Ray Rippelmeyer


Raymond Roy Rippelmeyer is a retired American professional baseball player and pitching coach. During his 12-season active career, he was a right-handed pitcher who spent part of one year in Major League Baseball as a member of the Washington Senators. He was listed as tall and.
Rippelmeyer attended Southeast Missouri State University and Southern Illinois University and signed with the Milwaukee Braves in 1954. He spent eight full seasons in the minor leagues, toiling in the Braves' and Cincinnati Reds' organizations before his selection by the Senators in the Rule 5 draft on November 27, 1961.
He then spent almost three full months on the Washington roster, working in 18 games, 17 of them in relief. Rippelmeyer won his only Major League game on June 1, 1962, against the Minnesota Twins, hurling two hitless innings and striking out one as Washington won in extra innings 4–3 on a home run by Chuck Hinton. One month later, on July 1, Rippelmeyer made his only start against the same team, but he lasted only 3 innings, surrendered two two-run homers, and left the game trailing, 4–0. The Senators eventually fell, 9–0. It was his last Major League appearance; ten days later he was returned to the Cincinnati organization. He spent the remainder of his pitching career with the Triple-A San Diego Padres, retiring in the middle of 1965 to manage the Short Season Class A Aberdeen Pheasants in the Baltimore Orioles' system.
During his three-month stint with Washington, Rippelmeyer posted a 1–2 win-loss record, and allowed 47 hits and 17 bases on balls in 39 innings pitched. He struck out 17. He won 114 games in the minor leagues.
Rippelmeyer began his career as a pitching coach in 1966 with the Triple-A Padres, and spent nine seasons as the mound tutor of the Philadelphia Phillies, working under managers Frank Lucchesi, Paul Owens and Danny Ozark. Rippelmeyer coached for three National League East Division champions. He was a minor league pitching instructor in the Phillie farm system both before and after his assignment with the big-league staff.