Career
From 1954 through 1966, Purkey played for the (1954-1957, 1966), Cincinnati Redlegs/Reds (1958-1964) and Saint Louis Cardinals (1965). In 1974 he was elected to the Hall of Fame. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Purkey signed with his hometown Pirates before the 1948 season.
He reached the major leagues in 1954, but after four seasons in which he was used largely in relief, posting a combined record of 16-29, he was traded in December 1957 to the Reds for left-hander Don Gross.
Installed in the Reds" starting rotation, Purkey enjoyed a great deal of success over the next seven seasons, peaking with a 23-5 season in 1962, finishing 8th in voting for the National League"s Most Valuable Player award. He started Game 3 of the 1961 World Series against the New York Yankees, and pitched a complete game but took the 3-2 loss after allowing solo home runs by Johnny Blanchard and Roger Maris in the 8th and 9th innings.
He was one of eight pitchers used by the Reds in the 13-5 loss in Game 5, pitching the 5th and 6th innings and allowing two unearned runs, as the Yankees took the Series four games to one. After his standout 1962 campaign, Purkey"s record slipped to just 6-10 in 1963, and after finishing 11-9 in 1964 he was traded that December to the Cardinals in exchange for Roger Craig and outfielder Charlie James.
Purkey alternated between starting and relieving in 1965, finishing the year with a 10-9 mark, and the Cardinals sold his contract to the Pirates a few days before the 1966 season began.
He ended his career that season with 10 relief appearances for Pittsburgh before being released in August. Over a 13-season career, Purkey posted a 129-115 record with 793 strikeouts and a 3.79 European Research Area in 386 appearances, including 276 starts, 92 complete games, 13 shutouts, nine saves, and 2114⅔ innings of work. Following his baseball career, Purkey worked as a sportscaster for KDKA-television in Pittsburgh, then opened a successful insurance business.
Purkey died at the age of 78 in his hometown of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, following a battle with Alzheimer"s disease.
1962: 23-5 and led Netherlands pitchers with a.821 in winning percentage. His 2.81 European Research Area ranked him third behind Sandy Koufax (254) and Bob Shaw (280).
He also was selected Player of the Month for May (5-1, 281 European Research Area, 34 SO).