids for Loop Batting Title and RBI Crown,” The Sporting News, August 24, 1955: 29.

Hudson, Jim. “Skizas Locates Friends In Hurry With Three Hits; Davie Pitches Tonight After Sens Slam 17 Hits,” Charleston Daily Mail (West Virginia), June 18, 1958: 12.

Hudson, Jim. “Warming Up; Skizas Wins Some Fans In a Hurry,” Charleston Daily Mail (West Virginia), June 18, 1958: 12.

“Lou Skizas Back With Denver,” The Sporting News, June 30, 1962: 32.

“Lou Skizas In Flashy Debut,” The Sporting News, May 9, 1951: 32.

“Yankees Recall Siebern, Deal Robinson and Skizas to A’s,” The Sporting News, June 20, 1956: 9.

 

Notes

1 Bill Gleason, “Triglycerides Replace Baseball in Skizas’ Life,” undated article found in Skizas’ player file at the National Baseball Hall of Fame, Cooperstown, New York.

2 Milton Richman, United Press, “Greatest Hitter In Baseball Is Skizas,” Huronite and Daily Plainsman (South Dakota), April 4, 1957: 10.

3 Gleason.

4 Nails Florio, “Ex-area athlete Kringas Hellenic ‘Man of Year’,” Chicago News Journal, February 26, 1976:  Sec. 11, 1.

5 Scouting report from Lou Skizas file, National Baseball Hall of Fame.

6 George Leonard, “Chattanooga Joins 1st-Division Battle,” The Sporting News, August 13, 1958:  39.

7 Dan Daniel, “Shortstop, Outfielder, ‘Solid Pitcher’ Listed,” The Sporting News, October 12, 1955:  7.

8 Richman.

9 The Sporting News, June 6, 1956: 32.

10 Joe McGuff, “Skizas Is 18th Player To Sign,” Kansas City Star, January 30, 1957:  28.

11 Ernest Mehl, “A’s Skizas Doesn’t Fear Jinx; He’s Naturally Unpredictable,” The Sporting News, March 6, 1957:  34.

12 A.L. Hardman, “Lou Took Some Time To Think Things Out,” Charleston Gazette (West Virginia), June 19, 1958:  20.

13 Ibid.

14 Edgar Munzel, “Golden Greek Skizas Seen as Green Touch in Pale Hose Garden,” The Sporting News,December 10, 1958: 19.

15 Gleason.

16 Diamantis Zervos, Baseball’s Golden Greeks (Canton: Aegean Books International, 1998), 180.

Full Name

Louis Peter Skizas

Born

June 2, 1932 at Chicago, IL (USA)

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