Buster Mills


Colonel Buster Mills was an American outfielder, coach, scout and interim manager in Major League Baseball. A native of Ranger, Texas, in his playing days, he stood tall, weighed 195 pounds, and threw and batted righthanded.
His father, Elvis, owned a general store in Ranger, Texas. Elvis and Lucy Mills gave their fourth child the unusual first name of Colonel, after the rank of either Elvis's best friend or a Civil War great-uncle. He lettered in football, basketball, track and baseball at the University of Oklahoma and was named all-Big Six quarterback. He graduated with a degree in geology in 1931.
A St. Louis Cardinals scout saw him hit for the cycle in a baseball game against Washington University in St. Louis. However, when he asked for the player's name, he was told it was Wahl. The scout had to leave, but left a message to sign the player. Mills signed with Cleveland, but ended up in the extensive St. Louis Cardinals farm system during the early 1930s, receiving a 29-game trial with the "Gashouse Gang" Cardinals and then a 17-game tryout with the Brooklyn Dodgers. He played the rest of his MLB career in the American League for the Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Browns, New York Yankees and Cleveland Indians. Overall, he played in 415 games, and compiled a lifetime batting average of.287 with 14 home runs and 163 runs batted in. In, Mills batted.397 in 63 at bats for the Yankees, largely as a pinch hitter.
After military service in World War II, Mills became a coach for the Indians, Chicago White Sox, Cincinnati Redlegs and Red Sox and managed in minor league baseball. He was the interim manager of the 1953 Redlegs, finishing the unexpired term of Rogers Hornsby, who resigned late in the season. Mills' record in Cincinnati was 4–4.
After his coaching career, Mills spent many seasons as a scout for the Kansas City Athletics, then the Yankees.
He died in Arlington, Texas, at the age of 83.