Mike Ryba
Dominic Joseph "Mike" Ryba was a Major League Baseball pitcher. A native of De Lancey, Pennsylvania, he attended Saint Francis University, Loretto, Pennsylvania. He was a right-hander and played for the St. Louis Cardinals and Boston Red Sox. In 1946, at the age of 43, he was the second-oldest player to appear in an American League game that season.
Ryba was usually used in relief during his ten-year major league career. Ryba appeared in 10 career games as a catcher. While in the minor leagues, he played all nine positions at various points. He made his major league debut on September 22, 1935, against the Cincinnati Reds in game 1 of a doubleheader at Sportsman's Park. He pitched seven innings of two-hit relief and was the winning pitcher in the 14–4 game. He also had two hits and three runs batted in to help his cause.
In four seasons with St. Louis Ryba won 16 games, lost 9, and had an ERA of 4.39. On September 5, 1940, he was traded to the Boston Red Sox for pitcher Al Brazle. Ryba was 37 years old and had not pitched in the big leagues for two years, but his best seasons were ahead of him.
In six years with the Red Sox, Ryba won 36 games, lost 25, saved 16, and had an ERA of 3.42. Boston won the pennant in his last season, and he appeared in Game # 4 of the 1946 World Series, giving up one earned run and allowing two inherited runners to score in of an inning. Ryba caught both games of a home doubleheader against the Cleveland Indians on July 19, 1942.
Ryba finished in his league's top ten for games finished 5 times, games pitched 3 times, saves 2 times, and winning percentage 1 time.
Career totals for 250 games include a record of 52–34, 36 games started, 16 complete games, 2 shutouts, 132 games finished, and 16 saves. Ryba allowed 319 earned runs in 783 innings pitched for an ERA of 3.66. He wielded a strong bat for a pitcher, hitting.235 with 24 RBI. He was strong defensively as well, making just seven errors as a pitcher and none as a catcher.
Ryba managed in the Red Sox, Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds farm systems after his pitching career, coached for St. Louis from 1951 to 1955, and scouted for the Cardinals and Reds until his death, at the age of 68 in Brookline Station, Missouri, when he fell from a ladder in his yard while trimming branches of a tree.