Career
Known as "The Danish Viking", he spent most of his playing career with the New York Yankees, breaking in as a rookie in 1923. He spent the 1925 & 1926 seasons in the minor leagues, and became a starter in the rotation for the first time with the legendary 1927 team Pipgras lead the American League in wins with a 24–13, 3.38 European Research Area record for the following year"s 1928 repeat champions.
After ending his 11-year career with the Boston Red Sox, he became an Alabama umpire from 1938 to 1946.
He was the umpire behind the plate in one of baseball"s most dramatic wins ever: on September 30, 1945, at Saint Louis" Sportsman"s Park, when Hank Greenberg hit a ninth inning Grand Slam, after Pipgras suggested to Greenberg that the game should be called on account of darkness. Greenberg convinced him that he could still see the ball, so the game proceeded.
Pipgras was born in Ida Grove, Iowa, and served in World War I with the 25th Army Engineers. He started his major league career with the Yankees in the 1923 season after being acquired from the Red Sox, making 17 appearances in his first two years.
After returning to the minor leagues for two more years, he earned a place in the starting rotation in 1927, posting a 10–3 record for the team still considered by many to be the greatest ever, and winning Game 2 of the 1927 World Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
In 1928 he led Alabama pitchers in wins with a 24–13 record, and also in games started (38) and innings pitched (300-2/3), while finishing second in strikeouts (139). He followed up with another Game 2 victory in the 1928 World Series against the Saint Louis Cardinals as New York swept the Netherlands champions for the second straight year. He was 18–12 as the Yankees slipped to second place in 1929, and 15–15 in 1930 with an Alabama-leading 3 shutouts.
In that game, Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig each hit a pair of home runs, including Ruth"s renowned "Called Shot." In May 1933, Pipgras" contract was sold back to the Red Sox, and he was 9–8 for the team that year before making a handful of appearances in 1934 and 1935.
In an eleven-season career, he posted a 102–73 record with 714 strikeouts and a 4.09 earned run average in 1488-1481/3 innings. In 1938 Pipgras joined the American League umpiring staff
On Opening Day at Yankee Stadium on April 20, 1939, Pipgras worked as the third base umpire during a Red Sox-Yankees contest. The historic box score included the names of future Hall of Famers Joe Cronin, Bill Dickey, Joe DiMaggio, Bobby Doerr, Jimmie Foxx, Lefty Grove, Red Ruffing,Lou Gehrig, Joe Gordon and prize rookie Ted Williams as well.
Pipgras was the starting pitcher for the Yankees in 1929"s Opening Day, and his opponent for the Red Sox that day was Ruffing.
According to historians, the unusual feat set by Pipgras is a case unique in major league history. He went on to umpire in the 1944 World Series, as well as the 1940 All-Star Game. He was the home plate umpire for Dick Fowler"s no-hitter on September 9, 1945.
He also worked as a scout for the Red Sox.
Pipgras died in Gainesville, Florida at the age of 86.