Sports' Forgotten Heroes
44min2022 MAY 14
Play Episode
Likes
Comments
Share

Details

Sam Byrd had a bright future ahead of him in baseball. A solid hitter and an even better outfielder, he had one huge issue facing him. He played for the New York Yankees and there was guy named Babe Ruth ahead of him. So, Byrd took his seat on the bench and patiently waited for an opportunity. When he got a chance to play, he did well. But never enough to supplant Ruth. In his spare time, Byrd not only worked to improve his game at the plate, but he also continued to refine his skills on the golf course. In fact, he was so good on the links, that guys like Ruth never stood a chance against him. Sam would enter a tournament, here and there, and win. He toyed with the idea of playing highly competitive golf on the PGA TOUR, but baseball paid the bills. When Sam finally got a chance on the diamond, he got hurt and when he returned he again had to take a seat on the bench. After trying to breakthrough with the Yankees for six years, Sam finally realized his dream of taking the field every day by virtue of a trade to the Cincinnati Reds. Now 27-years old, Sam was the team's regular right fielder. He hit a respectable .262 with nine home runs and 52 RBI. But it wasn't enough to earn the starting job the following season, 1936, and Sam once again found himself on the bench. At the end of the 1936 season, Sam was released by the Reds and claimed by the St. Louis Cardinals. However, Sam had had enough. All along, he continued to work on his golf game and decided to make the PGA TOUR his full time vocation (he actually joined the TOUR in 1933). What a great choice. Instead of riding the pine and playing second-fiddle in MLB, Sam walked the fairways with the likes of Hogan, Nelson and Snead. Over the course of a career that wound down in 1949, Sam won 11 times, finished as high as 3rd in The Masters (1941), 2nd in the PGA Championship and 16th in the U.S. Open. He won the Greater Greensboro Open, the Chicago Victory National Open and The Texas Open in 1945. A solid career as a professional golfer, Sam is the only person to have appeared in a baseball World Series and The Masters. Stephen Rice, who penned a terrific biography about SAM for the BioProject for SABR (Society for American Baseball Research) is on this episode of Sports' Forgotten Heroes to talk about the great dual career of Samuel Byrd.

see more

Only Willie Anderson, Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan and Jack Nicklaus won 4 U.S. Open Championships. Hogan, however, also won the 1941 Hale America National Open when the USGA cancelled the U.S. Open that year. Many think it should have counted as a Ma

1h 5min

SHN Presents: One Guy With a Mic: History of Dingers and Dunks - SHN Trailers

37s

Today they are known as the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. In 1935 they were known simply as the "Winnipegs when they went undefeated to win the Grey Cup and became the first team in Western Canada to do so. Led by a group of American-bred football play

1h 13min

SHN Presents: Tim Coffeen Talks Indy car and Racing History - SHN Trailers

1min

Sam Byrd is the only man to have ever played in baseball's World Series and to have played in The Masters. Sam started his baseball career with the New York Yankees, but after 8 years and only one of which he was a full time starter, Sam decided

44min

Billy Jurges-MLB

1h 10min

Lloyd Mangrum-PGA TOUR

1h 3min

Effa Manley-MLB

1h 22min